Friends
of the Earth International urges banks to stop fuelling harmful agrofuel boom
Brussels (Belgium) / Montevideo (Uruguay), 19
May 2008 - Many major European banks are funding the rapid expansion of
agrofuel production in Latin America, leading to large scale deforestation,
increasing human rights abuses and threatening food sovereignty, according to a
new report released today. [1]
The report - released by Friends of the Earth
Europe amid global worries about the increasing impacts of rising food prices -
calls for an end to investments by European banks in harmful agrofuel projects.
[2]
Agrofuels have been blamed as a major factor
driving up food prices. According to the UN and the World Bank, 100 million
more people are currently facing severe hunger due to higher prices for basic
foods. [3]
'European financing of agrofuel production in
Latin America' documents how major European banks, such as Barclays, Deutsche
Bank, BNP Paribas, Axa, HSBC, UBS and Credit Suisse are investing billions of
Euros in the production and trade of sugar cane, soybeans and palm oil in Latin
American countries.
Fuels from sugar cane, soybeans and palm oil
are increasingly used in Europe. Their large scale production in countries such
as Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Colombia is extremely controversial as it
leads to the destruction of the Amazon and other valuable ecosystems, as well
as to the contamination of drinking water. Large scale plantations also lead to
human rights violations against peasants, with working conditions on some
plantations in Brazil classed as modern slave labour.
At the same time agrofuel companies are making
record profits, enabled by loans, investments and other financial support from
private banks. All major European banks have invested billions of Euros over
recent years in agrofuel producing companies such as Cargill, Bunge, ADM, Cosan
and Brasil Ecodiesel. Several of these companies have been involved in, and
convicted of, illegal activities in Latin America. [4]
Some examples of European banks involvement:
- in 2007 Deutsche Bank owned 35 per cent of the shares of Brasil Ecodiesel
- Bunge currently has credit facilities worth more than a billion Euro from
banks such as Barclays, BBVA, BNP Paris, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Royal Bank of
Scotland, KBC and Credit Suisse
- in 2007 Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse provided financial services totalling
more than a billion Euros to Cosan
Paul de
Clerck, Friends of the Earth International corporate campaign coordinator, said: "Agrofuels are a
booming business and banks are out to make maximum money while millions of
people are suffering from lack of food and the environment is being destroyed.
Banks should immediately stop their investments in such harmful agrofuel
development."
Friends of the Earth is also calling on the
European Commission to revise its plans for a mandatory 10 per cent target for
the use of agrofuels in transport by 2020, which it says will exacerbate the
problems associated with the production of agrofuels. Agrofuels are billed as a
solution to climate change but growing scientific evidence shows that they 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.
"Using
crops to feed cars instead of people is a false solution to climate
change," added Mr de Clerck.
***
For more information, please contact:
In Brussels:
Paul de Clerck, Friends of the Earth International: Mobile: +32494380959, paul@milieudefensie.nl
In Montevideo:
Carlos Santos, Friends of the Earth Uruguay: Mobile: +5491160191836 /
+59898889498, carlos.santos@redes.org.uy
***