IUCN-Shell: Biofuels

Removing barriers to the implementation of more sustainable biofuels

The development of sustainable biofuels is a key issue for both IUCN and Shell. In 2009, a scoping project began under the IUCN-Shell collaborative partnership agreement to identify areas where a collaborative approach could meaningfully progress sustainability issues towards:

  • Reducing Shell’s environmental impact by improving the sustainability of its biofuels portfolio
  • Improving the understanding of sustainable resource use, biodiversity conservation and livelihood risks in the biofuels supply chain
  • Developing comprehensive systems and best practices to address the direct and indirect impacts of biofuels production
  • Contributing to the development and harmonization of biofuels sustainability standards
  • Convening experts and stakeholders to develop practical solutions that address sustainability challenges across the biofuels sector.

As part of this project, a stakeholder workshop was held to identify barriers to sustainability in the biofuels value chain. The workshop produced an action plan for overcoming these barriers, with four critical areas of work.

A specific Shell-IUCN Biofuels Agreement was then initiated to realize this action plan through four complementary and interrelated approaches:

  1. Harmonizing sustainability standards
  2. Encouraging consistent and robust policy
  3. Developing better environmental information
  4. Identifying good land-use planning approaches

A key issue cutting across all four components is mitigation against indirect land-use change (iLUC) – an increasingly growing concern for biofuels production and one of IUCN’s current areas of work in relation to biofuels.


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Green Ride starting point at Mae Had Pier

A Green Parade for a Green Paradise

 A green parade of bike riders kicked off the ‘Keep Koh Tao Clean, Keep Koh Tao Green’ campaign on the morning of 28 April at Mae Haad pier on the west coast of the island. The event, aimed at raising islanders’ awareness of the growing waste problem, was part of the 2012 annual Koh Tao festival, organised by the Save Koh Tao community group, the Koh Tao Tambon Administrative Organization, and local businesses.          

30 Apr 2012 | News story