Greenpeace today welcomed the government's announcement of a scientific review
into the impacts of biofuels, but insisted that Britain's biofuel targets be
suspended until the full consequences of the technology are properly understood.
The study, to be conducted by the UK's
new Renewable Fuels Agency (1), will look both at the immediate impact of
biofuels and at so-called "indirect effects".
For example, these effects
include an increase in demand for palm oil, which is imported into the EU to be
used in the food industry because homegrown rape seed oil is increasingly being
used in biofuels. Palm oil is heavily linked with deforestation in Indonesia, which creates massive
greenhouse gas emissions (2).
Recent scientific evidence shows that
these "indirect effects" could produce huge greenhouse gas emissions which would
more than negate any potential savings that biofuels can offer over conventional
fuels like petrol and diesel (3).
However, current government and EU
policies will oblige all suppliers to include biofuels in the fuel mix over the
next few years. The UK policy, called the Renewable
Transport Fuel Obligation, comes into operation on 15 April this year. From this
date, every forecourt in the country will have to provide 2.5 per cent of its fuel from
biofuel sources - rising to 5% by 2010.
Responding to the news, John
Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK
said: "The scientific evidence is mounting - biofuels are often more
damaging to the climate than the fossil fuels they are designed to replace.
While it's good news that the Government has commissioned a report to assess the
consequences of these fuels, the fact remains that from April this year we'll be
forced to pump biofuels into our petrol tanks. The government needs to introduce
a moratorium on the UK's biofuel targets until this
review has been published."
Biofuels currently make up a proportion of
the EU's 2020 renewable energy target. Greenpeace believes that it is essential
that if biofuels are taken out of this mix then the headline target remains the
same, and the shortfall is made up by the electricity and heat sectors - where
technologies such as wind, wave, tidal, solar, biomass, biogas and hydro power
can all contribute.
Indeed, it is widely accepted that using biofuels in
the transport sector is far less effective than using the same land to grow
biomass (like wood chip) for use in the heating and electricity sectors.
Sauven continued: "The uncertainty over biofuels must not be
used as an excuse to derail the EU's ambitious renewable energy targets. We need
to produce 20 per cent of our energy from renewables by 2020 to show real leadership at
tackling climate change - but we can achieve this without the use of biofuels."
(1)See announcement at www.gnn.gov.uk/Content/... and
more about the Renewable Fuel Agency at www.dft.gov.uk/rfa/abouttherfa.cfm
(2) See www.greenpeace.org.uk/media/reports/cooking-the-climate
(3)
Searchinger et al, Science, published online 7 Feb 2008. www.sciencemag.org/cgi/rapidpdf/1151861.pdf