Special Report: Fight against Global
Warming
WASHINGTON, April 14 (Xinhua) -- A new study finds
that it will take more than 75 years for the carbon emissions saved through the
use of biofuels to compensate for the carbon lost when biofuel plantations are
established on forestlands.
If the original habitat was peatland, carbon balance
would take more than 600 years. The study appeared on Tuesday in Conservation
Biology.
The oil palm, increasingly used as a source for
biofuel, has replaced soybean as the world's most traded oilseed crop. Global
production of palm oil has increased exponentially over the past 40 years. In
2006, 85 percent of the global palm-oil crop was produced in Indonesia and
Malaysia, countries whose combined annual tropical forest loss is around 20,000
square kilometers.
Conversion of forest to oil palm also results in
significant impoverishment of both plant and animal communities. Other tropical
crops suitable for biofuel use, like soybean, sugar cane and jatropha, are all
likely to have similar impacts on climate and biodiversity.
"Biofuels are a bad deal for forests, wildlife and
the climate if they replace tropical rain forests," says research scientist Finn
Danielsen at Nordic Agency for Development and Ecology, who is also lead author
of the study. "In fact, they hasten climate change by removing one of the
world's most efficient carbon storage tools, intact tropical rain forests."
As countries strive to meet obligations to reduce
carbon emissions under one international agreement (Kyoto Protocol), they may
not only fail to meet their obligations under another (Convention on Biological
Diversity) but may actually hasten global climate change.
According to the study, reducing deforestation is
likely to represent a more effective climate-change mitigation strategy than
converting forest for biofuel production, and it may help nations meet their
international commitments to reduce biodiversity loss.
Alternatively, planting biofuels on degraded
grasslands instead of tropical rain forests would lead to a net removal of
carbon from the atmosphere in 10 years. Any biofuel plantations in tropical
forest regions should be considered only in former forestland which has already
been severely degraded to support only grassy vegetation.
"The EU and the U.S. should only import and subsidize
biofuel from guaranteed sustainable productions and only from countries which
can demonstrate that their forests are sustainably managed," says Danielsen.
Tropical forests contain more than half of the
Earth's terrestrial species. They also store around 46 percent of the world's
living terrestrial carbon, and 25 percent of total net global carbon emissions
may stem from deforestation. There is therefore an inherent contradiction in any
strategy to clear tropical forest to grow crops for so-called carbon-neutral
fuels.
There are signs that part of the oil-palm industry is
trying to minimize the impact its plantations have on biodiversity, but there is
currently little effort to mitigate potential climate impacts.