Biofuel Crops: Power to the Poor
Developing nations are looking towards biofuels to help reduce
their spiraling foreign oil import costs, and to mitigate pollution
and global warming. The drylands, often neglected compared to more
favorable areas, can contribute importantly to a bio-fueled future.
Our challenge—and opportunity—is to ensure that the dryland poor are
not left behind.
Bio-ethanol: an idea whose time has come
Contrary to common belief that
massive subsidies are needed to promote bio-ethanol, it is now
price-competitive with petrol (gasoline) in India without subsidies,
due to recently skyrocketing petrol prices. This is the case even
after adjusting for energy-equivalency (one liter of petrol has the
same energy content as 1.5 liters of ethanol). India is targeting a
10% blend of ethanol in its national petrol supply.
The constraint is not the cost of
ethanol production; it is the supply of raw materials. This is where
ICRISAT and partners come in.
Sweet, sweet sorghum
Most
bio-ethanol in India is produced from the molasses left over from
the refining of sugar from sugarcane, but the supply of molasses is
insufficient and not reliable enough for costly ethanol production
facilities that need to keep working around the clock to pay off. We
are excited about the potential of a little-known dryland crop,
sweet sorghum, to help fill this supply gap. ‘Sweet’ varieties of
sorghum store large quantities of energy as sugar in their stalks,
while also producing reasonable grain yields.
Sorghum, like sugarcane and maize,
exhibits C4 metabolism – making it more efficient at converting
atmospheric carbon dioxide into sugar than most plants. As a dryland
crop, sorghum requires far less water than costly irrigated
sugarcane, making it more accessible to the poor. The juice squeezed
out of sweet sorghum stalks contains about 15-20% sugar that can be
fermented into ethanol more cheaply than from sugarcane molasses—and
with even greater energy savings compared to maize grain, which has
to be hydrated and converted from starch to sugar before it can be
fermented.
India’s
National Research Centre for Sorghum (NRCS) has long recognized the
potential of sweet sorghum and has developed excellent
open-pollinated varieties and some hybrids. Our complementary
contribution has been the identification of high-sugar parent lines
for hybrid breeding from our global germplasm collection (another
payoff from that immensely valuable resource). Hybrids are also less
photoperiod sensitive so they can be grown year-round, smoothing out
supply variations for the ethanol production facilities.
Making it happen
We are stimulating public-private
collaboration to move sweet sorghum from a good idea on the shelf,
to impact on the ground. Our hybrid sorghum program receives
substantial support from the private sector (30 seed companies)
through our innovative Hybrid Seed Consortium, so the seeds are
moving quickly through the research-to-development pipeline.
At ICRISAT Headquarters in Patancheru,
India we’ve also formed a public-private partnership with Rusni
Distilleries (P) Ltd. Rusni ensures that seeds of the highest-sugar
sorghum varieties identified by ICRISAT and NRCS reach farmers so
they can increase their productivity. Rusni also helps farmers by
transporting the stalks from farms within a 30 kilometer radius of
the plant, and providing more distant farmers with technologies to
crush the stalks and reduce the juice into syrup that can be moved
cost-efficiently to the ethanol production plant. Lessons we are
learning from this partnership will enable the technology to scale
up faster and more widely in the coming years.
Bio-diesel
Forty percent of India’s oil imports are consumed in the form of
diesel fuel, and demand is rapidly growing. The nation has adopted
similar blending targets as for bio-ethanol (10%). Bio-diesel is
even more environment-friendly than bio-ethanol because it requires
less energy to process. It is also much less polluting than
fossil-fuel diesel.
As in the case of bio-ethanol, the biggest constraint for takeoff of
the bio-diesel industry is insufficient supply of the raw material.
To fill this gap, vast wasteland areas, estimated at 38 to 187
million hectares in India, that include areas suitable for dryland-hardy
bio-diesel crops can be made available to local communities. While
providing an income-earning opportunity for the poor, these
perennial tree and shrub crops also help rehabilitate these lands by
building the fertility of their soils.
Two contrasting dryland species are
especially interesting: Pongamia pinnata, a leguminous tree adapted
to wetter wastelands with problem soils; and Jatropha curcas, a more
drought-tolerant shrub adapted to well-drained wastelands and widely
grown as a homestead boundary plant in the Sahel. Both produce
fruits containing about 35% oil suitable for bio-diesel.
Women are the main cultivators and
processors of bio-diesel crops at the village level. ICRISAT is
working with poor women united in self-help groups to start Pongamia
enterprises in remote tribal areas of Andhra Pradesh, India, and
working with India’s national research system to identify high-oil
varieties as well as better cultivation methods.
India is also promoting Jatropha; it
is grown along rail lines and the oil is blended with petro-diesel
to power trains. Japtropha is also widely grown as a hedgerow
boundary plant in Indian and African villages. We are exploring the
genetic variability in Jatropha on both continents to find
higher-oil types to increase its income-earning potential.
A
future of possibility
Some question whether biofuel crops
will compete for land with food crops, driving up food prices. To be
sure, there are risks; however we look at this issue differently.
The dryland poor need food to eat,
but they also need opportunities for economic growth if they are to
escape poverty. Sorghum production in India has been declining for
many years due to urban preferences and subsidies for rice and
wheat, lessening economic opportunities for dryland
agriculturalists. The same trends will probably develop in Africa in
decades to come. Increases in area sown to corn or sugarcane for
ethanol, in contrast would take the most valuable, fertile lands out
of food production.
Through research-for-development, we
can help transition the sorghum enterprise from a human food to a
cash crop for bio-ethanol as well as producing grains and stalks
that feed humans and livestock. We can help rural villages gain
greater self-sufficiency in energy production through bio-diesel
crops. The benefits are multiple and significant: easing poverty,
reducing air pollution, mitigating global warming, and
rehabilitating degraded wastelands.
Biofuels are a major emerging trend
that can have a large impact on dryland development. Now, in the
early stages, is the time of greatest opportunity to ensure that the
poor capture a large share of the benefits. Raw materials are a key
constraint that we are helping to overcome in a pro-poor manner
through our dryland crops expertise and partnerships with investors,
governments, non-governmental organizations and the private sector.
Many twists and turns still lie ahead
of us on this road, but I am confident that with your support and
partnership we will be able to power a better future for the
drylands through biofuels.
Sincerely yours,

William D. Dar
Director General