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Drive
1,000 Miles or Feed a Person for a Year?
The Biofuels Dilemma
John Lee / Aurora Select for TIME
A tiny sliver of transitional rain forest is surrounded by
hectares
of soybean fields in the Mato Grosso state, Brazil.
By
Stan Cox
Can the pumping of ethanol into American fuel tanks really
make it harder for parents to feed their families? Tools
With hungry, angry people taking to the streets in countries
on every continent -- from Morocco to Mexico and Pakistan to
the Philippines, and at least 20 other nations -- the biofuel
debate is clearly moving into new territory.
Arguments
for and against using crops to make fuel are no longer focusing
on energy ratios or "independence from
foreign oil" or feel-good environmentalism. The headlines
today are about people needing food to eat -- and right now.
Politicians
who once supported biofuel expansion are now backpedaling
fast in the face of irate grocery shoppers in this country
and an increase in hunger across the planet. Representative
James McGovern, D-Mass., was one of the first national lawmakers
to raise alarms about the impact of grain-based biofuels on
food prices, telling the New York Times last month, "If
there was a secret vote [in Congress], there is a pretty large
number of people who would like to reassess what we are doing." Now
24 Republican members of Congress, citing high food prices,
have come out into the open to urge a retreat from the Energy
Independence and Security Act of 2007, which mandates rapid
increases in biofuel production.
State officials across the country are also looking to bail
out of the biofuel rush. Gov. Rick Perry of Texas has formally
requested that the federal government relax biofuel requirements
imposed on his state. Also responding to runaway food costs,
the Missouri legislature is considering a rollback of its own
recently passed law requiring that gasoline must be mixed with
a minimum percentage of ethanol.
Filling gas tanks or plates?
The
agriculture lobby has legendary clout in Washington, so current
biofuel
targets, along with heavy subsidies that keep
the industry alive, will stay in place for now. The 2008 farm
bill, which has entered the homestretch in Congress, cuts the
corn-ethanol subsidy by only 6 cents, to 45 cents per gallon,
while the subsidy for the "next generation" of ethanol
(to be made from grass, straw, and other cellulosic materials)
will rise to more than a dollar a gallon. To soften the rapid
food-price inflation that's expected to result, the new law
will increase food aid to lower-income Americans.
Perhaps the starkest measure of the car culture's energy appetite
is the fact that the state of Iowa, the nation's leading corn
producer, will soon be importing corn. If a meteorite were
to land randomly in Iowa, there's a 35 percent chance it would
land in a cornfield; Iowa's corn harvest last year contained
more calories than the state's human population would consume
in 85 years of eating; yet Iowa will be hauling corn in from
other states. The grain will be fed to a multitude of new fuel-ethanol
factories, along with the state's existing corn syrup and livestock
industries.
The world is learning fast that when fuel demand competes
with food needs for the sun's energy, it's not a fair fight.
The energy contained in the gasoline that fills a typical SUV's
tank contains approximately the same number of calories as
are required in the annual diet of one adult. Or, rather than
picking on SUVs, consider the energy burned by a Prius hybrid
on a trip from San Francisco to San Diego and back. That would
also feed a person for a year.
Measured in energy units like kilocalories, world demand for
liquid fuels (gasoline, jet fuel, diesel and now biofuels)
is currently more than six times the global demand for food.
In energy terms, fuel demand will shoot up three times as fast
as food demand between now and 2030.
But such comparisons don't prove cause-and-effect. Can the
pumping of ethanol into American fuel tanks really make it
harder for parents in Yemen or Indonesia to feed their families?
An
ethanol industry-funded group called the New Fuels Alliance
doesn't
think so. In its briefing paper entitled "Fuel
vs. Food: No Conflict" (pdf), the group insists (reviving
the old Cold War term for less powerful nations) that "Third
world food shortages are largely due to political and social
issues such as poverty, government corruption, and inefficient
distribution ... Corn prices have little impact on food availability
in the Third World ... Food availability per capita is at an
historic high."
That last claim is simply wrong. A close look shows that it
was based on data from the late 1980s and early 1990s. The
amount of food available per person has been falling steadily
since that time; agriculture is not keeping up with humanity's
nutritional needs and is now being asked to fill the tanks
of vehicles as well.
Nevertheless,
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Ed Schafer told a recent International
Food Aid Conference in Kansas City, "Higher
[fossil] energy prices are the biggest factor in pushing up
food prices." He stressed, "Biofuels are a factor,
but not the factor." President Bush reiterated his strong,
if grammatically shaky, support for biofuels in a recent speech: "As
you know, I'm
a ethanol person." He has rejected the Republican
lawmakers' call for restraint and blamed food inflation on
people in India who, he believes, are eating too much.
Most
experts agree that, indeed, several factors have converged
to intensify
the food crisis. But in a very recent report,
the World Bank left no doubt where greatest responsibility
for the current food emergency lies. The report's authors dispensed
with two commonly cited reasons for high prices, stating, "Droughts
in Australia and poor crops in the European Union and Ukraine
were largely offset by good crops and increased exports in
other countries," and "only a relatively small share
of the increase in food production prices (around 15 percent)
is due directly to higher energy and fertilizer costs."
The
bottom line for the World Bank? "Increased bio-fuel
production has contributed to the rise in food prices... Almost
all of the increase in global maize production from 2004 to
2007 (the period when grain prices rose sharply) went for biofuels
production in the U.S."
How price shocks get from here to there
As
economists debate the theory of "price transmission" --
for example, the effect of rising corn prices in Iowa on the
price of wheat in Egypt -- the real-world data are coming in,
and they show that the economic, physical, and biological links
between biofuels and food can reach effortlessly across the
planet.
In late 2006 to early 2007, the Mexican livestock industry
was hit hard by the rising price of imported U.S. yellow corn
(which is not eaten by people but goes to produce meat, eggs,
corn syrup for soft drinks, and, increasingly, fuel ethanol.)
Domestic white corn, a food staple in Mexico used mostly to
make tortillas, was cheaper and was being diverted to animal
feedlots. The resulting scarcity and high prices led to widespread
unrest.
The
Chinese government has forbidden the use of traditional cropland
for biofuel production. But demand for biofuels is
rising in the the world's largest nation, so, according to
reports, "China is looking for [biofuel] feedstock production
opportunities outside its borders, [in] Laos, Cambodia, Malaysia,
Indonesia and the Philippines" -- a development that could
hit food production hard in those countries. China reportedly
has a keen interest in ethanol from cassava as well. To get
enough cassava, a starchy root crop that keeps some of the
world's poorest subsistence farmers alive, China would have
to import it from countries that are already struggling to
produce enough food.
Farmers have been forced off their good cropland in oil-rich
Indonesia and Colombia to make way for oil-palm plantations.
U.N. investigator Jean Ziegler has documented the coerced or
forced eviction of subsistence farmers in Brazil, Argentina,
and Paraguay, which is occurring with the encouragement or
even collusion of soy agribusiness interests (pdf). Rising
demand for biodiesel will put even more pressure on South American
farm families who grow food crops, according to forecasts.
Before the recent devastating cyclone hit them, the farmers
of Burma were already staggering under a government mandate
to grow the shrub Jatropha curcas for biodiesel production,
and rice production was taking
a hit.
Food
activists have long argued that so-called "dumping" by
the United States and other nations -- that is, selling surplus
grain cheaply on the world market -- drives down prices that
farmers receive in poorer countries, pushes them off their
land and distorts agricultural production. Now, says the New
Fuels Alliance, "as the U.S. ethanol market absorbs grain
surpluses that would otherwise be dumped on the international
market, small Third World farmers have a better chance of staying
in business."
But a recent survey by the International Food Policy Research
Institute in Washington (IFPRI) casts doubt on that happy prediction.
Looking at who buys and sells food in the markets of Bolivia,
Bangladesh, Zambia and Ethiopia (countries all currently suffering
food shocks), IFPRI found that while only 1 percent to 4 percent
of food is sold by poor farmers, 10 percent to 22 percent of
food is sold to the poor people of those countries (pdf). The
conclusion: Many more hungry people stand to lose than to gain
from higher prices.
Estimates
are that each 1 percent rise in the price of staple foods
(in excess of "normal" inflation) will subject
16 million additional people to hunger. IFPRI projects, "If
biofuel production undergoes a drastic increase, calorie availability
in sub-Saharan Africa is projected to fall by more than 8 percent,
and the number of malnourished children in the region is projected
to increase by 3 million [by 2020]."
As
major world crops are drawn into the energy market (in which
prices
are twice as volatile as in the food market),
it appears that other staple foods are being pulled in with
them. Noting that in the world's poorest regions, people can
spend 50 percent to 80 percent of their income on food, economists
C. Ford Runge and Benjamin Senauer of the University of Minnesota
warn, "When one staple becomes more expensive, people
try to replace it with a cheaper one, but if the prices of
nearly all staples go up, they are left with no alternative."
IFPRI predicts that the sheer quantity of food available will
drop by 5 percent to 8 percent in Latin America, South Asia
and Africa if biofuels are aggressively pursued. Were food
consumption to shrink by a similar percentage in the United
States, it might actually be a good thing, but in regions where
many millions are already malnourished, it could be a death
sentence, says IFPRI.
The cash crop trap
Cash crops -- including sugarcane, coffee, cotton, lumber
-- have a long track record of crippling nations' ability to
feed themselves. Energy crops grown in the tropics are projected
to follow in that cash-crop tradition. Brazil provides a key
example. Hailed as a leader in alternative fuels, Brazil has
based its ethanol industry on sugarcane, and that, according
to labor groups, has only perpetuated the exploitation that
always attends the growing of that crop.
The
country's Landless Workers' Movement has condemned a national
policy
of encouraging sugarcane production for ethanol on big
estates and even on lands being resettled under agrarian reform.
Cane cutters are paid not by the hour but by the quantity they
cut, and, writes the Movement, "This situation has serious
implications for the health of workers and has caused the death
of workers through fatigue and the excessive labor that requires
cutting up to 20 tons per day. The majority of contracts are
through third-party intermediaries or 'gatos' [so] formal work
contracts do not exist."
Another way in which biofuel production could make food more
scarce in the near future is by driving up demand for synthetic nitrogen
fertilizer. Lavish quantities are needed to achieve
high Midwestern corn yields, but synthetic nitrogen is even
more essential to the life of many poor nations. If farming
depended solely on naturally occurring nitrogen fertility,
the planet's cropped acreage could feed only about 50 percent
of today's human population.
In corn fields and rice paddies across the global south, farmers
pace back and forth with panfuls of commercial fertilizer,
metering out the precious granules by the handful. Meanwhile
in America's Corn Belt, big farm implements stuff more nitrogen
into the soil than the soil can hold or crops can absorb. As
natural gas (the chief input for making nitrogen fertilizer)
becomes even more expensive and the world market decides who
gets access to costly nitrogen, it will be ethanol cropping
-- whether it's with corn, switchgrass or other nitrogen-hungry
species -- that goes straight to the head of the line.
The
Worldwatch Institute's Lester Brown has been talking for
months now
about "competition for grain between the world's
800 million motorists and its 2 billion poorest people who
are simply trying to survive." The competition for nitrogen
is forecast to be just as sharp, with the wealthier motorists
favored to win.
Undercutting future harvests?
More than a century of research, on top of millennia of experience,
show that cropping of annual plants like wheat, rice, corn
and soybeans inevitably degrades soil (see this review in Scientific
American). It is estimated that almost 5 billion acres -- 15
percent of the planet's entire land surface -- is now subject
to human-caused soil degradation, mostly from agriculture.
On
this continent, two developments have helped reduce soil loss
by one-third over
the past two decades: adoption of so-called "no-till" methods
for reducing soil erosion and congressional passage of the Conservation
Reserve Program (CRP), which pays farmers to take the most erodable
land out of production altogether and sow it to mixtures of native
grasses and other plants. The CRP accounts for a much bigger
reduction in soil loss than does no-till, but both have helped. Biofuels
now threaten to undermine future food production by reversing
hard-won progress against soil degradation. First,
the high price of biofuel crops is leading farmers to withdraw
millions of acres from the CRP and put them back into cultivation.
That will reduce the useful lifetime of those soils, which
need permanent perennial vegetation. Second, as soon as methods
for producing ethanol from cellulose have been employed on
a large scale, crop "residues" -- the dry stems
and leaves left on the ground after harvest -- will be collected
and hauled off to biofuel plants.
A U.S. Department of Energy/Department of Agriculture blueprint
(pdf) for supplanting just 30 percent of U.S. petroleum consumption
with biofuels would not only consume vast quantities of intensively
cropped grain but would also strip 75 percent of crop residues
from the soil after harvest. That will further deplete the
organic-matter content of farm soils. Concern is also rising
that stepped-up depletion and pollution of water
resources by corn destined for ethanol plants will undercut America's
capacity to produce food in the future.
Future
food supplies elsewhere in the world also depend on intact,
healthy ecosystems, and those appear to be under threat.
In a recent Time cover
story, Michael Grunwald described
the "chain
reaction" that has accelerated deforestation in the Amazon
basin: "U.S. farmers are selling one-fifth of their corn
to ethanol production, so U.S. soybean farmers are switching
to corn, so Brazilian soybean farmers are expanding into cattle
pastures, so Brazilian cattlemen are displaced to the Amazon.
It's the remorseless economics of commodities markets." Indonesia
and Malaysia face a similar crisis, with oil palm plantations
displacing rainforests in order to supply biofuels for Europe.
The
bottom line on the food crisis was summed up in a May 6 commentary by Barry Coates, executive director of Oxfam New
Zealand, in which he reminded the world that "even without
the current food crisis, over 850 million people do not have
enough to eat. Now many more face a similar fate."
Meanwhile
India's Finance Minister P. Chidambaram has articulated an
ethical bottom line: "As citizens of the world, we
ought to be concerned about growing food and converting it
into fuel [to meet] lopsided priorities of certain countries.
It is the most foolish thing that humanity can do."
The ethanol and biodiesel industries have struggled for decades
to overcome technological, biological and political obstacles.
Now, just as the biofuel express gathers some real momentum,
the prospect of worldwide hunger could derail it for good.
Stan
Cox is
a senior scientist at The Land Institute in Salina, Kansas. He
worked for the US Department of Agriculture from 1984 to 1996
and has a Ph.D. in plant genetics. His recent
book "Corporate Food and
Medicine", Pluto Press, shows how food and drug companies are
destroying the planet. Petroleumworld
does not necessarily sharethese views.
Editor's
Note:This commentary was originally published by AlterNet,
May 9, 2008. Petroleumworld reprint this
article in
the interest of our readers.
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