12 January 2008

CLIMATE CHANGE AND ECONOMIC EQUITY: Biofuel incentives still forgetting about deforestation


In the face of mounting evidence that jatropha and other biofuel options are environmentally damaging to produce - monoculture issues, pollution, deforestation, short-term fertile cycles on land, land grabbing, loss of community benefits, elite capture, etc - some car firms are more interested in having something to report on their greencredentials in 2008's Annual Report ... HOWEVER, it will be beneficial in some locations - as Damlier state: "Since jatropha can be cultivated on barren land, it does not compete for land that is being used for food production, and thus provides farmers with an additional source of income". Let's hope its not just rich plantation farms only that benefit, and that the degraded land is re-invigorated through this production.


Source: African Agriculture: "Car maker Daimler, partners explore jatropha as a biodiesel source"
German carmaker Daimler AG has teamed up with Archer Daniels Midland and Bayer CropScience to explore tropical plant jatropha as a biodiesel fuel, Daimler said.
"Biodiesel derived from jatropha nut kernels has properties similar to those of biofuels obtained from oilseed rapes. It is also characterised by a positive CO2 balance and can thus contribute to protecting the climate," the companies said in a statement.
The partners aim to develop production and quality standards for jatropha-based biofuel. ADM runs several biodiesel refineries worldwide, while Bayer plans to develop herbicides, insecticides and fungicides for Jatropha plants.
Daimler has already completed a five-year project which demonstrated that jatropha can be used to make biodiesel. It will continue to explore the interactions between the fuel and engines.
Jatropha, a wild plant, has never been professionally cultivated, the statement said, suggesting the plant could be grown on 30 million hectares of land, especially in South America, Africa and Asia.
"Since jatropha can be cultivated on barren land, it does not compete for land that is being used for food production, and thus provides farmers with an additional source of income," it added.

No comments: