Media Release
Tuesday 24 June 2008
Embargoed until 6am, Wednesday 25 June 2008
Biofuels deepen poverty and accelerate climate
change: Oxfam report
The biofuel policies of developed countries like the US and the EU have dragged more than 30 million extra
people into poverty according to a report released today by international aid agency Oxfam.
The report, Another Inconvenient Truth, finds that biofuel policies are not solving climate change or the fuel
crisis but are instead contributing to food insecurity, hunger and inflation which hit poor people hardest.
Released today, the report calculates that developed country biofuel policies have dragged people into
poverty by causing a 30 per cent increase in global food prices.
The report follows last weeks news that food and drink companies including Unilever, Nestle, Cadbury and
Heineken asked the European Commission to review its policy that encourages biofuel production, stating
that they believed it would help drive agricultural commodity prices to further record highs.
Unlike many other developed countries, Australia has not set mandatory targets for biofuel production or
use.
Oxfam Australias biofuels and food crisis expert, Jeff Atkinson, said the report illustrated how catastrophic
policies like mandatory targets had been and urged the Australian Government not to adopt them.
Biofuel policies are actually helping to accelerate climate change and deepen poverty and hunger. Rich
countries demands for more biofuels in their transport fuels are contributing to spiralling production and food
inflation, Mr Atkinson said.
Mandatory targets for biofuel use place a legal obligation on fuel companies to blend a certain volume or
percentage of biofuels with the petrol and diesel they sell.
The evidence about the damage of mandatory targets is overwhelming, and we strongly urge the Australian
Government to ensure that these targets for biofuels are not adopted in Australia. Such targets would only
serve to put pressure on agricultural land in developing countries, Mr Atkinson said.
Mr Atkinson said the cultivation of biofuel products required mass land clearing that took over agricultural
land and forced farming to expand into lands like forests and wetlands. This triggered the release of
excessive and damaging carbon into the atmosphere, cancelling out the environmental benefits of biofuels.
He said in Indonesia, where peatland tropical rainforest was being cleared to make way for palm oil which is
used in biodiesel, it would take approximately 420 years of biofuel production to pay back the carbon debt
accrued from this destruction of the rainforests carbon stores.
Mr Atkinson said biofuels also would not address wealthy countries need for fuel security.
Even if the entire worlds supply of grains and sugars were converted into ethanol tomorrow in the
process giving the world less to eat we would only be able to replace 40 per cent of our petrol and diesel
consumption, Mr Atkinson said.
Rich country governments should not use biofuels as an excuse to avoid urgent decisions about how to
reduce their unfettered demand for petrol and diesel, he said.
For interviews for further information, please contact Laurelle Keough, Oxfam Australia Media
Liaison Coordinator Advocacy & Campaigns, on 0409 960 100