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6.3. Biofuels policy issues related to economic development and environmental sustainability

6.3. Biofuels policy issues related to economic development and environmental sustainability. Brent Swallow and Henning Baur, ICRAF. Objectives. To identify the key opportunities and challenges of biofuels To identify some of the implications for investments in the forestry sector.

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6.3. Biofuels policy issues related to economic development and environmental sustainability

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  1. 6.3. Biofuels policy issues related toeconomic development and environmental sustainability Brent Swallow and Henning Baur, ICRAF

  2. Objectives • To identify the key opportunities and challenges of biofuels • To identify some of the implications for investments in the forestry sector

  3. Potential benefits from biofuels • Increased energy availability & security • Reduced greenhouse gas emissions • Increased incomes for biofuel and food producers • Increased employment and economic development in rural areas

  4. International bio-energy markets developing fast • Excitement • Opportunities for importing and exporting regions • Entrepreneurs and policy now deal with a rapidly evolving international context • Concerns • Fierce debate on sustainability • Different interests & perspectives on governance & policy • Vulnerable stage, current energy regime still firmly entrenched

  5. Water? • A large-scale expansion of energy crop production would lead to a large increase in evapotranspiration appropriation for human uses • Need to consider restrictions from competing demand for water resources Source: Berndes 2002

  6. What about cheap food for the cities? • low food prices have helped keep rural populations poor, and have worked to prevent improved productivity • These poor people will benefit from the higher food prices that the increased demand associated with biofuels is causing • Urban poor suffer • Must boost staple food productivity to protect urban poor • Increased value for rural products can help many rural poor

  7. A historical moment? • Current crisis in overshooting the global carrying capacity requires bold action • fast • challenging • Bioenergy offers a huge opportunity • sustainable land use + rural development + energy substitution + climate change mitigation

  8. A possible biofuels future? 1/2 • 100 EJ* from forest and agricultural residues and organic wastes • 100 EJ from restoration schemes on degraded lands • 200 EJ from good quality land released due to higher efficiency in agriculture *EJ=exajoule= 1018 joules.

  9. A possible biofuels future? 2/2 • +/- 400 EJ is an expected 1/3 of the worlds future energy needs • Represents a trillion US $ market value worldwide • With appropriate increases in food productivity, would involve about 20% of agricultural and pasture land

  10. Biofuels policy challenges • Energy regime change • Increasing returns on investment, global convergence, dialogue, investment priorities • GHG balance, chain performance (30-80%+) • Land access and use • Competition with food • Biodiversity • Well being and livelihoods • Standards and certification

  11. A kind of conclusion • Energy transition needed: from fossil to flow • Biofuel production is still at a immature stage • Government policies ahead of the science. • The potential of first generation biofuel limited. Second-generation biofuels in 10 - 15 years. • Biofuels can substitute for some of the present energy imports • Conservation, fuel efficiency, new technologies, must be part of a serious and concerted effort by governments, academia, and the private sector to devise a post-petroleum future.

  12. A major research and development effort is needed in both public and private sectors Key objectives include among others: • increased yield per hectare of feedstock while reducing negative environmental impacts; • development of new feedstocks that can, for example, be grown in more hostile environments, be more readily processed and be capable of generating a variety of products; • increasing resource use efficiencies; • ensuring equitable profits; • improved methods of processing, in particular for lignocellulosefeedstocks; • internationally agreed methods of assessing sustainability

  13. Thank you for your attention

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