The article below is from the Oil and Natural Gas Journal, a trade newsletter 
in the oil and gas business. Some of the questions and the need for research 
that I raised in my last emails on biofuel were also raised in the biofuels 
conference in Brussels today. It makes me feel good that international 
attention is being paid to second generation non-food based biofuels and people 
are talking about measures to regulate the industry internationally. our talk 
of a comparative study between Bhwt Era and Nahor plants is in the same 
direction.
   
  Your comments on the subject after you read the article will be welcome.
   
  Dilip
  =========================================================
   
  Biofuels pitfalls need more study, say conferees
  Doris Leblond
OGJ Correspondent 
  BRUSSELS, July 11 -- Amid the current clamor for biofuels development came 
cautions from a number of speakers at the first International Biofuels 
Conference in Brussels July 5-6 that biofuels are "no panacea" and that 
potential drawbacks need to be identified and avoided. 
  Biofuels are being touted by many as an alternative to fossil fuels for 
transportation and for combating climate change, bolstering energy supply 
security, and benefiting farmers. 
  However the European Union's External Relations Commissioner Benita 
Ferrero-Waldner, who organized the conference, warned, "We cannot afford to 
turn a blind eye to the potential drawbacks. We need to analyze them and avoid 
them." 
  Ferrero-Waldner said an analysis should be carried out at the international 
level because "the benefits and risks of developing biofuels on a grand-scale 
have to be tackled as part of an international agenda." 
  The consensus among the speakers was that no country—even the US—could deal 
alone with the challenges of climate change and energy security and that 
convergent international standards for biofuels should be developed in line 
with their global trading. 
  "Biofuel policy is not ultimately an industrial policy or an agricultural 
policy—it is an environmental policy, driven above all by the greenest 
outcomes," said EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson. 
  "We do not usually think about the immense complexity of the infrastructure 
that supplies our energy," Mandelson said in an effort to temper what he called 
"an environmentally unsustainable stampede" towards biofuels production. "No 
industry works with a longer time horizon: It takes 5 years to build a 
pipeline, 10 years for a power station or refinery. So we must recognize the 
need for a stable regulatory framework, and for dependable signals from 
governments to guide investment and trade." 
  Promising that the EU's energy policy target of a 10% share of biofuels for 
transport by 2020—a nearly sevenfold increase—would be "binding," EU Energy 
Commissioner Andris Pielbags insisted that it also must be "sustainable." The 
directive giving legal backing to the policy will set minimum sustainability 
standards for both domestically produced and imported biofuels, he said, 
adding, "We must aim at the earliest possible entry into the market of 'second 
generation' biofuels," which are not food-related. 
  Claude Mandil, executive director of Paris-based International Energy Agency, 
told OGJ that the positive aspect of the conference, which he cochaired, was 
that it showed a "passing from poetry to serious thinking." 
  While biofuels served to diversify motor fuels, speakers recognized that 
biofuels must be produced and consumed in a sustainable manner, taking care to 
maintain biodiversity, prevent adverse impacts on world food prices and 
availability, and ensure that its production does not require more energy than 
it provides. And he stressed the need for a consensus on reaching international 
biofuels standards. 
  Like other speakers, Mandil did not view biofuels as "a panacea" pointing out 
that, despite an impressive number of projects existing or planned, biofuels 
would not in the foreseeable future account for more than 5-10% of world 
transport consumption and will never replace oil. He further warned: 
"Oil-producing countries must not be worried to the extent of curtailing oil 
development." 
  Ferrero-Waldner said the initial conference was only a first step towards a 
"transparent and frank dialogue with all partners" in order to work towards a 
credible and sustainable international market and convergence in biofuels 
standards." 

_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
assam@assamnet.org
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

Reply via email to