Certification of the Sustainability of Biofuels in Global Supply Chains
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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Certification of the Sustainability of Biofuels in Global Supply Chains. / Glinski, Carola.
Certification – Trust, Accountability, Liability. ed. / Peter Rott. Springer, 2019. p. 163-185 (Studies in European Economic Law and Regulation, Vol. 16).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Certification of the Sustainability of Biofuels in Global Supply Chains
AU - Glinski, Carola
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The promotion of biofuels in the EU aims at the substitution of fossil fuels and the reduction of carbon emissions. Therefore, the Renewable Energies Directive 2009/28/EC obliges EU Member States to make sure that until 2020 in transport at least 10% of the final energy consumption is derived from renewable sources or that at least a 6% greenhouse gas emission reduction is achieved. In order to safeguard that the production of biomass does not result in negative impacts on greenhouse gas stocks or on biodiversity the promotion of biofuels and bioliquids is accompanied by sustainability requirements. As the majority of biomass for biofuels is produced in the ‘Global South’ with often low regulatory and enforcement capacity, compliance with the sustainability requirements shall be ensured through a complex certification set-up based upon private certification systems and private certification bodies which thereby replace, to a certain extent, the regulatory and administrative role of the state. This chapter analyses that system of control and its weaknesses with regard to the sustainable production of biofuels.
AB - The promotion of biofuels in the EU aims at the substitution of fossil fuels and the reduction of carbon emissions. Therefore, the Renewable Energies Directive 2009/28/EC obliges EU Member States to make sure that until 2020 in transport at least 10% of the final energy consumption is derived from renewable sources or that at least a 6% greenhouse gas emission reduction is achieved. In order to safeguard that the production of biomass does not result in negative impacts on greenhouse gas stocks or on biodiversity the promotion of biofuels and bioliquids is accompanied by sustainability requirements. As the majority of biomass for biofuels is produced in the ‘Global South’ with often low regulatory and enforcement capacity, compliance with the sustainability requirements shall be ensured through a complex certification set-up based upon private certification systems and private certification bodies which thereby replace, to a certain extent, the regulatory and administrative role of the state. This chapter analyses that system of control and its weaknesses with regard to the sustainable production of biofuels.
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-02499-4
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-02499-4
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 9783030024987
T3 - Studies in European Economic Law and Regulation
SP - 163
EP - 185
BT - Certification – Trust, Accountability, Liability
A2 - Rott, Peter
PB - Springer
ER -
ID: 214827542