Forget Biofuels - Burn Oil and Plant Forests Instead
By Catherine Brahic
NewScientist.com
Thursday 16 August 2007
It sounds counterintuitive, but burning oil and
planting forests to compensate is more environmentally friendly than
burning biofuel. So say scientists who have calculated the difference
in net emissions between using land to produce biofuel and the
alternative: fuelling cars with gasoline and replanting forests on the
land instead.
They recommend governments steer away from biofuel
and focus on reforestation and maximising the efficiency of fossil
fuels instead.
The reason is that producing biofuel is not a "green
process". It requires tractors and fertilisers and land, all of which
means burning fossil fuels to make "green" fuel. In the case of
bioethanol produced from corn - an alternative to oil - "it's
essentially a zero-sums game," says Ghislaine Kieffer, programme
manager for Latin America at the International Energy Agency in Paris,
France (see Complete carbon footprint of biofuel - or is it?).
What is more, environmentalists have expressed
concerns that the growing political backing that biofuel is enjoying
will mean forests will be chopped down to make room for biofuel crops
such as maize and sugarcane. "When you do this, you immediately release
between 100 and 200 tonnes of carbon [per hectare]," says Renton
Righelato of the World Land Trust, UK, a conservation agency that seeks
to preserve rainforests.
Century-Long Wait
Righelato and Dominick Spracklen of the University
of Leeds, UK, calculated how long it would take to compensate for those
initial emissions by burning biofuel instead of gasoline. The answer is
between 50 and 100 years. "We cannot afford that, in terms of climate
change," says Righelato.
The researchers also compared how much carbon would
be stored by replanting forests with how much is saved by burning
biofuel grown on the land instead of gasoline.
They found that reforestation would sequester
between two and nine times as much carbon over 30 years than would be
saved by burning biofuels instead of gasoline (see bar chart, right).
"You get far more carbon sequestered by planting forests than you avoid
emissions by producing biofuels on the same land," says Righelato.
He and Spracklen conclude that if the point of
biofuels policies is to limit global warming, "policy makers may be
better advised in the short term to focus on increasing the efficiency
of fossil fuel use, to conserve existing forests and savannahs, and to
restore natural forest and grassland habitats on cropland that is not
needed for food."
They do admit, however, that biofuels made from
woody materials such as prairie grasses may have an advantage over
reforestation - although it is difficult to say for now as such fuels
are still in development (see Humble grasses may be the best source of
biofuel).
Forests at high latitudes have been found to
sequester less carbon than tropical forests (see Some forests may speed
global warming). But Righelato says this does not affect his
calculations as biofuel crops are not, by and large, grown in these
areas.