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     Apr 26, 2008
Food prices dim biofuel glow
By Antoaneta Bezlova

BEIJING - Studies debunking the environmental benefits of ethanol have made little impression in China, which is betting on biofuels as the green answer to coal and oil to help clear its increasingly smog-filled skies.

But economic realities of surging food prices and global inflation are beginning to disturb the ethanol dream. Prices for cassava and other non-grain feedstock promoted in China as a safe alternative to the conversion of precious corn into ethanol fuel are quickly rising.

Producers say they need more government subsidies to keep their projects going. Given government control on fuel prices, doubts are growing as to whether the expensive production of

 

cleaner fuels can ever be made profitable.

"The government controls all fuel prices - whether oil or ethanol - but with the prices for feedstock going through the roof we are all suffering losses," Li Jiangdong, a salesperson at Jilin Fuel Ethanol Ltd, one of the four largest state-mandated bio-ethanol producers, told China Times this week.

In Guangxi, an impoverished southwestern province where ethanol is commercially produced from cassava instead of from grain, officials this month said they were replacing traditional petrol and diesel oil with biofuel. The locality plans to phase out fossil fuels entirely by the end of the month, expanding the scope of a pilot scheme currently running in nine other provinces.

But what should have been a cause for environmental victory got little resonance among a public worried about galloping inflation and surging food prices. Consumer prices in March increased 8.3% while food prices have risen by 21% since last year. The rising price of corn, the primary source for ethanol production, has had a knock-on effect on all other staples.

This is consistent with warnings from the International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD), released in a report prepared by 400 experts that says diversion of agricultural crops to producing biofuel can raise food prices.

Prices of non-grain feedstock such as cassava and sorghum have risen too, squeezing producers' already thin profit margins.

"Without more and larger subsidies from the government our projects are doomed," one procurement official at Guangxi Zhongliang Bio-energy Co, said. "Prices of cassava have doubled since last year and one can't say how long the production can be sustained."

Chinese leaders have encouraged the production of biofuels from renewable resources to satisfy the country's voracious appetite for energy and reduce its dependence on imported oil. Biofuels are seen by Beijing as a greener way to sustain the country's robust economic growth in the face of growing international clamor about its pollution.

Under pressure to tackle its worsening smog and acid rain, China has stepped up efforts to develop clean alternative energies and has a target for renewable energy to account for at least 15% of consumption by 2020, up from just 6% in 2006.

Yet the promotion of biofuel has presented the leadership with the most difficult choices. Because of the country's vast population and low per-capita arable land, Beijing has had to carefully manage the competition for grains between food and fuel producers. Moreover, new evidence has shaken the earlier belief that biofuels are a silver bullet for climate change.

In the long term, effects on food prices may be reduced, but environmental effects caused by land and water requirements of large-scale increases of first generation biofuels production are likely to persist, the IAASTD report has warned.

Although a relative newcomer to the biofuel market, China in the past three years has emerged as the world's third-largest producer after Brazil and the United States. In 2006, the production capacity of China's ethanol mills reached 10 million tonnes, outpacing the government mandated output of six million tonnes for the whole of the 11th Five-Year plan (2006-10).

Amid rising corn prices and food security concerns, Beijing has tried to promote non-grain resources for the production of bio-ethanol, limiting the amount of corn used for conversion into green fuels and restricting investment into corn-based ethanol projects.

But even non-grain feedstock production of bio-ethanol is proving problematic as producers complain about sinking fortunes.

A circular released in 2006 by the nation's top planning body, the National Development and Planning Commission, estimated that the cost of producing one tonne of ethanol from corn was roughly 4,500 yuan (US$652) while the cost of producing it from cassava was lower, at $580.

The circular's estimates were used as a cost basis for the expansion of non-grain feedstock production but agricultural researchers say these projections have been now rendered meaningless, as prices have risen steeply.

Chinese researchers say the country uses about 3.3 tonnes of corn to produce one tonne of ethanol. It takes though 7 tonnes of cassava, or 15 tonnes of sorghum, to produce the same amount of biofuel. With the current prices of inputs there is no cost advantage of using non-grain feedstock as a substitute to corn.

China's corn-based ethanol production is already heavily subsidized. However, given domestic controls of retail fuel prices and steep corn prices, the subsidies are only sufficient for producers to break even or make tiny profits, according to a study by Deutsche Bank.

(Inter Press Service)


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