Seeing Like a Standard: EU, sustainable biofuels, and land use change in Africa

Authors

  • Marie Widengård School of Global Studies, Gothenburg University, Box 700, SE- 40530 Gothenburg, Sweden marie.widengard@globalstudies.gu.se Phone: +46 76 3364183 Fax: +46 (0)31-786 49 10
  • Andrea Nightingale Department of Urban and Rural Development Swedish University of Agricultural Science (SLU)
  • Peter Roberntz WWF Sweden
  • Tobias Edman Geografiska Informationsbyrån
  • Allan Carlson WWF Sweden

Keywords:

Biofuels, land use change, standards, sustainability criteria, EU, sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract

Biofuels have expanded across the globe, generating a range of concerns in the places of production. One approach to controlling the effects of biofuel production has been sustainability standards. This article takes a ‘seeing like’ approach to analyse how the EU Sustainability standard contributes to narrowing the vision of what sustainable biofuels are. Six biofuel cases in Africa are examined through the lens of the standard, using remote sensing to investigate the criteria on land use and canopy cover change. The standard view is also compared to on ground views regarding the sustainability of the projects. The effects of seeing like the EU standard are two: 1) diluted seeing, which prioritises global environmental problems over more nuanced social and institutional aspects; and 2) distributed seeing, which transforms standardised sustainable biofuels into multiple, uncertain forms because of hybrid governance. High carbon losses due to biofuel projects were detected, but at the same time, the standard simplifies and skips over wider problems related to unsustainable biofuel projects.

Author Biographies

Marie Widengård, School of Global Studies, Gothenburg University, Box 700, SE- 40530 Gothenburg, Sweden marie.widengard@globalstudies.gu.se Phone: +46 76 3364183 Fax: +46 (0)31-786 49 10

PhD of Environmental Social Science

Andrea Nightingale, Department of Urban and Rural Development Swedish University of Agricultural Science (SLU)

Professor of Rural Development in the Global South

Peter Roberntz, WWF Sweden

PhD in Forest Ecology & Eco Physiology

Tobias Edman, Geografiska Informationsbyrån

PhD in Biology

Allan Carlson, WWF Sweden

PhD in Nature Conservation Biology

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Published

2018-02-28

How to Cite

Widengård, M., Nightingale, A., Roberntz, P., Edman, T., & Carlson, A. (2018). Seeing Like a Standard: EU, sustainable biofuels, and land use change in Africa. ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 17(1), 49–87. Retrieved from https://acme-journal.org/index.php/acme/article/view/1258

Issue

Section

Research