Get Involved
Call for an Immediate Moratorium on Industrial AgrofuelsSign on now!
Call for an Immediate Moratorium on U.S. incentives for agrofuels, U.S. agroenergy monocultures and global trade in agrofuelsThe undersigned call for an immediate moratorium on U.S. incentives for agrofuels and agroenergy from large-scale monocultures and a moratorium on global trade of such agrofuels. This includes the immediate suspension of all congressionally mandated targets and incentives such as tax breaks, tariffs and subsidies that benefit and promote agrofuels from large-scale industrial monocultures, including financing through carbon trading mechanisms, international development aid or loans from international finance organizations. This call responds to the rapid concentration of the agrofuel industry in the U.S., driven largely by U.S. and E.U. renewable fuels targets, and to the growing number of calls from the global south against the expansion of agrofuel monocultures. Agrofuels refer to large-scale industrial monoculture production of crops such as soy, oil palm, sugar cane, jatropha, canola etc. for fuels and do not include small scale, sustainably grown fuel crops that benefit local communities, do not employ genetically engineered (GE) varieties, and can be accurately referred to as "biofuels." Agrofuels cause deforestation and environmental damageIndustrial monoculture production has numerous negative impacts on the environment, climate and on people. These include soil depletion and erosion, contamination and depletion of waterways, increased use of nitrogen fertilizers and toxic agrichemicals and an increasing reliance on a small number of GE varieties at the expense of diverse and sustainable agriculture systems. Monocultures of soy and sugar cane in Latin America and palm oil in Indonesia and Malaysia have led to massive deforestation and the loss of invaluable biodiversity. Agrofuels will worsen global warmingAgrofuels are promoted as a solution to global warming, but more accurate life-cycle assessments suggests that they increase carbon emissions by increasing deforestation and degradation of peatlands and soils, while also creating more nitrous oxide emissions from fertilizer use. Crop irrigation and refineries deplete already dwindling fresh water resources. Agrofuels seriously threaten food and land rights of indigenous people and the rural poor.Promoted as a benefit to the rural poor, agrofuels are instead causing the displacement, often violent, of indigenous people and the diversion of lands formerly used to produce food for local consumption into production of agrofuels for export to wealthy northern countries. Workers are subjected to poor conditions, chemical exposures, and other abuses. Certification will not provide adequate protectionsCertification systems cannot control macro-level impacts such as the displacement of other land uses, cannot be adequately monitored and implemented in many countries, have thus far failed to ensure full participation of affected communities, could conflict with WTO agreements, and cannot be designed and implemented fast enough to keep pace with current development. The International Energy Agency estimates that over the next 23 years, the world could produce as much as 147 million tons of agro-fuel. This fuel will barely offset the yearly increase in global oil demand, now standing at 136 million tons a year, without offsetting any of the existing demand. Is this worth it? Urgent and effective measures other than agrofuels are availableThe undersigned support urgent cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, based on climate science assessments, which involve a drastic overall reduction in energy use in industrialized countries, strict energy efficiency standards, and support for truly renewable forms of energy, such as sustainable wind and solar energy and promotion of land use patterns that preserve 'carbon sinks'.
Dear [ Decision Maker ] , Members of the working group: Rainforest Action Network Global Justice Ecology Project Food First Grassroots International Family Farm Defenders Student Trade Justice Campaign Signers: Altropico Foundation, Ecuador Amazon Watch American Jewish World Service A SEED Europe, Netherlands ATTAC, Germany BASE-Investigaciones Sociales, Paraguay Biofuelwatch, UK Biowatch South Africa Border Agricultural Workers Project Brazilian Association for Agroecology Carbon Trade Watch, Europe Centre for Sustainable Agriculture Climate Action Coalition, Bulgaria Concerned Citizens of Newport Cornucopia Institute Corporate Watch, Europe Dogwood Alliance EasySweet Farm Ecological Society of the Phillipines Ecologistas en Accion, Spain Energy Justice Network EPIC (Environmental Protection Information Center) ETC Group FIAN (Food First Information and Action Network), Netherlands Food and Water Watch Food for Maine's Future Foreign Policy in Focus Friends of the Earth International Friends of the Earth, Brazil Friends of the Earth, Sierra Leone Friends of the Earth, Sweden Global Exchange Global Forest Coalition Grupo de Reflexion Rural, Argentina IFG (International Forum on Globalization) Institute for Production and Investigation of Tropical Agriculture (IPIAT) International Society for Ecology and Culture Institute for Social Ecology Biotechnology Project Land Action Research Network Life of the Land Mesa Global de Guatemala Mother Earth Foundation, Philippines Movimento das Mulheres Camponesas, Brazil NOAH/Friends of the Earth, Denmark Northwest Resistance Against Genetic Engineering Organic Consumers Association Regenwald-Institut, Germany Rising Tide North America Sustainable Agriculture of Louisville Small Planet Institute Small Producers Movement (MPA) Third World Network UNAC - Mozambique Farmers' Union WALHI/Friends of the Earth, Indonesia World Hunger Year World Rainforest Movement
Signed by: |
Campaign Launched: |
| Background Information |
see pdf for download
