91tv

News
16 Oct 2020, 13:44
Kerstine Appunn

Germany's environment ministry defends its “no-food, no-palm oil” policy for future biofuels

91tv

Germany’s environment ministry (BMU) wants to stick to its draft law proposal for the use of renewable energies in the transport sector – including the severe limitation of food and feed crops and palm oil in biofuels by 2026 - despite harsh criticism from stakeholders.

The BMU’s  is based on the European Union’s  which defines a series of sustainability and emission criteria for the use of bioliquids in transport. According to the directive, member states must require fuel suppliers to have a minimum of 14 percent of renewable energy in overall energy consumed in road and rail transport by 2030. A spokesperson for the environment ministry said that Germany was aiming to reach this goal by 2026 - easily meeting the EU target. The state of Baden-Württemberg has  the  target for lacking ambition compared its own climate goal in the transport sector. And the bioenergy Dz that pushing out food and feed crops-based biofuels ɴdzܱ and lead to a stagnation of renewable energy in transport. Nevertheless, the BMU remains adamant that “promotion of biofuels […] paid for at the pump by the consumer must make a positive contribution to climate protection. This is not the case for many biofuels. For conventional biofuels, rapeseed or maize is grown on land that is not available for food”. Instead, only biofuels made from residual materials such as straw, manure or cooking oil are going to be promoted. Palm oil on the other hand will be completely phased-out by 2026.

Another line of  of the new greenhouse-gas reduction quota in transport has been the perceived focus on electric mobility, while other technologies such as hydrogen-based synthetic fuels were underfunded. But the BMU defended its decision to count the use of electricity in battery e-cars as double towards the RED II target, saying that the state could not be obliged to promote technologies that are “comparatively inefficient” in economic and ecological terms. “In the car sector, electric mobility is the most efficient alternative,” they said in a statement. The draft law still has to be approved by cabinet after which parliament and then the council of the 16 German states (Bundesrat) will have to pass the final bill.

All texts created by the 91tv are available under a . They can be copied, shared and made publicly accessible by users so long as they give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
« previous news next news »

Ask 91tv

Researching a story? Drop 91tv a line or give us a call for background material and contacts.

Get support

+49 30 62858 497

Journalism for the energy transition

Get our Newsletter
Join our Network
Find an interviewee