[R-G] Wealthy nations fuelling unrest

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Wed Apr 30 11:18:23 MDT 2008


Wealthy nations fuelling unrest
Susan Walsh and Wilhelmina Pelegrina
Citizen Special
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
http://www.canada.com/components/print.aspx?id=2771fe97-7c21-4dad-81ad-97633ac0f019&sponsor=

A UN official accuses a government of a "crime against humanity." The  
government representative shoots back angrily that the policy will not  
change.

The issue erupting so intensely is not ethnic cleansing, torture, or  
even terrorism. It is the production of biofuels.

The UN official was Special Rapporteur for the Right to Food Jean  
Ziegler, who told German radio last Monday production of biofuels for  
ethanol drives up food prices. Government subsidies and environmental  
regulations induce farmers to switch from growing crops for food to  
biofuels instead.

As food shortages lead to riots and widespread panic across the globe,  
leaving millions at risk, the politics of food is crowding out the war  
on terrorism as the No. 1 security concern. Granted, biofuels are not  
the only cause of rising prices, but along with soaring energy costs,  
increased demand in emerging economies, subsidies, and crop failure  
from climate change, biofuels are only making matters worse.

Food riots and unrest are spreading around the world, as is heightened  
use of security forces to combat them. The World Bank has forecast  
that 33 nations, from Mexico to Yemen, face social unrest, and has  
criticized biofuels as an important cause in the rise of food prices.

In the Philippines, troops armed with M-16 rifles have started to  
supervise the sale of subsidized rice, and the police are busy  
enforcing a presidential decree against the hoarding of food. Pakistan  
has sent troops to guard flour mills. Protests have erupted in Mexico,  
Jordan, Egypt, Haiti, Mozambique and elsewhere.

Human rights concerns are once again rising in Latin America. Since  
the boom of biofuels in 2007, prices for soybeans have increased and  
so has the cost of the land to grow them. In Paraguay, the demand for  
land and the corporate impunity of large agribusiness firms are  
resulting in human rights violations. Peasants and indigenous people  
are being pushed off their farms and can no longer afford to buy food.

"Farmers in our countries pay with their blood so that people in rich  
countries can feed their cars," said Javiera Rulli, a biologist turned  
human rights defender in Paraguay. "The grain used to fill one SUV  
tank with ethanol could feed a person for a year."

The accusations and recriminations will only get worse, as desperate  
people in the developing world feel that again, they are suffering to  
meet the demands of wealthy nations. Children are especially  
vulnerable, as price increases put food out of reach for hundreds of  
millions of undernourished children.

Under pressure as the crisis deepens, governments are pointing  
accusing fingers at one another. EU Environment Commissioner Stavros  
Dimas stood by the EU's environmental policies that support the use of  
biofuels, saying through a spokesperson: "There is no question for now  
of suspending the target fixed for (use of) biofuels." Public pressure  
might force the EU to revisit the issue.

Brazilian President Lula da Silva made an impassioned defence of  
biofuels, while criticizing developed countries for subsidizing  
industrial output.

"Biofuels aren't the villain that threatens food security," he told a  
meeting of the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization. "The real  
crimes against humanity are discarding biofuels. ..." Brazil is the  
world's largest exporter of ethanol made from sugar cane.

Other Latin American leaders are taking a different stance. Leaders  
from Cuba, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Venezuela pointed to the failings of  
global industrial agriculture, and created a $100-million fund to help  
the region's poor to buy food.

So far, Canadians have been largely observers of the crisis.  
Globalization has made countries dependent on each other for food,  
while favouring the wealthy nations. But Canada imports most of its  
fruit and vegetables, so Canada's wealth will not protect us from  
troubles in other countries.

Some countries have imposed limits on food exports. For instance,  
India has halted the export of non-basmati rice, peas and beans.  
Malawi plans to restrict corn exports. Kazakhstan, the world's sixth- 
largest wheat exporter, has banned wheat exports.

Canada's dependence on the global economy means we will not be exempt  
from the food pressure if this trend continues. Furthermore, like the  
EU and the United States, Canada's promotion of biofuels could be  
contributing to the problem.

The solution to the crisis is complex, but the reliance upon biofuels  
to combat climate change appears unworkable. This is no surprise to  
climate-change experts. A worldwide survey of 1,000 scientists last  
year found low faith in the current generation of biofuels. The most- 
favoured low-carbon technology was solar power.

While focusing on other climate change solutions, Canada could  
redirect a fraction of the subsidies for biofuels to help small-scale  
farmers around the world provide the food security that is so clearly  
missing for millions of people. We might find that promoting the food  
security of others helps our own food security as well.

Susan Walsh is executive director of USC Canada. Wilhelmina 'Ditdit'  
Pelegrina is the executive director of SEARICE, a farmers'  
organization based in the Philippines.



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