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I Pity the Fuel

Oxfam warns Europe's biofuel boom likely to worsen plight of world's poor

Posted at 7:45 AM on 01 Nov 2007

The anti-poverty charity Oxfam said this week that the European Union's rush to biofuels could hit the world's poor quite hard. The group released a report about the issue suggesting that without proper controls to make the biofuels boom sustainable and more just, it's likely to threaten the food supply and provide a large incentive to heavily concentrate land ownership for biofuels production, pushing many poor subsistence farmers and others off their land. Oxfam suggested that the E.U. work to ensure land rights, labor standards, and food security are protected in the countries that produce its biofuels, including Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Tanzania. "In the scramble to supply the E.U. and the rest of the world with biofuels, poor people are getting trampled," said Oxfam's Robert Bailey. "The E.U. proposals as they stand will exacerbate the problem. It is unacceptable that poor people in developing countries should bear the cost of questionable attempts to cut emissions in Europe."

sources:  Associated Press, BBC News, The Register
straight to the report:  Bio-Fueling Poverty [PDF]

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Biofuels Famine, poverty

I think its time we started to consider a broader set of morals on climate change.
We cannot expect the thrid world to maintain our way of living. We will have to share the wealth so they can improve their standards without costing the planet.
By the same token it is morally repugnant to convert food production to fuel.
If we were dumping food to maintain the price there would be an outcry.
More braodly we need to understand the total impact on developing economies  see http://www.greeninnovation.com.au/blog/forum/topic.php?id ...

Wayne Bingham www.greninnovation.com.au Painting the Planet Green

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