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De vraag die de FAO probeert te beantwoorden, betreft in de
eerste plaats ontwikkelingslanden zoals Tanzania, Peru en Thailand. Kan de
voedselzekerheid van de inwoners van die landen toenemen door de teelt van
biogewassen? Een aan de FAO verbonden econoom, Andre Croppenstedt, meent dat
het mogelijk is. Productie van biobrandstoffen hoeft volgens hem de teelt van
voldoende voedselgewassen niet in de weg te staan.
In het bijzonder de Afrikaanse landen hebben een groot
potentieel voor bio-energie. Afrika spiegelt zich aan Brazilië.
De verwachtingen zijn hooggespannen: “over 15 à 20 jaar
zullen biobrandstoffen voorzien in 25% van de wereldenergiebehoefte.”
Croppenstedt die betrokken was bij de beoordeling van een
project in Tanzania, zei dat het een voorwaarde is dat voor
biobrandstofproductie geen land wordt onttrokken aan de voedselteelten. Vooral
braakliggend land dat eerder in gebruik was door plantages wordt aangesproken.
Ook valt het woord ‘intercropping’ wat neerkomt op gecombineerde teelten van
voedsel- en energiegewassen. Agroforestry komt in beeld.
Boomgewassen vragen een langere aanlooptijd: oliepalmen: 10
tot 15 jaar; jatropa 5 tot 10 jaar. Suikerriet gaat sneller.
Volgens de FAO is de prijs van een vat bio-ethanol de helft
van die van een vat olie. Dat zal de ontwikkeling ten zeerste bespoedigen.
FAO
launches $3.7 million bioenergy study in developing world: biofuels can make
countries food secure
As oil
prices soar and biofuel production becomes more attractive, especially to poor
countries, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) is leading an
effort to study the potential for poor farmers to participate in the sector.
The three-year US$3.7 million project will help policy-makers assess the
potential effects of bioenergy production on food security and land-use in
developing countries. Three case studies will be investigated: Tanzania, Peru
and Thailand.
Biofuel
production to earn revenue could go 'hand-in-hand' with efforts to make
countries food secure says Andre Croppenstedt, an economist with the Agricultural
Development Economics Division of the UN Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO).
Many organisations think biofuels offer a historic opportunity for farmers in
Africa to diversify their crops, gain more income and thus boost food security
and social development. Croppenstedt explains why this is so:
Biofuel
production need not compete with food production. If biofuel demand generates
increased incomes for farm households, and this in turn is invested in raising
productivity of all farm activities, including food production.
Assuming that households typically do not only grow one or the other, then
biofuels could provide a stimulus to agricultural productivity, perhaps similar
to the experience of cotton farmers in some Sahelian countries.
African
countries have a large sustainable bioenergy potential. Projections by
scientists working for the International Energy Agency's Bioenergy Task 40
estimate its upper limit to be between 317 and 410 Exajoules of energy by 2050.
The projections show the potential left after meeting all food, fiber and
fodder requirements of rapidly growing populations and in a 'no deforestation'
scenario. This explicitly sustainable potential is roughly equivalent to the
world's total current fossil fuel consumption (coal, oil and gas), which stands
at around 400 Ej.
In short, in theory the African continent can supply domestic and world markets
with renewable bioenergy and fuels. But in order to tap this potential in a
sustainable manner and to ensure that local populations benefit, good planning
and strong policy frameworks are required. The FAO's study aims to help design
these policy measures.
'Devastating' oil prices
Biofuels
are a must for developing countries because the alternative - sticking to using
oil products - is set to damage their economies. According to the FAO, recent
oil price increases have had 'devastating' effects on many of the world's poor
countries: of the 50 poorest, 38 are net importers of petroleum and 25 import
all their petroleum requirements; some now spend up to six times as much on
fuel as they do on health, while others spend double the amount allocated to
poverty reduction on fuels, according to a report titled 'Sustainable
Bioenergy: A Framework for Decision Makers', released earlier by the UN.
Last year 13 African countries formed the Pan-African Non-Petroleum Producers
Association, formed to mitigate the effects of these catastrophic oil prices.
The goal of the association is to develop a biofuels industry in the continent
as an alternative. Many of these poor countries lie in tropical zones where
relatively low-cost and highly productive biofuel crops already grow and can be
expanded. "The gradual move from oil has begun," says Alexander Muller,
Assistant Director-General of Sustainable Development at the FAO. "Over
the next 15 to 20 years we may see biofuels providing a full 25 percent of the
world's energy needs." While the move is good for reducing greenhouse
emissions, soaring oil prices have encouraged most countries to go green by
switching to greater use of biofuels.
Global production of biofuels has doubled in the last five years and will
likely double again in the next four, according to the UN framework. Among the
countries that have enacted new pro-biofuel policies in recent years are
Argentina, Australia, Canada, China, Colombia, Ecuador, India, Indonesia,
Malawi, Malaysia, Mexico, Mozambique, the Philippines, Senegal, South Africa,
Thailand and Zambia.
On the other hand, the demand for biofuels is already having an impact on the
prices of the world's two leading agricultural biofuel feedstocks: maize and
sugar. For sugar the increase is good news, because most of it is produced in
developing countries like Brazil and India, as well as in Africa. Millions of
farmers there have suffered under low prices for years, and the slight increase
in the sugar price is welcomed. Moreover, for poor sugar producers, biofuels
offer a major chance to survive the EU's Sugar Reform. But for maize, the situation
looks different: the commodity is produced mainly in the U.S. and receives
large subsidies with the result that poor farmers in the South cannot compete.
The shift to subsidized ethanol enhances this effect and results in more corn
flowing to biofuel production.
For this reason, organisations, including the Global Bioenergy Partnership have
called on the U.S. and the E.U. to remove both biofuels subsidies and trade
barriers. This would result in imports of biofuels from developing countries
and reduce pressures on maize.
Land-use
The FAO
project will also analyse the land-use effects of bioenergy production.
"In the absence of comprehensive analyses and policies, commercial
production of biofuels may target high-quality lands - due to better profit margins
and high soil requirements of first-generation crops - such that biofuels, as
the 'next big cash crop', will be grown on the best lands, leaving cereals and
subsistence crops to the low-quality lands," the UN earlier noted.
This is one aspect the FAO project intends to monitor while it tries to
mainstream food-security concerns as countries develop bioenergy policies. The
Bioenergy and Food Security project has begun assessments in three countries:
Tanzania in Africa, Peru in South America and Thailand in Southeast Asia.
Croppenstedt, who was involved in the assessment in Tanzania, said the priority
at the moment was to ensure that any rural land acquired for biofuel production
had not previously been used for growing food crops. "Obviously, it is key
to get it right at this stage, that is, to make sure farmers are not left
landless."
The Tanzanian government was concerned that sugar plantations should not
displace or make subsistence farmers landless, and farmers who aimed to supply
a biofuel feedstock should not monocrop, Croppenstedt said. He added: From what
we have heard it would seem that some plantations use unused land, or rather,
previous plantation land that has since been abandoned.
At this
stage all the investors the FAO had spoken to in Tanzania were keen not to
comprise food security, and wanted to "promote intercropping or to advise
setting aside only part of the land for biofuel feedstock production. Investors
stressed that sustainability would imply easier access to land and finance in
the future, implying that they had an incentive to get it right."
Land acquisition is a complicated process in Tanzania and could delay biofuel
production. "Most land in Tanzania is either owned by the villages or is
designated as national land; land designated as national land is more easily
leased," says Croppenstedt.
"As I understand, the palm oil plantation would take 10 to 15 years before
it is fully operational; the jatropha plantation is going to be planted in
stages, and only if yields are high enough will they go ahead, and this should
take 5 to 10 years before becoming fully operational; the sugar cane plantation
we learned about plans to be fully operational by 2010," he said.
One of the investors planned to outsource biofuel crop production. "This
type of approach will create jobs and allow smallholders to join the biofuel
market," Croppenstedt said.
Rural development
Many
African leaders have been inspired by the success of another developing
country, Brazil, which started making biofuel 30 years ago and is now the
world's largest producer of bioethanol: about 1.5 million Brazilian farmers are
involved in growing sugar cane for fuel.
A barrel of bioethanol is currently half the price of a barrel of oil,
according to the FAO, and a million Brazilian cars run on fuel made from sugar
cane. This is a cost saving that many countries - developing and developed -
would like to emulate.
"As in Brazil, African countries should also develop a domestic market for
biodiesel," said Croppenstedt. Biofuel could also be used for small-scale
rural electrification. "In Tanzania there are efforts being made to
introduce generators that use SVO [straight vegetable oil] in rural areas. The
feedstock is jatropha."
The generators, promoted by TaTEDO, a non-governmental development
organisation, can provide power for machinery, recharge batteries and bring
electricity to village shops, and to households for some hours at night.
"The communities have passed by-laws to guarantee the supply of jatropha
seed for the generators [run by a selected/trusted 'entrepreneur' and
supervised by a community 'bioenergy' council]," said Croppenstedt.
"Although we do not know enough about jatropha, some of the agronomists we
talked to say it does well being intercropped with beans," he added.
"At the moment farmers seem to grow the plant in hedges."
Competition with the West
Even though
African countries have a very large sustainable biofuel potential "there
is much slack in terms of productivity in African agriculture - little irrigation,
very limited use of fertiliser - and hence there must be much scope for
improvements in productivity," Croppenstedt commented.
But the stumbling block is infrastructure development. "Transaction costs
are typically very high in African countries, and this is a hurdle for both
biofuel development and stimulating food production," he added. "How
will they compete with biofuel prices elsewhere in the world?"
The US and Europe are already offering subsidies to benefit domestic farmers
producing biofuel crops and have also imposed import tariffs to protect them.
"This has led to the strange irony of virtually unimpeded trade in oil,
while trade in biofuels is greatly restricted," the UN framework document
pointed out.
Most agricultural experts agree that opening international markets to biofuel
would accelerate investment and ensure that production occurred in locations
where costs were lower, such as poor countries in Central America and
sub-Saharan Africa.
October 25,
2007 Source: Biopact via
Checkbiotech
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