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EXPANSION OF SUGARCANE ETHANOL PRODUCTION IN BRAZIL: ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL CHALLENGES
445
Citations
57
References
2008
Year
Circular BioeconomyBiofuel ProductionBioenergyEngineeringBiorefinery ProductBiomass ResourceSustainable AgricultureAgricultural EconomicsBioethanol ProductionNatural Resource EconomicsIndustrial CropEthanol ProductionSugarcane EthanolFuel ProductionSustainable ProductionEnergy Crop
Renewable energy demand has spurred Brazil’s sugarcane ethanol industry, yet its expansion threatens air quality, soil and water systems, and labor conditions, raising sustainability concerns. The paper examines the environmental and social challenges of expanding sugarcane ethanol production in Brazil and proposes policy recommendations for sustainable, equitable practices. The authors recommend comprehensive planning, environmental risk assessments, improved land‑use practices, protection of waterways, banning sugarcane burning, fair labor conditions, stakeholder collaboration, and pricing that internalizes environmental costs.
Several geopolitical factors, aggravated by worries of global warming, have been fueling the search for and production of renewable energy worldwide for the past few years. Such demand for renewable energy is likely to benefit the sugarcane ethanol industry in Brazil, not only because sugarcane ethanol has a positive energetic balance and relatively low production costs, but also because Brazilian ethanol has been successfully produced and used as biofuel in the country since the 1970s. However, environmental and social impacts associated with ethanol production in Brazil can become important obstacles to sustainable biofuel production worldwide. Atmospheric pollution from burning of sugarcane for harvesting, degradation of soils and aquatic systems, and the exploitation of cane cutters are among the issues that deserve immediate attention from the Brazilian government and international societies. The expansion of sugarcane crops to the areas presently cultivated for soybeans also represent an environmental threat, because it may increase deforestation pressure from soybean crops in the Amazon region. In this paper, we discuss environmental and social issues linked to the expansion of sugarcane in Brazil for ethanol production, and we provide recommendations to help policy makers and the Brazilian government establish new initiatives to produce a code for ethanol production that is environmentally sustainable and economically fair. Recommendations include proper planning and environmental risk assessments for the expansion of sugarcane to new regions such as Central Brazil, improvement of land use practices to reduce soil erosion and nitrogen pollution, proper protection of streams and riparian ecosystems, banning of sugarcane burning practices, and fair working conditions for sugarcane cutters. We also support the creation of a more constructive approach for international stakeholders and trade organizations to promote sustainable development for biofuel production in developing countries such as Brazil. Finally, we support the inclusion of environmental values in the price of biofuels in order to discourage excessive replacement of natural ecosystems such as forests, wetlands, and pasture by bioenergy crops.
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