Interamerican
Ethanol Commission (IEC) and the Interamerican
Development Bank (IDB)
~ IDB President Moreno; former Florida Governor Jeb Bush; and Roberto Rodrigues, former Brazilian Minister of Agriculture co-chairmen of the Interamerican Ethanol Commission (IEC),
led a briefing session on biofuels, the emerging Caribbean and Latin American market, and implications of the U.S.-Brazil ethanol agreement ~
April 2,
2007 (Washington, DC) – At a briefing event today at
the
Interamerican Development Bank Headquarters, His
Excellency Luis Alberto Moreno, President of the IDB;
the Honorable Jeb Bush, former Governor of the State of
Florida; and His Excellency Roberto Rodrigues, President
of the Superior Council of Agribusiness of FIESP and
former Minister of Agriculture of Brazil; announced how
the IEC will work with the private sector to expand and
strengthen our Hemispheric Biofuels Market. The briefing
also included a first-look presentation of a
comprehensive study of biofuels markets through 2020
commissioned by the IDB and carried out by Garten
Rothkopf, an independent consultancy that focuses on
emerging markets. Bush, Rodrigues and Moreno serve as
co-chairs of the IEC, which has as its mission to
promote the usage of ethanol in the gasoline pools of
the Americas.
The three co-chairs and David Rothkopf were joined by a
distinguished audience that included Cliff Sobel, U.S.
Ambassador to Brazil; Linneu Carlos da Costa Lima,
Brazilian Deputy Minister of Agriculture for Production
and Agroenergy; Joseph Lambert, Senate President of
Haiti; Brian C. Dean, Acting Executive Director of the
IEC; the co-chairs of the Ethanol Advocacy Committee:
Jorge L. Arrizurieta, Chair, Intl. Policy Group, Akerman
Senterfitt; Dominique Virchaux, Managing Partner,
Virchaux & Partners; and Mario Fernandez, President,
COFE Properties, LLC; and several key officials from the
IDB, including senior staff of the bank’s section for
Alternative Sources of Energy. Additional attendees
included corporate leaders, scientific experts,
scholars, and other government leaders.
Moreno, Bush, and Rodrigues highlighted the main
objectives of the commission, which include: promoting
increased ethanol blended fuel use throughout the
region; promoting the integration of technical and
scientific research efforts across the hemisphere
related to the production and distribution of ethanol;
determining investment needs in both agriculture and
infrastructure to enable a hemispheric wide market for
ethanol blended fuel; determining the economic and
environmental implications of carbon credits produced by
the project; encouraging the development of
environmentally sound ethanol operations; and
recommending a set of actions in order to create an
international market for ethanol.
In addition, the Commission is organizing a New,
Strategic Ethanol Information Campaign. Recognizing
that lack of information and misinformation are among
the principal obstacles hindering expansion of the
ethanol market, the commission views education as key to
the success of increased ethanol production and
consumption and aims to serve as a clearinghouse for
up to date, accurate, and objective information on
ethanol. This information will be shared with the
general public, policy makers and shapers, industries,
and investors.
President Moreno discussed the particular
challenges facing smaller Latin American countries that
are launching biofuels industries stating, “We must
recognize ethanol potential as a catalyst for
development in low income areas of Latin America and the
Caribbean…Biofuels could bring investment, development
and jobs to rural areas with high levels of poverty,
while reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels” in
several IDB member countries.” He also mentioned the
Bank’s renewable energy strategy and its work plan in
member countries with strong biofuels potential and
reviewed the IDB’s role in the implementation of the
historic biofuels cooperation agreement between Brazil
and the U.S. Moreno noted that the “IDB’s Private Sector
Department is structuring senior debt financing for
three Brazilian ethanol production projects that
will have a total cost of $570 million.”
Former Governor Bush offered an analysis of the
political and commercial barriers to free trade in
biofuels and described how renewable fuel targets in the
U.S. could impact the hemispheric biofuels industry. He
pointed out that “with the growing demand for
ethanol, there is room for everyone at the table, from
different feedstock in the U.S. and abroad.” He also
stated, “To achieve the strategic vision outlined by the
President, we need to dramatically increase importation
of ethanol from our neighbors and allies in the Western
Hemisphere. Eliminating the 54-cent tariff on imported
ethanol is the quickest, least expensive way for America
to significantly increase our supply of ethanol.” In
addition, Bush detailed his vision for how the U.S. can
strengthen its energy matrix through closer cooperation
with Latin American biofuels producers and highlighted
some of the U.S. ethanol market deadlocks saying,
“Removing trade barriers to imported ethanol would go a
long way to addressing the limited infrastructure in
many parts of the nation.”
Former Minister Rodrigues spoke of Brazil’s role
as a global leader in ethanol technology, production and
distribution. He stated, “Brazil’s ethanol capacities
and technology position the nation to provide leadership
throughout the hemisphere,” and emphasized that “Agroenergy
is going to change trade relations and the economic
geography of the world.” Brazil is the world’s
leader in ethanol exports with more than 300 million
liters exported in 2006.
David Rothkopf presented "A Blueprint for Green
Energy in the Americas", an analysis of the region's
global competitive position in biofuels prepared for the
IDB by Garten Rothkopf. Some key findings highlighted
were: $200+ billion in new investment is necessary
for biofuels to provide 5% of transport energy in 2020;
blend mandates have been enacted in 27 of the 50
countries surveyed and 40 have some form of biofuels
promotion legislation; a number of countries in the
region, led by Brazil, have the potential to develop
sustainable, competitive biofuels industries; there is a
need for common global standards for ethanol or
biodiesel, international futures contracts, and a
reduction in tariff barriers to facilitate the
development of global trade. Rothkopf concluded by
saying "Latin America and the Caribbean have the
potential to be the Persian Gulf of biofuels without the
instability."
Moreover, Moreno, Bush and Rodrigues agreed that
cooperation on renewable energy has the potential to
serve as a uniting force in the Americas, contributing
toward economic growth and a cleaner environment. All
three alluded to the significant opportunities expanded
ethanol production holds for sustainable development and
job creation throughout the Western Hemisphere.
###
The
Interamerican Ethanol Commission promotes the usage of
ethanol in the gasoline pools of the Western Hemisphere
and is co-chaired by Jeb Bush, former Governor of the
State of Florida; Roberto Rodrigues, President of the
Superior Council of Agribusiness of FIESP and former
Brazilian Minister of Agriculture; and Luis Alberto
Moreno, President of the Inter-American Development
Bank. The commission will serve to foster awareness of
the benefits of renewable fuels in economies throughout
the Americas and contribute toward a framework for a
rationalized and viable regional marketplace in ethanol,
promoting the policy guidance necessary to spur both
foreign and domestic investment in renewable fuel
production and infrastructure.
.
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