1、The Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels Ensuring that biofuels deliver on their promise of sustainability,The Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels,We are an international multi-stakeholder initiative developing principles and criteria for sustainable biofuels production that will be:,Simple, accessible
2、 andimplemented worldwideGeneric to all cropsAdaptable to new informationEfficient and cheap to measureIn line with WTO rules (use ISEAL code),How is the RSB organized?,Founding Steering Board composed of international stakeholders from WWF, UNEP, Swiss and Dutch governments, Shell, BP, Toyota, TERI
3、 India, Mali Folkecenter, Petrobras, UNICA, and others. New governance structure and open membership starting in 2009, with chambers divided along the following lines: trade unions, small and large farmers, producers, financial institutions, petroleum and transportation industry, food security NGOs,
4、 indigenous peoples groups, conservation NGOs, etc. Two members (one North, one South) from each chamber elected to a new Executive Standards Board. One Secretariat based at EPFL. Part-time staff in South Africa, full-time Americas Coordinator in the US. Working Groups by subject (GHG, ENV, SOC, etc
5、.) open to any interested participant; they help develop content to present to the Board.,Stakeholder-driven,Innovative transparent standard-setting using BioenergyW, to share background information and comments with other participants. 270 participants from international organisations, NGOs, privat
6、e sector and academic institutions from 38 countries helped draft Version Zero. Regional stakeholder meetings held already in Brazil, South Africa, China, India, Mali, and Mozambique. Further outreach in Europe and North and South America planned for early 2009.,Version Zero - RSB Standard,Meta-stan
7、dard concept,Many certifications already exist or are under development for biofuel crops (palm, sugar, soy). Most standards were created for the food industry, so they focus on on-farm sustainable agriculture, and not climate change or macro effects (e.g. land use change and food security).,To mini
8、mize verification burden, aim is to recognize other certifications as covering most elements of the RSB meta-standard, then add on information about GHG emissions and macro effects.,UK Meta-standard: Illustration,Better biofuels the scorecard concept,Red line: Minimum social and environmental criter
9、ia for sustainable agriculture that all biofuels must meet Use a scorecard system to incent better biofuels, i.e. those with: Good GHG reduction potential, including sequestering carbon in soil Rural development potential Less likely to have indirect impacts: Encourage use of degraded/idle lands (bu
10、t these need identification) Use waste materials as feedstocks Improve yields on existing lands (whilst minimizing environmental impacts),Timeline,Version Zero published August, 2008 Global stakeholder feedback gathered through spring of 2008, via regional meetings in Mozambique, Latin America (in p
11、artnership with IADB), USA, Europe, East Asia , Mali and now East Africa Transition to new governance structures and approve Version One by June 2009,Encourage/foster crop-specific better practice definitions (e.g. jatropha)Develop generic indicators, benchmark against existing standardsCollaborate with other partners to measure & mitigate indirect effectsCoordinate pilot testing of draft standards in real supply chains in 2009,Secretariat: rsbepfl.ch http:/EnergyCenter.epfl.ch/Biofuels,Contact,E25 Supporters,