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As We Stand on the Brink of Catastrophe, Bio-Fuels are no Magic Bullet

By Debi Barker and Jerry Mander, AlterNet. Posted September 12, 2007.


Having made ethanol into this magic elixir, politicians, financial investors, and the occasional environmental organization are masking the need for far deeper investigation and solutions.
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The burgeoning reality of global climate change, rooted in a century of over-consumption of fossil fuels, is merging with another crisis with the same basic root cause--the looming depletion of inexpensive oil and gas supplies ("peak oil"). Combined, they bring the world to an unprecedented and profoundly dangerous moment that threatens global environmental and social crises on an epic scale.

These crises potentially include a breakdown of the most basic operating structures of our society, even industrialism itself, at least at its present scale. Long distance transportation, industrial food systems, complex urban and suburban systems, and many commodities basic to our present way of life--autos, plastics, chemicals, pesticides, refrigeration, et al.--are all rooted in the basic assumption of ever-increasing inexpensive energy supplies.

One would think that such threatening circumstances would bring clear and effective movement from the leaders of national governments, acting on behalf of present and future generations. So far, however, with a few exceptions, the response of most governments has been inadequate to address the scale of the problem. This is particularly the case in the U.S., where government, politicians, and most corporations are still hoping to somehow convert the climate and peak oil crises into a new business opportunity.

We are seeing a lot of scurrying and postulating, as each sector, government, business, and that odd new third sector--presidential candidates--are engaged in a mad rush to identify magic elixirs to solve the energy problem while pushing corporate growth and unabated consumerism. By avoiding reality, they make the problems worse, and real solutions more difficult to achieve. Solutions so far include, for example, desperate grabs for the last remnants of oil and gas supplies, thus the war in Iraq.

An increasingly popular solution is that of biofuels, purported as the renewable energy that will definitively shift our dependency away from fossil fuels. But corn-produced ethanol and many of the other biofuel varieties are leading us down a path of unsustainability as they continue to impact fragile ecosystems, threaten biodiversity, concentrate corporate power and increase inequities in rural communities. These surely offer no magic bullets to solve our problems, and may, in the end, bring more harm than good, as compared with likely alternatives such as wind, solar, small scale hydro, and wave.

Ethanol, the most popular of biofuels, is creating a new competition between land needed to grow fuel for cars versus food for humans. Add to that the fact that generating ethanol costs more energy than it produces and it contributes to a net increase in greenhouse gas emissions, and the entire myth of biofuels as the catch-all solution to global warming is debunked.

Having made ethanol into this magic elixir, politicians, financial investors, and the occasional environmental organization are masking the need for far deeper investigation and solutions. They are pushing us toward practices that actually may be less sustainable and socially just than what preceded them. We are merely trading one set of problems for another.

There is a strong case that no combination of renewables will be sufficient to sustain the industrial system at its present bloated, wasteful scale. Ultimately, the answer must involve renewables plus significant efforts toward all-out conservation, efficiency, reduced consumption and "powering down" of energy use. It is crucial that these latter elements always be included in discussions of sustainable futures.

But there is some good news. A new process and set of evaluative tools is now gaining favor among scientists, which they are calling "Life Cycle Analysis." This basically means that new technologies, and specifically energy technologies, are evaluated in a far more comprehensive way, including all inputs and materials used at every stage of their extraction through mining, assembly, transport and performance from "dust to dust." They offer full ecological footprints from the ground-up, from birth to death. This process has the potential to dissuade us from making glib assumptions about which energy alternative actually contributes more, and harms less, than the others.

The basic goal must be to move toward creating an economy that operates first of all in the interests of ecological sustainability, within the ecological limits of the planet, and which includes social and economic equity, without which no long term solution is possible. The lives of our children and the planet literally depend on our doing the right thing, not the most convenient thing. That's the impetus for a Washington teach-in later this week that seeks to confront the global triple crisis of our time: climate change, peak oil, and global resource depletion. Sixty speakers from all continents will offer their ideas. Visit www.ifg.org and join the discussion.

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See more stories tagged with: climate change, global warming, bio-fuels

Debi Barker is Co-Director of the San Francisco-based International Forum on Globalization. Jerry Mander is the Founder and Co-Director of the International Forum on Globalization.

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Debi Barker and Jerry Mander, where have you been?
Posted by: AsteroidMiner on Sep 12, 2007 11:17 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wind, solar, small scale hydro, and wave are also very limited
resources. Debi Barker and Jerry Mander, since you work for
AlterNet, have you not been following the conversation on
alternet.org/environment? If you read the previous 10 or 20
comments sections, you would already know that wind, solar,
small scale hydro, and wave are just not going to make it. You
would also know that we are forced to convert from coal to
nuclear to avoid extinction. You would also know that nuclear
power is safer than coal. You would also know that we have
plenty of nuclear fuel in Yucca Mountain.
I double dare you to prove that I am wrong.

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I disagree with some of what you say.
Posted by: Bart Thesc on Sep 13, 2007 12:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wind may be limited but we have so far made the tiniest dent in reaching that limit. Solar has boundless amounts to grow, just think of all of the empty space on everyone's roof to start. Wave and tidal have a long way to go before we have even scratched the surface.

I do agree about the hydro as we will be losing dams faster than we build them probably for at least the next two decades. And I wholeheartedly agree that we will have to embrace nuclear if we wish to maintain our way of life. It is the logical choice and other countries such as France and Japan are showing the way.

Ethanol is a stupid proposition as it is currently structured and anyone who says differently either hasn't studied it or is sucking money out of it. Kill the subsidies and then we will really see if it's a good idea.

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» RE: Solar cells Posted by: AsteroidMiner
Renewable energy will do the job if given the chance,
Posted by: leerhok on Sep 13, 2007 1:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
meaning the right priorities taken by governments and business.

Up in the mountains, on lakes and at sea there is sufficient place for a hell of a lot of windmills. In the tropics and adjacent land we can fill every desert and uninhabitable land with huge solar parks. Wave produced electricity too has nearly unlimited capabilities.

But the very best would probably be each household its own power supply: In the warmer regions roof and walls covered with solar panels. In wind stable regions 5-10 KW windmills on the roof of one-family homes and bigger ones on larger buildings. And in many places hybrids of both would be feasible. Then most people would need grid supply only as a backup for sunless/windless days.

Oil rigs out at sea ending their production period could be used for windmills producing ecologically clean hydrogen for electrical autos. Hydrogen easier to transport to shore than electricity and we will need "clean" hydrogen anyhow to make autos using this source of energy environmentally friendly.

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» RE:solar cells Posted by: AsteroidMiner
HEMP
Posted by: garry minor on Sep 13, 2007 1:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once again I read the problems faced because of corn biofuels, and again no mention the only true viable plant resource we have, kaneh bosm, cannabis, hemp! Not only is hemp ten times more efficient than corn for ethanol production, it grows in soil and conditions other crops won't grow, without fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides that foul our soil and water which harm the environment all the way to the dead zones they create in the oceans. Henry Ford built and fueled a car with hemp. The cellulose plastic panels ten times stronger than steel. Synthetic plastics were derived from cellulose technology. Neither he or Diesel intended to run their engines on petroleum. We were sold people!
One acre of hemp equals four of timber for pulp and you harvest hemp every year, in some area's twice a year. Do the math on that! Why are we cutting all the tree's? There are over 25,000 uses for hemp, all paper, plastics, packaging, paints, varnishes, lubricants, textiles, medicines, pressed board, and most building products can be made with it. In 1938, not knowing harmless hemp was the "killer marijuana" and now illegal to grow, Popular Mechanics wrote that with the invention of the decorticator it was the most desirous, and would be the first billion dollar crop in America. What happened?
The hempseed is the single most nutritious thing you can eat. Our Government stockpiles it as a strategic food source under Executive order #12919, yet "we the people" are denied it's benefits today. This seed could eliminate the need for hormones and remnants in our feedstock which is why American beef is banned in Europe. Hemp is also good for the soil, it's roots grow deep breaking it for future rotated crops. Canvas is Dutch for cannabis. For thousands of years all ships sails, rope, most clothing, and oil paintings were of cannabis fiber, which is the longest and strongest in nature.
Humans, birds, and reptiles all have cannabinoid receptors throughout our body's. In the entire history of mankind not one death can be attributed to cannabis. It can not kill you! It's good for you. In Canada and Europe it has been proven to increase brain cell development and shrink tumors. It has been found helpful with Alzheimers, MS, autism, chronic pain, diabetes, epilepsy, depression, migraine, arthritis, glaucoma, obesity, asthma, emphysema, herpes, Parkinsons, Huntingtons, Tourettes, Crohns disease, and more. For some reason our FDA refuses to look at it even though centuries before Jesus it was #1 on a list of ten thousand medicinal plants given to a Dr. Thrita in the Zend Avesta.
The reason hemp became illegal never had anything to do with it's physical effects. The reason cannabis is illegal is because billionaires want to remain billionaires and hemp is the only plant that can replace our need for the oil, coal, cotton, chemical, alcohol, and other earth and soul destroying products they peddle.
I sincerely believe that if we open our eyes to this miracle of a plant, and at the same time develop solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, and other clean technologies we can make it work. Hemp industrialization not only gives us fuel but alleviates many other pollutants. One thing we don't want to do is put a burden on future generations by jumping into energy sources without stopping to think of consequences. Look at us now!
And, maybe we need to slow down a little bit too!
Kaneh bosm!!!!!!!

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Solar Works
Posted by: Bill James on Sep 13, 2007 7:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Quote from someone who change the energy world:

"Sunshine is spread out thin and so is electricity. Perhaps they are the same, Sunshine is a form of energy, and the winds and the tides are manifestations of energy.”

“Do we use them? Oh, no! We burn up wood and coal, as renters burn up the front fence for fuel. We live like squatters, not as if we owned the property.

“There must surely come a time when heat and power will be stored in unlimited quantities in every community, all gathered by natural forces. Electricity ought to be as cheap as oxygen...."

Thomas Edison, 1910


Historical Curiosity: I wonder what our world would look like today if Edison had teamed up with Eistein based on Einstein's 1905 proof of Quantum Mechanics based on the PhotoElectric Effect. Sunshine and electricity might cost nearly the same.

The reality is that if we design for what we have, we do not have an energy crisis at all.

Instead of moving a ton to move a person, we will this winter implement the first solar powered transportation network. Ultra-light JPods, suspended from rails create a Physical-Internet. You get in the JPods, tell the computer where you wish to go and it takes you there with 5 hp electoric motors, powered by sunshine.

www.jpods.com

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mick3
Posted by: mick3 on Sep 14, 2007 3:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ethanol is just another ADM-style ripoff, intended to enrich corporations and their investors at huge cost to the rest of us. It has already been established that processing corn into ethanol uses more energy than it produces.

But don't worry, Dictator Cheney will handle everything after the next "Pearl Harbor" (this time, what? bio attacks?). Recall that the anthrax that showed up in Democrats' mail came from a US government lab. Whatever, the US will be placed under martial law and kept there as a police state under the dictatorship already systematically put in place by BushCo. Does anyone expect that them to hand that over to Democrats, or even sane Republicans?

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And Beware Of Biofuels
Posted by: Jeff Hoffman on Sep 14, 2007 5:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rainforests have been killed in order to grow crops for biodiesel, such as in Malaysia where they're planting palm trees for palm oil. While petroleum is very environmentally destructive, using plants for fuel is even worse, because it's not as bad to use something from under the ground than it is to either destroy a natural area or use crops that would otherwise feed people.

So the column is exactly right when it says we need to reduce our consumption, and we need to do so by quite a bit.

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MADNESS
Posted by: Constitutionalist75 on Sep 17, 2007 4:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As the human population continues to grow and the economy continues to expand, the consumer demand for cheap fuel for cars and trucks also continues to grow and so, as oil supplies are depleted, bio-fuels are made ready to fill the need - oh thank goodness for the progress of technology ( ! ) -- But when agribusiness executives are faced with the choice between growing bio-fuel crops or food crops, how will they decide? Profit, what else?! And if their paid-for politicians give them massive tax incentives to choose bio-fuel agriculture, will any of them say HEY what about continuing to produce low-cost food crops for the people? Not in a competitive economy where big corporations must get even bigger to survive! Thus, as they shift over from food crops for a growing population to bio-fuel crops for a growing number of vehicles, food prices will rise and people will starve, because "Market Forces" must be allowed to work ( ! ) But of course, they will blame the scarcity of food on the crop failures caused by chaotic drought and floods, caused by all those carbon-emitting power plants, jet planes and motor vehicles!

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