http://www.alternet.org/story/151542/the_globe%E2%80%99s_not_only_getting_hotter._it%E2%80%99s_more_unjust_and_unstable%2C_too?page=entire
The Globe's Not Only Getting Hotter
- It's More Unjust and
Unstable Too -
by Michelle Chen
July 6, 2011
from
AlterNet Website
Michelle Chen has
written for ColorLines, In These Times, South China
Morning Post, Clamor, INTHEFRAY.COM and her own zine,
cain.
The future of a warming
planet holds more than just melting ice - it will see a
lot more conflict over resources, food, and living space
as well. |
Over the next few decades, tens of millions of people will be driven
from their homes.
Braving violence and poverty, they’ll
roam desperately across continents and borders in search of work and
shelter. Unlike other refugees, though, their plight won’t be blamed
simply on the familiar horrors of war or persecution; they’ll blame
the weather.
If you haven’t heard about the rising tide of environmental
migrants, that’s because throngs of displaced black and brown people
don’t evoke the same public sympathy as photos of polar bear cubs.
The governments of rich industrialized
nations will scramble to shut the gates on the desperate hordes with
the same self-serving efficiency with which they’ve long ignored the
social, ecological and economic consequences of their prosperity.
But both efforts at blissful ignorance will fail, because climate
change is forcing society to confront the mounting natural and
man-made disasters on the horizon.
In 2010, according to the
Pew Center on Global Climate Change,
“more than 90 percent of all
disasters and 65 percent of associated economic damages were
weather and climate related (i.e. high winds, flooding, heavy
snowfall, heat waves, droughts, wildfires).
In all, 874 weather
and climate-related disasters resulted in 68,000 deaths and $99
billion in damages worldwide.”
Those numbers look worse on the ground.
In
rural Bangladesh, where some of South Asia’s major river-ways
converge, rising waters are threatening to swallow vulnerable
coastal communities and leave millions without homes.
According to the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC), the sea level need only rise by a few feet to
turn a cultivated area of 1,000 kilometers squared into sopping
marsh. The frequency and intensity of floods continues to escalate
exponentially, pushing young workers into the cities to earn a
living and eroding rural communities and their cultures.
While some places soak, others bake. An ongoing drought crisis in
East Africa has created massive hunger and aggravated conflict
between groups vying for dwindling resources in an increasingly
barren terrain.
The
United Nations estimated that in 2009,
conflicts
over cattle grazing and water resources led to several hundred
deaths.
It’s hard to pinpoint climate as a decisive factor in this sort of
social upheaval, but the evidence grows more pronounced with each
violent storm, ruined harvest and tribal clash:
the cumulus of
natural calamities makes it harder to live and thus harder to
coexist with our neighbors.
On “Democracy Now!”, Christian Parenti, author of “Tropic of Chaos,”
described how climate-driven warfare brings the environmental toll
of imperialism full circle:
From 1945 to 1990 the U.N. said there were 150 or so armed conflicts
that,
-
killed 20 million people
-
displaced 15 million
-
16 million were
wounded
That all happened in the “global south” in this belt of
states:
The updated view of
the north-south divide.
Blue includes G8
states and developed/ first world states.
And so now that’s where climate change
is kicking in and that was also the same terrain where the last 30
years of IMF and World Bank-backed structural adjustment of
privatization, deregulation of economies, cutting state support for
farmers and fishermen - that program affected those states most
intensely.
And now the weather associated with
climate change, extreme weather
such as the drought, punctuated by flooding in East Africa, is
adding to this. And there’s this catastrophic convergence.
Grassroots environmental groups have rallied around the concept of
“climate debt” to demand
justice for the ecological destruction of
the Global South.
Still, the immediate humanitarian
threats posed by climate change reveal the difficulty of thinking
long term in the face of intense scarcity.
Trickle-Down
Effect
A warming planet is
a thirsty one.
Water is one reason why Southern Sudan’s new independence could just
be a temporary respite in a raging struggle for ecological wealth.
The world’s youngest nation is at the
heart of the Nile River Basin, which supports several economies and
ecosystems and fuels toxic tensions among them.
Last year, economics
professor Paul Sullivan of National Defense University,
predicted
that without equitable
management of precious water, Sudan’s
partition would merely pave the way for more turmoil:
Water, land, food, energy and development are tightly and
importantly interlinked. Water is also very much linked to the
potential for peace in the country.
The tensions and potentials for
peace in Darfur, between the north and the south - and amongst many
other in other regions, including between local tribes and clans -
can be, in part, determined, by the availability, quality, sharing,
management and maintenance of water sources in the country.
A recent Senate Foreign Relations Committee
report offered
similar warnings about Afghanistan and Pakistan, where,
“water scarcity… triggers human
insecurity, which can intensify potentially explosive tensions
among neighboring countries or regions.”
Alarmingly, the report recommended that
the U.S. government integrate water management into its occupation
of the region, which would
expand Washington’s control over civilian
resources in an arena of unending conflict.
And long before popular uprisings in Egypt, analysts were
predicting
that climate change would feed into
geopolitical instability in the
Middle East.
Al Jazeera reports that water shortages could tip Yemen’s political
turmoil toward full-blown civil war.
Yemen’s capital Sanaa, from where president Ali Saleh left the
country after he was injured during protests, could effectively run
out of water by 2025, hydrology experts say.
Water shortages could cost the unstable country 750,000 jobs,
slashing incomes in the poorest Arab country by as much as 25 per
cent over the next decade...
Commentators frequently blame Yemen’s problems on tribal
differences, but environmental scarcity may be underpinning
secessionist struggles in the country’s south and some general
communal violence.
One of the perverse intersections between the water and climate
crises is a misguided attempt to solve both through the energy
industry.
For instance, while hydroelectricity has been
touted as a “clean”
power source, activists
point out that energy-intensive mega-dam
projects may actually ruin ecosystems and belch even more carbon
into the atmosphere - and strengthen oppressive regimes as well. The
government of Burma has used dam construction as a pretext for
driving out indigenous groups and crushing political dissent.
The military has repeatedly cracked down
on isolated minority villages to clear the way for lucrative
dam-building projects, which are typically designed to funnel
electricity to energy-hungry consumers in China at the expense of
Burma’s poorest communities.
One 85 year-old who fled to Thailand from his homeland in 2008,
whose story was recorded by the
Shan Sapawa Environment
Organization, couldn’t imagine life in exile:
"My spirit is here; I am connected
to this land…. When the military burned our village and forced
us out from our homeland, we still hand the land. If the water
floods over, we will have nothing left.”
Frustrated by political gridlock in
international negotiations on carbon emissions, the climate justice
movement sees the link between climate and conflict as a
call for
broad-based solutions that blend the environmental with the social.
That can start with the political
enfranchisement of indigenous groups and securing food and water
sovereignty for the poor. From there, the people most impacted by
climate change can work toward inclusive development to heal the
damage and move toward more sustainable energy.
But environmental migrants have a long way to go before they reach
justice.
Meanwhile, whether displaced by nature’s
wrath or civil war, the new refugees are running out of places to
run.
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