The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s
Agricultural Development Program has awarded
Stanford University’s Program on Food Security and
the Environment (FSE) and a team of collaborators
$3.8 million over three years to conduct a quantitative
assessment of the effect of biofuels expansion on
food security in the developing world. This work will
determine how different scenarios of expanded biofuels
production in rich and poor countries will affect global
and regional food prices, farmer incomes, and food
consumption of the poor. In three case-study countries
(India, Mozambique, Senegal), it will make a more
detailed assessment of the opportunities and pitfalls
associated with an array of possible biofuels development
scenarios (e.g., using different crops for biofuels
production, using marginal land versus highly productive
land, etc.). We expect the work will represent the first
systematic, detailed effort to address the effects of
biofuels expansion on welfare in poor countries and
the first available analytic tool for assessing possible
biofuels investments in individual developing countries.
Project collaborators include FSE, the International
Food Policy Research Institute, the Center on Chinese
Agricultural Policy, and the University of Nebraska.
Through this grant, the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation aims to assess how biofuels may affect
smallholder farmers in the developing world. This includes
assessing both the risks, such as increasing food prices,
and the potential opportunities for smallholder farmers
to leverage biofuels to boost their productivity, increase
their incomes, and build better lives for themselves and
their families. The foundation and Stanford University
will disseminate the findings widely to inform a broad
audience, including policymakers.
FSE is also very pleased to announce a private gift
from Lawrence Kemp for further work in the biofuels
area. The Kemp gift will be devoted to building a team
of faculty and students on campus who will analyze the
transmission of global price effects to local markets,
provide policy advice and communication on biofuels,
and expand the field-level coverage of Stanford’s
biofuels work.
In the November 2007 issue of Environment, project
collaborators Rosamond L. Naylor (FSE), Adam Liska,
Marshall Burke (FSE), Walter P. Falcon (FSE), Joanne
Gaskell, Scott Rozelle (FSE), and Kenneth Cassman
demonstrate how high energy prices and biofuelspromoting
agricultural policy result in higher food prices
generally and then examine in detail the potential global
effects of biofuels expansion in four countries for four
crops—corn in the United States, cassava in China,
sugarcane and soy in Brazil, and palm oil in Indonesia.
They argue that in each case, the threats to global food
security from biofuels expansion likely outweigh the
benefits, especially in the short run. This is because in
many poor countries these crops play an important
role in the diets of the poor and because the poorest in
the world typically spend more money on food than they
earn in income through farming. They also note that
“second generation” technologies such as cellulosic
biofuels will likely not play a significant role in biofuels
production over the next decade or longer—and thus
in the near-term are very unlikely to be the win-win that
their proponents suggest.
“The ripple effect: biofuels, food
security, and the environment” excerpted from Environment, November 2007
The integration of the agricultural and energy sectors
caused by rapid growth in the biofuels market signals
a new era in food policy and sustainable development.
For the first time in decades, agricultural commodity
markets could experience a sustained increase in prices,
breaking the long-term price decline that has benefited
food consumers worldwide. Whether this transition
occurs—and how it will affect global hunger and
poverty—remain to be seen. Will food markets begin
to track the volatile energy market in terms of price and
availability? Will changes in agricultural commodity
markets benefit net food producers and raise farm
income in poor countries? How will biofuels-induced
changes in agricultural commodity markets affect net
consumers of food? At risk are more than 800 million
food-insecure people—mostly in rural areas and
dependent to some extent on agriculture for incomes—
who live on less than $1 per day and spend the majority
of their incomes on food. An additional 2–2.5 billion
people living on $1 to $2 per day are also at risk, as
rising commodity prices could pull them swiftly into
a food-insecure state.
The potential impact of a large global expansion
of biofuels production capacity on net food producers
and consumers in low-income countries presents
challenges for food policy planners and raises the
question of whether sustainable development targets
at a more general level can be reached. Achieving
the 2015 Millennium Development Goals adopted by
the United Nations General Assembly in 2000, which
include halving the world’s undernourished and
impoverished, lies at the core of global initiatives to
improve human well-being and equity, yet today virtually
no progress has been made toward achieving the dual
goals of alleviating global hunger and poverty. The
record varies on a regional basis: Gains have been made
in many Asia-Pacific and Latin American-Caribbean
countries, but progress has been mixed in South Asia
and setbacks have occurred in numerous sub-Saharan
African countries. Whether the biofuels boom will move
extremely poor countries closer to or further from the
Millennium Development Goals remains uncertain.
Biofuels growth also will influence efforts to meet
two sets of longer-run development targets. The first
encompasses the goals of a “sustainability transition,”
articulated by the Board on Sustainable Development
of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, which seeks
to provide energy, materials, and information to meet
the needs of a global population of 8–10 billion by
2050, while reducing hunger and poverty and preserving
the planet’s environmental life-support systems. The
second is the Great Transition of the Global Scenario
Group, convened by the Stockholm Environment
Institute, which focuses specifically on reductions in
hunger and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions beyond
2050. As additional demands are placed on the agricultural
resource base for fuel production, will ecosystem
services (such as hydrologic balances, biodiversity,
and soil quality) that support agricultural activities
be eroded? Will biofuels development require a large
expansion of crop area, which would involve conversion
of marginal land, rainforest, and wetlands to arable
land? And what will be the net effect of biofuels expansion
on global climate change?
Although the questions outnumber the answers at
this stage, two trends seem clear: Total energy use will
continue to escalate as incomes rise in both industrial
and developing countries, and biofuels will remain a
critical energy development target in many parts of the
world if petroleum prices exceed $55–$60 per barrel.
Even if petroleum prices dip, policy support for biofuels
as a means of boosting rural incomes in several key
countries will likely generate continued expansion of
biofuels production capacity. These trends will have
widespread ripple effects on food security—defined
here as the ability of all people at all times to have
access to affordable food and nutrition for a healthy
lifestyle—and on the environment at local, regional,
and global scales. The ripple effects will be either
positive or negative depending on the country in
question and the policies in play.