Brazil taps small farmers for biofuels campaign

GETULIO VARGAS, Brazil,  (Reuters) – With its  biofuels business increasingly dominated by giant corporations,  Brazil is seeking to extend its biofuels sector to include  farmers like Lucas Scariot, who makes around $10,000 per year  from selling grain.

For the past three years, Scariot has sold soy beans at a  premium over market prices to a biofuels company under a  government program aimed at supporting small farms and creating  jobs in the countryside while cutting fuel imports.

This year Scariot planted canola for the first time in a  field he usually leaves fallow during the winter, diversifying  the region’s soy-dependent agricultural base and providing a  new raw material for local biodiesel production.

“It’s good for the farmer because it gives us additional  value for our crops,” said Scariot, a 22-year-old farmer and  agronomy student who along with his father works 20 hectares —  equal to about nine Manhattan city blocks — of verdant and  hilly land in Brazil’s southernmost state of Rio Grande do Sul.

“And now we have incentives for new crops, because people  are always talking about soy, soy, soy. We can’t just depend on  that,” said Scariot, who also raises pigs and chickens at his  farm house.

The program is meant to boost production of biodiesel,  which can be used in heavy vehicles like trucks, and reduce  diesel imports the way the 30-year sugar cane ethanol program  has cut the use of motor gasoline.

Brazil’s government hopes backing small farmers will help  avoid problems associated with its ethanol sector, including  growing concentration in the hands of large agribusiness and  notoriously bad labor conditions that have drawn global  condemnation.

But efforts to use new raw materials, including untested  crops such as castor bean plants, have sparked criticism that  it is sinking millions of dollars into inefficient biofuels  production that mostly benefits the politically  well-connected.

SMALL FARMS

The program offers tax breaks to 30 participating biofuels  producers and helps them get better financing arrangements.  Those companies in 2009 purchased raw materials from around  51,000 small farmers, a figure slated to reach 100,000 by the  end of this year.

Those benefits attracted Oleoplan, a biodiesel producer  with close to 800 million reais ($450 million) in annual sales,  that now buys more than a third of its raw materials from small  farmers like Scariot.

“The results have been fantastic,” Oleoplan’s director  Domingos Costella said at the company’s headquarters, where a  maze of machinery — clouded in the overpowering smell of soy  — grinds up hundreds of tonnes of the crop, extracts its oils  and mixes it with other chemicals to create fuel.

“This is a way for us to secure more raw material while  still keeping the small farmer in mind.”

The company plans to nearly double fuel production by next  year in part because of the additional supply.

As part of the arrangement, Oleoplan provides technical  assistance to farmers or farming cooperatives to help them  boost crop yields and make more efficient use of fertilizer.

Brazil began biodiesel production in 2005 and in 2010 is  expected to produce 2.4 billion liters (634 million gallons).  This year it began requiring all fossil diesel to be sold with  a minimum 5 percent biodiesel mix.

Biodiesel backers say hiking that rate would cut carbon  emissions and reduce state oil company Petrobras’s imports of  diesel and distillate fuels, which last year reached 78,000  barrels per day — more than 10 percent of its diesel output.

Petrobras has found new ways to refine vegetable-based oils  together with diesel in its petroleum refineries.

While the country’s ethanol program has won praise, it is  also targeted by critics who say it contributes to rising food  prices and makes use of quasi-slave labor. Authorities hotly  deny the first accusation but have acknowledged the second.
The government last year put Cosan, the world’s largest  sugar and ethanol group, on a list of companies that put  workers in slave-like conditions, though it was quickly  removed.

“We can create better jobs than the ones in the ethanol  sector, and with biodiesel those jobs can go to family  farmers,” said Arnoldo de Campos, coordinator of the program  for the ministry of agricultural development.

WONDER CROPS?

The effort has faced furious criticism for falling into a  common trap of biofuels innovation — betting on crops with  hyped-up energy promise that ultimately fall short.

The program recruited thousands of family farmers to grow  castor bean plants, which sprout spiky green seeds that  advocates insisted could produce large amounts of oil and grow  on degraded soil with little water.

But no producer participating in the program has been able  to commercially produce biofuels from the crop. Critics say  this is because production costs and yields are too high to  justify using it for fuel.