by eric_b » Sun 12 Mar 2006, 23:56:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lorenzo', 'I')nteresting, but very much a one-sided article.
Doesn't look at energy crops that are used to fight desertification and erosion, or at others that explicitly don't grow in forest areas. Finally, the FAO has calculated that for tropical energy crops, on average 15 to 20 jobs are created for the poorest.
As with all things, you can use them in a good or a bad way. Energy farming in the South is not going to be different.
The writer of the article should also stop eating meat, stop using a computer and stop driving a car, else, he remains the main culprit of the destruction of the rainforests.
Crops - agriculture itself, do not 'fight desertification and erosion',
they contribute to it. Get your fundamentals straight here kiddo.
At least the way agriculture is currently practised.
Talk about missing the forest though the trees. There's already
so many people packed onto this world that we are using
something like 50% of all photosynthesis to support ourselves.
And now you want to add to this tremendous burden via biofuels.
Get a clue.
For example (one of MANY), here's a recent satellite shot, taken
yesterday (March 11). It shows another enormous, continental
sized, dust cloud blowing off the coast of Africa.
[web]http://www.fractalfreak.com/wx/0311Africa_dust.jpg[/web]
Now, dust clouds have been blowing off of Africa for millennia,
but they've become much worse the past few decades, largely
due to an exploding population in Africa trying to farm the
marginal sub-saharian land to feed themselves. This practice
is contributing to desertification, not helping it.
More, these record breaking dust storms may be contributing to
the demise of coral throughout the world.
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/african_dust/
And there's no need to point fingers. We're all to blame for
the situation as it stands. There are no saints here.
{photo reformated by SPG to correct widening of page}