If there’s anything we’ve learned from the mostly completed saga of adopting the EU’s Fit for 55 climate package, it’s that the EU needs a new way to think about biofuels and their contribution to transport de-fossilization.
The role of sustainable biofuels in the transition from a fossil-based economy to carbon neutrality has often been the subject of intense and often misinformed debate during the whole Fit for 55 process, but as the EU enters a new political cycle there is cause for optimism that Europe could move to a more constructive discussion.
A mindset-shift is needed if the EU wants to achieve its goals for climate change mitigation, food security and energy independence.
Consider the recent declaration by the G7 group of leading economic nations — in a statement co-signed by EU leaders — that sustainable biofuels have a vital role to play in reducing transport emissions. This was a welcome turnaround from recent policy developments that did not take into full account the proven contribution of biofuels to reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in transport.
Ethanol biorefineries across the EU contribute to several European strategic objectives, including:
- Climate change mitigation: Biofuels continue to be the main renewable energy in transport and a proven solution for reducing emissions from cars. According to the latest data, renewable ethanol produced by ePURE members reduced GHG emissions by more than 78 percent compared to fossil fuel — and is getting closer to carbon-neutrality every year. It works in today’s petrol and hybrid cars — still the majority of new cars Europeans continue to buy — and in existing infrastructure.
- Energy independence: Domestic production of renewable ethanol helps reduce the EU’s dependence on imported fossil fuel. EU policies that unfairly hamper the use of sustainable biofuels such as ethanol are by definition opening the door to more fossil oil.
- Food security: The ‘food vs. fuel’ argument reared its head again in 2022 but once again has been shown to be a myth. In fact, EU biorefineries produced more food and animal feed than fuel in 2022 — helping reduce the EU’s need to import protein. Considering that ePURE members used multipurpose crops to co-produce 5.9 million tons of food and feed last year in addition to ethanol, there does not have to be any trade-off.
- Strategic autonomy: Domestic ethanol production also creates other beneficial products, including biogenic CO2 to replace fossil CO2 in beverage and industrial applications. This domestic production is essential to ensure supply.
2. The EU approach to emissions-reduction should be open to all technologies
3. CO2-neutral liquid fuels are vital to de-fossilization
Which brings us to another important factor:
4. The fight against climate change must be socially inclusive
David Carpintero is the director general of ePURE, the European renewable ethanol association.