- National targets would contribute to
rapid biofuel expansion in the next 10 years
- Reaching those goals would have a
limited impact on the global economy
- Some countries would be affected
significantly, with higher cost of food imports
Washingon, June 27,
2011-Expanding biofuel production to meet various national
targets in the next decade would have a limited impact on the
global economy, but poor people in some developing countries would
find it harder to afford an adequate diet, according to recent
World Bank research.
The expansion would push up prices for many food staples. Global
prices for corn and other major grains could rise by as much as 3
percent and the price of sugar by 8%, according to the research,
which is based on a simulation model covering 25 countries or
regions through 2020. The expansion would only lead to a modest
percentage decline in global gross domestic product.
The effort would benefit major biofuel-exporting countries, such as
Brazil, Argentina and Indonesia, as higher demand boosts their
exports of biofuels and feedstocks.
But other countries, which have
ambitious targets for biofuels but only limited domestic
production, could end up converting a significant amount of land
from food crops to biofuel production.
The volume and cost of their agricultural imports, meanwhile, would
rise. India's agricultural imports, for example, would rise 4
percent, and its food exports would drop by up to 6 percent.
The
overall impact on the cost of food purchase would be fairly minor
for most countries, but higher prices of basic staples would prove
especially burdensome for the very poor in places such as India and
many parts of sub-Saharan Africa."Biofuels are
an important alternative source of energy, but a large-scale
expansion could hurt countries already constrained by land, food
and other resources," says Govinda Timilsina, a senior economist at
the World Bank's Development Research Group and leader of its
biofuels research program.
He spent two and a half years
conducting the research with partners at the Bank, the University
of California at Berkeley and Iowa State University.
The research comes as developing and developed countries alike have
set biofuel mandates or voluntary targets in recent years, amid
concerns about climate change and the rising cost of fossil fuels.
Brazil, for example, requires regular gasoline to contain as much
as 25 percent ethanol blends.
If all the countries meet their goals,
global biofuel production would go up more than 60 percent in the
next decade, though it would still be a fairly small share of
global fuel consumption.
The rapid expansion over the past decade contributed to the 2008/09
jump in food prices, though findings from different studies provide
a broad range of estimates for the exact impact.
Even less is known regarding how
meeting all those goals for biofuel expansion would affect the
world's economy, the environment and the availability of food for
the world's growing population, among other things, in the long
run.
The research aims to help fill that gap by evaluating the impact of
the expansion through 2020. Using a global economic model, it
simulates how the global expansion of biofuel production would
affect the world's economic activities, environment and social
welfare.
The analysis addresses in detail key
factors such as the cost of biofuels, changes in land use and
competition between biofuels and food production.
There are some caveats. The research
assumes countries will meet all of their biofuel targets, which
would require significant reshuffling of land use, capital and
labor. Land expansion is also likely to lead to more deforestation,
says Dominique van der Mensbrugghe, a co-author and economist at
the World Bank's Development Prospects Group.
In addition, a sustained and significant rise in crude oil prices
could increase the demand for biofuels and raise overall food
prices. For example, if oil prices rise 150 percent from their 2009
levels by 2020 - rather than the 65 percent used as a baseline
assumption
in the current research - biofuel
production would be expanded at a faster pace. The researchers
point out that this would lead to a larger impact on food prices
and the overall economy than the findings summarized above.
While many support biofuels as
an instrument to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the researchers
say emissions would rise in the short run, mainly because of
destroyed pasture and forest areas. It would
take more than two decades to reverse the trend through reductions
in the use of fossil fuels, unless the conversion of forest land is
avoided.
"Second-generation" biomass-based fuels, which are made from
non-crop feedstocks, would be more environmentally friendly and put
less pressure on the global food supply. But the researchers
conclude that those potential sources need to overcome major
technical obstacles before they are ready for large-scale
commercial production.
"The research helps policy makers and the development community
better understand the factors influencing the long-term impacts of
expanding biofuels," says Michael Toman, manager of environment and
energy research in the Development Research Group.
"It points especially to both
challenges and uncertainties presented by a concerted effort to
expand global biofuels production.