In 2008, the Roundtable for Sustainable Biofuels released its
proposed standards for sustainable biofuels. This includes 12
principles:
- "Biofuel production shall follow international treaties and national laws regarding such things as air quality, water resources, agricultural practices, labor conditions, and more.
- Biofuels projects shall be designed and operated in participatory processes that involve all relevant stakeholders in planning and monitoring.
- Biofuels shall significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions as compared to fossil fuels. The principle seeks to establish a standard methodology for comparing greenhouse gases (GHG) benefits.
- Biofuel production shall not violate human rights or labor rights, and shall ensure decent work and the well-being of workers.
- Biofuel production shall contribute to the social and economic development of local, rural and indigenous peoples and communities.
- Biofuel production shall not impair food security.
- Biofuel production shall avoid negative impacts on biodiversity, ecosystems and areas of high conservation value.
- Biofuel production shall promote practices that improve soil health and minimize degradation.
- Surface and groundwater use will be optimized and contamination or depletion of water resources minimized.
- Air pollution shall be minimized along the supply chain.
- Biofuels shall be produced in the most cost-effective way, with a commitment to improve production efficiency and social and environmental performance in all stages of the biofuel value chain.
- Biofuel production shall not violate land rights".
Several countries and regions have introduced policies or adopted
standards to promote sustainable biofuels production and use, most
prominently the European Union and the United States. The 2009 EU Renewable Energy Directive, which requires 10 percent of transportation energy from renewable energy by 2020, is the most comprehensive mandatory sustainability standard in place as of 2010.
The EU Renewable Energy Directive requires that the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions
of biofuels consumed be at least 50 percent less than the equivalent
emissions from gasoline or diesel by 2017 (and 35 percent less starting
in 2011). Also, the feedstocks for biofuels "should not be harvested
from lands with high biodiversity value, from carbon-rich or forested
land, or from wetlands".
As with the EU, the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) and the California Low Carbon Fuel Standard
(LCFS) both require specific levels of lifecycle greenhouse gas
reductions compared to equivalent fossil fuel consumption. The RFS
requires that at least half of the biofuels production mandated by 2022
should reduce lifecycle emissions by 50 percent. The LCFS is a
performance standard that calls for a minimum of 10 percent emissions
reduction per unit of transport energy by 2020. Both the U.S. and
California standards currently address only greenhouse gas emissions,
but California plans to "expand its policy to address other
sustainability issues associated with liquid biofuels in the future".
In 2009, Brazil also adopted new sustainability policies for sugarcane ethanol, including "zoning regulation of sugarcane expansion and social protocols".
Why it is needed?
Biofuels, in the form of liquid fuels derived from plant materials, are entering the market, driven by factors such as oil price spikes and the need for increased energy security.
However, many of these first-generation biofuels that are currently
being supplied have been criticised for their adverse impacts on the natural environment, food security, and land use.
The challenge is to support second, third and fourth-generation biofuel development.
Second-generation biofuels include new cellulosic technologies, with responsible policies and economic instruments to help ensure that biofuel commercialization is sustainable.
Responsible commercialization of biofuels represents an opportunity to
enhance sustainable economic prospects in Africa, Latin America and
Asia.
Biofuels have a limited ability to replace fossil fuels and
should not be regarded as a ‘silver bullet’ to deal with transport
emissions. However, they offer the prospect of increased market
competition and oil price moderation. A healthy supply of alternative energy sources will help to combat gasoline price spikes and reduce dependency on fossil fuels, especially in the transport sector. Using transportation fuels more efficiently is also an integral part of a sustainable transport strategy.
Biofuel options
Biofuel development and use is a complex issue because there are many biofuel options which are available. Biofuels, such as ethanol and biodiesel,
are currently produced from the products of conventional food crops
such as the starch, sugar and oil feedstocks from crops that include wheat, maize, sugar cane, palm oil and oilseed rape. Some researchers fear that a major switch to biofuels from such crops would create a direct competition with their use for food
and animal feed, and claim that in some parts of the world the economic
consequences are already visible, other researchers look at the land
available and the enormous areas of idle and abandoned land and claim
that there is room for a large proportion of biofuel also from
conventional crops.
Second generation biofuels
are now being produced from a much broader range of feedstocks
including the cellulose in dedicated energy crops (perennial grasses
such as switchgrass and Miscanthus giganteus), forestry materials, the co-products from food production, and domestic vegetable waste. Advances in the conversion processes
will improve the sustainability of biofuels, through better
efficiencies and reduced environmental impact of producing biofuels,
from both existing food crops and from cellulosic sources.
In 2007, Ronald Oxburgh suggested in The Courier-Mail
that production of biofuels could be either responsible or
irresponsible and had several trade-offs: "Produced responsibly they are
a sustainable energy source that need not divert any land from growing
food nor damage the environment; they can also help solve the problems
of the waste generated by Western society; and they can create jobs for
the poor where previously were none. Produced irresponsibly, they at
best offer no climate benefit and, at worst, have detrimental social and
environmental consequences. In other words, biofuels are pretty much
like any other product. In 2008 the Nobel prize-winning chemist Paul J. Crutzen published findings that the release of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions in the production of biofuels means that they contribute more to global warming than the fossil fuels they replace.
According to the Rocky Mountain Institute,
sound biofuel production practices would not hamper food and fibre
production, nor cause water or environmental problems, and would enhance
soil fertility.
The selection of land on which to grow the feedstocks is a critical
component of the ability of biofuels to deliver sustainable solutions. A
key consideration is the minimisation of biofuel competition for prime
cropland.
Biofuels are different from fossil fuels in regard to carbon
emissions being short term, but are similar to fossil fuels in that biofuels contribute to air pollution. Raw biofuels burned to generate steam for heat and power, produces airborne carbon particulates, carbon monoxide and nitrous oxides. The WHO estimates 3.7 million premature deaths worldwide in 2012 due to air pollution.
Plants used as sustainable biofuel
Sugarcane in Brazil
Brazil’s production of ethanol fuel from sugarcane dates back to the 1970s, as a governmental response to the 1973 oil crisis. Brazil is considered the biofuel industry leader and the world's first sustainable biofuels economy.Inslee, Jay; Bracken Hendricks (2007). "6. Homegrown Energy". Apollo's Fire. Island Press, Washington, D.C. pp. 153–155, 160–161. ISBN 978-1-59726-175-3. In 2010 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency designated Brazilian sugarcane ethanol as an advanced biofuel due to EPA's estimated 61% reduction of total life cycle greenhouse gas emissions, including direct indirect land use change emissions.
Brazil sugarcane ethanol fuel program success and sustainability is
based on the most efficient agricultural technology for sugarcane
cultivation in the world, uses modern equipment and cheap sugar cane as feedstock, the residual cane-waste (bagasse) is used to process heat and power, which results in a very competitive price and also in a high energy balance (output energy/input energy), which varies from 8.3 for average conditions to 10.2 for best practice production.
A report commissioned by the United Nations, based on a detailed
review of published research up to mid-2009 as well as the input of
independent experts world-wide, found that ethanol from sugar cane as
produced in Brazil "in some circumstances does better than just
“zero emission”. If grown and processed correctly, it has negative
emission, pulling CO2 out of the atmosphere, rather than adding it. In contrast, the report found that U.S. use of maize
for biofuel is less efficient, as sugarcane can lead to emissions
reductions of between 70% and well over 100% when substituted for
gasoline.
Several other studies have shown that sugarcane-based ethanol reduces
greenhouse gases by 86 to 90% if there is no significant land use
change.
In another study commissioned by the Dutch
government in 2006 to evaluate the sustainability of Brazilian
bioethanol concluded that there is sufficient water to supply all
foreseeable long-term water requirements for sugarcane and ethanol
production.
This evaluation also found that consumption of agrochemicals for sugar
cane production is lower than in citric, corn, coffee and soybean
cropping. The study found that development of resistant sugar cane
varieties is a crucial aspect of disease and pest control and is one of
the primary objectives of Brazil’s cane genetic improvement programs.
Disease control is one of the main reasons for the replacement of a
commercial variety of sugar cane.
Another concern is the fact that sugarcane fields are
traditionally burned just before harvest to avoid harm to the workers,
by removing the sharp leaves and killing snakes and other harmful
animals, and also to fertilize the fields with ash.
Mechanization will reduce pollution from burning fields and has higher
productivity than people, and due to mechanization the number of
temporary workers in the sugarcane plantations has already declined. By the 2008 harvest season, around 47% of the cane was collected with harvesting machines.
Regarding the negative impacts of the potential direct and indirect effect of land use changes on carbon emissions,
the study commissioned by the Dutch government concluded that "it is
very difficult to determine the indirect effects of further land use for
sugar cane production (i.e. sugar cane replacing another crop like soy
or citrus crops, which in turn causes additional soy plantations
replacing pastures, which in turn may cause deforestation), and also not
logical to attribute all these soil carbon losses to sugar cane". The Brazilian agency Embrapa
estimates that there is enough agricultural land available to increase
at least 30 times the existing sugarcane plantation without endangering
sensible ecosystems or taking land destined for food crops. Most future growth is expected to take place on abandoned pasture lands, as it has been the historical trend in São Paulo state.
Also, productivity is expected to improve even further based on current
biotechnology research, genetic improvement, and better agronomic
practices, thus contributing to reduce land demand for future sugarcane
cultures.
Another concern is the risk of clearing rain forests and other
environmentally valuable land for sugarcane production, such as the Amazon rainforest, the Pantanal or the Cerrado.
Embrapa has rebutted this concern explaining that 99.7% of sugarcane
plantations are located at least 2,000 km from the Amazon, and expansion
during the last 25 years took place in the Center-South region, also
far away from the Amazon rainforest, the Pantanal or the Atlantic
forest. In São Paulo state growth took place in abandoned pasture lands. The impact assessment commissioned by the Dutch government supported this argument.
In order to guarantee a sustainable development of ethanol
production, in September 2009 the government issued by decree a
countrywide agroecological land use zoning to restrict sugarcane growth
in or near environmentally sensitive areas.
According to the new criteria, 92.5% of the Brazilian territory is not
suitable for sugarcane plantation. The government considers that the
suitable areas are more than enough to meet the future demand for
ethanol and sugar in the domestic and international markets foreseen for
the next decades.
Regarding the food vs fuel issue, a World Bank research report published on July 2008 found that "Brazil's sugar-based ethanol did not push food prices appreciably higher". This research paper also concluded that Brazil's sugar cane–based ethanol has not raised sugar prices significantly. An economic assessment report also published in July 2008 by the OECD
agrees with the World Bank report regarding the negative effects of
subsidies and trade restrictions, but found that the impact of biofuels
on food prices are much smaller. A study by the Brazilian research unit of the Fundação Getúlio Vargas regarding the effects of biofuels on grain prices concluded that the major driver behind the 2007-2008 rise in food prices was speculative activity on futures markets
under conditions of increased demand in a market with low grain stocks.
The study also concluded that there is no correlation between Brazilian
sugarcane cultivated area and average grain prices, as on the contrary,
the spread of sugarcane was accompanied by rapid growth of grain crops
in the country.
Jatropha
India and Africa
Crops like Jatropha,
used for biodiesel, can thrive on marginal agricultural land where many
trees and crops won't grow, or would produce only slow growth yields. Jatropha cultivation provides benefits for local communities:
Cultivation and fruit picking by hand is labour-intensive and needs around one person per hectare. In parts of rural India and Africa this provides much-needed jobs - about 200,000 people worldwide now find employment through jatropha. Moreover, villagers often find that they can grow other crops in the shade of the trees. Their communities will avoid importing expensive diesel and there will be some for export too.
Cambodia
Cambodia has no proven fossil fuel reserves, and is almost completely dependent on imported diesel fuel
for electricity production. Consequently, Cambodians face an insecure
supply and pay some of the highest energy prices in the world. The
impacts of this are widespread and may hinder economic development.
Biofuels may provide a substitute for diesel fuel that can be
manufactured locally for a lower price, independent of the international
oil price. The local production and use of biofuel also offers other
benefits such as improved energy security, rural development
opportunities and environmental benefits. The Jatropha curcas
species appears to be a particularly suitable source of biofuel as it
already grows commonly in Cambodia. Local sustainable production of
biofuel in Cambodia, based on the Jatropha or other sources, offers good
potential benefits for the investors, the economy, rural communities
and the environment.
Mexico
Jatropha
is native to Mexico and Central America and was likely transported to
India and Africa in the 1500s by Portuguese sailors convinced it had
medicinal uses. In 2008, recognizing the need to diversify its sources
of energy and reduce emissions, Mexico passed a law to push developing
biofuels that don't threaten food security and the agriculture ministry
has since identified some 2.6 million hectares (6.4 million acres) of
land with a high potential to produce jatropha. The Yucatán Peninsula, for instance, in addition to being a corn producing region, also contains abandoned sisal plantations, where the growing of Jatropha for biodiesel production would not displace food.
On April 1, 2011 Interjet completed the first Mexican aviation biofuels test flight on an Airbus A320.
The fuel was a 70:30 traditional jet fuel biojet blend produced from
Jatropha oil provided by three Mexican producers, Global Energías
Renovables (a wholly owned subsidiary of U.S.-based Global Clean Energy Holdings, Bencafser S.A. and Energy JH S.A. Honeywell's UOP processed the oil into Bio-SPK (Synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene). Global Energías Renovables operates the largest Jatropha farm in the Americas.
On August 1, 2011 Aeromexico, Boeing,
and the Mexican Government participated in the first biojet powered
transcontinental flight in aviation history. The flight from Mexico
City to Madrid used a blend of 70 percent traditional fuel and 30
percent biofuel (aviation biofuel). The biojet was produced entirely from Jatropha oil.
Pongamia Pinnata in Australia and India
Pongamia pinnata
is a legume native to Australia, India, Florida (USA) and most tropical
regions, and is now being invested in as an alternative to Jatropha for
areas such as Northern Australia, where Jatropha is classed as a
noxious weed.
Commonly known as simply 'Pongamia', this tree is currently being commercialised in Australia by Pacific Renewable Energy,
for use as a Diesel replacement for running in modified Diesel engines
or for conversion to Biodiesel using 1st or 2nd Generation Biodiesel
techniques, for running in unmodified Diesel engines.
Sweet sorghum in India
Sweet sorghum
overcomes many of the shortcomings of other biofuel crops. With sweet
sorghum, only the stalks are used for biofuel production, while the
grain is saved for food or livestock feed. It is not in high demand in
the global food market, and thus has little impact on food prices and
food security. Sweet sorghum is grown on already-farmed drylands that
are low in carbon storage capacity, so concerns about the clearing of
rainforest do not apply. Sweet sorghum is easier and cheaper to grow
than other biofuel crops in India and does not require irrigation, an
important consideration in dry areas. Some of the Indian sweet sorghum varieties are now grown in Uganda for ethanol production.
A study by researchers at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT)
found that growing sweet sorghum instead of grain sorghum could
increase farmers incomes by US$40 per hectare per crop because it can
provide food, feed and fuel. With grain sorghum currently grown on over
11 million hectares (ha) in Asia and on 23.4 million ha in Africa, a
switch to sweet sorghum could have a considerable economic impact.
International collaboration on sustainable biofuels
Roundtable on Sustainable Biomaterials
Public
attitudes and the actions of key stakeholders can play a crucial role
in realising the potential of sustainable biofuels. Informed discussion
and dialogue, based both on scientific research and an understanding of
public and stakeholder views, is important.
The Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels is an international
initiative which brings together farmers, companies, governments,
non-governmental organizations, and scientists who are interested in the
sustainability of biofuels production and distribution. During 2008,
the Roundtable used meetings, teleconferences, and online discussions to
develop a series of principles and criteria for sustainable biofuels
production.
In April 2011, the Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels launched a
set of comprehensive sustainability criteria - the “RSB Certification
System.” Biofuels producers that meet to these criteria are able to show
buyers and regulators that their product has been obtained without
harming the environment or violating human rights.
Sustainable Biofuels Consensus
The
Sustainable Biofuels Consensus is an international initiative which
calls upon governments, the private sector, and other stakeholders to
take decisive action to ensure the sustainable trade, production, and
use of biofuels. In this way biofuels may play a key role in energy
sector transformation, climate stabilization, and resulting worldwide
revitalisation of rural areas.
The Sustainable Biofuels Consensus envisions a "landscape that
provides food, fodder, fiber, and energy, which offers opportunities for
rural development; that diversifies energy supply, restores ecosystems,
protects biodiversity, and sequesters carbon".
Better Sugarcane Initiative / Bonsucro
In 2008, a multi-stakeholder process was initiated by the World Wildlife Fund and the International Finance Corporation, the private development arm of the World Bank,
bringing together industry, supply chain intermediaries, end-users,
farmers and civil society organisations to develop standards for
certifying the derivative products of sugar cane, one of which is ethanol fuel.
The Bonsucro standard is based around a definition of sustainability which is founded on five principles:
- Obey the law
- Respect human rights and labour standards
- Manage input, production and processing efficiencies to enhance sustainability
- Actively manage biodiversity and ecosystem services
- Continuously improve key areas of the business
Biofuel producers that wish to sell products marked with the Bonsucro
standard must both ensure that they product to the Production Standard,
and that their downstream buyers meet the Chain of Custody Standard. In
addition, if they wish to sell to the European market and count against
the EU Renewable Energy Directive, then they must adhere to the Bonsucro EU standard, which includes specific greenhouse gas calculations following European Commission calculation guidelines.
Oil price moderation
Biofuels offer the prospect of real market competition and oil price moderation. According to the Wall Street Journal,
crude oil would be trading 15 per cent higher and gasoline would be as
much as 25 per cent more expensive, if it were not for biofuels. A
healthy supply of alternative energy sources will help to combat
gasoline price spikes.
Sustainable transport
Biofuels have a limited ability to replace fossil fuels and should
not be regarded as a ‘silver bullet’ to deal with transport emissions.
Biofuels on their own cannot deliver a sustainable transport system and so must be developed as part of an integrated approach, which promotes other renewable energy options and energy efficiency,
as well as reducing the overall energy demand and need for transport.
Consideration needs to be given to the development of hybrid and fuel
cell vehicles, public transport, and better town and rural planning.
In December 2008 an Air New Zealand
jet completed the world's first commercial aviation test flight
partially using jatropha-based fuel. More than a dozen performance
tests were undertaken in the two-hour test flight which departed from
Auckland International Airport. A biofuel blend of 50:50 jatropha and
Jet A1 fuel was used to power one of the Boeing 747-400's Rolls-Royce
RB211 engines.
Air New Zealand set several criteria for its jatropha, requiring that
"the land it came from was neither forest nor virgin grassland in the
previous 20 years, that the soil and climate it came from is not
suitable for the majority of food crops and that the farms are rain fed
and not mechanically irrigated". The company has also set general
sustainability criteria, saying that such biofuels must not compete with
food resources, that they must be as good as traditional jet fuels, and that they should be cost competitive.
In January 2009, Continental Airlines
used a sustainable biofuel to power a commercial aircraft for the first
time in North America. This demonstration flight marks the first
sustainable biofuel demonstration flight by a commercial carrier using a
twin-engined aircraft, a Boeing 737-800,
powered by CFM International CFM56-7B engines. The biofuel blend
included components derived from algae and jatropha plants. The algae
oil was provided by Sapphire Energy, and the jatropha oil by Terasol Energy.
In March 2011, Yale University research showed significant potential for sustainable aviation fuel
based on jatropha-curcas. According to the research, if cultivated
properly, "jatropha can deliver many benefits in Latin America and
greenhouse gas reductions of up to 60 percent when compared to
petroleum-based jet fuel". Actual farming conditions in Latin America
were assessed using sustainability criteria developed by the Roundtable
on Sustainable Biofuels. Unlike previous research, which used
theoretical inputs, the Yale team conducted many interviews with
jatropha farmers and used "field measurements to develop the first
comprehensive sustainability analysis of actual projects".
As of June 2011, revised international aviation fuel standards
officially allow commercial airlines to blend conventional jet fuel with
up to 50 percent biofuels. The renewable fuels "can be blended with
conventional commercial and military jet fuel through requirements in
the newly issued edition of ASTM D7566, Specification for Aviation
Turbine Fuel Containing Synthesized Hydrocarbons".
In December 2011, the FAA awarded $7.7 million to eight companies
to advance the development of commercial aviation biofuels, with a
special focus on alcohol to jet fuel. The FAA is assisting in the
development of a sustainable fuel (from alcohols, sugars, biomass, and
organic matter such as pyrolysis oils) that can be “dropped in” to
aircraft without changing current practices and infrastructure. The
research will test how the new fuels affect engine durability and
quality control standards.
GreenSky London, a biofuels plant under construction in 2014,
aimed to take in some 500,000 tonnes of municipal rubbish and change the
organic component into 60,000 tonnes of jet fuel, and 40 megawatts of
power. By the end of 2015, it was hoped all British Airways flights from
London City Airport will be fuelled by waste and rubbish discarded by
London residents, leading to carbon savings equivalent to taking 150,000
cars off the road.
Unfortunately, the £340m scheme was mothballed in January 2016
following low crude oil prices, jittery investors and a lack of support
from the UK government.