/ Forside / Interesser / Andre interesser / Politik / Nyhedsindlæg
Login
Glemt dit kodeord?
Brugernavn

Kodeord


Reklame
Top 10 brugere
Politik
#NavnPoint
vagnr 20140
molokyle 5006
Kaptajn-T.. 4653
granner01 2856
jqb 2594
3773 2444
o.v.n. 2373
Nordsted1 2327
creamygirl 2320
10  ans 2208
Biofuels - hunger - immigration
Fra : Jan Rasmussen


Dato : 17-06-07 16:56

http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSL1490977120070614?pageNumber=1

Biofuels could lead to mass hunger deaths


GENEVA (Reuters) - Diverting sugar and maize for biofuels could lead
to hundreds of thousands of deaths from hunger worldwide, the United
Nations' food envoy warned on Thursday.

Jean Ziegler, U.N. special rapporteur on the right to food, accused the
European Union (EU), Japan and the United States of "total hypocrisy"
for promoting biofuels to cut their own dependency on imported oil.

Fears over climate change have boosted the demand for alternative
fuels in wealthy countries, but the rise of biofuel has been criticized by
some who say it will put a squeeze on land needed for food.

"There is a great danger for the right to food by the development of biofuels,
" Ziegler told a news briefing held on the sidelines of the U.N. Human Rights Council.

"It (the price) will be paid perhaps by hundreds of thousands of people who
will die from hunger," he added.

However, a senior official at the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
said recently that biofuels were getting a bad press and that rather than being
a threat to the poor, they could boost food production.

Ziegler said that more and more sugar cane plantations in northern and eastern
Brazil were being used for biofuels, leaving less land for subsistence farmers.

Brazil is the world's biggest producer of cane-based fuel ethanol, most of which
is destined for the domestic market to meet rapidly growing demand from flex-fuel motorists.

In some regions of Mexico, the price of maize rose by 16 percent last year,
because of rising demand for use in biofuels, according to the independent U.N. envoy.

"I can understand the Brazilian and Mexican policies which as very indebted countries
want to earn hard currency....But from the point of view of the right to food, which must
be the decisive one, it is a catastrophe," Ziegler said.

Some 854 million people worldwide -- or one in six -- suffer from hunger, according
to the sociologist and former Swiss parliamentarian who cited U.N. figures.

Ziegler said famine and chronic hunger were driving many in sub-Saharan Africa
to risk their lives on rickety boats bound for Europe, often Spain's Canary Islands or Lampedusa, Italy.
__________________________________________________________________
An estimated 2 million people try to enter the European Union (EU) illegally every year,
and about 2,000 of them drown in the Mediterranean Sea, he said.

"Nobody knows how many thousands of other people have died trying to make the journey,
but bodies regularly wash up on the beaches or fishermen catch them in their nets," he said.
__________________________________________________________________
Ziegler called for Western countries to grant so-called "refugees from hunger" a temporary
right of asylum. This would require amending a 1951 U.N. convention granting refugee status
to people fleeing racial, political or religious persecution.


Jan Rasmussen



 
 
cpeter (17-06-2007)
Kommentar
Fra : cpeter


Dato : 17-06-07 17:21


Jan Rasmussen wrote:

> GENEVA (Reuters) - Diverting sugar and maize for biofuels could lead
> to hundreds of thousands of deaths from hunger worldwide, the United
> Nations' food envoy warned on Thursday.

Det var de sku fa'me længe om at opdage!! .Tortilla-krisen er aldeles
ikke ny...og de 16 % prisstigning på majs (omtalt andetsteds i
artiklen) er på forunderligvis blevet til en fordobling på
endeproduktet - tortillaerne:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2007-02-01-mexico-tortilla_x.htm

>
> Jean Ziegler, U.N. special rapporteur on the right to food, accused the
> European Union (EU), Japan and the United States of "total hypocrisy"
> for promoting biofuels to cut their own dependency on imported oil.

> Fears over climate change have boosted the demand for alternative
> fuels in wealthy countries, but the rise of biofuel has been criticized by
> some who say it will put a squeeze on land needed for food.
.......


> "It (the price) will be paid perhaps by hundreds of thousands of people who
> will die from hunger," he added.

Ark jo - Greenpeace + medløberne har ansvar for mangt og meget. Håber
nogen bringer lidt fornuft ind i alt det øko/bio-bullshit. Lomborg -
hvor er du ??? Atomkraft JA TAK , og det kan ikke gå hurtigt nok!


Søg
Reklame
Statistik
Spørgsmål : 177558
Tips : 31968
Nyheder : 719565
Indlæg : 6408893
Brugere : 218888

Månedens bedste
Årets bedste
Sidste års bedste