Ben Webster, Transport Correspondent
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Tesco has made false claims about the source of the green fuel sold at its service stations, according to an investigation that found that the chain sold one of the most environmentally damaging types of biodiesel.
An investigation by Greenpeace found that 30 per cent of the biofuel in Tesco diesel came from palm oil. A litre of Tesco diesel typically contains 5 per cent biofuel.
Researchers from the group bought biodiesel from a Tesco filling station in Edmonton, North London, on April 3 and sent it to Germany for analysis by ASG, an independent laboratory.
The remaining 70 per cent of the biofuel was from soya – more sustainable than palm oil but linked to concerns about global food prices as fuel companies outbid other buyers.
From tomorrow fuel suppliers will be legally obliged to ensure that at least 2.5 per cent of the petrol and diesel sold in Britain comes from crops. The law is designed to reduce carbon dioxide emissions but companies are allowed to comply by buying cheap palm oil from plantations created by chopping down rainforest.
A study by the University of Minnesota, published in February, found that growing biofuel on converted rainforests, peat lands, savannas or grasslands created up to 420 times more carbon dioxide than it saved. But a loophole in the Government’s biofuel rules allows companies to disguise the origin of the crop. Tesco, which has more than 400 petrol stations and 13 per cent of the British fuel market, initially denied using any palm oil in its diesel and said that it shares concerns about the environmental damage done by palm oil.
A spokesman said initially: “The feedstock we use is rapeseed and soy. There is no palm oil whatsoever.” When pressed, he admitted that small amounts of palm oil might be used in some parts of the country. He said that the only recent example was in the North West in January when Tesco biodiesel contained 10 per cent palm oil. When told of Greenpeace’s findings, Tesco issued a new statement: “We try to minimise the use of palm oil but levels do go up and down. We wouldn’t give a set limit.”
Tesco said that the concentration of palm oil in its biodiesel was the responsibility of Greenergy, its supplier. Tesco owns 25 per cent of Greenergy. A spokeswoman for Greenergy also initially denied using palm oil but later said: “It’s a very, very small proportion of our feedstock mix.”
Greenergy is a member of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, which claims to be trying to prevent rainforests from being destroyed to grow palms. Only a tiny proportion of palm oil has so far been certified as coming from sustainable sources.
The Liberal Democrats have uncovered a loophole that allows suppliers, when declaring the previous use of the land on which biofuel was grown, to put “unknown”. A DfT spokesman said: “We allowed this flexibility, following extensive consultation, in recognition of fact that it may be difficult to supply information when the supply chain is new. We have been clear that suppliers will only be allowed to do this for a limited time.”
The DfT has set up a review of biofuel but it is not due to report until June. Ministers may then delay or abandon plans to increase the amount of biofuel in petrol and diesel to 5 per cent by 2010 and 10 per cent by 2020.
Belinda Fletcher, from Greenpeace, said: “It’s madness that when you buy diesel at Tesco you are pumping palm oil into your tank. Palm oil is the leading cause of rainforest destruction in countries such as Indonesia. Trashing these forests for palm plantations massively speeds up climate change.”
Asda, Morrisons and BP said that they tried to use only sustainable palm oil. Sainsbury’s did not return calls.
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Have you lost the plot. Palm oil can be the most sustainable oil in the world. It produces 10 x more per ha than ANY other oil. Second it does not need cropping every year, it grows for 25-30 years, thirdly, not all oil palm is grown on rainforest - see Colombian Palm oil for instance.
James Gero, Richmond,
Indeed, HHO fuel can be made on demand with the 0.5 amps and water through a process called electrolosys. Google or youtube Stan meyers water car for the truth. It's very apparent however that certain people (oil companies and governments) do NOT want this 100% clean and free source of energy to flourish. The truth is out there and it's becoming increasingly difficult for the media, governments, corporations and the easily led scientific community to hide.
Tom Watts, Yorkshire, UK
Firstly: most of you just don't get it at all...biofuels are not about the environment (although those benefits are there when biofuels are made sustainably as can be done with recovered cooking oils)...the real issue is independence from unstable regions of the world. we need fuel independence at competitive cost. second generation biofuels and synthetic oils will give us this independence...but don't strangle what we have now or we will never develop the second generation. Secondly let's look at ethanol - this is produced from wheat intended for cattle feed. feed cattle wheat and they get fat. take the wheat, extract the carbohydrates to make ethanol, return the wastes in the form of the dark grains as cattle feed and you give the cattle a high protein feed that heps the cattle grow muscle meat. 1million tonnes of grain gives 400,000 tonnes of ethanol and 600,000 tonnes of cattle feed rich in protein. perfect! get real people...we need biofuels now!!!!!
phil durrant, york,
I am appaled that goverments have not regulated the use of foodstuff in bio-diesel production. In El Salvador Central America more and more sugar cane is planted to produce alcohol for the USA market. The resulting disaster is that we are now importing our foodstuff, basic grains like maize, rice and beans at worlwide inflated prices.
Goverments need to stop or regulate better to protect poor emerging nations
Carlos A Perez Avila
El Salvador
Central America
Cvarlos Perez Avila, San Salvador, El Salvador
Those who think crops are the way forwards should consider the fact that America, the bread basket of the world has never been in such a poor position for food storage.
HHO gas costs virtually nothing and is produced from ordinary H2O water. It produces enough fuel from a litre of water to make 8,000 litres of hho gas. Trucks, busses, boats, Narrow boats and cars. Men have succesfull run their high performance sporting cars fully on this unpolluting fuel for after burning it reverts to water. Visit these web sites
For cars go to:
www.toamazing.com/freecheapfuel.html
For trucks, busses vans boats go to:
www.toamazing.com/fuel4truckers.html
Itâs amazing to think you are using water to drive your car. How crazy is that.
Jas, Alders, UK
Join the greens, a preserve of the middle classes- raise taxes and then starve the planet. Brilliant!
Henry, Oxford, UK
If you have chopped down the rain forest to plant anything then that carbon debt will take many decades to repay. end of in terms of sustainable biofuel terms. So once you had a sink, now you have a sink and a source with a big debt to pay off to boot.
Pete Best, Northampton, UK
Seems pretty obvious biofuel is not the way forward, crops are all ready needed for over 6 Billion people not to mention 300 Million Americans. Crops can not be used as fuel!
Dean, Southampton, England
firstly palm is a 25 year crop since it matures only after 3 years and so many of the palm oil produced today come from large plantations in Malaysia and Indonesia. These plantations are essentially managed forrests.
In Indonesia & Malaysia, palm is grow on usually deforrested areas after much of it has been indiscriminately logged over the years. Most of this wood has been used for making furniture in Vietnam and China. The buyers are Europe and the US.
Palm plantations essentially replace the forests that have been destroyed.
Since palm produces 5-7 MT of palm oil a year 3 years after planting, it is one of the most efficient crops per Hectares enabling land to be used for other food crops.
lets not forget that Biodiesel fm palm oil requires 4 times less energy than producing fuel fm fossil fuels according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
Maybe Greenpeace should be taking a closer look at rapeseed rather than palm oil?
Henri J Bardon, Singapore, Singapoe