Biofuel
crops transform German farming
The
shepherds of Germany are worried. There are still about 2,000 of them
tending sheep on grasslands, plying their ancient trade and defying
time and the intrusions of modernity.
BBC,
31
August, 2012
But
it is a losing battle. The pastures they and the sheep need are
diminishing. The shepherds blame biofuels. They complain that meadows
where sheep have always grazed are being turned over to the growing
of crops for power generation.
Maik
Gersonder tends flocks in eastern Germany. It is getting harder to
find suitable grassland because fields are being switched to grow
maize (corn), which is processed into ethanol for cars.
"We
have many problems with it," he told the BBC. "We have to
go further to find land to graze the sheep. And it's pushed the price
of land up."
The
price of food on world markets is high at the moment - not quite as
high as in 2008, but still very high compared with previous decades.
In Germany, where one in eight acres of farmland is now used for
biofuels, the price of wheat is at its highest in 25 years.
But
the farmers who do the growing say that high prices are a recent
thing, and that for too long food has been too cheap to grow
profitably - so they have turned land over to plants for biofuel.
Fuel
instead of food
Hellmuth
Riestock has a big farm north of Berlin - but he is also now a
generator of electricity. Alongside the cowshed are big green tanks
into which chopped-up plants are put. They are mulched and processed
to emit gas, which is then used for power generation. He uses some of
the electricity, with the excess being sold to the grid.
Last
year, the price of his rye was so low it was not worth selling for
food - so he turned it into electricity. This year, higher prices
mean it will end up going into a mouth rather than a gas tank.
He
thinks a system where it pays him to grow crops for fuel is not
right. "It's a problem that food's been too cheap - so switching
land to grow fuel made economic sense. And that's a relationship that
needs to be addressed."
It
is being addressed at the top of government - or rather argued over,
because two of the important ministers take opposite views on the
impact of biofuels.
The
country's development minister, Dirk Niebel, said as he toured
African countries recently: "We need to put corn on the plate,
not in the tank."
But
the environment minister, Peter Altmaier, disagreed. "There is
no connection between the production of biofuel and food prices,"
he said, "not in Germany, anyway".
Crop
research 'neglected'
Harald
von Witzke, Professor of Agricultural Economics at Humboldt
University in Berlin, told the BBC that only 3% of the world's
farmland was being used for biofuel. This, he estimated, was
responsible for perhaps one-tenth of the doubling in food prices
since 2000.
"So
for the time being the expansion of biofuel has had a limited effect
on price increases."
Global
food trends are putting the traditional shepherd's lifestyle at risk
There
are other factors he thinks we should be worried about, like the
decline in agricultural research.
"Agricultural
research in the rich countries has been neglected. It has been cut
back and this has resulted in a decline of annual productivity
growth."
Broadly,
food prices fell during the 20th Century. Science and technology
delivered new methods, and productivity of people and land rose. That
long-term fall is now set to be reversed, he thinks, raising the need
for better yields.
But
he says that in the European Union, "we've started to cut back
agricultural research".
He
says surpluses of food in the richer countries weakened the impulse
to improve yields. On top of that, there was a vogue for research
into climate change, rather than increasing crop production.
He
warns that there are likely to be 10 billion people on this planet by
2050, compared with seven billion now. "The growth in demand
will be close to a record pace because of continued very rapid
population growth. The second reason is increasing incomes and
consumption in the newly industrialising countries.
"Global
demand is growing at a rapid pace. Agriculture faces increasing
resource constraints. Land, water and energy are becoming scarcer and
more expensive."
So,
supply failing to keep pace with rising demand will push up food
prices. It will also push up the price of farmland, whether to grow
crops for food or fuel.
It
is not new to grow fuel - that is what firewood is. But the drive
towards biofuels is intensifying the pressure and sharpening the
choices.
The
shepherds of Germany live a quiet life - but under intense economic
pressure.
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