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Volume 8, Issue 5 (Suppl)

J Bioremediat Biodegrad, an open access journal

ISSN: 2155-6199

Biofuels Congress 2017

September 05-06, 2017

September 05-06, 2017 | London, UK

Biofuels and Bioenergy

6

th

World Congress on

THE FOOD AND FUEL CONTROVERSY - perceived and real potential conflict of biofuels and food

security

Frank Rosillo-Calle

PhD; Honorary Senior Research Fellow, CEP, Imperial College London

D

ealing with food and fuel can be very emotive, because for many people, the use of land to produce fuel instead of food is

ethically wrong, particularly when so many people go hungry or are undernourished; there is a large body of literature to testify

this. Misinformation, misconceptions, and vested interests, have accompanied the development of the biofuel industry since almost

its origins. There are, however, multiple reasons to challenge this misrepresented view of reality. The underlying reasons of why this

situation has arisen are multiple. Also, the narrowness of the debate e.g. the focus in just a few feedstocks (maize, sugarcane, cereals),

and the geographical dimension [although biofuels are global, just a few countries (Brazil, and USA and to a lesser extent the EU)],

are the key players. This has been further compounded by the emphasis of many studies on the negative implications of biofuels

without taking fully into account their intertwin nature e.g. agriculture sector, environmental and social implications. More recently

the geographical diversity is being enriched by a greater diversification of the feedstock and better understanding of the implications.

For far too long the emphasis has been on the potential conflicts rather than to the complementarity of food and fuel production.

The development of biofuels is limited by many factors, but not necessarily by these so strongly emphasized throughout history such

as direct land use competition with food production or ethical considerations. The aim of this presentation is to outline the latest

developments on food and fuel and the extent to which the debate is overcoming old prejudices. Scientific facts, greater pragmaticism

and holism should be the main pillar. Also, it should be recognised that much will also depend on factors indirectly linked to biofuels

such as eating habits. Innovation in the agricultural sector, environmental, social and policy considerations, will also play a key role.

Biography

Frank Rosillo-Calle is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Biomass Energy, Imperial Centre for Environmental Policy, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Imperial

College London. He has been conducting research in Biomass Energy for more than 35 years. His areas of interest are: biomass resource assessment, biomass

energy (production, conversion and use), liquid biofuels, agriculture, and food security implications. He has extensive international research experience and has

published extensively in this field. He has taught biomass energy-related subjects at PhD and MSc level at various universities, and has published various books

on biomass energy.

frc@ic.ac.uk bunfrc@tiscali.co.uk

Frank Rosillo-Calle, J Bioremediat Biodegrad 2017, 8:5(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2155-6199-C1-008