Fueling human rights violations: Consequences of EU and Belgian biofuel policies in northern Peru

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Women lead protests against sugarcane-field burning in the Chira Valley (Courtesy of the Comité de Defensa de la Margen Izquierda del Río Chira, 2019)

Oxfam Solidarité | 21 Sep 2021

Fueling human rights violations: Consequences of EU and Belgian biofuel policies in northern Peru

First-generation biofuels have a somewhat paradoxical status. On the one hand, they have become key ingredients in the EU’s ‘Green Deal’ priorities. On the other hand, they have fuelled all kinds of environmental, social and political disruptions, and unleashed massive transformations – particularly in the Global South – because of rising international demand. Our report explores a sugar cane plantation from northern Peru that was supported through Belgian and Dutch investments and is feeding the EU bioethanol market since 2018. It shows how EU policies are fueling land and water grabbing, air pollution, climate change vulnerabilities, food insecurity and social unrest in the Chira Valley.

EU countries must establish strong and legally binding social safeguards for their energy markets, and fully phase out land-based biofuels.
 
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