Once-hidden EU report reveals damage from biodiesel
21 Apr 2010 12:11:03 GMT
Source: Reuters Excerpt:
* Hidden biofuels study now released under transparency laws * Says biodiesel can cause four times more CO2 than diesel * European Commission questions methodology By Pete Harrison BRUSSELS, April 21 - Biofuels such as biodiesel from soy beans can create up to four times more climate-warming emissions than standard diesel or petrol, according to an EU document released under freedom of information laws. The European Union has set itself a goal of obtaining 10 percent of its road fuels from renewable sources, mostly biofuels, by the end of this decade, but it is now worrying about the unintended environmental impacts. Four major studies are under way. [ID:nLDE62O1UK] Chief among those fears is that biofuel production soaks up grain from global commodity markets, forcing up food prices and encouraging farmers to clear tropical forests in the quest for new land. Burning forests releases vast quantities of carbon dioxide and often cancels out many of the climate benefits sought from biofuels. Biodiesel from North American soybeans has an indirect carbon footprint of 339.9 kilograms of CO2 per gigajoule -- four times higher than standard diesel -- said the EU document, an annex that was controversially stripped from a report published in December.
END EXCERPT
Kinda funny...
21 Apr 2010 12:11:03 GMT
Source: Reuters Excerpt:
* Hidden biofuels study now released under transparency laws * Says biodiesel can cause four times more CO2 than diesel * European Commission questions methodology By Pete Harrison BRUSSELS, April 21 - Biofuels such as biodiesel from soy beans can create up to four times more climate-warming emissions than standard diesel or petrol, according to an EU document released under freedom of information laws. The European Union has set itself a goal of obtaining 10 percent of its road fuels from renewable sources, mostly biofuels, by the end of this decade, but it is now worrying about the unintended environmental impacts. Four major studies are under way. [ID:nLDE62O1UK] Chief among those fears is that biofuel production soaks up grain from global commodity markets, forcing up food prices and encouraging farmers to clear tropical forests in the quest for new land. Burning forests releases vast quantities of carbon dioxide and often cancels out many of the climate benefits sought from biofuels. Biodiesel from North American soybeans has an indirect carbon footprint of 339.9 kilograms of CO2 per gigajoule -- four times higher than standard diesel -- said the EU document, an annex that was controversially stripped from a report published in December.
END EXCERPT
Kinda funny...