Oxfam: Poor nations should think twice about biofuel boom
The Associated Press
In a report, campaigners recommended that developing countries “move with extreme caution” before embarking on any broad push to increase output of energy crops such as palm oil.
It said biofuel exports to Europe and the
Oxfam said governments need to set safeguards to make sure small farmers are not thrown off their land and that food crops continue to be grown.
The report said
It warned that this may worsen because both
Oxfam is calling on the European Union to scrap a target for biofuel to replace a tenth of transport fuel by 2020. It says the target will not fulfill
“Biofuels currently provide a solution neither to the oil nor to the climate crisis, and are now contributing to a third: the food crisis,” Oxfam spokesman Robert Bailey told reporters.
The group claims that biofuels are partly responsible for hikes in food prices and are to blame for dragging some 30 million people worldwide into poverty.
However, some voices see biofuels as a huge opportunity for developing countries.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva says the biofuel boom creates a profitable export for energy crop producers in Africa, Central America and













