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Bristol Protest Against Biofuels; a solution worse than the problem

bristol rising tide and espacio bristol-colombia | 15.04.2008 13:23 | Climate Chaos | Repression | Social Struggles

People from Bristol Rising Tide[1] and Espacio Bristol –Colombia[2] will be at Tesco petrol station, Eastville, Bristol from 5pm – 7pm today to highlight the devastating consequences that agrofuels[3] from monocultures will have on the climate, ecosystems, food prices and human rights.


From today, all forecourts will be required by law to sell only fuel which is blended with 2.5% agrofuel. EU targets are set to increase to 10% by 2020. This law is being introduced despite research which shows that producing agrofuels causes greater global warming emissions than the equivalent for fossil fuels [4].

Food prices are rising rapidly due to agrofuels, causing the poor to suffer more malnutrition. This has been called a "crime against humanity" by the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Jean Ziegler. Furthermore, the United Nations has warned that 60 million people may soon become "biofuel refugees" – people forced off their land to make way for huge areas of agrofuel crops.

Sam from Bristol Rising Tide says "The expansion of agrofuels is going to have the same impact as climate chaos: increase in poverty, hunger and refugees. Yet the Government is promoting this as yet another technical fix for climate change, despite its own Chief Scientist's doubts about their sustainability."

An Espacio Bristol member currently accompanying Colombian communities under threat from the the expansion of palm says "I have met farmers surviving on one meal a day since being forced off their land by a palm oil company, people working for palm companies paid poorly and paid late, and many who are angry and saddened that in such a fertile area they are having to buy expensive food from elsewhere."

Tesco, who already sell agrofuel at the pump, tries to impress its customers by claiming to be 'green' because of being the UK's market leader in the sale of biofuels to customers. However, they have a vested interest in the technology's promotion as they own a 25% share of Greenenergy, a biofuel company.

Bristol Rising Tide and Espacio Bristol Colombia argue that Climate change is an issue of social injustice and is a direct result of the economic domination of Northern interests and transnational corporations. They reject false solutions that are used as a way of maintaining 'business as usual' and a means to escape responsibility.

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[1] Bristol Rising Tide is part of the International Rising Tide for Climate Justice network
www.risingtide.org.uk

[2] Espacio Bristol-Colombia is a collective of people working in solidarity with Colombian social activists, communities and human rights defenders, who face threats, murder and imprisonment as a result of their struggles for defending their land and right s They are part of the Network of Friendship and Solidarity with Colombia, a space for coordination between various Colombian and international groups.
www.espacio.org.uk

[3] A large number of global social movements, ranging from peasants to animal rights activists, are rejecting the deceptive term "biofuel" which makes us believe that energy from crops is more environmentally friendly. Instead the word agrofuels is used, that is fuels produced from purposely and intensively grown crops using large quantities of chemicals, fossil fuels and resulting in monocultural land use.

[4] Two recent peer-reviewed studies published in Science (www.tinyurl.com/2blteq and www.tinyurl.com/2nkx7n) show that the full greenhouse gas emissions from land conversion for agrofuel has been ignored in nearly all previous 'life cycle studies'. Once the emissions from converting more land to agrofuels are taken into account, all agrofuels currently available accelerate global warming and do not mitigate it.


bristol rising tide and espacio bristol-colombia

Comments

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Overthrow Uribe regime in Colombia!

15.04.2008 15:15

The reason for what is happening to farmers in Colombia is obvious-the U.S.-backed Uribe regime. Uribe must go! The people of Colombia need to take their country back like the people of Venezuela did. They need to act quickly, too, as the U.S. wants to impose another of their "made in USA" free trade agreements on Colombia which will make the situation for Colombian farmers and working class people far worse than it already is!

Eliminate capitalism and replace it with economic democracy!

No Corps
- Homepage: http://www.prout.org/


microalgae & hemp,scientific research

16.04.2008 00:33

microalgae grows in lakes abundantly & can can grow in med, tropics abundantly, as well as providing potentially massive amounts of veg matter with very high oil contentm.Spirullina is a superfood containing omega 3 & epa-dha oil essential to veggies-vegans & omnivores now cod stocks are so low due to overfishing & seals are being scapegoated.
Boeing are doing experiments on algae in S.africa & for once need encouragement, though jet flight would still need restricting as fuel would still be burnt in upper atmosphere & wont might be potentially carbon nuetral, but will still effect the greenhouse effect.
Hemp is also very high in oil, needs little or no fertilisers, can be grown on poorer soils, is resilient & good for mixing with other crops drawing up beneficial nutrients.
Certainly turning over food crop to biofuel & cutting down forests for palm trees is corporate biofuel BS, though lets not throw out the babies with the bath water!& used veg oil still has alot of potential!
Check this out, I know it from memory, I researched repeatedly over last few years, info on hemp has been known for ages though getting a hemp growing licence has been tricky-impossible in last century due to laws put down to help Dupont petroluem+ products.

Green Syndicalist