Published: September 11, 2008
Friends of the Earth Report on Biofuel Production Offers Incomplete, Outdated and Inaccurate Picture, According to Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association
SAO PAULO, Brazil, Sept. 11 /PRNewswire/ -- References to the Brazilian
ethanol industry in the report "Fuelling Destruction inLatin America,"
distributed by theAmsterdam-based non-government organization Friends of the
Earth, are based on out-of-context, inaccurate and generally outdated
information that in no way reflects current biofuel production and use in
Brazil. The assessment comes from Marcos Sawaya Jank, president ofBrazil's
top organization representing sugar and ethanol producers, the Brazilian
Sugarcane Industry Association (UNICA). Timed to coincide with today's
announcement on the European Directive on Renewable Energy Sources by the
European Parliament's ITRE (Industry, Technology, Research and Energy)
Committee, the report is an example of "how unprepared, or unwilling to
properly process information that confronts their beliefs, some organizations
are about topics they propose to analyse, in this case ethanol production and
use inBrazil," said Jank.
Throughout the Friends of the Earth document, there are numerous factual
errors and conclusions that bear little or no resemblance to the facts on the
ground, according to UNICA. Sweeping statements, such as "Little progress has
been made to make the Brazilian biofuels industry sustainable," are indicative
of a pre-determined negative slant that defies long-standing facts and figures
corroborated by respected global institutions and easily available to anyone
conducting serious research.
"How is it possible to conclude that a sector has made little progress
towards sustainability when that sector's activities are extremely positive on
all fronts that define sustainability? From the most significant CO2 reduction
of any biofuel produced in the world today, to a highly positive energy
balance, to hundreds of thousands of jobs created, new technologies developed,
and strong, visible and positive economic impacts throughout the economy, the
production and use of Brazilian sugarcane ethanol is a highly successful and
sustainable activity," counters Jank.
Even simple aspects are bungled in the Friends of the Earth report, says
UNICA. It states that exports of Brazilian sugarcane ethanol toEurope are
increasing, "especially tothe Netherlands". The authors are apparently
unaware of the fact that most ethanol exports toEurope enter the continent
throughRotterdam, but are not necessarily destined forthe Netherlands.
Europe's top importer of Brazilian ethanol isSweden.
Marcos Jank points out that when organizations insist on disseminating
incomplete and out-of-context information, it is their own credibility that is
at stake. "The Brazilian ethanol experience is the longest and most successful
effort at large-scale, sustainable production and use of a biofuel in the
world to date. That explains the hundreds of visits toBrazil in recent months
by groups of government and elected officials, researchers, students,
journalists and investors from all over the world. They come to take a closer
look at what is being done here, and they go away with a far different view
from what they read in some of these reports, so insisting on such tactics is
a risky proposition for NGOs that wish to remain credible," concludes Jank.
A partial list of specific errors, unsubstantiated claims and conclusions
in the Friends of the Earth report is available from the UNICA website at the
following link:
http://www.unica.com.br/downloads/documents/factualerrors.pdf
Additional information is also available on the "Myths vs. Facts" leaflet
produced by UNICA, available at this link:
http://www.unica.com.br/download.asp?mmdCode=407ED204-2194-4AF3-8652-
538632DF16B8 (Due to the length of the URL, it may be necessary to copy and
paste it into your web browser).
About UNICA:
The Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association (UNICA) represents the top
producers of sugar and ethanol in the country's South-Central region,
especially the state ofSao Paulo, which accounts for about 50% of the
country's sugarcane harvest and 60% of total ethanol production. UNICA
develops position papers, statistics and specific research in support of
Brazil's sugar, ethanol and bioelectricity sectors. In 2007,Brazil produced
an estimated 490 million metric tons of sugarcane, which yielded 30.5 million
tons of sugar and 22.3 billion liters of ethanol.
For More Information, Please Contact:
CDN - Corporate Communications
Rosa Webster - (5511) 3643 2707 / rosa.webster@cdn.com.br
Marli Romanini - (5511) 3643 2756 / marli@cdn.com.br
Camila Nobre - (5511) 3643 2730 / camila.nobre@cdn.com.br
SOURCE Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association - UNICA
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