For Brazil, US and EU Farm Subsidies and Not Biofuels Are the Villain

Corn The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, made an impassioned defense of biofuels rejecting that they are responsible for the recent rise in global food prices, during the opening ceremony of a United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) conference in Brazilian capital BrasÀ­lia.

President Lula also criticized industrial countries for subsidizing agriculture, which he blamed for undermining the competitiveness of developing nations and reducing world production.

"Biofuels aren't the villain that threatens food security," he said adding that "on the contrary … they can pull countries out of energy dependency without affecting foods."

A chorus of opposition to biofuels has been growing in different parts of the world in recent months. Environmental groups, government ministers and even world leaders like President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Cuba’s Fidel Castro have all voiced their concerns that the use of crops like sugar-cane and corn to make fuel for cars could lead to a serious food crisis.

Critics claim biofuels are also partly responsible for the recent rise in global food prices.

And Jean Ziegler, the UN Special Rapporteur for Food Rights and a Swiss national, has described biofuel production as "a crime against humanity."

President Lula, whose country is the world's largest exporter of biofuels such as ethanol made from sugarcane, said it was easy for someone sitting in Switzerland to preach to Brazil.

He said allegations that global food prices were rising because of biofuels were baseless. Food prices were going up, he said, because people in developing countries like China, India and Brazil itself were simply eating more as their economic conditions improved.

The president has signed several important cooperation deals with the US, another leading biofuels producer, as well as with several African countries, to work together to improve production.

The battle against biofuels has united a dichotomous group ranging from environmental activists to the leaders of some of the world's largest oil producing countries

"The real crimes against humanity are discarding biofuels and criticizing countries, energy dependence and food insecurity," he said. "If there is no reduction of agricultural subsidies in Europe, it will be difficult for poor countries to be competitive".

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Inquiry Shows Brasília’s Corruption Saga Might Be Decades Old

Federal government attorneys in Brazil intend to expand their investigation into a corruption ring ...

Persistence of Vision

The Brazilian Real was hit by speculators who were betting that Brazil would be ...

Brazil’s Minimum Wage: Government and Unions Adopt Hard Line on Negotiations

Brazil’s labor Union Força Sindical says it will insist on a minimum wage of ...

One Year Later Relatives of Brazilian Slain by London Police Feel no Closure

Family and friends of a Brazilian man who was mistaken by London police officers ...

Lula and Chavez Tie Economic Knots

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva arrives today for a state visit to ...

Easy Irrigation Will Teach Brazilians How to Save Water

Brazil’s Minister of National Integration, Pedro Brito, has announced the launch of a program ...

We Saw Brazil’s Future and It’s Not Green But Grey

9,000 square miles of Amazonian rainforest were destroyed in 2004, an urgent call to ...

Brazil’s Commercial Agriculture Gets 42% Boost in Funding

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil, and the Brazilian minister of ...

Brazilian players raise World Cup trophy

With Elections and World Cup Brace Yourself for Another Lost Year in Brazil

Brazil seems distant from the many prickly issues that are involving the world’s powers ...

Social Activism Makes Brazil’s Petrobras Member of UN Committee

Petrobras, the first and only Latin American company that is a member of the ...