FOOD VERSUS FUEL IN THE PHILIPPINES
The Philippine Government wants farmers to plant crops
for biofuels on a vast scale. But could the quest for green energy
create food shortages? Imelda Abano* reports.
Growing world energy demand, the insecurity of long-term supply
and the consequences of fossil fuel use for climate change are
driving governments to look for alternatives. To meet rising energy
needs, many countries are promoting the production and use of
biofuels - energy extracted as a gas, liquid or oil from
plants.
Derived from food crops such as corn, sugarcane, soybean, oil
palm and sugarbeet, biofuel production has been on the rise in
recent years. It is seen by many as a clean form of energy in an
era of soaring oil prices and concerns over carbon emissions.
Jatropha, a plant originating in Central America that grows wild
in many developing countries, including South Africa, India,
Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, China and the Philippines, has
suddenly found itself at the centre of a new phase in the world's
alternative energy boom.
In the Philippines, there is currently much hype surrounding its
production as a source of renewable fuel. Philippine President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has signed into law the Biofuels Act which
mandates a minimum one percent biodiesel blend and five percent
bioethanol blend in all diesel and gasoline fuels. To meet demand,
the Government is pushing aggressively for the cultivation of
jatropha, believing it to be one of the best candidates for future
biofuel production.
The Government, through the Philippine National Oil
Co.-Alternative Fuels Corp, is now looking at some 1.2 million
hectares for jatropha production in the southern island of
Mindanao. It is also busy identifying more than 400,000 hectares of
land for private sector investments.
Jatropha curcas is a drought-tolerant, non-edible shrub. It
produces fruits the size of golf balls which contain oil that can
be converted into biodiesel, a substitute for fossil fuel.
According to Rhandy Tubal, Research Specialist at the Department
of Environment and Natural Resources in Cordillera, farmers who
have received training to grow jatropha are enthusiastic about the
crop. He says the cultivation of the plant could provide the first
step out of poverty for Filipino farmers and claims that, depending
on the density of the plants, each hectare can yield jatropha oil
worth nearly $2,000 a year.
'We are in the initial stage of planting jatropha and we are
very optimistic that it is indeed one of the best candidates for
biofuel. Farmers are very excited about its production,' Tubal
says, adding that only idle land would be used for jatropha
planting to avoid competition with other crops.
However, research from Australia suggests the plant will need
more intensive inputs to produce the oil used for biofuels and it
can take several years to develop optimum yields. Furthermore, some
experts warn the move may use up precious land that could be used
to grow food and may in time hurt subsistence farmers. Concerns
over possible future food shortages have generated a 'food versus
fuel' debate in the country.
Rachel Smolker, a biofuels specialist and Research Biologist for
the US-based environmental group the Global Justice Ecology
Project, fears the global rush to switch from oil to energy derived
from plants will drive deforestation, push small farmers off the
land and lead to serious food shortages and increased poverty
unless managed carefully.
'If food sources become biofuels, that may lead to shortages and
raise prices. The promotion of biofuels will have an impact on
local food security as some fuel crops are also food crops,'
Smolker says.
Her view is echoed by Philippine Senator, Miriam Santiago,
author of the 2007 Biofuels Act, who has sought more governmental
oversight of biofuels development, saying that backing biofuels
could affect adversely the country's ability to produce its own
food.
'Biofuel is land-based and will eventually compete with food.
Because the Philippines has a small land area, biofuel production
will tend to encroach on food production. Corporations are already
searching for millions of hectares for jatropha alone. We have to
step on the brakes and decelerate,' she says.
Santiago thinks the Philippines 'will not prosper by betting
only on the biofuels option.' She says the Government should
explore other alternative energy sources such as wind, solar,
hydropower, geothermal and biomass.
But the Philippines' Environment Secretary, Lito Atienza, has
defended the Government's massive jatropha cultivation for the
biofuels programme, saying it will not imperil the country's food
supply.
'Jatropha is a non-food crop. So the issue over food versus fuel
is not a debate about this crop. Jatropha grows on idle lands,
particularly denuded mountains and forests, unfit for food crop
cultivation, so it will not compete with land used for the
production of food,' says Atienza.
Widespread jatropha cultivation is fairly new in the
Philippines. It is only recently, with the news that jatropha can
be a source of biodiesel, that people have started planting larger
areas of the crop.
All the more reason, according to Dr Emil Javier, President of
the National Academy of Science and Technology, to check out its
credentials. 'The Philippines should do its homework and conduct
thorough research on jatropha and see its viability compared with
other alternative crops,' he says.
The challenge, believes Achim Dobermann, a scientist from the
Philippine-based International Rice Research Institute, is to
ensure a balance between food and biofuel production. 'There is an
urgent need to strengthen policy research in order to avoid
decisions that may lead to competition between food and
bioenergy.'
*Imelda Abano is an international journalist.
This feature is published courtesy of Panos.
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