Biofuel gangs kill for green profits

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article18757...

June 3, 2007
Biofuel gangs kill for green profits
Tony Allen-Mills, New York

He survived decades of Colombia's murderous guerrilla uprisings. He lived through paramilitary purges and steered well clear of the cocaine overlords who swarmed across his rural region. It was something completely different that killed Innocence Dias. He died because the world is turning green.

The global quest for alternative sources of environmentally friendly energy has attracted high-profile support from American politicians, including President George W Bush and Arnold Schwarzenegger, the governor of California. Celebrities such as Daryl Hannah, the actress, and Willie Nelson, the country singer, are leading a campaign to promote green fuels.

Yet the trend has already had disastrous consequences for tens of thousands of peasants in rural Colombia. A surge in demand for biofuels derived from agricultural products has unleashed a chaotic land grab by a new breed of gangster entrepreneurs hoping to cash in on the world's thirst for palm oil and related bioproducts.

Vast areas of Colombia's tropical forest are being cleared for palm tree plantations. Charities working with local peasants claim that paramilitary forces in league with biofuel conglomerates "some of them financed by US government subsidies " are forcing families off their land with death threats and bogus purchase offers.

"The paramilitaries are not subtle when it comes to taking land," said Dominic Nutt, a British specialist with Christian Aid who recently visited Colombia. "They simply visit a community and tell landowners, 'If you don?t sell to us, we will negotiate with your widow'."

Dias was one of several landowners around the remote settlement of Llano Rico who decided not to abandon his property when the paramilitaries first moved into the area. "My father felt protected because he had a local government position," said his daughter, Milvia Dias, 29.

Even when paramilitaries warned the villagers that if they stayed they would be considered left-wing guerrilla sympathisers, Dias refused to be bullied. "He had cattle and land and one day, after all this happened, he went out to fix a hole in one of the farm's fences," his daughter said. He never came back. A search party found him with his throat cut and seven stab wounds in his torso.

"We held the funeral at 5pm the same day and we ran away the next morning," said Dias. The land is now covered in palm trees owned by Urapalma, a Colombian enterprise that has repeatedly been accused in court proceedings of improperly invading private property.

Nutt said last week that he had heard stories of paramilitaries cutting off the arms of illiterate peasants and applying their fingerprints to land sale documents. In many cases, Nutt added, the land is collectively owned by indigenous people or Afro-Colombians and protected by federal laws that courts seem unable or unwilling to enforce.

There is no reliable estimate of how many thousand acres have been appropriated, or how many of the 3m Colombians who have lost their homes since 1985 were forced out by the palm oil business.

Washington has been struggling for years to persuade Colombian farmers to turn their backs on coca leaf production in favour of other crops. Desperate to find energy alternatives to expensive and politically volatile sources of Middle Eastern and Venezuelan oil, Bush is also advocating a global increase in biofuel production.

Alvaro Uribe, the president of Colombia, has urged local palm oil producers to more than double the land they have under cultivation within four years. Uribe's critics complain that he has effectively given a green light to paramilitaries.

At a congressional hearing on Colombia last week, Luis Gilberto Murillo-Urrutia, the former governor of Choco province, told a House foreign affairs subcommittee that US trade policy was likely to "generate an expansion of palm oil cultivation in Afro-Colombian territories . . . there is evidence that palm oil companies, taking advantage of the vulnerability of Afro- Colombian people, have been taking over lands illegally".

For Don Enrique Petro, 67, formerly a wealthy landowner from Curvarado, growing international awareness of the human cost of a green conscience has come several years too late.

"I arrived in Curvarado 39 years ago with my wife and five sons," he said last week. He bought a patch of jungle and slowly transformed it into a 30-acre spread with 110 cows, 20 bulls and 10 horses.

He lost two sons and a brother to the guerrilla wars and in the early 1990s fled his land for five years. When he returned, he found a right-wing paramilitary group in control. "They said they wanted my land to fight the guerrillas," Petro said. "They were lying. It was so they could grow palm on it and make money." Petro refused to sell up. He claims he was eventually taken prisoner by the paramilitaries and, when released, found his land had been planted with palm trees belonging to Urapalma. The company has denied that it is cooperating with paramilitaries or acquiring land illegally.

The world's demand for alternative fuels is unlikely to diminish, but Nutt argued that biofuel consumers should put pressure on Colombia to return stolen land.

Celebrities such as Hannah are beginning to distinguish between palm oil and less controversial biofuels such as ethanol, which is derived mainly from corn.

"I want biofuels that are grown and produced in a sustainable manner," said Hannah, who leads a pressure group which is lobbying for US government standards on green fuel production. "I would not buy biodiesel made from palm oil."

EU biofuel proposals

Press release
For immediate release
18th June 2007
Prepared by biofuelwatch, www.biofuelwatch.org

Environmentalists warn that EU biofuel proposals put rainforests, the climate and communities at risk

A European consultation on biofuels closes today, with nearly 5,000 respondents warning that current proposals fail to comply with an EU Summit decision that biofuel targets should be conditional on guaranteeing that biofuels must come from sustainable sources.

The European Commission have proposed a small number of environmental criteria for deciding whether biofuels are sustainable. This means that biofuels would be classed as sustainable even if they come from plantations from which local of people have been evicted. In countries like Colombia and Indonesia, human rights abuses at the hands of plantation companies and paramilitaries are widespread.

Andrew Boswell says: "In the last month, we have heard from the chair of UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (Sixth session) that 5 million indigenous people in one part of Borneo alone are likely to be displaced by biofuel plantations. We have also heard of thousands of families who have been violently evicted from their land by paramilitaries in Colombia who are helping palm oil companies clear land to produce biofuels, mostly for export. The EU commission is culpable, as it knowingly forced through this aggressive biofuels target without considering sustainability first, and with a blind eye to social and human rights issues. "

European proposals also seek to ignore the wider impacts of biofuel production. Europe's biofuel policy is pushing up the price of soya, palm oil and other commodities, which are already linked to large-scale destruction of rainforests, peatlands and traditional farmlands. NASA scientists have shown that, in the Amazon, the rate of rainforest destruction is directly linked to the price of soya. Almuth Ernsting, also of Biofuelwatch says: "The European Commission want to do nothing about the wider impacts of biofuel production other than 'monitor' them. They are looking for tiny greenhouse gas savings from displacing a small proportion of fossil fuels whilst risking the large-scale destruction of rainforests and peatlands on which all of us depend for a stable climate. This policy will be a disaster for ecosystems, for local communities particularly in the global South, and for the global climate".

Earlier this month, seven organisations wrote to all MEPs to ask for an end to biofuel targets and support until Europe could guarantee that all biofuels come from sustainable sources. They expressed their serious concern that the EU has not encouraged organisation in the global South to participate in the consultation, even though people in Asia, Latin America and Africa will be affected most directly by Europe's biofuel policy.

CONTACTS :

Almuth Ernsting, Biofuelwatch, UK: +44 -1224 324797 (mornings and evenings); 01224 553195 (afternoons).

Deepak Rughani, Biofuelwatch, UK: +44-7931-636337 (daytime and evening)

Andrew Boswell, Biofuelwatch, UK: T: +44-1603-613798, M: 07787127881; E: andrew.boswell@yahoo.co.uk

REFERENCES AND NOTES:

1. Biofuelwatch is a UK-based campaign group against the use of biofuels from unsustainable sources. The website is www.biofuelwatch.org.uk

2. Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, chair of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues warned in May that 5 million indigenous people in West Kalimantan, Indonesia were likely to be displaced by biofuel production. See: http://www.checkbiotech.org/green_News_Biofuels.aspx?infoId=14672
[http://tinyurl.com/2rxgv6]
FULL REPORT:
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/documents/6session_crp6.doc [http://tinyurl.com/2j96om]

3. Human rights abuses and evictions in Colombia, linked to biofuel expansion, were reported by the Guardian on 5th June (http://environment.guardian.co.uk/energy/story/0,,2095349,00.html#articl... [http://tinyurl.com/2bye9d]) and have been confirmed by several NGOs, including Christian Aid and Peace Brigades International.

4. For details of the link between the price of soya and Amazon destruction, see http://news.mongabay.com/2006/0919-amazon.html [http://tinyurl.com/2zzep5]

5. A copy of the Open Letter sent to MEPs can be found at http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/biofuelwatch/message/656 [http://tinyurl.com/2acz44].

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