http://www.workers.org/2007/world/biofuels-1018/
Biofuels
and world hunger
By G. Dunkel
Published Oct 12, 2007 11:41 PM
While
obesity is a major health problem in the
Ten
million children under the age of 5 die each year from hunger, according to an
article in the Lancet, a major medical journal. Three billion people out of the
6 billion in the world face premature death due to lack of nutrition or potable
water, according to the FAO; 2.4 billion people have to cook with wood or other
biological products and 1.6 billion have no access to electricity.
In
the past year, the problem of hunger—especially in the least developed
areas of the world like sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia—has grown
sharper because the price of corn has shot up, more than doubling in the past
12 months and the price of wheat has reached a ten-year high. The world has
less than 60 days of corn stockpiled, the lowest level in decades, and the
stock of wheat is at a 25-year low.
The
reason for this increase is the policy recently adopted by the Bush administration
to produce a major amount of ethanol from corn. Ethanol can be used as a
substitute for fuels produced from petroleum.
In
the developed countries, not much corn is consumed directly. Instead, it is
used as feed to produce milk and dairy products, eggs, meat (beef, chicken,
pork), cereals, peanut butter, soft drinks and snacks.
But
in countries like
Prices
of white corn meal in
Imperialists use corn as weapon
In an
article entitled “Foodstuff as Imperial Weapon: Bio-fuels and Global
Hunger,” Cuban President Fidel Castro pointed out, “The sinister
idea of turning foodstuffs into fuel was definitely established as the economic
strategy of the U.S. foreign policy on Monday, March 26th last.” Fidel
Castro quoted an Associated Press dispatch about George Bush’s meeting
with car company executives in which the
In this
dispatch, Bush said he was going to call on Congress to mandate the production
of 35 billion gallons of ethanol by 2017, which Fidel Castro points out is a
phenomenal amount that “will happen after a great number of investments,
which could only be afforded by the most powerful companies whose operations
are based on the consumption of electricity and fuel.”
Bush has
claimed that the shift to ethanol might help clean up the environment. Analysts
argue, however, that the carbon released into the atmosphere by the energy
required to produce this amount of ethanol and the huge amount of fertilizers needed
to grow the corn would most likely be higher than the carbon released by using
oil.
The costs
involved in substituting ethanol for oil will be very high, but there also
might be vast profits, something that drives capitalists ever onward.
Politically, the
A number
of African countries—including Benin, Mali, Nigeria and Senegal, led by
Ghana—have been testing producing biofuel from jatropha, a weed that is
widely used to protect fields from livestock, which don’t like its taste
or feel. The seeds of jatropha contain oil, which has been used for a long time
to produce soap. But researchers have found that it is much cheaper to produce
biodiesel from jatropha than from corn or soy beans. And burning
jatropha-derived biodiesel produces one-fifth the carbon of burning
petroleum-derived diesel. The residue left after oil production can even be
used as fertilizer and to produce soap.
Since it
is a perennial weed, jatropha grows well in very poor, arid conditions without
fertilizer or irrigation. Its roots, lying close to the surface, stabilize the
soil and for this reason it currently is planted on earthen dams and dikes.
“They
came to explain the project to us and said that if we grow jatropha it can
produce oil to make the machine work,” Daouda Doumbia, an elder in the
Malian village of Simiji told Reuters. Simiji was recently outfitted with a
biodiesel generator. “I grow groundnuts, and this activity can go
alongside it as a partner crop,” he explained.
The real
problem
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