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Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A Framework for Policy Evaluation

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dc.contributor.author Amezaga, JM
dc.contributor.author Von Maltitz, Graham P
dc.contributor.author Boyes, S
dc.date.accessioned 2010-11-17T14:06:52Z
dc.date.available 2010-11-17T14:06:52Z
dc.date.issued 2010
dc.identifier.citation Amezaga, J. M., Von Maltitz, G.P. and S. Boyes (Editors) 2010, “Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A framework for policy evaluation”, Newcastle University, ISBN 978-9937-8219-1-9, pp 179 en
dc.identifier.isbn 978-9937-8219-1-9
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4566
dc.description Correct citation: Amezaga, J. M., G. von Maltitz and S. Boyes (Editors) 2010, “Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A framework for policy evaluation”, Newcastle University, ISBN 978-9937-8219-1-9, 179 pages en
dc.description.abstract Fulfilling the promise of sustainable development has become a major concern for proponents ofmodern bioenergy projects. The global land area dedicated to feedstock production, be it for liquid biofuels, solid biomass or biogas, has expanded greatly over the past decades; increasingly so indeveloping countries. Current first generation bioenergy feedstocks, particularly for commercial scale production, demand large areas of land and in many cases have extensive labour requirements. Where marginal or degraded lands are not used, feedstock production could compete with food crops for land or labour, may impact negatively on biodiversity and alter local hydrology, or create a multitude of other direct or secondary social and environmental impacts. The expanding global demand for bioenergy products provides many opportunities for socio-economic benefits and rural development in developing countries; however there are also numerous tradeoffs and potential negative impacts that must be taken into account. The need to assess and find a balance between both positive and negative impacts of bioenergy production and use is therefore apparent. Whilst some existing initiatives are proving to be robust and effective from a western, market-oriented perspective, a concern is that the assessments are limited in scope and often only conducted after projects are designed and initiated. A strong need has been identified for approaches with a developing country perspective which assess impacts both in a locally oriented, context specific way as well considering how they might relate to wider national or international agendas. This volume provides an introduction to a selection of suitable approaches that can be used to assess individual aspects of bioenergy production, based on up to date knowledge, and worked out examples from a developing country perspective. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Newcastle University en
dc.relation.ispartofseries Book en
dc.subject Bio Fuel en
dc.subject Bioenergy en
dc.subject Sustainability en
dc.subject Social Impacts en
dc.subject Biodiversity development en
dc.subject Gas Emissions en
dc.subject Greenhouse en
dc.subject Hydrological impacts en
dc.title Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A Framework for Policy Evaluation en
dc.type Book en
dc.identifier.apacitation Amezaga, J., Von Maltitz, G. P., & Boyes, S. (2010). <i>Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A Framework for Policy Evaluation</i>. Newcastle University. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4566 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Amezaga, JM, Graham P Von Maltitz, and S Boyes. <i>Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A Framework for Policy Evaluation</i>. n.p.: Newcastle University. 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4566. en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Amezaga J, Von Maltitz GP, Boyes S. Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A Framework for Policy Evaluation. [place unknown]: Newcastle University; 2010.http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4566 en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Book AU - Amezaga, JM AU - Von Maltitz, Graham P AU - Boyes, S AB - Fulfilling the promise of sustainable development has become a major concern for proponents ofmodern bioenergy projects. The global land area dedicated to feedstock production, be it for liquid biofuels, solid biomass or biogas, has expanded greatly over the past decades; increasingly so indeveloping countries. Current first generation bioenergy feedstocks, particularly for commercial scale production, demand large areas of land and in many cases have extensive labour requirements. Where marginal or degraded lands are not used, feedstock production could compete with food crops for land or labour, may impact negatively on biodiversity and alter local hydrology, or create a multitude of other direct or secondary social and environmental impacts. The expanding global demand for bioenergy products provides many opportunities for socio-economic benefits and rural development in developing countries; however there are also numerous tradeoffs and potential negative impacts that must be taken into account. The need to assess and find a balance between both positive and negative impacts of bioenergy production and use is therefore apparent. Whilst some existing initiatives are proving to be robust and effective from a western, market-oriented perspective, a concern is that the assessments are limited in scope and often only conducted after projects are designed and initiated. A strong need has been identified for approaches with a developing country perspective which assess impacts both in a locally oriented, context specific way as well considering how they might relate to wider national or international agendas. This volume provides an introduction to a selection of suitable approaches that can be used to assess individual aspects of bioenergy production, based on up to date knowledge, and worked out examples from a developing country perspective. DA - 2010 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Bio Fuel KW - Bioenergy KW - Sustainability KW - Social Impacts KW - Biodiversity development KW - Gas Emissions KW - Greenhouse KW - Hydrological impacts LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2010 SM - 978-9937-8219-1-9 T1 - Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A Framework for Policy Evaluation TI - Assessing the Sustainability of Bioenergy Projects in Developing Countries: A Framework for Policy Evaluation UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4566 ER - en_ZA


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