Wow. Tough stuff from Time. They focus on ethanol, but also about the dangers of palm oil and peat destruction. Care to tear it apart? What can we do to battle the negative perception of biodiesel? Or, more importantly, how can we ensure that (or encourage) biodiesel is made in a sustainable way?
Thursday, Mar. 27, 2008
The Clean Energy Scam
By Michael Grunwald
From his Cessna a mile above the southern Amazon, John Carter
looks down on the destruction of the world's greatest ecological jewel.
He watches men converting rain forest into cattle pastures and soybean
fields with bulldozers and chains. He sees fires wiping out such
gigantic swaths of jungle that scientists now debate the
"savannization" of the Amazon. Brazil just announced that deforestation
is on track to double this year; Carter, a Texas cowboy with all the
subtlety of a chainsaw, says it's going to get worse fast. "It gives me
goose bumps," says Carter, who founded a nonprofit to promote
sustainable ranching on the Amazon frontier. "It's like witnessing a
rape."
The Amazon was the chic eco-cause of the 1990s, revered
as an incomparable storehouse of biodiversity. It's been overshadowed
lately by global warming, but the Amazon rain forest happens also to be
an incomparable storehouse of carbon, the very carbon that heats up the
planet when it's released into the atmosphere. Brazil now ranks fourth
in the world in carbon emissions, and most of its emissions come from
deforestation. Carter is not a man who gets easily spooked--he led a
reconnaissance unit in Desert Storm, and I watched him grab a small
anaconda with his bare hands in Brazil--but he can sound downright
panicky about the future of the forest. "You can't protect it. There's
too much money to be made tearing it down," he says. "Out here on the
frontier, you really see the market at work."
This land rush is
being accelerated by an unlikely source: biofuels. An explosion in
demand for farm-grown fuels has raised global crop prices to record
highs, which is spurring a dramatic expansion of Brazilian agriculture,
which is invading the Amazon at an increasingly alarming rate.
Propelled
by mounting anxieties over soaring oil costs and climate change,
biofuels have become the vanguard of the green-tech revolution, the
trendy way for politicians and corporations to show they're serious
about finding alternative sources of energy and in the process slowing
global warming. The U.S. quintupled its production of ethanol--ethyl
alcohol, a fuel distilled from plant matter--in the past decade, and
Washington has just mandated another fivefold increase in renewable
fuels over the next decade. Europe has similarly aggressive biofuel
mandates and subsidies, and Brazil's filling stations no longer even
offer plain gasoline. Worldwide investment in biofuels rose from $5
billion in 1995 to $38 billion in 2005 and is expected to top $100
billion by 2010, thanks to investors like Richard Branson and George
Soros, GE and BP, Ford and Shell, Cargill and the Carlyle Group.
Renewable fuels has become one of those motherhood-and-apple-pie
catchphrases, as unobjectionable as the troops or the middle class.
But
several new studies show the biofuel boom is doing exactly the opposite
of what its proponents intended: it's dramatically accelerating global
warming, imperiling the planet in the name of saving it. Corn ethanol,
always environmentally suspect, turns out to be environmentally
disastrous. Even cellulosic ethanol made from switchgrass, which has
been promoted by eco-activists and eco-investors as well as by
President Bush as the fuel of the future, looks less green than
oil-derived gasoline.
Meanwhile, by diverting grain and oilseed
crops from dinner plates to fuel tanks, biofuels are jacking up world
food prices and endangering the hungry. The grain it takes to fill an
SUV tank with ethanol could feed a person for a year. Harvests are
being plucked to fuel our cars instead of ourselves. The U.N.'s World
Food Program says it needs $500 million in additional funding and
supplies, calling the rising costs for food nothing less than a global
emergency. Soaring corn prices have sparked tortilla riots in Mexico
City, and skyrocketing flour prices have destabilized Pakistan, which
wasn't exactly tranquil when flour was affordable.
Biofuels do
slightly reduce dependence on imported oil, and the ethanol boom has
created rural jobs while enriching some farmers and agribusinesses. But
the basic problem with most biofuels is amazingly simple, given that
researchers have ignored it until now: using land to grow fuel leads to
the destruction of forests, wetlands and grasslands that store enormous
amounts of carbon.
Backed by billions in investment capital,
this alarming phenomenon is replicating itself around the world.
Indonesia has bulldozed and burned so much wilderness to grow palm oil
trees for biodiesel that its ranking among the world's top carbon
emitters has surged from 21st to third according to a report by
Wetlands International. Malaysia is converting forests into palm oil
farms so rapidly that it's running out of uncultivated land. But most
of the damage created by biofuels will be less direct and less obvious.
In Brazil, for instance, only a tiny portion of the Amazon is being
torn down to grow the sugarcane that fuels most Brazilian cars. More
deforestation results from a chain reaction so vast it's subtle: U.S.
farmers are selling one-fifth of their corn to ethanol production, so
U.S. soybean farmers are switching to corn, so Brazilian soybean
farmers are expanding into cattle pastures, so Brazilian cattlemen are
displaced to the Amazon. It's the remorseless economics of commodities
markets. "The price of soybeans goes up," laments Sandro Menezes, a
biologist with Conservation International in Brazil, "and the forest
comes down."
Deforestation accounts for 20% of all current
carbon emissions. So unless the world can eliminate emissions from all
other sources--cars, power plants, factories, even flatulent cows--it
needs to reduce deforestation or risk an environmental catastrophe.
That means limiting the expansion of agriculture, a daunting task as
the world's population keeps expanding. And saving forests is probably
an impossibility so long as vast expanses of cropland are used to grow
modest amounts of fuel. The biofuels boom, in short, is one that could
haunt the planet for generations--and it's only getting started.
Why the Amazon Is on Fire
This
destructive biofuel dynamic is on vivid display in Brazil, where a
Rhode Island--size chunk of the Amazon was deforested in the second
half of 2007 and even more was degraded by fire. Some scientists
believe fires are now altering the local microclimate and could
eventually reduce the Amazon to a savanna or even a desert. "It's
approaching a tipping point," says ecologist Daniel Nepstad of the
Woods Hole Research Center.
I spent a day in the
Amazon with the Kamayura tribe, which has been forced by drought to
replant its crops five times this year. The tribesmen I met all
complained about hacking coughs and stinging eyes from the constant
fires and the disappearance of the native plants they use for food,
medicine and rituals. The Kamayura had virtually no contact with whites
until the 1960s; now their forest is collapsing around them. Their
chief, Kotok, a middle-aged man with an easy smile and Three Stooges
hairdo that belie his fierce authority, believes that's no coincidence.
"We are people of the forest, and the whites are destroying our home,"
says Kotok, who wore a ceremonial beaded belt, a digital watch, a pair
of flip-flops and nothing else. "It's all because of money."
Kotok
knows nothing about biofuels. He's more concerned about his tribe's
recent tendency to waste its precious diesel-powered generator watching
late-night soap operas. But he's right. Deforestation can be a complex
process; for example, land reforms enacted by Brazilian President Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva have attracted slash-and-burn squatters to the
forest, and "use it or lose it" incentives have spurred some landowners
to deforest to avoid redistribution.
The basic problem is that
the Amazon is worth more deforested than it is intact. Carter, who fell
in love with the region after marrying a Brazilian and taking over her
father's ranch, says the rate of deforestation closely tracks commodity
prices on the Chicago Board of Trade. "It's just exponential right now
because the economics are so good," he says. "Everything tillable or
grazeable is gouged out and cleared."
That the destruction is
taking place in Brazil is sadly ironic, given that the nation is also
an exemplar of the allure of biofuels. Sugar growers here have a
greener story to tell than do any other biofuel producers. They provide
45% of Brazil's fuel (all cars in the country are able to run on
ethanol) on only 1% of its arable land. They've reduced fertilizer use
while increasing yields, and they convert leftover biomass into
electricity. Marcos Jank, the head of their trade group, urges me not
to lump biofuels together: "Grain is good for bread, not for cars. But
sugar is different." Jank expects production to double by 2015 with
little effect on the Amazon. "You'll see the expansion on cattle
pastures and the Cerrado," he says.
So far, he's right. There
isn't much sugar in the Amazon. But my next stop was the Cerrado, south
of the Amazon, an ecological jewel in its own right. The Amazon gets
the ink, but the Cerrado is the world's most biodiverse savanna, with
10,000 species of plants, nearly half of which are found nowhere else
on earth, and more mammals than the African bush. In the natural
Cerrado, I saw toucans and macaws, puma tracks and a carnivorous flower
that lures flies by smelling like manure. The Cerrado's trees aren't as
tall or dense as the Amazon's, so they don't store as much carbon, but
the region is three times the size of Texas, so it stores its share.
At
least it did, before it was transformed by the march of progress--first
into pastures, then into sugarcane and soybean fields. In one field I
saw an array of ovens cooking trees into charcoal, spewing Cerrado's
carbon into the atmosphere; those ovens used to be ubiquitous, but most
of the trees are gone. I had to travel hours through converted Cerrado
to see a 96-acre (39 hectare) sliver of intact Cerrado, where a former
shopkeeper named Lauro Barbosa had spent his life savings for a nature
preserve. "The land prices are going up, up, up," Barbosa told me. "My
friends say I'm a fool, and my wife almost divorced me. But I wanted to
save something before it's all gone."
The environmental cost of
this cropland creep is now becoming apparent. One groundbreaking new
study in Science concluded that when this deforestation effect is taken
into account, corn ethanol and soy biodiesel produce about twice the
emissions of gasoline. Sugarcane ethanol is much cleaner, and biofuels
created from waste products that don't gobble up land have real
potential, but even cellulosic ethanol increases overall emissions when
its plant source is grown on good cropland. "People don't want to
believe renewable fuels could be bad," says the lead author, Tim
Searchinger, a Princeton scholar and former Environmental Defense
attorney. "But when you realize we're tearing down rain forests that
store loads of carbon to grow crops that store much less carbon, it
becomes obvious."
The growing backlash against biofuels is a
product of the law of unintended consequences. It may seem obvious now
that when biofuels increase demand for crops, prices will rise and
farms will expand into nature. But biofuel technology began on a small
scale, and grain surpluses were common. Any ripples were
inconsequential. When the scale becomes global, the outcome is entirely
different, which is causing cheerleaders for biofuels to recalibrate.
"We're all looking at the numbers in an entirely new way," says the
Natural Resources Defense Council's Nathanael Greene, whose optimistic
"Growing Energy" report in 2004 helped galvanize support for biofuels
among green groups.
Several of the most widely cited experts on
the environmental benefits of biofuels are warning about the
environmental costs now that they've recognized the deforestation
effect. "The situation is a lot more challenging than a lot of us
thought," says University of California, Berkeley, professor Alexander
Farrell, whose 2006 Science article calculating the emissions
reductions of various ethanols used to be considered the definitive
analysis. The experts haven't given up on biofuels; they're calling for
better biofuels that won't trigger massive carbon releases by
displacing wildland. Robert Watson, the top scientist at the U.K.'s
Department for the Environment, recently warned that mandating more
biofuel usage--as the European Union is proposing--would be "insane" if
it increases greenhouse gases. But the forces that biofuels have
unleashed--political, economic, social--may now be too powerful to
constrain.
America the Bio-Foolish
The best place to see
this is America's biofuel mecca: Iowa. Last year fewer than 2% of U.S.
gas stations offered ethanol, and the country produced 7 billion gal.
(26.5 billion L) of biofuel, which cost taxpayers at least $8 billion
in subsidies. But on Nov. 6, at a biodiesel plant in Newton, Iowa,
Hillary Rodham Clinton unveiled an eye-popping plan that would require
all stations to offer ethanol by 2017 while mandating 60 billion gal.
(227 billion L) by 2030. "This is the fuel for a much brighter future!"
she declared. Barack Obama immediately criticized her--not for
proposing such an expansive plan but for failing to support ethanol
before she started trolling for votes in Iowa's caucuses.
If
biofuels are the new dotcoms, Iowa is Silicon Valley, with 53,000 jobs
and $1.8 billion in income dependent on the industry. The state has so
many ethanol distilleries under construction that it's poised to become
a net importer of corn. That's why biofuel-pandering has become
virtually mandatory for presidential contenders. John McCain was the
rare candidate who vehemently opposed ethanol as an outrageous
agribusiness boondoggle, which is why he skipped Iowa in 2000. But
McCain learned his lesson in time for this year's caucuses. By 2006 he
was calling ethanol a "vital alternative energy source."
Members
of Congress love biofuels too, not only because so many dream about
future Iowa caucuses but also because so few want to offend the farm
lobby, the most powerful force behind biofuels on Capitol Hill. Ethanol
isn't about just Iowa or even the Midwest anymore. Plants are under
construction in New York, Georgia, Oregon and Texas, and the ethanol
boom's effect on prices has helped lift farm incomes to record levels
nationwide.
Someone is paying to support these environmentally
questionable industries: you. In December, President Bush signed a
bipartisan energy bill that will dramatically increase support to the
industry while mandating 36 billion gal. (136 billion L) of biofuel by
2022. This will provide a huge boost to grain markets.
Why is so
much money still being poured into such a misguided enterprise? Like
the scientists and environmentalists, many politicians genuinely
believe biofuels can help decrease global warming. It makes intuitive
sense: cars emit carbon no matter what fuel they burn, but the process
of growing plants for fuel sucks some of that carbon out of the
atmosphere. For years, the big question was whether those reductions
from carbon sequestration outweighed the "life cycle" of carbon
emissions from farming, converting the crops to fuel and transporting
the fuel to market. Researchers eventually concluded that yes, biofuels
were greener than gasoline. The improvements were only about 20% for
corn ethanol because tractors, petroleum-based fertilizers and
distilleries emitted lots of carbon. But the gains approached 90% for
more efficient fuels, and advocates were confident that technology
would progressively increase benefits.
There was just one flaw
in the calculation: the studies all credited fuel crops for
sequestering carbon, but no one checked whether the crops would
ultimately replace vegetation and soils that sucked up even more
carbon. It was as if the science world assumed biofuels would be grown
in parking lots. The deforestation of Indonesia has shown that's not
the case. It turns out that the carbon lost when wilderness is razed
overwhelms the gains from cleaner-burning fuels. A study by University
of Minnesota ecologist David Tilman concluded that it will take more
than 400 years of biodiesel use to "pay back" the carbon emitted by
directly clearing peat lands to grow palm oil; clearing grasslands to
grow corn for ethanol has a payback period of 93 years. The result is
that biofuels increase demand for crops, which boosts prices, which
drives agricultural expansion, which eats forests. Searchinger's study
concluded that overall, corn ethanol has a payback period of about 167
years because of the deforestation it triggers.
Not every kernel
of corn diverted to fuel will be replaced. Diversions raise food
prices, so the poor will eat less. That's the reason a U.N. food expert
recently called agrofuels a "crime against humanity." Lester Brown of
the Earth Policy Institute says that biofuels pit the 800 million
people with cars against the 800 million people with hunger problems.
Four years ago, two University of Minnesota researchers predicted the
ranks of the hungry would drop to 625 million by 2025; last year, after
adjusting for the inflationary effects of biofuels, they increased
their prediction to 1.2 billion.
Industry advocates say that as
farms increase crop yields, as has happened throughout history, they
won't need as much land. They'll use less energy, and they'll use farm
waste to generate electricity. To which Searchinger says: Wonderful!
But growing fuel is still an inefficient use of good cropland. Strange
as it sounds, we're better off growing food and drilling for oil. Sure,
we should conserve fuel and buy efficient cars, but we should keep
filling them with gas if the alternatives are dirtier.
The
lesson behind the math is that on a warming planet, land is an
incredibly precious commodity, and every acre used to generate fuel is
an acre that can't be used to generate the food needed to feed us or
the carbon storage needed to save us. Searchinger acknowledges that
biofuels can be a godsend if they don't use arable land. Possible
feedstocks include municipal trash, agricultural waste, algae and even
carbon dioxide, although none of the technologies are yet economical on
a large scale. Tilman even holds out hope for fuel crops--he's been
experimenting with Midwestern prairie grasses--as long as they're grown
on "degraded lands" that can no longer support food crops or cattle.
Changing the Incentives
That's
certainly not what's going on in Brazil. There's a frontier feel to the
southern Amazon right now. Gunmen go by names like Lizard and Messiah,
and Carter tells harrowing stories about decapitations and castrations
and hostages. Brazil has remarkably strict environmental laws--in the
Amazon, landholders are permitted to deforest only 20% of their
property--but there's not much law enforcement. I left Kotok to see
Blairo Maggi, who is not only the soybean king of the world, with
nearly half a million acres (200,000 hectares) in the province of Mato
Grosso, but also the region's governor. "It's like your Wild West right
now," Maggi says. "There's no money for enforcement, so people do what
they want."
Maggi has been a leading pioneer on the Brazilian
frontier, and it irks him that critics in the U.S.--which cleared its
forests and settled its frontier 125 years ago but still provides
generous subsidies to its farmers--attack him for doing the same thing
except without subsidies and with severe restrictions on deforestation.
Imagine Iowa farmers agreeing to keep 80%--or even 20%--of their land
in native prairie grass. "You make us sound like bandits," Maggi tells
me. "But we want to achieve what you achieved in America. We have the
same dreams for our families. Are you afraid of the competition?"
Maggi
got in trouble recently for saying he'd rather feed a child than save a
tree, but he's come to recognize the importance of the forest. "Now I
want to feed a child and save a tree," he says with a grin. But can he
do all that and grow fuel for the world as well? "Ah, now you've hit
the nail on the head." Maggi says the biofuel boom is making him
richer, but it's also making it harder to feed children and save trees.
"There are many mouths to feed, and nobody's invented a chip to create
protein without growing crops," says his pal Homero Pereira, a
congressman who is also the head of Mato Grosso's farm bureau. "If you
don't want us to tear down the forest, you better pay us to leave it
up!"
Everyone I interviewed in Brazil agreed: the market drives
behavior, so without incentives to prevent deforestation, the Amazon is
doomed. It's unfair to ask developing countries not to develop natural
areas without compensation. Anyway, laws aren't enough. Carter tried
confronting ranchers who didn't obey deforestation laws and nearly got
killed; now his nonprofit is developing certification programs to
reward eco-sensitive ranchers. "People see the forest as junk," he
says. "If you want to save it, you better open your pocketbook. Plus,
you might not get shot."
The trouble is that even if there were
enough financial incentives to keep the Amazon intact, high commodity
prices would encourage deforestation elsewhere. And government mandates
to increase biofuel production are going to boost commodity prices,
which will only attract more investment. Until someone invents that
protein chip, it's going to mean the worst of everything: higher food
prices, more deforestation and more emissions.
Advocates are
always careful to point out that biofuels are only part of the solution
to global warming, that the world also needs more energy-efficient
lightbulbs and homes and factories and lifestyles. And the world does
need all those things. But the world is still going to be fighting an
uphill battle until it realizes that right now, biofuels aren't part of
the solution at all. They're part of the problem.