Brazil, the world’s second largest producer of ethanol and biodiesel, has succeeded in getting the G20 and COP30 to support the increase in the use of biofuels in the world, despite the international community’s historic resistance to both food and biofuel produced in Latin America for its possible relationship to deforestation. The paradox of selling a ‘100% renewable’ fuel that is expensive with the rise in the price of oil “Brazil can become …
Brazil, the world’s second largest producer of ethanol and biodiesel, has succeeded in getting the G20 and COP30 to support the increase in the use of biofuels in the world, despite the international community’s historic resistance to both food and biofuel produced in Latin America for its possible relationship to deforestation. The paradox of selling a ‘100% renewable’ fuel that is expensive with the rise in the price of oil “Brazil can become …