Leaked documents show only cosmetic
changes
Brussels, 4 April 2008
- Leaked EU documents reveal that preliminary negotiations to establish
sustainability criteria for biofuels could fail to prevent an increase in
greenhouse gas emissions and fail to stop negative impacts on wildlife and
people, international environment groups warned today. The documents reveal
that EU Member States are currently planning to apply only cosmetic changes to
the very weak criteria put forward by the European Commission in January. [1]
Representatives from EU Member States are
currently meeting to agree sustainability criteria for the production of
biofuels. Last year European Heads of State agreed to increase biofuel use on
the condition that it could be done sustainably. The leaked documents dated 28
March reveal that Member States are ignoring growing scientific evidence
showing that many crops currently used to produce transport fuels may actually
increase rather than decrease greenhouse gas emissions, especially if wider
knock-on effects, such as changes in land use, are taken into account.
Green groups BirdLife International, European
Environmental Bureau, Friends of the Earth Europe and Greenpeace have written
to senior government officials from all EU countries urging them to reject weak
proposals for biofuels standards and reiterating their call for the EU to drop
its proposed mandatory target for 10 per cent of all transport fuels to be made
from biofuels by 2020. Any sustainable biomass that is available today should
be used where it is most efficient: primarily in the electricity and heating
sectors. [2]
Adrian Bebb,
agrofuels coordinator for Friends of the Earth Europe said: "These negotiations
show that the EU is prepared to dress biofuels up as green when in fact they
are instead causing widespread environmental damage and creating havoc for
wildlife and people. Using crops to feed cars instead of people is a recipe for
disaster."
Ariel
Brunner, agriculture policy officer for BirdLife International said: "It's time the EU
were brave enough to admit that currently proposed biofuels standards and
targets are unacceptable, and risk exacerbating the climate crisis and
devastating wildlife habitats. There is a lot of evidence to suggest that other
measures, such as improving vehicle efficiency or simply enforcing speed
limits, would be far more effective at addressing transport's emissions."
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For more information, please contact:
Ariel Brunner, BirdLife International, +32 238
5092 mobile +32 4866 30042
Adrian Bebb, Friends of the Earth Europe, +49
8025 99 19 51 mobile +49 1609 490 1163
Pieter de Pous, European Environmental Bureau,
+32-2891306 mobile +32 497 53 7264
Frauke Thies, Greenpeace, +32 227 41912 mobile
+32 477 790415
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