Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login

NEWSDESK

Brazil Lula defends biofuels from growing criticism
16 Apr 2008 20:21:51 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Raymond Colitt

BRASILIA, April 16 (Reuters) - President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva defended Brazil's production of biofuels on Wednesday, rejecting criticism they are furthering a surge in global food prices and harming the environment.

"Don't tell me, for the love of God, that food is expensive because of biodiesel. Food is expensive because the world wasn't prepared to see millions of Chinese, Indians, Africans, Brazilians and Latin Americans eat," Lula told reporters before speaking at a conference of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Brasilia.

"We want to discuss this not with passion but rationality and not from the European point of view," Lula said.

Lula's comments follow a week of criticism and protests in Europe and Brazil against fuels derived from food crops and their supposed environmental and social benefits.

The growing criticism is a challenge to Brazil's diplomacy and its agricultural export boom, which has seen it become the world's largest exporter of ethanol -- derived from sugar cane -- and place it at the center of the global biofuels debate.

Competitors and critics have tried to link several of Brazil's leading farm exports, from beef to soybeans, with environmental destruction and poor working conditions.

"Brazil is prepared for this debate. I and my government are ready to travel around the world," Lula said.

Critics say the increased production of crops for ethanol and biodiesel, which is derived from oil seeds, is using up land that would otherwise by used for food crops. In Brazil, they say it is also pushing cattle ranchers and farmers further north and contributing to the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.

Some of Brazil's neighbors, including Venezuela and Bolivia, warned at the FAO conference this week that biofuels could increase malnutrition in Latin America.

Brazil has repeatedly argued that it has plenty of unused land to plant crops for biofuels and that current production was still too small to affect food prices.

The Brazilian government rejected this week a voluntary code of conduct to guide the production and use of biofuels, saying the proposal made in the FAO meeting needed further study.

The European Union's environment chief said on Tuesday that biofuels, which Brazil hopes to export to the EU, now must meet social and environmental criteria. Scientists from the European Environment Agency urged the 27-nation bloc to drop its 10 percent biofuel target for road-transport fuels.

(Reporting by Raymond Colitt, editing by Stuart Grudgings and Philip Barbara)

(For more stories on global food price rises, please see http://www.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/agflation)


AlertNet news is provided by

Email this article       Send comments

Topics

•  Food and hunger

MORE >>

NGO latest

•  Catholic Relief Services Urges Immediate Global Hunger Relief
CRS - USA

•  CARE and Oxfam organize a forum to rethink the international response to world hunger
CARE International Secretariat

•  Concern wraps up emergency response after Mozambique floods
Concern Worldwide - Ireland

•  High food prices necessitate urgent reallocation of development aid
Deutsche Welthungerhilfe (German Agro Action) - Germany

•  Red Cross announces scale-up in food programmes
Red Cross - UK

MORE >>

Latest news

•  Brazil Lula defends biofuels from growing criticism

•  Colorado wildfires prompt state of emergency

•  US forces release AP photographer in Iraq after 2 yrs

•  Pope meets Bush, urges more just society

•  RPT-Prayers mix with protests as pope motorcade passes

MORE >>
AlertNet news is provided by

Del.icio.us Del.icio.us  |   Digg Digg  |   NewsVine NewsVine  |   Reddit Reddit   
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2008-04-16T153234Z_01_DEL40_RTRIDSP_2_CHINA-TIBET_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/DEL40.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2008-04-16T153018Z_01_DEL42_RTRIDSP_2_CHINA-TIBET_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/DEL42.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2008-04-16T152952Z_01_DEL41_RTRIDSP_2_CHINA-TIBET_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/DEL41.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2008-04-16T152804Z_01_DEL39_RTRIDSP_2_CHINA-TIBET_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/DEL39.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2008-04-16T134608Z_01_DEL06_RTRIDSP_2_INDIA_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/DEL06.htm

A Tibetan exile takes part in a candle light vigil during 24-hour hunger strike in the northeastern Indian city of Siliguri April 16, 2008, against what they say is human rights ...



Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Wed Apr 16 20:19:21 2008