About iDW

Rising fuel costs, food shortages, a growing population, and lack of access to medical and educational resources present some of the 21st century's greatest global challenges.

iDW collects and features innovative solutions to these problems from all over the developed and underdeveloped world, and invites active feedback from its readers.

If you would like to publicize your own appropriate technology solutions, or have any suggestions for future features please contact iDW at: idw.news@gmail.com

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Study Shows Bioenergy Benefits the Rural Poor

Bioenergy, when produced on a small-scale in local communities, can play a significant role in rural development in poor countries, according to a new report jointly published by FAO and the UK's Department for International Development (DFID)




(Taken from the FAO's news release)
"The study, "Small Scale Bioenergy Initiatives: Brief Description and Preliminary Lessons on Livelihood Impacts from Case Studies in Latin America, Asia and Africa," covers 15 different "start-up" bioenergy projects from 12 countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia involving a diverse array of technologies. "The furious debate around bioenergy has largely concerned liquid fuels used for transport," said Oliver Dubois, a bioenergy expert in FAO's Natural Resources Department. "Yet more than 80 percent of bioenergy usage in the world involves other sources, mainly wood, which are used for basic household cooking and heating in poor areas of the world."   Concern over the impact these transportation biofuels will have on the environment, water resources and food security has obscured many of the positive benefits for poor rural people.  The study shows quite clearly that there are a number of huge possible benefits of using new technologies for biomass-based rural energy, some very basic, others more sophisticated. 
Biofuel benefits for poor
Some of the possible benefits of bioenergy highlighted in the study include:  
  • An increase in natural resource efficiency as energy can be created from waste that would otherwise be burnt or left to rot is put to use 
  • The creation of useful by-products such as affordable fertilizer from biogas production  
  • The possibility of simultaneously producing food and fuel through intercropping
  • The creation of new financial capital with growth cycles by making use of marginal land  
Saving local resources
 "Virtuous cycles are shown to develop within communities where people have access to the energy services needed for development without money flowing out of communities for fossil fuels or local natural resources used up".  The study also shows how the use of bioenergy has often played a role in partially insulating poor rural people from the vagaries of the fossil fuel market used in times of an energy crisis, but then typically abandoned when the oil price drops. In none of the cases studied did bioenergy production appear to jeopardise food security, either because the bioenergy is produced from crops not used for food or grown on very small plots or stretches of unused land. "


Read the original FAO Press Release: bioenergy benefits for rural poor 

Read the actual study: Small Scale Bioenergy Initiatives: Brief Description and Preliminary Lessons on Livelihood Impacts from Case Studies in Latin America, Asia and Africa 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Blog Archive