viernes, 21 de diciembre de 2007

Corn's key role as food and fuel / El papel central del maíz como alimento y combustible

By Adam Brookes
BBC News, Iowa

The price of food is on the rise. On the Chicago markets, the price of a bushel of wheat has gone over $10 for the first time. Soybeans are at a 34-year high. And corn is hitting new highs as well.

The International Monetary Fund says that over the past 12 months, "the world has experienced a substantial inflationary shock in the form of higher food prices".

Simon Johnson, chief economist at the IMF, points to three factors as responsible for the spike in prices.

First, increased demand from emerging economies like India and China, where consumers are demanding more calories in their diet.

Second, weather. Droughts have had an impact in some parts of the world.

But third is the contentious relationship between food and fuel. And to understand this relationship, it pays to look at corn.

Corn prices, according to the IMF, have doubled over the past two years. And in significant part, that is due to demand for the biofuel, ethanol, and the way in which ethanol policy is made in the United States.

"Corn has become all things to all people," says Simon Johnson. "It used to be fuel for people. Now it's fuel for cars."

Unintended consequences

Making biofuels for our cars from corn is now big business.

The International Monetary Fund says that over the past 12 months, "the world has experienced a substantial inflationary shock in the form of higher food prices".

Simon Johnson, chief economist at the IMF, points to three factors as responsible for the spike in prices.

First, increased demand from emerging economies like India and China, where consumers are demanding more calories in their diet.

Second, weather. Droughts have had an impact in some parts of the world.

But third is the contentious relationship between food and fuel. And to understand this relationship, it pays to look at corn.

Corn prices, according to the IMF, have doubled over the past two years. And in significant part, that is due to demand for the biofuel, ethanol, and the way in which ethanol policy is made in the United States.

"Corn has become all things to all people," says Simon Johnson. "It used to be fuel for people. Now it's fuel for cars."

Unintended consequences

Making biofuels for our cars from corn is now big business.

"It's causing the price of corn to go up and that affects both corn prices and other food prices in the United States. But affecting them in the United States is the same thing as affecting them globally."

Larsson Dunn, a former chemistry professor who runs the Lincolnway ethanol plant, argues that Iowa, and US agriculture, are fertile and technologically advanced enough to meet demand for food and fuel.

"We have the most efficient farmers and some of the best farmland in the world in the Midwest. So we're able to efficiently produce enough grain for food and produce surpluses for fuels."

Alternative uses

Because corn is such an important ingredient in our food supply, higher corn prices mean higher prices for all sorts of things you might not expect.

We stopped for breakfast at The Cafe in Ames, Iowa, where they cook a wonderful plate of steak and eggs.

On the plate you see how important corn is to our diet. Corn pancakes; steak from cattle fed on tons of corn; tomato ketchup flavoured with corn syrup; and an egg - whose yolk is turned a rich yellow by feeding the chicken corn products.

And the alternative uses of corn go way beyond biofuels.

At Iowa State University, scientists are pulling this grain apart and finding that its chemical constituents can make all sorts of things.

Larry Johnson, director of the Center for Crops Utilisation Research at Iowa State, showed us paper finished with corn-derived chemicals, charcoal briquettes bound with corn products, even a shirt woven from a corn-based fibre.

And he, too, believes there is no tension between food and fuel.

"We believe we can have both food and fuel," he says. "These things are totally compatible with each other, and we are going to devise new cropping systems that are going to allow us to do that as well."

US subsidies

In the coming years, say the experts, other crops - sugar cane, switchgrass, jatropha trees - may well grow into potent sources of renewable fuels.

But, says the IMF, those crops - many of which are grown in developing countries - will make slow headway as a source of renewable fuels while ethanol policy in the United States remains the way it is.

The US government offers generous financial subsidies to companies that blend ethanol and petrol, and has placed obstacles in the way of cheaper ethanol imports.

"Industrial countries," writes Simon Johnson, "need to seize this moment and eliminate subsidies."

Allowing freer trade in biofuels should, he says, help agricultural sectors everywhere.

But more people in more countries are now seeking more and better food. And if we want biofuels too, we may have to expect higher food prices.







lunes, 3 de diciembre de 2007

Key climate summit opens in Bali

Governments at a key UN climate summit will discuss how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions after the current Kyoto Protocol targets expire in 2012.

Talks will centre on whether a further set of binding targets is needed.

It is the first such meeting since the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that evidence for global warming was "unequivocal".

The two-week gathering in Bali, Indonesia, will also debate how to help poor nations cope in a warming world.

The annual high-level meeting, organised by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), is under pressure to deliver a new global agreement on how to cut rising greenhouse gas emissions.

Rachmat Witoelar, the Indonesian environment minister who was named president of the conference, pledged to do his best to deliver a deal.

"Climate protection must form an integral part of sustainable economic development, and it is critical that we act and we act now," he said.

UNFCCC Executive Director Yvo de Boer urged the international community to use the summit to take "concrete steps" towards curbing climate change.

"We urgently need to take increased action, given climate change predictions and the corresponding global adaptation needs," he said in his welcome message to delegates.

"In the context of climate change, projections of economic growth and increases in energy demand over the next 20 years, especially in developing countries, point to the urgent need to green these trends."

Earlier this year, the IPCC published its Fourth Assessment Report (A4R), in which it projected that the world would warm by 1.8-4.0C (3.2-7.2F) over the next century.

Mr de Boer added that the IPCC's conclusion that climate change was "very likely" the result of human activity ended any doubt over the need to act.

Climate for consensus?

At the top of the conference's agenda is the need to reach a consensus on how to curb emissions beyond 2012.

This marks the end of the current phase of the Kyoto Protocol, which commits industrialised nations to cutting greenhouse gas emissions by an average of about 5% from 1990 levels.

Critics of the existing framework say binding targets do not work, and favour technological advances instead.

Recent studies show that levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are rising faster than they were a decade ago.

Meanwhile, US President George Bush - who favours voluntary rather than mandatory targets - issued a statement saying that the nation's emissions had fallen by 1.5% in 2006 from levels in 2005.

Mr Bush used the reduction as an endorsement of his climate policy, saying: "Our guiding principle is clear: we must lead the world to produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions.

"We must do it in a way that does not undermine economic growth or prevent nations from delivering greater prosperity for their people."

However, the European Union backs the use of binding targets. The 27-nation bloc has already committed itself to cut emissions by 20% by 2020.

A number of observers believe the difference between the two economic powerhouses will result in the Bali conference failing to deliver a policy roadmap for "Kyoto II".

Softening the blow

The conference is also scheduled to consider how to fund projects that will help developing nations deal with the impact of climate change.

Ahead of the climate conference, another UN agency published a report criticising global efforts to date.

The UN Development Programme's annual Human Development Report said funding currently amounted to $26m (£13m), roughly the same amount as the UK spent on its flood defences in a week.

"Nobody wants to understate the very real long-term ecological challenges that climate change will bring to rich countries," said lead author Kevin Watkins.

"But the near-term vulnerabilities are not concentrated in lower Manhattan and London, but in flood-prone areas of Bangladesh and drought-prone parts of sub-Saharan Africa.

"Allowing the window of opportunity to close would represent a moral and political failure without precedent in human history."




Entregan Premio al Periodismo Ambiental a Octavio Klimek Alcaraz

En la ceremonia de premiación el periodista Agustín del Castillo, del periódico Público-Milenio, recibió mención honorífica.

Guadalajara.- El reportero del periódico El Sur, de Acapulco, Guerrero, Octavio Klimek Alcaraz, recibió hoy el Premio al Periodismo Ambiental 2007, por la publicación de cuatro artículos, uno de ellos enfocado a los manglares.

Durante el V Foro Cultura y Naturaleza, que se desarrolla como parte de la Feria Internacional del Libro (FIL) de Guadalajara, Klimek Alcaraz recibió una escultura y un premio de 50 mil pesos. En el acto, además se otorgaron diversas menciones honoríficas.

Estas fueron para los trabajos de Agustín Bernardo del Castillo Sandoval, del Periódico Público-Milenio; Rodolfo Chávez Calderón, del Programa “Más que noticias”, de la Dirección General de Medios de la Universidad de Guadalajara (UdeG); y Priscila Hernández Flores, reportera de la radio de la misma casa de estudios.

Así como a la Dirección de Noticias de Canal 22; a Maurizio Guerrero, de la Revista Poder y Negocios; Mónica Pérez Taylor, del periódico Mural; Yadira Elizabeth Flores Rodríguez, Revista Día Siete y periódico El Centro, y Juan José Morales Barbosa, del periódico Por Esto!, de Quintana Roo, y revista Contenido.

Además, a los estudiantes del Centro de Estudios y Producción Audiovisual de la Universidad Autónoma de Baja California: Rosa Herlinda Beltrán Pedrín, Cristina Conde Félix y Salvador León Guridi

Este reconocimiento se otorga por tercer año consecutivo para los trabajos de prensa, radio y televisión en las categorías de reportaje, artículo de fondo, crónica, noticia, entrevista y caricatura, y se tomó en cuenta la publicación o presentación del material de octubre de 2006 al mismo mes de 2007.

En la ceremonia de premiación, el rector de la UdeG, Carlos Briseño Torres, resaltó que el periodismo juega un papel estratégico, comprometido con el cuidado del medio ambiente.

“La difusión de la riqueza de la diversidad y el análisis de su importancia, así como los peligros que se enfrentan son muy importantes para despertar el interés de los ciudadanos y ser más responsables”, concluyó.

Notimex

Expertos mundiales logran avances en monitoreo de cambio climático

El Grupo de Observaciones de la Tierra busca conectar una serie de satélites, estaciones terrestres, sistemas de radares y monitores oceánicos.

CIUDAD DEL CABO.– Expertos gubernamentales y científicos de unos 100 países están logrando progresos para la elaboración de un sistema coordinado con el fin de monitorear los cambios climáticos y limitar su impacto en lo posible.

El Grupo de Observaciones de la Tierra busca conectar una serie de satélites, estaciones terrestres, sistemas de radares y monitores oceánicos que a menudo operan aisladamente.

Trabajando en conjunto, los sistemas podrían aumentar la capacidad de predecir y proteger contra sequías, inundaciones, huracanes y enfermedades.

“El objetivo es proveer la información adecuada en el formato adecuado a las personas adecuadas y en el momento adecuado, para que la gente pueda tomar decisiones'’, dijo el viernes el secretario del Interior de Estados Unidos, Dirk Kempthorne, durante el congreso anual del grupo.

En la reunión, China y Brasil prometieron transmitir gratis a Africa los datos de sus observaciones de satélite.

La Unión Europea lanzó también un proyecto para ayudar al continente africano a reducir sus problemas en el monitoreo.

En los últimos años se han alcanzado enormes avances en el intercambio de ideas y la tecnología compartida.

Existe un sistema de alerta de tsunamis para evitar una repetición de catástrofes como la que en el 2004 mató a 230.000 personas en el sudeste asiático.

Pero los retos asociados con el calentamiento global, la sobrepoblación, deforestación y desertificación están creciendo.

Existen brechas grandes en países pobres y densamente poblados, y muy poca coordinación en general.

Las advertencias sobre un reciente ciclón en Bangladesh provinieron de un experto bengalí radicado en Estados Unidos que tomó la iniciativa de hacer sus propios cálculos sobre el impacto de la tormenta y envió los resultados a su país.

Los 3.500 muertos fueron apenas una fracción del saldo usual en años anteriores.

En el 2005 fue concebido un Sistema de Sistemas Globales de Observación de la Tierra para ser completado en el 2015, con el objetivo de permitir el acceso a una vasta información sobre los cambios en océanos y las masas de tierra en el planeta en un solo sitio en la internet.

AP

Promoverá que vehículos híbridos no paguen tenencia vehicular

El Primer Mandatario, que por cierto manejó una de estas unidades, se comprometió a buscar mecanismos para que se evite la emisión de gases contaminantes.

México.—El presidente Felipe Calderón prevé que vehículos híbridos no paguen la tenencia vehicular como parte de un estímulo para la protección del medio ambiente.

El automóvil, del que se producirán 6 mil 500 unidades al año para su exportación en la planta de Ramos Arizpe, Coahuila, es patrocinado por la firma General Motors que anunció invertirá 500 millones de dólares.

Durante la presentación de este tipo de automotores, el Primer Mandatario, que por cierto manejó una de estas unidades, se comprometió a buscar mecanismos para que se evite la emisión de gases contaminantes.

“Promoveremos que estos vehículos no paguen tenencia”, dijo en la Residencia Oficial de Los Pinos.

Al tercer trimestre ya se alcanzó la meta fijada económica para 2007, al subrayar que México es el mejor país para invertir.

Subrayó que al 15 de noviembre se han creado 960 mil nuevos empleos según cifras del Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social.

Explicó que su administración quiere “seguir dándole buenas noticias a los mexicanos” en materia de generación de empleos e inversión “porque al final de cuentas son las bases del crecimiento ordenado, sostenido, con desarrollo regional, que tanto necesita nuestro país”.

Agustín Martínez Xelhuantzi/milenio.com