As strategies for energy security, investment
opportunities and energy policies prompt ever-growing production and
consumption of biofuels like bioethanol and biodiesel, land and water that
could otherwise be used for food production increasingly are used to produce
crops for fuel.
About 4 percent of the world's agricultural land and
3 to 4 percent of its fresh water are now used for growing biofuels, according
to a new study published March 3, 2016 in the Nature journal Scientific
Reports. About one-third of the malnourished people in the world, the findings
suggest, could be fed by using these resources for food production.
With the world's population at about 7.4 billion
people, and projected to grow to about 9 billion by the middle of the century,
the need for food and fuel could increasingly be at odds.
"We are investigating and evaluating the
affects of biofuels on food security -- the food-energy nexus -- and its link
with the global appropriation of land and water," said Paolo D'Odorico, an
environmental sciences professor at the University of Virginia who co-wrote the
paper with colleagues in Italy. "The land and water resources claimed by
biofuel production have been poorly quantified, and we are trying to gain
better understanding to help inform public policy."
D'Odorico said that if biofuel production for
transportation were to be increased to 10 percent of the total fuel used by the
transportation sector -- as is projected to occur based on recent policy and
business patterns that encourage renewable energy production -- the planet
could meet the food needs of only about 6.7 billion people.
"We are looking at a food deficit for about 700
million people with respect to our current world population," D'Odorico
said. "It will only get worse as the population grows."
The research team based its analysis on biofuel
consumption rates inferred from data by the United Nation's Food and
Agriculture Organization and other sources. They estimated the water and land
footprints of one unit of biofuel energy and reconstructed global trade
patterns for bioenergy crops. They determined that the approximately 4 percent
of agricultural land and water used for producing biofuels would be sufficient
to feed about 280 million more people if used for food crops.
"These results clearly show the extent to which
biofuels are competing with food for the limited land and water resources of
the planet, and are becoming an additional obstacle to bringing food production
in line with the increasing needs of the human population," D'Odorico
said.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from materials provided
by University of Virginia. Note: Materials may be edited for content and
length.
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