Biofuels: The Five Myths of the Agro-fuels Transition
by Eric Holt-Giménez
Global Research, June 30, 2007
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Biofuels. The term invokes a life-giving image of renewability and
abundance—a clean, green, sustainable assurance in technology and the
power of progress. This image allows industry, politicians, the World
Bank, the United Nations, and even the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change to present fuels made from corn, sugarcane, soy and
other crops as the next step in a smooth transition from peak oil to a
yet-to-be-defined renewable fuel economy. Drawing its power from
a cluster of simple cornucopian myths, “biofuels” directs our attention
away from the powerful economic interests that benefit from this
transition. It avoids discussion of the growing North-South food and
energy imbalance. More fundamentally, it obscures the
political-economic relationships between land, people, resources and
food. By showing us only one side, “biofuels” fails to help us
understand the profound consequences of the industrial transformation
of our food and fuel systems—The Agro-fuels Transition.
The Agro-fuels Boom
Industrialized countries unleashed an “agro-fuels boom” by mandating
ambitious renewable fuel targets. Renewable fuels are scheduled to
provide 5.75% of Europe’s transport fuel by 2010, and 10 percent by
2020. The United States aims at 35 billion gallons a year. These
targets far exceed the agricultural capacities of the industrial North.
Europe would need to plant 70% of its farmland to fuel. The U.S.’s
entire corn and soy harvest would need to be processed as ethanol and
bio-diesel. Converting the bulk of their arable land to fuel crops
would wreak havoc with the North’s food systems. Therefore, OECD
countries are looking to the Global South to meet their fuel demands.
Southern governments appear eager to oblige. Indonesia and Malaysia are
rapidly expanding oil-palm plantations in an effort to supply up to 20
percent of the EU bio-diesel market. In Brazil—where fuel crop acreage
already occupies a land area the size of Netherlands, Belgium,
Luxembourg and Great Britain combined—the government is planning a
five-fold increase in sugar cane acreage. Their goal is to replace 10
percent of the world’s gasoline by 2025.
The rapid capitalization and concentration of power within the
agro-fuels industry is breathtaking. Over the last three years
venture capital investment in agro-fuels has increased eightfold.
Private investment is swamping public research institutions, as
evidenced by BP’s recent award of half a billion dollars to the
University of California. Behind the scenes—and under the noses of most
national anti-trust laws—giant oil, grain, auto and genetic engineering
corporations are forming powerful partnerships: ADM and Monsanto,
Chevron and Volkswagen; BP, DuPont, and Toyota. These corporations are
consolidating the research, production, processing, and distribution
chains of our food and fuel systems under one colossal, industrial
roof.
Agro-fuel champions assure us that because fuel crops are renewable,
they are environmentally–friendly, can reduce global warming, and will
foster rural development. But the tremendous market power of agro-fuel
corporations, coupled with the poor political will on the part of
governments to regulate their activities, leads us to doubt these happy
scenarios. Before jumping on the bandwagon, the mythic baggage of the
agro-fuels transition needs to be publicly unpacked:
Myth #1: Agro-fuels are clean and green
Because photosynthesis from fuel crops removes green house gases from
atmosphere and can reduce fossil fuel consumption, we are told fuel
crops are green. But when the full “life cycle” of agro-fuels is
considered—from land clearing to automotive consumption—the moderate
emission savings are undone by far greater emissions from
deforestation, burning, peat drainage, cultivation, and soil carbon
losses. Every ton of palm oil produced results in 33 tons of
carbon dioxide emissions—10 times more than petroleum.[1]
Tropical forests cleared for sugar cane ethanol emit 50 percent more
greenhouse gasses than the production and use of the same amount of
gasoline[2] Commenting on the global carbon balance, Doug Parr, chief
UK scientist at Greenpeace states flatly, “If even five percent of
biofuels are sourced from wiping out existing ancient forests, you’ve
lost all your carbon gain.”
There are other environmental problems as well. Industrial agro-fuels
require large applications of petroleum-based fertilizers, whose global
use—now at 45 million tons/year—has more than doubled the biologically
available nitrogen in the world, contributing heavily to the emission
of nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas 300 times more potent than CO².
In the tropics—where most of the world’s agro-fuels will soon be
grown—chemical fertilizer has 10-100 times the impact on global warming
compared to temperate soil applications.[3] To produce a liter of
ethanol takes three to five liters of irrigation water and produces up
to 13 liters of waste water. It takes the energy equivalent of 113
liters of natural gas to treat this waste, increasing the likelihood
that it will simply be released into the environment to pollute
streams, rivers and groundwater[4] Intensive cultivation of fuel crops
also leads to high rates of erosion, particularly in soy
production—from 6.5 tons/hectare in the U.S. to up to 12 tons/hectare
in Brazil and Argentina.
Myth #2: Agro-fuels will not result in deforestation
Proponents of agro-fuels argue that fuel crops planted on ecologically
degraded lands will improve rather than destroy the environment.
Perhaps the government of Brazil had this in mind when it re-classified
some 200 million hectares of dry-tropical forests, grassland, and
marshes as “degraded” and apt for cultivation[5] In reality, these are
the bio-diverse ecosystems of the Mata Atlantica the Cerrado and the
Pantanal, occupied by indigenous people, subsistence farmers, and
extensive cattle ranches. The introduction of agro-fuel plantations
will simply push these communities to the “agricultural frontier” of
the Amazon where the devastating patterns of deforestation are all too
well-known. Soybeans supply 40 percent of Brazil’s biodiesel. NASA has
positively correlated their market price with the destruction of the
Amazon rainforest—currently at nearly 325,000 hectares a year. Called
“The Diesel of Deforestation,” palm oil plantations for bio-diesel are
the primary cause of forest loss in Indonesia, a country with one of
the highest deforestation rates in the world. By 2020, Indonesia’s
oil-palm plantations will triple in size to 16.5 million hectares—an
area the size of England and Wales combined—resulting in a loss of 98%
of forest cover.[6] Neighboring Malaysia, the world’s largest producer
of palm oil, has already lost 87% of its tropical forests and continues
deforesting at a rate of seven percent a year.
Myth #3; Agro-fuels will bring rural development
In the tropics, 100 hectares dedicated to family farming generates
thirty-five jobs. Oil palm and sugar cane provide 10 jobs, eucalyptus
two, and soybeans a scant half-job per 100 hectares, all poorly paid.
Until recently, agro-fuels supplied primarily local and sub-regional
markets. Even in the U.S., most ethanol plants were relatively small,
and farmer-owned. With the agro-fuels boom big industry is quickly
moving in, centralizing operations and creating gargantuan economies of
scale. Big Oil, Big Grain, and Big Genetic engineering are rapidly
consolidating control over the entire agro-fuel value chain. The market
power of these corporations is staggering: Cargill and ADM control 65
percent of the global grain trade, Monsanto and Syngenta a quarter of
the $60 billion gene-tech industry. This market power allows these
companies to extract profits from the most lucrative and low-risk
segments of the value chain, e.g., inputs, processing and distribution.
Agro-fuels producers will be increasingly dependent on a
tightly-organized cabal of companies for their seed, inputs, services,
processing and sale. They are not likely to receive many
benefits.[7] More likely, smallholders will be forced out of the
market and off the land. Hundreds of thousands have already been
displaced by the soybean plantations in the “Republic of Soy” a 50+
million hectare area covering southern Brazil, northern Argentina,
Paraguay, and eastern Bolivia.[8]
Myth #4: Agro-fuels will not cause hunger
Hunger, said Amartya Sen, results not from scarcity, but poverty.
According to the FAO, there is enough food in the world to supply
everyone with a daily 3,200-calorie diet of fresh fruit, nuts,
vegetables, dairy and meat. Nonetheless, because they are poor,
824 million people continue to go hungry. In 2000, world leaders
promised to halve the proportion of hungry people living in extreme
poverty by 2015. Little progress has been made. The world's
poorest people already spend 50-80% of their total household income on
food. They suffer when high fuel prices push up food prices. Now,
because food and fuel crops are competing over land and resources, high
food prices may actually push up fuel prices. Both increase the prices
of land and water. This perverse, inflationary spiral puts food and
productive resources out of reach for the poor. The International Food
Policy Research Institute has estimated that the price of basic food
staples will increase 20-33 percent by the year 2010 and 26-135 percent
by the year 2020. Caloric consumption typically declines as price rises
by a ratio of 1:2. With every 1 percent rise in the cost of food, 16
million people are made food insecure. If current trends continue, some
1.2 billion people could be chronically hungry by 2025—600 million more
than previously predicted.[9] World food aid will not likely come
to the rescue because our surpluses will go to our gas tanks.
Perversely, food aid only increases when food prices are low, not high.
Instead of converting land to fuel production, what are urgently needed
are massive transfers of food-producing resources to the rural poor.
Myth #5: Better “second-generation” agro-fuels are just around the
corner
Proponents of agro-fuels like to reassure “food versus fuel” skeptics
by asserting that present agro-fuels made from food crops will soon be
replaced with environmentally-friendly crops like fast-growing trees
and switchgrass. This myth, wryly referred to as the “bait and
switch-grass” shell game, helps make first generation agro-fuels
socially acceptable.
The agro-fuel transition transforms land use on massive scales, pitting
food production against fuel production for land, water and resources.
The issue of which crops are converted to fuel is irrelevant. Wild
plants cultivated as fuel crops won’t have a smaller “environmental
footprint” because commercialization will transform their ecology. They
will rapidly migrate from hedgerows and woodlots onto arable lands to
be intensively cultivated like any other industrial crop—with all the
associated environmental externalities.
By genetically engineering plants with less lignin and cellulose, the
industry aims to produce cellulosic agro-fuel crops that break down
easily to liberate sugars, especially fast-growing trees. Trees are
perennial and spread pollen father than food crops. Cellulosic
candidates miscanthus, switch grass, and canary grass, are invasive
species. Given the demonstrated promiscuity of genetically-engineered
crops, we can expect massive genetic contamination. Monsanto and
Syngenta will be quite pleased. Agro-fuels will serve as their genetic
Trojan horse, allowing them to fully colonize both our fuel and food
systems.
Any technology with potential to avoid the worst impacts of global
warming must be commercially viable on a global scale within the next
5-8 years. This is highly unlikely with cellulosic ethanol, a product
that has thus far demonstrated no carbon savings. Making it a green,
viable product is not simply matter of scaling up existing technology,
but of major breakthroughs in plant physiology that permit the
economically efficient breakdown of cellulose, hemi-cellulose, and
lignin. The agro-fuel industry is either betting on miracles or
counting on taxpayer bail-outs. Faith in science is not science.
Selective faith in second-generation fuel—rather than working to
improve existing solar, wind, or conservation technologies—is bias in
favor of the highest bidder.
The Twin is Dead, Long live the Twin
The International Energy Agency estimates that over the next 23 years,
the world could produce as much as 147 million tons of agro-fuel. This
will be accompanied by a lot of carbon, nitrous oxide, erosion, and
over 2 billion tons of waste water. Remarkably, this fuel will barely
offset the yearly increase in global oil demand, now standing at 136
million tons a year—never mind offsetting any of the existing demand.
Is this worth it?
The agro-fuel transition closes a 200-year chapter in the relation
between agriculture and industry that began with the Industrial
Revolution. Then, the invention of the steam engine promised an end to
drudgery. However, industry’s take-off lagged until governments
privatized common lands, driving the poorest peasants out of
agriculture and into urban factories. Peasant agriculture effectively
subsidized industry with both cheap food and cheap labor. Over the next
100 years, as industry grew, so did the urban percentage of the world’s
population: from 3% to 13%. Cheap oil and petroleum-based fertilizers
opened up agriculture itself to industrial capital. Mechanization
intensified production, keeping food prices low and industry booming.
The next hundred years saw a three-fold global shift to urban living.
Today, the world has as many people living in cities as in the
countryside. [10] The massive transfer of wealth from agriculture
to industry, the industrialization of agriculture, and the rural-urban
shift are all part of the “Agrarian Transition,” the lesser-known twin
of the Industrial Revolution. The Agrarian/Industrial twins transformed
most of the world’s fuel and food systems and established non-renewable
petroleum as the foundation of today’s multi-trillion dollar agri-foods
complex.
The pillars of the agri-foods industry are the great grain
corporations, e.g., ADM, Cargill and Bunge. They are surrounded by an
equally formidable phalanx of food processors, distributors, and
supermarket chains on one hand, and agro-chemical, seed, and machinery
companies on the other. Together, these industries consume four of
every five food dollars. For some time, the production side of the
agri-foods complex has suffered from agricultural “involution” in which
increasing rates of investment (chemical inputs, genetic engineering,
and machinery) have not increased the rates of agricultural
productivity—the agri-foods complex is paying more and reaping less.
Agro-fuels are the perfect answer to involution because they’re
subsidized, grow as oil shrinks, and facilitate the concentration of
market power in the hands of the most powerful players in the food and
fuel industries. Like the original Agrarian Transition, the present
Agro-fuels Transition will “enclose the commons” by industrializing the
remaining forests and prairies of the world. It will drive the planet’s
remaining smallholders, family farmers, and indigenous peoples to the
cities. It will funnel rural resources to urban centers in the form of
fuel, and will generate massive amounts of industrial wealth.
Unfortunately, the agro-fuels transition suffers from a congenital
flaw: its fraternal twin is dead. There is no new Industrial
Revolution. No expanding industrial sector waits to receive displaced
indigenous communities, smallholders and rural workers. There are no
production breakthroughs poised to flood the world with cheap food.
This time, fuel will not subsidize agriculture with cheap energy. On
the contrary, fuel will compete with food for land, water and
resources. Agro-fuels collapse the industrial link between food and
fuel. Taken to its extreme, agro-fuel will be used to grow agro-fuel—a
thermodynamically pathetic proposition. The inherent entropy of
industrial agriculture was invisible as long as oil was abundant. Now,
food and fuel systems must shift from a savings to a checking account.
Agro-fuels lead us to overdraw. “Renewable” does not mean “limitless.”
Even if crops can be replanted, land, water, and nutrients are
limiting. Pretending otherwise serves the interests of those
monopolizing those resources.
Agro-fuel’s appeal lies with its potential to prolong the oil economy.
With an estimated one trillion barrels of oil reserves left on the
planet, $100-a-barrel oil is not far off.[11] The higher the oil
prices, the more ethanol costs can rise while remaining competitive.
Herein lays the contradiction for second generation agro-fuels: as oil
becomes more expensive, first generation agro-fuels become more
lucrative, discouraging the development of second-generation fuels. If
oil reaches $80 per barrel, ethanol producers could afford to pay over
$5 per bushel (~127 kg.) for corn, making it competitive with sugar
cane as well. The planet’s energy crisis is potentially an $80—100
trillion dollar bonanza for food and fuel corporations. No wonder we
are invited to consume our way out of over-consumption.
Limits—not incentives—must be placed on the agro-fuels industry. It is
unconscionable for the North to shift the burden of over-consumption to
the Global South simply because the tropics have more sunlight, rain
and arable land. If agro-fuels are to be forest and food friendly,
clearly the grain, cane, and oil-palm industries need to be regulated,
and not in piecemeal fashion. Strong, enforceable standards based on
limiting land planted to agro-fuels are urgently needed, as are
anti-trust laws powerful enough to prevent the corporate concentration
of market power in the industry. Sustainable benefits to the
countryside will only accrue if agro-fuels are a complement to
territorial plans for sustainable rural development, not the
centerpiece.
Building Food and Fuel Sovereignty
The Agro-fuels Transition is not inevitable. There is no reason to
sacrifice the possibility of sustainable, equitable food and fuel
systems to an industrial strategy that compromises both. Many
successful, locally-focused, energy-efficient and people-centered
alternatives are presently producing food and fuel in ways that do not
threaten food systems, the environment, or livelihoods. The question is
not whether ethanol and bio-diesel per-se have a place in our future,
but whether or not we allow a handful of global corporations to
determine our future by dragging us down the dead end of the agro-fuels
transition. To avoid this trap we have to abandon the cornucopian myths
left over from the age of abundant oil. We must dare to envision a
different, steady-state agrarian transition built on re-distributive
land reform that re-populates and stabilizes the world’s struggling
rural communities. We need to rebuild and strengthen our local food
systems, and ensure conditions for the local re-investment of rural
wealth. Putting people and environment—instead of corporate
mega-profits—at the center of rural development requires food
sovereignty: the right of people to determine their own food systems.
In both the Industrial North and the Global South, hundreds of
thousands of producers and consumers are actively organizing for their
right to healthy and culturally appropriate food produced through
ecologically sound and sustainable methods. They are also re-building
local food systems architecture to ensure that most of the wealth and
benefits of food systems accrue locally—not in the distant corporate
coffers of the agri-foods giants. They are holding agri-foods
corporations accountable for the externalities that their industry
imposes on taxpayers in the form of hunger, environmental destruction
and poor health from cheap, processed foods. Social movements for land
reform, indigenous rights, farmer-to-farmer sustainable agriculture,
ethical trade, farmers’ markets, community-supported agriculture,
inner-city gardens and neighborhood-food systems development, are a few
examples of the widespread, multi-faceted efforts for food sovereignty.
Organizations like international Via Campesina, Brazil’s landless
movement (MST), the Federation of Southern Cooperatives of
African-American Farmers, and the Community Food Security
Coalition, are transforming the social will from these rural and
urban movements into political will—the formula for social change.
Food Sovereignty movements are already squaring off with the agro-fuels
boom. When U.S. president George Bush arrived in Brazil to establish an
ethanol partnership with Lula, 700 women from Via Campesina greeted him
by occupying Cargill’s sugar mill in Sao Paulo in protest. But
derailing the agro-fuels juggernaut entails changing the Agro-fuels
Transition from an agrarian transition that favors industry to one that
actually favors rural communities—a transition that does not drain
wealth from the countryside, but that puts resources in the hands of
rural peoples. This is a far-reaching project. A good nest step would
be to launch a pro-active, global moratorium on the expansion of
agro-fuels. Time and public debate is needed to assess the potential
impacts of agro-fuels, and to develop the regulatory structures,
programs, and incentives for conservation and food and fuel development
alternatives. We need the time to forge a better transition—an agrarian
transition to food and fuel sovereignty.
Eric Holt-Giménez, Ph.D., is Executive Director, Food
First/Institute for Food and Development Policy
NOTES
1.Delft Hydraulics in George Monbiot, “If we want to save the planet,
we need a five-year freeze on biofuels” The Guardian, 3/27/2007
2. David Tilman and Jason Hill, Washington Post, 3/25/07
3. Miguel Altieri and Elizabeth Bravo, “The ecological and social
tragedy of biofuels,” 5/1/07, www.foodfirst.org ,
4. Ecologist, May, 2007
5. Plano Nacional de Agroenergia 2006-2011, In Camila Moreno,
“Agroenergia X Soberania Alimentar: a Questão Agrária do
século XXI”, 2006
6.The Ecologist, Ibid
7. Annie Dufey, “International trade in biofuels: Good for development?
And good for environment?” International Institute for Environment and
Development, 2006.
8. Bravo, E. 2006, Biocombustibles, cutlivos energeticos y soberania
alimentaria: encendiendo el debate sobre biocommustibles. Accion
Ecologica, Quito, Ecuador
9. C. Ford Runge and Benjamin Senauer, “How Biofuels Could Starve the
Poor”,
Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007
10. “The World Goes to Town,” The Economist, 5/11/07
11. Caroline Lucas Mep, et al “Fuelling a Food Crisis: The impact of
peak oil on food security”, The Greens/European Free Alliance, European
Parliament, 12/06
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Global Research Articles by Eric Holt-Giménez