* Adopt an EU-wide limit on the amount of bioenergy used to meet the EU’s 2030 climate and energy targets, including a phase out of biofuels from food and energy crops;
* Exclude high-risk biomass sources such as biomass from protected areas, stumps and roundwood and crops from agricultural land (unless evidence is provided that this enhances their environmental conditions);
* Limit the extraction of agricultural and forest residues;
* Ensure that biomass for energy doesn’t displace other existing uses of the biomass and is in line with the principles of cascading use and the waste hierarchy;
* Ensure affected communities’ Free Prior and Informed Consent, respect of their human, labour and land rights in the production and use of biomass for energy;
* Introduce a minimum efficiency threshold for energy installations and fuel manufacturing producing bioenergy or biofuels.
These policies would clearly need tweaking for a UK context. For example, the UK's woodlands are quite different from those on the European mainland and there may be some cases, such as on RSPB nature reserves, where using roundwood from trees for energy makes sense because it benefits wildlife. However, they are a useful springboard into a discussion about what kinds of policies should be applied to safeguard nature and the climate.
Right now it is clear that existing criteria in the UK are not guaranteeing environmental protection or genuine emissions reductions.
Matt Williams, Assistant Warden, RSPB Snape.
environmental impacts
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