A crime against humanity?

I was going to call this post “food or fuels?”, but then I read this item on the BBC News website.

This is a bit over the top isn’t it? Calling bio-fuels “a crime against humanity”?

The term usually makes me think of events in places like Kosovo, people being charged in The Hague, or even back to the Nuremberg trials of the 1940s. Am I committing a crime against humanity? I thought I was trying to save the planet!

It’s a thought that I touched on in the Monday Podcast a couple of weeks ago – should we be growing all these plants (regardless of which ones) to make bio-fuels, when there are people on the planet that don’t have enough to eat? Most often, Africa is brought up in the discussion.

But is it really that simple? If we didn’t turn the crops into fuel, would they be exported to Third World countries to stop people from starving? Somehow, I doubt it.

But these countries are also affected by Global Warming – in fact, isn’t it often the case that such countries are quoted as being affected but without themselves producing very much of the greenhouse gasses? They suffer at the hands of the industrialised nations, and don’t have much of a chance to cut down emissions themselves?

So I’m wondering if the process is a little bit more complicated than just growing food to eat and shipping it out there. If we can reduce Global Warming, will there be less drought in Third World countries and hence more chance of growing food – in the countries themselves?

In which case, anything we can do to reduce emissions good, right?

Perhaps the UN should have another think about the problem, before they make more such bold statements…

Filling up with bio-ethanol for the first time

Today I filled up with bio-ethanol for the first time. Germany’s first bio-ethanol petrol station is located in Bad Homburg and to operate the pump I have a coded key, which allows me to go there at any time of the day, regardless of the opening hours.

For my first visit, however, I decided to go there whilst it was open, just to make sure that there were no problems.

Actually there was a problem – a car had parked on the space in front of the bio-ethanol pump, and I had to wait about 15 minutes until it was moved.

After that I parked there myself, turned the key and filled up the car. As simple as that! Now I have a full tank and can work out for myself how much the car is using. The on-board computer says that I used 13.3litres/100km since I started driving the car, but I don’t know how many litres were in the tank when I got it so I can’t check that figure.

bioethanol_tankstelle.jpg
The first bio-ethanol petrol station in Germany,
located in Bad Homburg

Did I say $90?

Today the oil price hit $96 per barrel!

Read more at the BBC News website and my comment on Monday about hitting the $90 mark.

Good job I filled the non-bioethanol car up this morning!

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