May Biofuel News Roundup

This month I wrote about making biodiesel from algae, growing biodiesel crops in freeway medians, refinery issues surrounding high gas prices, and the demand for sustainable biofuels.

Here are some stories I missed:

Al Gore was in Argentina, where he spoke before the biofuel industry there (May 1)
Argentina is looking to jump on the biofuel bandwagon by offsetting 5% of its fuel usage with biodiesel or ethanol within the next 3 years. If not implemented carefully, the diversion of food or cropland to biofuels could drive up commodity prices for the 25% of Argentina's population who live in poverty, not to mention the already strained middle class. "Every potential solution must be handled carefully and the danger with biofuels is that extremely valuable forests will be destroyed unnecessarily," said Gore, "Another danger is that, if it is not pursued carefully, it will drive food prices up."

Just Say 'No' to Bad Biofuels (May 9)
Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, RSPB and WWF have launched an advertising campaign against 'the wrong kind of biofuels'. The 'wrong kind' being those produced in ecologically destructive or irresponsible ways, like rainforest-eating Malaysian Palm Oil. Campaign posters depict a gas pump handle being held to an orangutan's head along with the words "Tell the Government to choose the right biofuel or the orang-utan gets it." The groups are urging the government to avoid misguided biofuel mandates without implementing proper environmental safeguards.