FAO calls for review of biofuel policies and subsidies
Biofuel policies and subsidies should be urgently reviewed in order to preserve the goal of world food security, protect poor farmers, promote broad-based rural development and ensure environmental sustainability, FAO said today in a new edition of its annual flagship publication The State of Food and Agriculture (SOFA) 2008.
By FFSNET
FAO calls for review of biofuel policies and subsidies Annual report weighs opportunities and risks of biofuels
Rome, 7 October 2008 - Biofuel policies and subsidies should be urgently reviewed in order to preserve the goal of world food security, protect poor farmers, promote broad-based rural development and ensure environmental sustainability, FAO said today in a new edition of its annual flagship publication The State of Food and www.fao.org/docrep/011/i0100e/i0100e00.htm Agriculture (SOFA) 2008.
"Biofuels present both opportunities and risks. The outcome would
depend on the specific context of the country and the policies
adopted," said FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf today. "Current
policies tend to favour producers in some developed countries over
producers in most developing countries. The challenge is to reduce
or manage the risks while sharing the opportunities more
widely."
Biofuel production based on agricultural commodities increased more
than threefold from 2000 to 2007, and now covers nearly two percent
of the world's consumption of transport fuels. The growth is
expected to continue, but the contribution of liquid biofuels
(mostly ethanol and biodiesel) to transport energy, and even more
so, to global energy use will remain limited.
Despite the limited importance of liquid biofuels in terms of
global energy supply, the demand for agricultural feedstocks
(sugar, maize, oilseeds) for liquid biofuels will continue to grow
over the next decade and perhaps beyond, putting upward pressure on
food prices.
Opportunities for the poor
If developing countries can reap the benefits of biofuel
production, and if those benefits reach the poor, higher demand for
biofuels could contribute to rural development.
"Opportunities for developing countries to take advantage of
biofuel demand would be greatly advanced by the removal of the
agricultural and biofuel subsidies and trade barriers that create
an artificial market and currently benefit producers in OECD
countries at the expense of producers in developing countries,"
Diouf said.
Other policy measures driving the rush to liquid biofuels, such as
mandated blending of biofuels with fossil fuels, as well as tax
incentives, have created an artificially rapid growth in biofuel
production. These measures have high economic, social and
environmental costs and should also be reviewed, according to the
report.
Food security
Growing demand for biofuels and the resulting higher agricultural
commodity prices offer important opportunities for some developing
countries. Agriculture could become the growth engine for hunger
reduction and poverty alleviation.
Production of biofuel feedstocks may create income and employment,
if particularly poor small farmers receive support to expand their
production and gain access to markets. Promoting smallholder
participation in crop production, including for biofuel, requires
investment in infrastructure, research, rural finance, market
information and institutions and legal systems.
Among the risks, however, food security concerns loom large. High
agricultural commodity prices are already having a negative impact
on developing countries that are highly dependent on imports to
meet their food requirements.
Particularly at risk are poor urban consumers and poor net food
buyers in rural areas. Many of the world's poor spend more than
half of their incomes on food. "Decisions about biofuels should
take into consideration the food security situation but also the
availability of land and water," Diouf said. "All efforts should
aim at preserving the utmost goal of freeing humanity from the
scourge of hunger," he stressed.
Greenhouse gases
When looking at the environmental dimension, the balance is not
always positive. "Expanded use and production of biofuels will not
necessarily contribute as much to reducing greenhouse gas emissions
as was previously assumed," the report finds. While some biofuel
feedstocks, such as sugar, can generate significantly lower
greenhouse gas emissions, this is not the case for many other
feedstocks.
The largest impact of biofuels on greenhouse gas emissions is
determined by land-use change. "Changes in land use - for example
deforestation to meet growing demand for agricultural products -
are a great threat to land quality, biodiversity, and greenhouse
gas emissions," Diouf noted.
Sustainability criteria based on internationally agreed standards
could help to improve the environmental footprint of biofuels, the
report states, but they should not create new trade barriers for
developing countries.
Second generation
The next generation of biofuels currently under development but not
yet commercially available, using feedstocks such as wood, tall
grasses, forestry and crop residues, could improve the fossil
energy and greenhouse gas balance of biofuels.
"There seems to be a case for directing expenditures on biofuels
more towards research and development, especially on
second-generation technologies, which, if well designed and
implemented, could hold more promise in terms of reductions in
greenhouse gas emissions with less pressure on the natural resource
base," Diouf said.
Access to Full document: www.fao.org/docrep/011/i0100e/i0100e00.htm


