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The Commission has asked countries to include in their reporting on biofuels the overall impact of the environment, but for the moment it won't affect their eligibility to count toward targets or the way they're subsidized. "It's a paper exercise," said Robbie Blake, the biofuels campaigner for Friends of the Earth. He said he was still waiting for a system that would ensure that "when claims are being made about how much greenhouse gases are being saved, we know they'll be true." Friends of the Earth and other groups would like to see food-based biofuels slashed to zero in the EU's targets. Anti-hunger advocates, like the three U.N. food agencies, are also urging governments to adjust biofuel production requirements in light of the U.S. drought, which is driving up food prices around the world. Currently, 40 percent of the U.S. corn crop goes to ethanol production. "With close to 900 million people suffering hunger in the world, what is needed is a rapid phase out of these biofuels," said Marc Olivier Herman, Oxfam's EU biofuels expert.
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