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Leading biofuels wreak environmental havoc

Leading biofuels wreak environmental havoc

Leading biofuels wreak environmental havoc
mongabay.com
January 3, 2008




Leading biofuels may be worse for environment than fossils fuels



Biofuels made from world’s dominant energy crops — including corn, soy, and oil palm — may have worse environment impacts than conventional fossil fuels, reports a study published in the journal Science.

Analyzing recent findings from a Swiss government study on 26 types of transport biofuels, Jorn P. W. Scharlemann and William F. Laurance say that arguments in favor of some large-scale biofuels often fail to fully account for the environmental costs of production, including destruction of forests, emissions of trace greenhouse gases, and air pollution. Fuels derived from “residual products, such as biowaste or recycled cooking oil, as well as ethanol from grass or wood” may offer lower environmental costs, according to the authors.


Oil-palm plantations in Malaysia on the island of Borneo. Satellite image courtesy of Google Earth. Lifecycle analysis of Indonesian palm oil — presently one of the highest yield energy crops — shows that palm biofuel produced on peatlands releases 8 to 21 times greater than those from diesel.


“Biofuels are going to have a massive impact on nature and our economies, and we need to focus on the smartest biofuels,” Laurance, a senior researcher at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, told mongabay.com. “Some of the most important biofuels–notably those produced from corn, soy and palm oil–are generally bad for the environment. Biofuel from sugarcane is also harmful if tropical forests are being destroyed to produce it.”

“The key point is that biofuels vary enormously in their relative merits. New biofuel technologies, especially those that focus on using fast-growing weedy plants or algae, are likely to be much more beneficial than using food crops for biofuels,” he continued. “Food crops require lots of water, fertilizer, pesticides, and prime agricultural land, and these should be used for food–not biofuels.”



CITATION: J.P.W. Scharlemann and W.F. Laurance (2007). “How Green are Biofuels?” SCIENCE VOL 319 4 JANUARY 2008

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