We use some essential cookies to make this website work.
We'd like to set additional cookies to understand how you use our site so we can improve it for everyone. Also, we'd like to serve you some cookies set by other services to show you relevant content.
New publication. Biofuels’ unbalanced equations: Misleading statistics, networked knowledge and measured parameters
By: Martin Wingfield
Last updated: Friday, 15 November 2019
Part 2. Networks, consensus and power
Kate B. Showers In International Review of Environmental History: Volume 5, Issue 2, 2019
Abstract The independence of claims that biofuels can mitigate climate change is assessed using environmental history. The development of professional and institutional networks that produced both energy demand models and soil, land and terrain databases and models is traced, and the acquisition of significant unacknowledged social power is examined. Data literacy’s critical perspective identified sources of embedded distortions, unacknowledged bias and inherent weaknesses. Claims of the robustness, accuracy, objectivity and originality of globalised analyses in general, and global biofuels projections in particular, are challenged. The effectiveness of policy based upon these results is discussed.