New Report Urges Western Governments to Reconsider Reliance on Biofuels

- by Justin Gillis, Jan­u­ary 28, 2015, New York Times

West­ern gov­ern­ments have made a wrong turn in ener­gy pol­i­cy by sup­port­ing the large-scale con­ver­sion of plants into fuel and should recon­sid­er that strat­e­gy, accord­ing to a new report from a promi­nent envi­ron­men­tal think tank.

Turn­ing plant mat­ter into liq­uid fuel or elec­tric­i­ty is so inef­fi­cient that the approach is unlike­ly ever to sup­ply a sub­stan­tial frac­tion of glob­al ener­gy demand, the report found. It added that con­tin­u­ing to pur­sue this strat­e­gy — which has already led to bil­lions of dol­lars of invest­ment — is like­ly to use up vast tracts of fer­tile land that could be devot­ed to help­ing feed the world’s grow­ing population.

Some types of bio­fu­els do make envi­ron­men­tal sense, the report found, par­tic­u­lar­ly those made from wastes like saw­dust, tree trim­mings and corn­stalks. But their poten­tial is lim­it­ed, and these fuels should prob­a­bly be used in air­planes, for which there is no alter­na­tive pow­er source that could reduce emissions.

“I would say that many of the claims for bio­fu­els have been dra­mat­i­cal­ly exag­ger­at­ed,” said Andrew Steer, pres­i­dent of the World Resources Insti­tute, a glob­al research orga­ni­za­tion based in Wash­ing­ton that is pub­lish­ing the report. “There are oth­er, more effec­tive routes to get to a low-car­bon world.”

The report fol­lows sev­er­al years of ris­ing con­cern among sci­en­tists about bio­fu­el poli­cies in the Unit­ed States and Europe, and is the strongest call yet by the World Resources Insti­tute, known for non­par­ti­san analy­sis of envi­ron­men­tal issues, to urge gov­ern­ments to recon­sid­er those policies.

The report, which was made avail­able to The New York Times in advance of its Thurs­day morn­ing release, cites numer­ous exam­ples of what it describes as mis­guid­ed approach­es to fight­ing glob­al warm­ing.

For instance, under man­dates adopt­ed by Con­gress dur­ing the George W. Bush admin­is­tra­tion and sup­port­ed by the Oba­ma admin­is­tra­tion, as much as 30 per­cent to 40 per­cent of the Amer­i­can corn crop is being turned into fuel for cars each year, dis­plac­ing about 6 per­cent of the nation’s demand for gasoline.

Sev­er­al stud­ies have found that the pol­i­cy has helped dri­ve up glob­al food prices, has wors­ened some types of air pol­lu­tion and has done rel­a­tive­ly lit­tle to reduce over­all emis­sions of car­bon diox­ide, the gas pri­mar­i­ly respon­si­ble for glob­al warming.

In Europe, burn­ing wood pel­lets to dis­place coal has become a fun­da­men­tal strat­e­gy in the pow­er indus­try, dri­ven by exten­sive sub­si­dies and man­dates, par­tic­u­lar­ly in the Unit­ed King­dom. Mil­lions of tons of pel­lets are being pro­duced in the Unit­ed States and shipped to Europe.

The Amer­i­can indus­try sup­ply­ing that mar­ket says that it uses only waste wood or trees that would be cut down any­way when over­grown forests are thinned, and that it pays close atten­tion to issues of sustainability.

“We believe in mit­i­gat­ing cli­mate change,” said M. Seth Ginther, exec­u­tive direc­tor of the U.S. Indus­tri­al Pel­let Asso­ci­a­tion.

But some envi­ron­men­tal groups have grown dubi­ous of that asser­tion and argue that the con­tin­ued growth of the wood-pel­let indus­try is putting nat­ur­al forests at risk. They are pres­sur­ing the Euro­pean Union to recon­sid­er its approach.

Some of the bio­fu­el poli­cies in the West go back a decade or longer, adopt­ed on the basis of claims in the sci­en­tif­ic lit­er­a­ture that turn­ing plant mate­r­i­al into fuel would help low­er emis­sions of car­bon dioxide.

The basic the­o­ry was that, while burn­ing such fuel does emit the gas, it would then be removed quick­ly from the atmos­phere as plants grew and replaced those that had been used to pro­duce the fuel.

That was con­sid­ered a more sus­tain­able approach than the burn­ing of fos­sil fuels, which pulls car­bon from deep under­ground and injects it into the atmos­phere, trap­ping extra heat above the earth’s surface.

Tim­o­thy D. Searchinger, a research schol­ar at Prince­ton and pri­ma­ry author of the new report, said that more recent sci­ence had chal­lenged some of the assump­tions under­pin­ning many of the pro-bio­fu­el policies.

He said such poli­cies had often failed to con­sid­er the oppor­tu­ni­ty cost of using land to pro­duce plants for bio­fu­el, for instance.

If forests or grass­es were grown in their place, that would pull car­bon diox­ide out of the air, stor­ing it in tree trunks and soils and off­set­ting emis­sions more effec­tive­ly than bio­fu­els would do, he said.

More­over, bio­fu­els are an inef­fi­cient way to con­vert sun­light to fuel, mean­ing an immense amount of land would be required to sup­ply a sig­nif­i­cant frac­tion of glob­al ener­gy demand, Mr. Searchinger said.

That land will also be need­ed to help meet a glob­al appetite for food that is expect­ed to rise 70 per­cent or so by 2050, he said.

“We’ve only got one plan­et, with only so much land,” Mr. Searchinger said. “If you use land for one pur­pose, you can’t use it for another.”

Mr. Searchinger added that he was con­cerned by recent pol­i­cy state­ments from the Oba­ma admin­is­tra­tion that he said might open the door to exten­sive burn­ing of wood pel­lets in the Unit­ed States in the name of fight­ing glob­al warm­ing, sim­i­lar to what has hap­pened in Europe.

But Liz Purchia, a spokes­woman for the Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency, said the pol­i­cy in ques­tion was not final, and would be sub­mit­ted for review to a sci­en­tif­ic advi­so­ry pan­el appoint­ed by the agency.

Jason Hill, who stud­ies bioen­er­gy at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Min­neso­ta, was not involved in the World Resources Insti­tute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its con­clu­sions, par­tic­u­lar­ly the idea that turn­ing food crops into fuel makes lit­tle sense.

“It’s true that our first-gen­er­a­tion bio­fu­els have not lived up to their promise,” Dr. Hill said. “We’ve found they do not offer the envi­ron­men­tal ben­e­fits they were pur­port­ed to have, and they have a sub­stan­tial neg­a­tive impact on the food system.”

How­ev­er, Dr. Hill was more bull­ish than Mr. Searchinger on the poten­tial for new­er types of bio­fu­els made from crops plant­ed specif­i­cal­ly for that purpose.

Their poten­tial envi­ron­men­tal and eco­nom­ic ben­e­fits are not yet clear, and gov­ern­ments would be act­ing pre­ma­ture­ly if they were to aban­don research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubt­ed that they could ever sup­ply any large frac­tion of glob­al fuel demand.

Many of the pro-bio­fu­el poli­cies adopt­ed by West­ern gov­ern­ments date to a peri­od when oth­er types of renew­able ener­gy were viewed as pro­hib­i­tive­ly expen­sive. But costs for wind and solar pow­er have plum­met­ed over the past decade, and the new report points out that for a giv­en amount of land, solar pan­els are at least 50 times more effi­cient than bio­fu­els at cap­tur­ing the ener­gy of sun­light in a use­ful form.


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