I was looking at the NFU web site the other day to try to discover why the NFU, usually so strident about what Defra should do, is so silent at this time of potentially massive cuts to Defra.  I didn't find the answer but then something caught my eye which I could hardly believe - Red Tractor scheme proposed for biofuels.

What madness is this? If we grow wheat in the UK and use it to produce fuel then someone, somewhere else has to grow wheat for food consumption.  And that means that the likelihood of rainforest or grassland loss increases.  Losing those biodiversity-rich habitats also means losing carbon-rich habitats and nullifies for many years any potential greenhouse gas reductions.  If the UK were an island that produced all its own food and fuel then the trade-off between food and fuel would be very clear - the fact that we are a small part of a crowded planet makes it less clear, but no less real. 

NFU combinable crops board chairman Ian Backhouse said: “This new development will mean that the crops grown by participating farmers for biofuels come with a certification that demonstrates that the crops have been grown to sustainable standards and that the end fuel meets the strict guidelines set out by the EU. It also removes the need for a government or supply chain scheme being imposed on growers.

“The NFU has worked with AFS to ensure that existing systems can be used to provide additional information and the verification required and that the changes will not be time-consuming or costly for growers. The changes have been designed to have a minimal burden on farm as they utilise the existing strengths of the Red Tractor systems, and provide an easy system of recognition for farmers’ crops for these new and growing markets."

Everyone wants to be seen to be green - but just saying it doesn't make it true. 

Actually, this new development means nothing much about the sustainability of the crops because it has no impact on land use abroad - how could it?  The EU guidelines are weak and inadequate.  And similar mistakes are being made with EU standards and UK implementation on biomass use for electricity production.

The next time that the NFU talks about the need to feed the world we should remember that the NFU promotes a fundamentally flawed and unsustainable farming system in the UK where land that could grow food is used to grow fuel instead.  The net result is higher food prices, practically no carbon savings and terrible loss of biodiversity.

The Gallagher review of biofuels was rather weak in its conclusions but clearly stated that biofuel production must avoid agricultural land that produced food crops for the reasons given above.  Every time you fill your car up with fuel, petrol or diesel, you now are putting some biofuel into your tank - and you don't have any choice about it.

Today the Renewables Fuel Agency which regulates biofuels in the UK (and therefore illustrates the difference between renewable and sustainable) states that it is disappointed that the fuel industry is not meeting voluntary green standards.  The whole thing is a disaster for the planet and if it sounds as though it makes me mad - it does.

And I will carry on wondering why the NFU is so mute at a time when Defra is facing huge cuts which, presumably, could affect farming very fundamentally.

  • Very pleased to see you blogging so strongly on biofuels Mark. Presumably the EU directive was always at least as much about making money for Europe's farmers as it was about saving the planet. The lesson for 'greens' is surely that we always need to look at the likely practical outcomes of any policy and not be swept along, taking bad decisions in "we must do something" mode.

  • Russia has just started another year's ban on the export of wheat. Europe seems to be buying up Africa to produce food for Europe. Why grow biofuels on good agricultural land anywhere?

  • Yep - utter madness - but! Whilst on holiday in southern Germany earlier this month I asked one of my relatives to explain the high proportion of maize being grown in fields around them. Apparently this was grown under contract by local farmers as biofuel for a local power station powering the local community. That had an attraction for me as it makes the provision of power locally 'sustainable' (a dreadful word with confused meanings!) and self sufficient - but! - it was clearly obvious that fields previously growing wheat were now covered in maize - ultimately this can not be right. Its just a distraction from tackling the problem of climate change by finding proper solutions, not biofuel systems, which on the face of it are seductive (I nearly succumbed!) but probably produces more CO2 than reducing it (sorry this is my view and not scientifically backed up!). And Sooty - well said - the test will be how much this is 'greenwash' rather than real, measurable and dare I say it - sustainable policies and initiatives.

  • Mark,

    Not being a farmer or scientist I always find the subject of biofuels difficult.  A member of the public will think biofuels are 'green' because they sound as though they are.  There is very little in the public domain that explains the issues surrounding biofuels to the potential buyer and with an accreditation in place the fuel looks even more 'green'.

    You also have to ask why farmers would move to biofuel production and somewhere the answer is going to be because it is financially worthwhile.  Reading your blogs, it is becoming clearer to me by the day that we have to reward farmers for the good they do to our environment and that must include paying them for food production and environmental protection.  If society wants food and not biofuels then the grant structure must be slanted accordingly.

    I know that the RSPB and other organisations lobby government all the time on issues like this but I suspect a public survey would result in a big 'Yes' to biofuels.  It does need a clear message and that is difficult; I found when volunteering the other day that as many people thought the RSPB was opposed to wind farms as there were who thought the RSPB was in favour and as we know the answer is actually in the middle.

  • It's Balance Sheet vs Profit & Loss - a gain