E-Newsletter
Subscribe Now
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
 
MARKETPLACE
Job Board
Classifieds
Product News
COMMUNITY
Blog
Events
 
RESOURCES
E-Newsletter
Links
Sitemap
 
UN assesses crop- and forestry-based biofuels
Nov. 3, 2009, Nairobi, Kenya – A far more sophisticated approach needs to be taken when developing biofuels as an environmentally friendly energy option, a new report concludes. Governments should fit biofuels into an overall energy, climate, land-use, water, and agricultural strategy if their deployment is to benefit society, the economy, and the environment as a whole. The report Towards Sustainable Production and Use of Resources: Assessing Biofuels is based on a detailed review of research published up to mid-2009, as well as the input of independent experts worldwide. It is the first such report by the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP) International Panel for Sustainable Resource Management.

The report says that some first-generation biofuels such as ethanol from sugar cane can reduce greenhouse gas emissions. As currently practiced in a country such as Brazil, it can lead to emissions reductions of between 70 and well over 100% when substituted for petrol. However, the way in which biofuels are produced matters in determining whether they lead to more or less greenhouse gas emissions. The report identifies conditions under which the production of biofuels does lead to higher emissions. For example, the production and use of biodiesel from palm oil on deforested peatlands in the tropics can lead to significant increases in greenhouse gas emissions of up to 2000% when compared with fossil fuels. This is mainly a result of carbon releases from soil. However, greenhouse gas emissions reductions can arise if palm or soybeans are instead grown on abandoned or degraded land.

Examples of other beneficial biofuels are biomethane from manure, with emissions savings of over 170% and second-generation ethanol produced from agricultural and forestry wastes, with savings in the region of 80 to 90% over petrol.

The report notes that generating electricity at local power stations using wood, straw, seed oils, and other crop or waste materials "is generally more energy efficient that converting biomass to liquid fuels."

"Using abandoned or so called waste land for biofuels might be a sensible option, but it may also have implications for biodiversity, and greenhouse gas emissions might be better cut by forestry schemes,” says Professor Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker, who heads the Resource Panel.

Achim Steiner, UN under-secretary general and executive director of the UN Environment Programme, which hosts the Resource Panel, says: "Biofuels are neither a panacea nor a pariah, but like all technologies, they represent both opportunities and challenges. Therefore, a more sophisticated debate is urgently needed, which is what this first report by the Panel is intended to provide. On one level, it is a debate about which energy crops to grow and where, and also about the way different countries and biofuel companies promote and manage the production and conversion of plant materials for energy purposes—some clearly are climate friendly, whereas others are highly questionable."

A summary and the full report are available from the UNEP Energy branch Bioenergy webpage.