Biofuels and land use changes - public lecture by Professor Tim Searchinger

Zemo Partnership EventZemo Partnership Event
Add to Calendar 2008-03-19 3.15pm 2008-03-195pm Europe/London Biofuels and land use changes - public lecture by Professor Tim Searchinger Professor Timothy Searchinger of Princeton University will deliver a public lecture on the subject: "How Land Use Change Alters Our Thinking About Biofuels" in a joint LowCVP/Imperial College event on Wednesday 19 March. Imperial College
Date:19 Mar 2008
Time:3.15pm-5pm
Contact:Alison Parker , (0) 207 594 7460
Location:Imperial College
Full Address:Sir Alexander Fleming Building Lecture Theatre G34 Exhibition Road, South Kensington

Description:

Professor Timothy Searchinger of Princeton University will deliver a public lecture on the subject: "How Land Use Change Alters Our Thinking About Biofuels" in a joint LowCVP/Imperial College event on Wednesday 19 March.

Tim Searchinger is a Visiting Scholar and Lecturer in public and international affairs at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School. He is also a Transatlantic Fellow of the German Marshall Fund of the United States, and a Senior Fellow at the Georgetown Environmental Law and Policy Institute. Trained as a lawyer, Searchinger now works primarily on interdisciplinary environmental issues related to agriculture.

Professor Searchinger will be presenting the results of his recent study into biofuels and land-use change.

The Abstract of Searchinger's study says: "Most prior studies have found that substituting biofuels for gasoline will reduce greenhouse gasses because growing the crops for biofuels sequesters carbon. These analyses have failed to count the carbon emissions that will occur either as farmers worldwide directly convert forest or grassland to produce biofuels or as farmers worldwide respond to higher prices and convert forest and grassland to new cropland to replace the grain (or cropland) diverted to biofuels.

Two new papers in Science magazine have now calculated that the emissions from this land use change for most biofuels that use productive land are likely to mean that these biofuels overall result in substantially increases greenhouse gas emissions over 30 years. Even advanced biofuels from biomass, if produced on good cropland, could have adverse greenhouse gas effects."

For more information or to confirm a place at the lecture, contact Alison Parker at Imperial College. Email: eeo@imperial.ac.uk 

For a LowCVP news link on Searchinger study: click here

 


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