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Sugarcane in Brazilpast, present and future 
Andreza Vieira Dantas 
for Energy and Society –Fall, 2014
Sugarcane around the worldpast and present
How sugarcane spread around the world 
1,000BC 
Reached Asia mainland 
Plants taken to China and India and then were crossed with Saccharumspontaneum[1] 
Indians processed into a powder, medicine for headaches, stomach flutters, impotence[2] 
10,000/6,000 years ago 
Sugarcane was domesticated on the island of New Guinea 
Plants with high sucrose selected and adapted for cultivation[1] 
2 
1 
600/500BC 
Reached Iraq/Iran -Persia[1] 
Rulers entertained guests with a plethora of sweets[2] 
AD700 
Arabs adopted the crop and took it to Egypt and spread to Syria, Cyprus, Crete and eventually Spain[1]. 
3 
1400s 
Portuguese introduced sugar to Madeira island and then reached Canary islands, Azores, and West Africa[1] 
5 
1500s 
The crop was taken to: 
Mexico (1520) 
Brazil (1532) 
Peru (1533) 
and later to the British and French West Indies. 
Madeira became the largest exporter[1]. 
6 
4 
Sources: [map] Natural History Museum. -http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nature-online/life/plants-fungi/seeds-of- trade/page.dsml?section=crops&ref=sugar_cane&cat_ref=&region_ID=&time_ref=&page=spread&origTimeID=&origTimePoint=&origTpTitle=&origPage= 
[1] National History Museum. Seeds of Trade. London. -http://www.nhm.ac.uk/seeds 
[2] National Geographic –Sugar Love, Rich Cohen, Aug, 2013. -http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/08/sugar/cohen-text
Nowadays, things are almost the same… same regions, but different context! 
Brazil, India, China, Thailand and Pakistan have 80% of the sugarcane’s world production [1] 
Source: [map] Wikipedia -http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugarcane#mediaviewer/File:SugarcaneYield.png 
[1] FAOSTAT-Food and Agriculture Organization of theUnited Nations-http://faostat.fao.org/site/339/default.aspx 
Sugarcane in the world
Sugarcane cyclewhen everything has started
A bit about Brazilian history 
1500 –Pedro Álvares Cabral fleet, in route to India, reached Northeastern coast of Brazil [1] 
Portuguese main interests: gold and silver [2] 
What did they find? 
No gold for them in the 1500s! 
Indigenous population (índios) + nature 
Pau-brasil(Brazil wood -wood with deep red hue) was the first product they exploited! 
30 years after their arrival… 
Pau-brasilbecame more and more scarce –depletion led to deforestation in the coastal area by 1875[3] 
Portuguese needed other product to diversify trade 
Pictures: [top] “Desembarquede Cabral emPorto Seguro” painting, by Oscar Pereira da Silva - http://www.cabecadecuia.com/files/2013/04/22/7687_9fa5304205611f6b7059ed2f0a882cdfg.jpg 
[bottom] Detail of map of Brasilpainting, by GiácomoGastaldi, 1550 - http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652007000400014&lng=en&nrm=iso 
Sources: [1] http://countrystudies.us/brazil/4.htm; [2] http://thebrazilbusiness.com/article/history-of-colonial-brazil; [3] SUAREZ, V. C. D. M. (1977). Brazilian trees and their adaptation in the Southern USA. Journal of Arboriculture. Feb.,1977. p. 35-36. http://joa.isa- arbor.com/request.asp?JournalID=1&ArticleID=1431&Type=2
The sugarcane cycle (1530 to 1700) 
In the 1400s 
Europeans fell in love with sugar, -rare and noble product [1] 
The trade with the East became difficult![1] 
In the 1500s and later… 
1533 –MartimAfonsode Sousa brought the 1stsugarcane sprouts [2] 
Sugarcane was a big deal! Brazil had all the ingredients to grow it … 
Martin Afonsode Sousa brought 1stbud of sugarcane to Brazil 
fertile (abundant) soil + tropical climate + slaves+ know-how= $$$ [1] 
Indigenous + African slaves 
Indigenous were decimated by disease killed (diseases) and were substituted by African slaves 
Sources: [1] National Geographic –Sugar Love, Rich Cohen, Aug, 2013. -http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/08/sugar/cohen-text 
[2] Britannica Escola Online -http://escola.britannica.com.br/article/483229/engenho-de-acucar
The sugarcane society and the farms 
Source: http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_v9K1WlYSXJI/SeqbQDYMNoI/AAAAAAAAANg/vqxzlPpwrww/s400/pir%C3%A2mide+social+do+brasil+a%C3%A7ucareiro.jpg 
Source: http://jubran.deviantart.com/art/engenho-cana-Brazil-sec-XVIII-77980514 
Aristocrats 
Free men 
Slaves 
Sugar Society
The sugarcane farms (engenhos) 
Big House (Casa Grande) 
Where the owner and his family lived 
1 
Family Chapel (Capela) 
3 
Slave quarters (Senzala) 
Where the slaves were kept 
2 
Sugar Mill (Moinhode Açúcar) 
Place where the equipment to grind the sugarcane was installed 
4 
Furnaces (Fornalhas) 
Where the cane juice was boiled and purified copper pots 
5 
Hangars (Galpões) 
Where the sugar blocks were stocked 
6 
Sugarcane field (Canavial) 
7
The power of sugarcanethe present
12.8% 
Natural Gas & Coal 
39.3% 
Petroleum & Oil Products 
12.5% 
Hydro 
16.1% 
Sugarcane 
8.3% 
Firewood and Charcoal 
1.3% 
Uranium 
4.2% 
Other Renewables 
Sugarcane, Brazil’s energy grid and industry 
Source: BEN (2014) 
Sugarcane 
is the top source among the renewables 
Brazil has one of the world’s cleanestenergy grids[3] 
1970s: Sugarcane production start to boom as well as ethanol vehicles production/sales 
Early 2000s: another car sales boom, but now Flexfuelvehicles 
2 
1 
1973 oil crisis –Mid-Eastern countries proclaimed an oil embargo. In 1974, oil price rose $3 /barrel to ~ $12[1] 
1975 –Brazil launched Pro-Alcohol program [2] 
3 
2005 –More than 500mil flexfuelvehicles [4]
Sugarcanecrops occupy: 
1.1% of the country’s total land 
3.7%of Brazil’s arable lands (pasture + agriculture) 
… and produce over 720million tons per crop year-twice #2 India[2] 
Ethanol uses 0.5% of the national territory 
Northeastern area 
Harvest cycle: Sep. -Mar. 
15% of sugarcane production 
Production concentrated in South-Central areas 
Harvest cycle: Apr. –Dec. 
85% of sugarcane production 
Land Use in Brazil[1] 
Sugarcane in Brazil: context 
Notes: 1 hectare = 2.5 acres . Other uses include hydrography. 
Source: [1] UNICA (2013) –compiled data from different sources. 
50% sugar 
50% ethanol
Sugar types: raw, crystal, brown and refined 
Syrup and molasses 
Rapadura 
Lactic acid 
Sugar 
The sugarcane power 
Ethanol 
Anhydrous ethanol (blended into gasoline) 
Alcohols (e.g.: cosmetic/pharmacy industries) 
Alcohols 
Cogeneration (bioelectricity) 
Biogas 
Biodiesel 
Paper 
Bioplastic 
and more 
Biomass 
cane waste = bagasse + straw 
Vinasseuses (by-product from ethanol processing): methane production, fermentation, fertigation, yeast and energy production 
Raw cane: cane juice / cachaça (distilled cane juice) 
and more 
Other
Disadvantages 
Hard to use ethanol fuel in cold weather 
Shortcomings of ethanol fuel (scarcity x price) 
Sugarcane does not fit temperate climates[3] 
Brazil 
#1 largest producer of sugarcane ethanol~23.2bi L (2012/13) and #2 largest producer of ethanol (#1 U.S.)[1] 
Gasoline in Brazil has a blend of 18% to 25% of anhydrous ethanol (ethanol dehydrated) [1] 
Ethanol has been replacing 50% of Brazil’s gasoline needs[1] 
Flexfuel(ethanol/gasoline) vehicles are pretty common and convenient now in Brazil 
Biodiesel law (2005 to 2014): progressive goals. B2 (vegetable diesel + 2% ethanol) to B7 (vegetable diesel + 7% ethanol)[5] 
Benefits (not only… we are going to talk more later) 
Cleaner air: adds oxygen to gasoline and helps to reduce air pollution/harmful emissions[1] 
Reduced GHG emissions: cuts off CO2emissions by 90% in average compared to gasoline[1] 
Better performance: high-octane fuel[1] 
Alternative energy: to fossil fuels[1] 
Versatility: same plant produces many by-products[1] 
Better ethanol: 370% more energy than it spends to obtain it (US ethanol only 10%) [2] 
High productivity: more ethanol/acre than corn[3] 
Game changer against climate change [4] 
Ethanol 
Ethanol production 
Gas stations in Brazil
How does an ethanol plant work? 
Source: RevistaÉpoca. Ed. Globo- http://epoca.globo.com/infograficos/526_usina_alcool.html
Ethanol 
95.1% ethanol (minimum) + 4.9% water 
Flexfuelengines, ethanol engines -more common in compact cars 
Gasoline 
75% -80% gasoline + 20% -25% anhydrous (blended) 
3 versions: regiuar(25% anhydrous), special (additives) and premium (additives + high-octane –cleaner , less sulfur residues) 
Flexfuelengines, gas engines –compact to SUVs and Vans 
Diesel 
95% diesel + 5% biodiesel (enforced by law) 
More common in heavy vehicles , largely used for transportation. 
NGV -Natural Gas Vehicular 
Fuel commonly used by taxicabs 
Gas stations in Brazil 
What’s your fuel?
Bioelectricity 
In Brazil 
2/3 of the sugarcane energy is stored in the leftover cane fiber (bagasse + straw)[1] 
Leftover is burned and converted into electricity in the ethanol and sugar plants (cogeneration) 
Bioelectricity complements hydroelectricity: sugarcane harvesting occurs during driest periods[1] 
Bioelectricity provides more than 3% of Brazil’s electricity needs ~1,000 MW/year[1] 
Enough energy to power the current demand of a country such Sweden or Argentina. 
! 
Source: Bioelectricity generation –RevistaGalileu. Ed. Globo-http://revistagalileu.globo.com/Revista/Common/0,,EMI326727-18537,00.html 
Harvested sugarcane goes through a crushing-mill where the cane juice is extracted 
1 
The leftover is called bagasse, industrial waste that is transported to the boiler area where it is burned 
Steam turns a turbine and a generator coupled converts mechanical energy into electrical energy 
3 
2 
sugarcane 
sugar production 
ethanol production 
generator 
turbine 
cane juice 
boiler 
steam 
Part of the energy is used in the plant itself and the surplus can be sold. 
Burning bagasse generates energy to use and sell. 
FROM THE LEFTOVER TO THE ELECTRICAL OUTLET 
4
Harvested sugarcane goes through a crushing-mill where the cane juice is extracted 
1 
The leftover is called bagasse, industrial waste that is transported to the boiler area where it is burned 
Steam turns a turbine and a generator coupled converts mechanical energy into electrical energy 
3 
2 
sugarcane 
sugar production 
ethanol production 
generator 
turbine 
cane juice 
boiler 
steam 
Part of the energy is used in the plant itself and the surplus can be sold. 
Burning bagasse generates energy to use and sell. 
FROM THE LEFTOVER TO THE ELECTRICAL OUTLET 
4
Challenges, potential, future 
what’s next? 
Numbers, challenges and futurewhat’s next?
Sugarcane industry in numbers (2012/13 harvesting)[1] 
Note:The data presented here (sugarcane production in 2012) -from the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association -UNICA –is 22% lower than the data from United Nations (presented in the slide 12 from United Nations.
Sugarcane 
Challenges and issues 
Crops are getting old: monoculture x fires to prepare soil for next harvesting. Decreasing tons/acre. How to solve it? [1] 
“Low-tech” agriculture has led Brazil to the #1[3] 
Improvements in efficiency = investment in technology innovation [1] 
Clean source? Environmental controversy: sugarcane as a pollutant (fires) x ethanol and cane waste as efficient and clean sources 
Social issue: migrant manpower (from N/NE to Central- South region) + low wages + bad labor conditions 
Farmers are still recovering from 2008 financial crisis + seasonal changes in environmental conditions. Public policies? Funding? Federal subsides? [1] 
How about future? 
Climate change: scientists foresee geographical redistribution of the croplands[5] 
Potential for crops expansion: from 8 to 38 million hectares, depending on irrigation techniques leading to 3bi ton/year[5] 
Bioelectricity has potential to 14 GW/year (2020/21); In 2012, the installed capacity was 7.7GW, but only 1.1GW/year were connected to the grid[2] 
Bioplastic: large-scale use [1] 
Biochemicalsand biohydrocarbons: : next frontier, substitute for gasoline (?), diesel and jet fuel[4] 
Cellulosic ethanol: fuel from leftover –potential to double the fuel produced/hectare 
Green Protocol for sugarcane: 1stinitiative in São Paulo[4].For future, the whole country should be involved.

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Sugarcane in Brazil: past, present and future

  • 1. Sugarcane in Brazilpast, present and future Andreza Vieira Dantas for Energy and Society –Fall, 2014
  • 2. Sugarcane around the worldpast and present
  • 3. How sugarcane spread around the world 1,000BC Reached Asia mainland Plants taken to China and India and then were crossed with Saccharumspontaneum[1] Indians processed into a powder, medicine for headaches, stomach flutters, impotence[2] 10,000/6,000 years ago Sugarcane was domesticated on the island of New Guinea Plants with high sucrose selected and adapted for cultivation[1] 2 1 600/500BC Reached Iraq/Iran -Persia[1] Rulers entertained guests with a plethora of sweets[2] AD700 Arabs adopted the crop and took it to Egypt and spread to Syria, Cyprus, Crete and eventually Spain[1]. 3 1400s Portuguese introduced sugar to Madeira island and then reached Canary islands, Azores, and West Africa[1] 5 1500s The crop was taken to: Mexico (1520) Brazil (1532) Peru (1533) and later to the British and French West Indies. Madeira became the largest exporter[1]. 6 4 Sources: [map] Natural History Museum. -http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nature-online/life/plants-fungi/seeds-of- trade/page.dsml?section=crops&ref=sugar_cane&cat_ref=&region_ID=&time_ref=&page=spread&origTimeID=&origTimePoint=&origTpTitle=&origPage= [1] National History Museum. Seeds of Trade. London. -http://www.nhm.ac.uk/seeds [2] National Geographic –Sugar Love, Rich Cohen, Aug, 2013. -http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/08/sugar/cohen-text
  • 4. Nowadays, things are almost the same… same regions, but different context! Brazil, India, China, Thailand and Pakistan have 80% of the sugarcane’s world production [1] Source: [map] Wikipedia -http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugarcane#mediaviewer/File:SugarcaneYield.png [1] FAOSTAT-Food and Agriculture Organization of theUnited Nations-http://faostat.fao.org/site/339/default.aspx Sugarcane in the world
  • 6. A bit about Brazilian history 1500 –Pedro Álvares Cabral fleet, in route to India, reached Northeastern coast of Brazil [1] Portuguese main interests: gold and silver [2] What did they find? No gold for them in the 1500s! Indigenous population (índios) + nature Pau-brasil(Brazil wood -wood with deep red hue) was the first product they exploited! 30 years after their arrival… Pau-brasilbecame more and more scarce –depletion led to deforestation in the coastal area by 1875[3] Portuguese needed other product to diversify trade Pictures: [top] “Desembarquede Cabral emPorto Seguro” painting, by Oscar Pereira da Silva - http://www.cabecadecuia.com/files/2013/04/22/7687_9fa5304205611f6b7059ed2f0a882cdfg.jpg [bottom] Detail of map of Brasilpainting, by GiácomoGastaldi, 1550 - http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652007000400014&lng=en&nrm=iso Sources: [1] http://countrystudies.us/brazil/4.htm; [2] http://thebrazilbusiness.com/article/history-of-colonial-brazil; [3] SUAREZ, V. C. D. M. (1977). Brazilian trees and their adaptation in the Southern USA. Journal of Arboriculture. Feb.,1977. p. 35-36. http://joa.isa- arbor.com/request.asp?JournalID=1&ArticleID=1431&Type=2
  • 7. The sugarcane cycle (1530 to 1700) In the 1400s Europeans fell in love with sugar, -rare and noble product [1] The trade with the East became difficult![1] In the 1500s and later… 1533 –MartimAfonsode Sousa brought the 1stsugarcane sprouts [2] Sugarcane was a big deal! Brazil had all the ingredients to grow it … Martin Afonsode Sousa brought 1stbud of sugarcane to Brazil fertile (abundant) soil + tropical climate + slaves+ know-how= $$$ [1] Indigenous + African slaves Indigenous were decimated by disease killed (diseases) and were substituted by African slaves Sources: [1] National Geographic –Sugar Love, Rich Cohen, Aug, 2013. -http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/08/sugar/cohen-text [2] Britannica Escola Online -http://escola.britannica.com.br/article/483229/engenho-de-acucar
  • 8. The sugarcane society and the farms Source: http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_v9K1WlYSXJI/SeqbQDYMNoI/AAAAAAAAANg/vqxzlPpwrww/s400/pir%C3%A2mide+social+do+brasil+a%C3%A7ucareiro.jpg Source: http://jubran.deviantart.com/art/engenho-cana-Brazil-sec-XVIII-77980514 Aristocrats Free men Slaves Sugar Society
  • 9. The sugarcane farms (engenhos) Big House (Casa Grande) Where the owner and his family lived 1 Family Chapel (Capela) 3 Slave quarters (Senzala) Where the slaves were kept 2 Sugar Mill (Moinhode Açúcar) Place where the equipment to grind the sugarcane was installed 4 Furnaces (Fornalhas) Where the cane juice was boiled and purified copper pots 5 Hangars (Galpões) Where the sugar blocks were stocked 6 Sugarcane field (Canavial) 7
  • 10. The power of sugarcanethe present
  • 11. 12.8% Natural Gas & Coal 39.3% Petroleum & Oil Products 12.5% Hydro 16.1% Sugarcane 8.3% Firewood and Charcoal 1.3% Uranium 4.2% Other Renewables Sugarcane, Brazil’s energy grid and industry Source: BEN (2014) Sugarcane is the top source among the renewables Brazil has one of the world’s cleanestenergy grids[3] 1970s: Sugarcane production start to boom as well as ethanol vehicles production/sales Early 2000s: another car sales boom, but now Flexfuelvehicles 2 1 1973 oil crisis –Mid-Eastern countries proclaimed an oil embargo. In 1974, oil price rose $3 /barrel to ~ $12[1] 1975 –Brazil launched Pro-Alcohol program [2] 3 2005 –More than 500mil flexfuelvehicles [4]
  • 12. Sugarcanecrops occupy: 1.1% of the country’s total land 3.7%of Brazil’s arable lands (pasture + agriculture) … and produce over 720million tons per crop year-twice #2 India[2] Ethanol uses 0.5% of the national territory Northeastern area Harvest cycle: Sep. -Mar. 15% of sugarcane production Production concentrated in South-Central areas Harvest cycle: Apr. –Dec. 85% of sugarcane production Land Use in Brazil[1] Sugarcane in Brazil: context Notes: 1 hectare = 2.5 acres . Other uses include hydrography. Source: [1] UNICA (2013) –compiled data from different sources. 50% sugar 50% ethanol
  • 13. Sugar types: raw, crystal, brown and refined Syrup and molasses Rapadura Lactic acid Sugar The sugarcane power Ethanol Anhydrous ethanol (blended into gasoline) Alcohols (e.g.: cosmetic/pharmacy industries) Alcohols Cogeneration (bioelectricity) Biogas Biodiesel Paper Bioplastic and more Biomass cane waste = bagasse + straw Vinasseuses (by-product from ethanol processing): methane production, fermentation, fertigation, yeast and energy production Raw cane: cane juice / cachaça (distilled cane juice) and more Other
  • 14. Disadvantages Hard to use ethanol fuel in cold weather Shortcomings of ethanol fuel (scarcity x price) Sugarcane does not fit temperate climates[3] Brazil #1 largest producer of sugarcane ethanol~23.2bi L (2012/13) and #2 largest producer of ethanol (#1 U.S.)[1] Gasoline in Brazil has a blend of 18% to 25% of anhydrous ethanol (ethanol dehydrated) [1] Ethanol has been replacing 50% of Brazil’s gasoline needs[1] Flexfuel(ethanol/gasoline) vehicles are pretty common and convenient now in Brazil Biodiesel law (2005 to 2014): progressive goals. B2 (vegetable diesel + 2% ethanol) to B7 (vegetable diesel + 7% ethanol)[5] Benefits (not only… we are going to talk more later) Cleaner air: adds oxygen to gasoline and helps to reduce air pollution/harmful emissions[1] Reduced GHG emissions: cuts off CO2emissions by 90% in average compared to gasoline[1] Better performance: high-octane fuel[1] Alternative energy: to fossil fuels[1] Versatility: same plant produces many by-products[1] Better ethanol: 370% more energy than it spends to obtain it (US ethanol only 10%) [2] High productivity: more ethanol/acre than corn[3] Game changer against climate change [4] Ethanol Ethanol production Gas stations in Brazil
  • 15. How does an ethanol plant work? Source: RevistaÉpoca. Ed. Globo- http://epoca.globo.com/infograficos/526_usina_alcool.html
  • 16. Ethanol 95.1% ethanol (minimum) + 4.9% water Flexfuelengines, ethanol engines -more common in compact cars Gasoline 75% -80% gasoline + 20% -25% anhydrous (blended) 3 versions: regiuar(25% anhydrous), special (additives) and premium (additives + high-octane –cleaner , less sulfur residues) Flexfuelengines, gas engines –compact to SUVs and Vans Diesel 95% diesel + 5% biodiesel (enforced by law) More common in heavy vehicles , largely used for transportation. NGV -Natural Gas Vehicular Fuel commonly used by taxicabs Gas stations in Brazil What’s your fuel?
  • 17. Bioelectricity In Brazil 2/3 of the sugarcane energy is stored in the leftover cane fiber (bagasse + straw)[1] Leftover is burned and converted into electricity in the ethanol and sugar plants (cogeneration) Bioelectricity complements hydroelectricity: sugarcane harvesting occurs during driest periods[1] Bioelectricity provides more than 3% of Brazil’s electricity needs ~1,000 MW/year[1] Enough energy to power the current demand of a country such Sweden or Argentina. ! Source: Bioelectricity generation –RevistaGalileu. Ed. Globo-http://revistagalileu.globo.com/Revista/Common/0,,EMI326727-18537,00.html Harvested sugarcane goes through a crushing-mill where the cane juice is extracted 1 The leftover is called bagasse, industrial waste that is transported to the boiler area where it is burned Steam turns a turbine and a generator coupled converts mechanical energy into electrical energy 3 2 sugarcane sugar production ethanol production generator turbine cane juice boiler steam Part of the energy is used in the plant itself and the surplus can be sold. Burning bagasse generates energy to use and sell. FROM THE LEFTOVER TO THE ELECTRICAL OUTLET 4
  • 18. Harvested sugarcane goes through a crushing-mill where the cane juice is extracted 1 The leftover is called bagasse, industrial waste that is transported to the boiler area where it is burned Steam turns a turbine and a generator coupled converts mechanical energy into electrical energy 3 2 sugarcane sugar production ethanol production generator turbine cane juice boiler steam Part of the energy is used in the plant itself and the surplus can be sold. Burning bagasse generates energy to use and sell. FROM THE LEFTOVER TO THE ELECTRICAL OUTLET 4
  • 19. Challenges, potential, future what’s next? Numbers, challenges and futurewhat’s next?
  • 20. Sugarcane industry in numbers (2012/13 harvesting)[1] Note:The data presented here (sugarcane production in 2012) -from the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association -UNICA –is 22% lower than the data from United Nations (presented in the slide 12 from United Nations.
  • 21. Sugarcane Challenges and issues Crops are getting old: monoculture x fires to prepare soil for next harvesting. Decreasing tons/acre. How to solve it? [1] “Low-tech” agriculture has led Brazil to the #1[3] Improvements in efficiency = investment in technology innovation [1] Clean source? Environmental controversy: sugarcane as a pollutant (fires) x ethanol and cane waste as efficient and clean sources Social issue: migrant manpower (from N/NE to Central- South region) + low wages + bad labor conditions Farmers are still recovering from 2008 financial crisis + seasonal changes in environmental conditions. Public policies? Funding? Federal subsides? [1] How about future? Climate change: scientists foresee geographical redistribution of the croplands[5] Potential for crops expansion: from 8 to 38 million hectares, depending on irrigation techniques leading to 3bi ton/year[5] Bioelectricity has potential to 14 GW/year (2020/21); In 2012, the installed capacity was 7.7GW, but only 1.1GW/year were connected to the grid[2] Bioplastic: large-scale use [1] Biochemicalsand biohydrocarbons: : next frontier, substitute for gasoline (?), diesel and jet fuel[4] Cellulosic ethanol: fuel from leftover –potential to double the fuel produced/hectare Green Protocol for sugarcane: 1stinitiative in São Paulo[4].For future, the whole country should be involved.