WRI - World Resources Institute

11/07/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 11/08/2025 17:43

STATEMENT: Brazil Announces Pledge to Quadruple ‘Sustainable Fuels’

STATEMENT: Brazil Announces Pledge to Quadruple 'Sustainable Fuels'

November 7, 2025
Statement
Topic
Forests
  • Social
    • LinkedIn
    • Bluesky
    • X
    • Facebook
  • Email
  • Print
More on
  • COP30
  • biofuels
  • land use
More on
  • COP30
  • biofuels
  • land use

Belém, Brazil (November 7, 2025) - At the COP30 Leaders' Summit, Brazil announced the Belém 4X Pledge on Sustainable Fuels, a commitment to quadruple production and use of 'sustainable fuels' by 2035, along with Japan, Italy, India and others. The fuels mentioned in the pledge include hydrogen, biogases, biofuels, and e-fuels.

The pledge cites a new report by the International Energy Agency (IEA) that envisions a quadrupling of these fuels by 2035, including a doubling of biofuel production.

Following is a statement from Janet Ranganathan, Managing Director of Strategy, Learning and Results, World Resources Institute:

"While countries are right to transition away from fossil fuels, they also need to ensure their plans don't trigger unintended consequences, such as more deforestation either at home or abroad. Doubling biofuel production would have significant implications for the world's land, especially without guardrails to prevent large-scale expansion of land dedicated to biofuels, which drives ecosystem loss.

"Already today, at least 40 million hectares of cropland are used globally to grow biofuel feedstocks, an area the size of Paraguay. And the world's land is under pressure to provide more food and wood products for a population that will grow toward 10 billion by 2050. At present rates of cropland expansion, an area nearly the size of India would be converted from nature to food production between 2020 and 2050. Increasing biofuel mandates would create significant extra pressure for land conversion.

"WRI's global research shows that expansion of land dedicated to biofuel production is likely to have serious negative impacts on food security, nature, and climate because it competes with food production or natural ecosystems. Biofuel production on agricultural land implies trade-offs with both food production and restoring land to nature. Agricultural products are commodities in global markets, and policies that increase demand for these products will raise prices and likely lead to expansion of new cropland. Both responses are likely to have negative impacts on climate, food security, and nature. Furthermore, many models and carbon accounting frameworks undercount biofuels' land carbon cost or miss it entirely.

"That's why both the land and the types of biomass used for fuels matter. The pledge says that efforts to scale up fuel use must be environmentally and socially responsible. But it does not include critical caveats from the IEA report: that biofuel expansion should not further increase cropland use, and that waste and residue-based biomass potentially offer a more sustainable pathway than feedstocks grown on dedicated land-although the amounts are limited, making scalability challenging. National policies should account for these important nuances.

"All countries should develop a strategy for how best to use their limited land to advance prosperity and meet people's growing needs for food, while achieving climate and nature goals. These strategies should align with national pledges to halt deforestation and preserve existing ecosystems. Any mandates that intensify pressure on land risk undermining those commitments.

"More locally grounded research is needed to inform these strategies. For instance, how can Brazil best use its 40 to 100 million hectares of degraded land to meet its needs for food, wood products, jobs, revenue and energy, while protecting and restoring nature and meeting climate goals? As the demands on our land grow, while the planet's land area stays the same, evidence-based land-use planning will be essential to balance competing priorities."

Relevant Work

Climate

Biomass Can Fight Climate Change, But Only If You Do It Right

Insights May 1, 2025
Food

How to Manage the Global Land Squeeze? Produce, Protect, Reduce, Restore

Insights July 20, 2023
Climate

Under New Guidance, 'Sustainable' Aviation Fuel in the US Could Be Anything But

Insights May 9, 2024
Climate

Biofuels Are Not a Green Alternative to Fossil Fuels

Insights January 29, 2015

Media Contact

  • Alison Cinnamond

    Global Director for Strategic Communications

WRI - World Resources Institute published this content on November 07, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on November 08, 2025 at 23:43 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]