Plants at the Pump: Reviewing Biofuels' Impacts and Policy Recommendations

This article summarizes and updates the conclusions of the Plants at the Pump report, released in December 2007.

Inquiries

Downloads

Full Text (PDF, 8 pages, 328 Kb)

All rights reserved (more info).

As biofuels become a larger part of the social, economic, and environmental strategies of countries around the world, standards and regulations are needed to ensure that biofuels do in fact reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and promote sustainable development.

In a world of rapidly rising GHG emissions and growing unease about imported oil, the appeal of renewable fuels is growing apace. Biofuels — liquids produced from plant matter that can substitute for gasoline or diesel fuel—have become a hot topic from Capitol Hill to Silicon Valley. Despite their promise, however, recent research suggests that most of today’s biofuels increase GHG emissions compared to gasoline or diesel fuel. These increases in greenhouse gas emissions primarily result from land-use changes associated with growing crops for biofuels. The scale-up of biofuels to meet market demands for alternative fuels should therefore be examined further for its impacts on greenhouse gas emissions.

Greenhouse gas emissions concerns, coupled with rising global food prices, have called into question biofuels policies, and some of the “silver bullet” sheen has begun to wear off. Policy makers should understand that the term “biofuels” covers a range of products with varying potentials to achieve energy, climate, transportation, or agricultural policy aims. A key policy question, then, is how to ensure that biofuels do not cause greater harm than good. Policy makers should:

  • Use technology-neutral policies, as opposed to technology-specific policies such as biofuel subsidies, to drive fuel choices in relation to desired policy goals (e.g., greenhouse gas reductions, energy security, and other social and environmental priorities).
  • Design methodologies for calculating the sustainability benefits of fuel options and incorporate these calculations into energy, climate, agricultural, land use, and trade policy.
  • Design certification programs to avoid “exporting” negative impacts of biofuels production to other producing countries where regulation is not yet in place.
  • Recognize that biofuels alone will not provide low-carbon transportation solutions needed to address climate change. Policy support for other mobility options, such as increased efficiency in the immediate term, or electricity for vehicle propulsion accompanied by an aggressive rise in zero-carbon power generation, should be explored. Addressing emissions from transport will ultimately require rethinking how cities are designed and must include an aggressive push toward improved public transportation.
Permissions

All rights reserved. For quotes and references, please refer to suggested citation on the title page of the PDF document. You may reproduce summary information about this report, such as the title, author(s) and summary details, provided you include a link to the publication's landing page where users can download the PDF version and/or other documents. If you wish to use this report in any other manner, please contact us to request permission.

4 Comments

Comments expressed on this page are opinions of the authors themselves, and not positions of the World Resources Institute. WRI reserves the right to remove any comments that it considers inappropriate or spam.

Perhaps the relacionship

Perhaps the relacionship between biofuel production and the rising of the food price is not so strong. (And perhaps It´s just a naive perseption about economical context).

The food industry is a huge petroleum consumer and the petroleo price is also rising, commodities speculation got more interesting. And If we want a social en environmental friendly food production, we want to pay more for food.

I think that biofuel is a great step If used with responsibility.

Biofuels are one step. I

Biofuels are one step. I think it is more important to find different solutions to the energy challenge, we are facing.

The problem with biofuels

The problem with biofuels ist, that prices for food are rising. This wil become a bigger issue in the future.

Although I am unable to down

Although I am unable to down load and see the full article, the summary is informative and useful to persons with interest in the subject of biofuels and climate change. I would have loved to see a recommendation on the institutional side much like the recommendation on legal side and perhaps what should be done in countries where there are no legal guidelines or no policies to guide the development of biofuels. In such countries one can safely conclude that there are possibly no suitable or strong enough institutions to guide the development of biofuels. In such scenarios, I see the strengthening of environmental regulatory institutions as one way to achieve a goal of regulating the biofuels.
I would love to have a Pdf copy of full article or similar articles on the subject; Biofuels, climate change and environment.