
Sweet Fuel: A Political And The Environmental History Of Brazilian Ethanol Traces The Ethanol Industry From Its Inception Under A State Institution In 1933 Through The Height Of Government Intervention Under The National Program During The Dictatorship To Its Rebirth With The Launch Of The Flexible Fuel Car In 2003. It Argues That Private Businessmen, Politicians, And Rural Workers Leveraged Nationalist Interests In A Domestic Fuel Option Into One Of The Most Advanced Alternative Energy Initiatives In The World. The Industry's Connection To The Popular Ethanol-fueled Car Connected The Sugar-ethanol Sector To Brazilian Development Goals Of The Twentieth Century, But Producers And Government Officials Ignored The Disproportionate Environmental And Costs Associated With Ethanol's Expansion. Focused On Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, The Largest Ethanol-producing Region In The Country, The Book Examines How Producers' Continued Dumping Of Vinasse, A Byproduct Of Ethanol Distillation, In Local Waterways Connected The Industry To Extensive Water Pollution While Exploitative Labor Laws Drove The Program's Rapid Expansion Over The Course Of The Twentieth Century. Rural Communities' Efforts To Hold Producers Accountable For These Costs Contrasts With National And International Praise For The Industry's Potential Climate Benefits. Sweet Fuel Provides A Full Analysis Of Ethanol's Long-term Development To Reveal The Historical Complexities Of One Of Today's Premiere Green Energy Industries--
This book investigates the historical development of the Brazilian ethanol industry to determine how nationalist energy goals obscured significant environmental and social costs. Jennifer Eaglin, a historian specializing in Latin American environmental history, utilizes archival research and regional case studies to analyze the interplay between state policy, private industry, and rural labor. She argues that while Brazil successfully established a world-leading alternative energy initiative, the rapid expansion of the sugar-ethanol sector relied on exploitative labor practices and caused severe, localized ecological degradation.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this work as a critical contribution to the study of green energy transitions and the hidden costs of industrial development. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the research and the author's success in balancing macro-level policy analysis with localized environmental impacts.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
019751071X
ISBN-13:
9780197510711
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