Tesco Biofuel Protest and Chain mail
Kevin Lister | 05.02.2008 20:23 | Climate Chaos | Ecology | Globalisation
Protesters gathered at Tesco in Stroud during the weekend to protest against biofuels and collected names of people to volunteer to send around a chain mail presentation highlighting the destruction that the biofuel industry causes.
Presentation on biofuel - application/vnd.ms-powerpoint 1.5M
As part of the week long demonstation organised by biofuel watch, protesters decended on Tesco at Stroud. Over two hundred leaflets were handed out to Tesco shopper sover the weekend to highlight what Tesco's biofuel is doing to the rainforests.
A key part of the protest was to collect names of people who would volunteer to send a presentation to Tesco's senior management to ask how they justify tearing down the rainforests for biofuel
The presentation is already on mass circulation, with many peope protesting directly to Tesco by forwarding the presentation on to Tescos chairman, Terry Leahy. Tesco have already started issuing replies, and have now confirmed that they do in fact use palm oil in their biofuel. They then go on to claim that the biofuel is grown sustainably, but can not define what sustainability is. They say that it can be audited to ensure it is sustainable but can not provide any audit documents. They say science shows that the tropics are the best place to grow biofuel, but can not quote any science. Sounds to me like it is not sustainable, they have no audit documents and don't know what they are talking about.
Do join in the pressure. Down the load the presentation, send it around your address book, and most importantly send it to Terry Leahy and ask him to explain why.
See http://kevsclimatecolumn.blogspot.com/ for the presentation and correspondence with Tesco.
A key part of the protest was to collect names of people who would volunteer to send a presentation to Tesco's senior management to ask how they justify tearing down the rainforests for biofuel
The presentation is already on mass circulation, with many peope protesting directly to Tesco by forwarding the presentation on to Tescos chairman, Terry Leahy. Tesco have already started issuing replies, and have now confirmed that they do in fact use palm oil in their biofuel. They then go on to claim that the biofuel is grown sustainably, but can not define what sustainability is. They say that it can be audited to ensure it is sustainable but can not provide any audit documents. They say science shows that the tropics are the best place to grow biofuel, but can not quote any science. Sounds to me like it is not sustainable, they have no audit documents and don't know what they are talking about.
Do join in the pressure. Down the load the presentation, send it around your address book, and most importantly send it to Terry Leahy and ask him to explain why.
See http://kevsclimatecolumn.blogspot.com/ for the presentation and correspondence with Tesco.
Kevin Lister
e-mail:
kevin.lister@btopenworld.com
Homepage:
http://kevsclimatecolumn.blogspot.com/
Comments
Hide the following 2 comments
This is bogus
06.02.2008 16:48
Whilst it is true that rainforests are being damaged by rapacious over exploitation, biofuel production, on the whole is not the culprit. Its the growing desire for wealth from the developing world that is driving this land clearing. The vast majority of biofuel production does not come from previously virgin rainforest but from other agricultual land (look at rapeseed from Europe, corn and soy from the USA and sugar cane from Brazil which together make up the vast majority of all biofuel feedstocks and do not effect rainforests at all).
And while I agree that this, in the short term, is placing strains on food supplies, this is just a stepping stone. We MUST ween ourselves of the addiction to fossil fuels there is no doubt and biofuels is just one way. The use of food products is a temporary necessary evil in that it helps us learn how biofuels can be manufactured and used. We dont want anyone to stave and to that end, economic rules will prevail! The price of the biofuel feedstock will (and has already) skyrocket and thus create the impetus to develop new feedstocks like algae and jatropha. Check D1 Oils website http://www.d1plc.com/agronomy.php for example. Once these new feedstocks, which by the way do not use any arable land at all, come on line, food prices will return to their normal levels. The growing "wealthy" population of the world will end up putting the greatest upward pressure on food prices, not biofuels.
And isn't a growing the wealth of the poor and reducing greenhouse gases what we all want?
David
e-mail: david_mckenzie@yahoo.com
The presentation is not bogus
09.02.2008 23:20
Biofuels represents all the worse aspects of our globalised economy. Just as we accept the concept of food chains with lions and polar bears sitting at the top and these chains going all the way down to bacteria and single celled organisms; then so it is with the products that we consume and we have a similar product chain. Those well off individuals in the west exploit the next layer of society down, who exploit the next layer down, and so on. Eventually you reach the very bottom, were you find people and ecosytems with no rights being totally exploited. That is the way it is with our system. To try and pretend otherwise is naiviety. See my blog for the recent NASA pictures of the Amzon burning for biofuel.
Yes the Amzon might be burning for other things, but it is now burning faster than ever before because of biofuels and that is an unavoidable conclusion.
And next time you watch the news about Afganistan and read of th billions it is costing us and the young lives that we are sacrificing, then reconsider that 1.3 million have now moved into starvation due to the escalating prices of staple foods.
What ever way you look at it, Biofuels are the most stupid idea that we have ever come up.
kevin.lister@btopenworld.com
e-mail: kevin.lister@btopenworld.com
Homepage: http://kevsclimatecolumn.blogspot.com/