Commission announcement
fails the green test
Brussels,
June 10 - Commenting on the European Commission’s Communication on new
sustainability criteria for biofuels, Adrian Bebb, food and agriculture campaigner at
Friends of the Earth Europe said:
“Europe’s policy on biofuels is inherently
unsustainable. It is driving deforestation, damaging the environment, creating
more greenhouse gas emissions, increasing hunger and encouraging rampant
land-grabbing in the South. It will take a lot more than a few criteria and
voluntary schemes to make them sustainable. The EU should abandon this folly
and invest in genuine energy reductions in the transport sector.”
The
Communication attempts to clarify the sustainability criteria as part of the
Renewable Energy Directive that sets a mandatory 10% target for renewable
energy in transport, likely to be predominantly made up of biofuels. Although
palm oil plantations are no longer defined as forests, a move welcomed by
Friends of the Earth Europe, palm oil plantations remain environmentally
destructive [1]. Recent research by the European Commission [2] concluded that
if biofuels exceed 5.6% of Europe’s transport fuels, which is almost certain,
then they will “rapidly” increase climate emissions and “erode the environmental
sustainability of biofuels”.
Adrian Bebb, food and agriculture campaigner at
Friends of the Earth Europe said: “Europe’s palm oil use is driving deforestation in
countries like Malaysia, where profit is being put before both people and the
planet – with the resulting greenhouse gas emissions fuelling climate change
rather than curbing it. All efforts should be made to prevent the use of palm
oil in biofuels.”
***
For more
information, please contact:
Adrian Bebb,
food and agriculture campaign coordinator for Friends of the Earth Europe,
Tel: +49 1609
490 1163, adrian.bebb@foeeurope.org
Sam Fleet,
communications officer for Friends of the Earth Europe,
Tel: +32 2893
1012, samuel.fleet@foeeurope.org
***
Notes:
[1] Report on
deforestation as a result of palm oil development in Malaysia ‘Too Green to be
True’ - can be found here
http://www.foeeurope.org/publications/2010/Too_Green_to_be_True0310.pdf
[2] Global
Trade and Environmental Impact Study of the EU Biofuels Mandate: http://ec.europa.eu/trade/analysis/chief-economist/