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Politics : The Environmentalist Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4522)2/24/2005 1:52:57 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 36917
 
Is Another World Possible? A Water Activist Reports from Porto Alegre
by Arnie Alpert

From the forthcoming issue of Peacework magazine

The Sunday morning workshop on forced privatization of water and power began like so many other World Social Forum events: no one from the sponsoring organization was there at 9 a.m., thirty minutes after the workshop was supposed to start. A dozen or two dozen people sat around in the lean-to structure chatting in several languages.

As this was the fourth day of Forum workshops, participants were by then accustomed to events that didn't start on time or didn't take place at all. I found myself with three North American students and offered to share what I knew about water privatization.

Water was a major theme for the Forum. Just in Terrain E, the zone designated for discussions of “Assuring and Defending Earth and People's Common Goods — as an Alternative to Commodification and Control by the Transnationals,” I counted 27 workshops listed in the program with explicit reference to water. These included sessions with such complex names as “Strategies from the social movements to defend water against the free trade agreements and international finance organizations” and “From the Water War in Bolivia to the constitutional reform in Uruguay: Resistance to water's private appropriation and the struggle in favor of public goods.” Others had simpler titles, like “Water Planet,” and “Reclaiming public water.” No doubt, there were other workshops on related topics in the other eleven “terrains” stretched along the Guaiba River in Porto Alegre.

There was so much going on, in fact, that it would have taken hours just to read through the program, printed in four tabloids and totaling more than 300 pages. Terrain A was for discussions of “Autonomous Thought, Reappropriation and Socialization of Knowledge and Technologies.” Terrain D was for “Communication: Counter-hegemonic Practices, Rights, and Alternatives.” Terrain G was “Peace and Demilitarization: Struggles against War, Free Trade, and Debt.” Other terrains dealt with diversity, arts, human rights, “sovereign economies,” alternatives to neo-liberalism, and ethics. In each area, anywhere from five to twenty-five separate sessions were scheduled for each of three 3-hour time slots a day for four days. In addition, the Youth Encampment in the middle of the WSF “campus,” where 35,000 people were camping, had its own schedule of events.

According to organizers, more than 155,000 people from 135 countries participated in the Forum. Nearly 7000 presenters led 2500 separate activities, not even counting the marches which took place each day. The scale would have been overwhelming, even if daytime temperatures had kept below 100 degrees.

At the macro level, the World Social Forum is both a laboratory and an expression of the movement to create alternatives to neo-liberal capitalism and imperialist war. But proclaiming “Another World Is Possible” is far easier, of course, than bringing it into being. By the end of this year’s Forum, the fifth annual and the fourth held in Porto Alegre, a split had emerged among those who have led what is called the “World Social Forum Process.” On the last day of the Forum, a group of 19 prominent intellectuals — including Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Perez Esquivel, sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein, and Walden Bello of Focus on the Global South — released a 12-point platform which might serve as a consensus statement of the WSF. In effect, by releasing the “Porto Alegre Manifesto,” the group of 19 was calling for the Forum to go beyond its role as a place for discussion to become a global body with an action agenda. The twelve points, including debt relief for poor nations, the imposition of a tax on international financial transactions, an end to foreign military bases, and the cessation of water privatization, were not controversial or even especially radical. But the notion that the World Social Forum might advance such positions contradicts the Forum’s stated principles, and clearly is still opposed by many Forum insiders. The only actual decisions that seemed to be forthcoming from the Forum’s International Council were that there would be no World Social Forum in 2006, that there would be regional forums instead, and that the next World Social Forum will be somewhere in Africa in 2007.

If the Forum is not — or not yet — able to chart a course for the broad agenda of “other worlders,” it still can be an important gathering point for the more focused movements, such as the growing web of campaigns to stop the corporate takeover of the world’s water. Three years ago, there was not much discussion of water at the Forum, said Tony Clarke, co-author of Blue Gold and director of the Polaris Institute. Then, last year at Mumbai, “it took off,” and became a unifying issue.”

For water activists, Mumbai was not just a point of wider recognition of their struggle; they also organized themselves for further discussion and action, such as a joint project to explore successful models of democratic delivery of water services. The result is a book, Reclaiming Public Water: Achievements, Struggles and Visions from Around the World,” released to the public in Porto Alegre (published by the Transnational institute and the Corporate Europe Observatory; visit www.tni.org or www.corporateeurope.org for more information). “Almost without exception, global water corporations have failed to deliver the promised improvements and have, instead, raised water tariffs far beyond the reach of poor households,” writes the international editorial team in the book’s foreword. “The rise of grassroots anti-privatization campaigns in countries around the world, increasingly linked in regional and global networks, is starting to turn the tide against free-market fundamentalism. The time has come to refocus the global water debate on the key question: how to improve and expand public water delivery around the world?”

The authors aim to answer that question with examples from Brazil, Bolivia, India, Malaysia, France, the USA, Germany, Argentina, Colombia, Venezuela, Ghana, South Africa, Uruguay, Ukraine, Slovakia, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Mexico. Their articles in turn served as the basis for presentations and discussions at the Forum.

Another set of discussions focused on how water activists can prepare for the next meeting of the World Water Forum (WWF), a project of the World Water Council, which was formed under United Nations auspices. The WWF meets every three years to discuss how to make healthy water more available around the world, an urgent goal. But since its first session in 1997, the WWF has been dominated by the World Bank and trans-national water corporations which would like to promote private water utilities and “public-private partnerships” as the preferred solution.

But a small number of water activists crashed WWF party in The Hague in 2000, followed by a larger number at the WWF in Tokyo in 2003. There, wearing bright blue headbands that said “Water Is Life” in several languages, they challenged the proposals being put forward by CEOs of 22 big companies. If any WWF observers came to Tokyo thinking there was a global consensus behind privatization as the solution to the world’s water problems, that notion was smashed by the session’s end.

Now, activists are preparing for the next World Water Forum, which will be in Mexico City next year. At a session held on the final afternoon of the Social Forum, Maude Barlow of the Council of Canadians opened discussion by saying “This is a planning meeting for us to take over the World Water Forum in 2006.” More than a hundred people squeezed into the small cabin for the discussion, with more clustered in the doorways and just outside.

Over nearly three hours, water activists from at least fourteen countries contributed their ideas on how to make the movement’s voices carry greater clout. Some speakers gave specific suggestions, such as a proposal to raise funds on-line to mobilize Mexican campesinos and indigenous groups. Other proposals, such as calling privatizers to account before an international tribunal, were worthy of discussion at another time. Some participants made speeches about their own local struggles without tying them to the Mexico City meeting at all.

On balance, there were perhaps more speeches than proposals. “But we lit a spark under some important people and groups,” commented Maude Barlow.

My own conversation with the North American students had just started when we were interrupted by a Brazilian man. Seemingly undisturbed by the absence of the workshop organizers, he suggested we organize the workshop ourselves. The Brazilian turned out to be Dieter Wartchow, a former director of Porto Alegre's public water system and a member of Red VIDA, a Latin American network of activist groups fighting water privatization. With his outgoing personality and ability to speak English, Portuguese, and Spanish, Dieter soon had us organized and ready to begin. In the lean-to were people from Brazil, France, Paraguay, Costa Rica, France, and the USA.

Dieter introduced the discussion by saying it is necessary to construct a social movement to force our governments to improve public water systems. With Dieter translating, mostly between English and Spanish, several people gave short presentations. First, Carlos Todeschini, another former director of Porto Alegre's municipal department of water and wastewater, explained how his city showed it is possible to provide public water with low rates and high quality. Then, Julio Cesar, from Paraguay, described efforts there to stop privatization and protect the Guarani aquifer, one of the world's largest. I described three components of the US movement: struggles against bottled water companies, anti-privatization efforts, and campaigns to stop trade agreements which would promote privatization and de-regulation through “liberalization” of services.

As we spoke the building filled up with more people. Soon, Dieter had help from other volunteer translators between Spanish, Portuguese, and English, while a little cluster of French speakers met off to one side. Additional comments came from participants from Brazil, Costa Rica, Spain, and France. Dieter brought us toward a close by making three points. First, we must make information more widely available. Second, we must unite globally. Third, we must organize in our communities everywhere. Finally, he led a chant, “Water is life,” in several languages. By the end we were chanting in Portuguese, French, Spanish, English, German, Hebrew, Guarani, Tagalog, and Vietnamese. That there is a global movement against corporate control of water is now indisputable. Brazilian activists are getting help from Swiss church groups to help them stop Nestlé from sucking their aquifers dry. Farmers in India are linking up with Colombian trade unionists to put pressure on Coca Cola. Anti-privatization activists in Kentucky are drawing inspiration from indigenous people in Bolivia. The role of the World Bank as a promoter of the corporate agenda is well understood through case studies shared between countries by networks like Jubilee South. Likewise, the ways in which "free trade" agreements would force the de-regulation and privatization of water is a topic for analysis shared among groups trying to derail the WTO. And with publication of books like Reclaiming Public Water, alternative means of providing water to a thirsty world are getting explored and developed.

Similar discussions are taking place with regard to anti-war organizing, human rights, indigenous struggles, the role of the arts, and other topics. Perhaps another world really is possible.

Much of the communication needed to propel movement toward “another world” is accomplished by e-mail networks and websites. One leading fair trade organizer with whom I spoke said, “I hate the World Social Forum. It’s a waste of time and money.” But as Maude Barlow told me, “One cannot overestimate the value of sitting down in these groups and interacting on a human level.” With all its limitations, the World Social Forum has become the primary opportunity for such discussions to occur.

Arnie Alpert is New Hampshire Coordinator for the American Friends Service Committee. He attended the World Social Forum in January, 2005, held in Porto Alegre, Brazil. This article is from the March 2005 issue of Peacework Magazine (www.afsc.org/peacework).

For more information about the global movement against the corporate takeover of water, Public Citizen’s “Water for All” Campaign is a good place to start. Go to www.citizen.org/cmep/Water for more information.

###



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4522)2/26/2005 7:10:28 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 36917
 
Panelists Decry Bush Science Policies
The Associated Press

Monday 21 February 2005

Washington - The voice of science is being stifled in the Bush administration, with fewer scientists heard in policy discussions and money for research and advanced training being cut, according to panelists at a national science meeting.

Speakers at the national meeting of the American Association for Advancement of Science expressed concern Sunday that some scientists in key federal agencies are being ignored or even pressured to change study conclusions that don't support policy positions.

The speakers also said that Bush's proposed 2005 federal budget is slashing spending for basic research and reducing investments in education designed to produce the nation's future scientists.

And there also was concern that increased restrictions and requirements for obtaining visas is diminishing the flow to the U.S. of foreign-born science students who have long been a major part of the American research community.

Rosina Bierbaum, dean of the University of Michigan School of Natural Resources and Environment, said the Bush administration has cut scientists out of some of the policy-making processes, particularly on environmental issues.

"In previous administrations, scientists were always at the table when regulations were being developed," she said. "Science never had the last voice, but it had a voice."

Issues on global warming, for instance, that achieved a firm scientific consensus in earlier years are now being questioned by Bush policy makers. Proven, widely accepted research is being ignored or disputed, she said.

Government policy papers issued prior to the Bush years moved beyond questioning the validity of global warming science and addressed ways of confronting or dealing with climate change.

Under Bush, said Bierbaum, the questioning of the proven science has become more important than finding ways to cope with climate change.

One result of such actions, said Neal Lane of Rice University, a former director of the National Science Foundation, is that "we don't really have a policy right now to deal with what everybody agrees is a serious problem."

Among scientists, said Lane, "there is quite a consensus in place that the Earth is warming and that humans are responsible for a considerable part of that" through the burning of fossil fuels.

And the science is clear, he said, that without action to control fossil fuel use, the warming will get worse and there will be climate events that "our species has not experienced before."

Asked for comment, White House spokesman Ken Lisaius said, "The president makes policy decisions based on what the best policies for the country are, not politics. People who suggest otherwise are ill-informed."

Kurt Gottfried of Cornell University and the Union of Concerned Scientists said a survey of scientists in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that about 42 percent said they felt pressured to not report publicly any findings that do not agree with Bush policies on endangered species. He said almost a third of the Fish and Wildlife researchers said they were even pressured not to express within the agency any views in conflict with the Bush policies.

"This administration has distanced itself from scientific information," said Gottfried. He said this is part of a larger effort to let politics dominate pure science.

He said scientists in the Environmental Protection Agency have been pressured to change their research to keep it consistent with the Bush political position on environmental issues.

Because of such actions, he said, it has become more difficult for federal agencies to attract and retain top scientific talent. This becomes a critical issue, said Gottfried, because about 35 percent of EPA scientists will retire soon and the Bush administration can "mold the staff" of the agency through the hiring process.

Federal spending for research and development is significantly reduced under the proposed 2005 Bush budget, the speakers said.

"Overall the R&D budget is bad news," said Bierbaum.

She said the National Science Foundation funds for graduate students and for kindergarten through high school education has been slashed.

NASA has gotten a budget boost, but most of the new money will be going to the space shuttle, space station and Bush's plan to explore the moon and Mars. What is suffering is the space agency's scientific research efforts, she said.

"Moon and Mars is basically going to eat everybody's lunch," she said.

Lane said Bush's moon and Mars exploration effort has not excited the public and has no clear goals or plans.

He said Bush's moon-Mars initiative "was poorly carried out and the budget is not there to do the job so science (at NASA) will really get hurt."



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4522)3/1/2005 10:46:59 AM
From: D_I_R_T  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36917
 
Raymond,

I don't disagree with most of what the environmental movement says in principal, what I do disagree with is the inconsistency and hypocrisy that often accompanies their statements, views, positions, etc... This really doesn't help further protection of the environment as a whole and in fact I believe it is detrimental to raising awareness on a broader scale. In the past election I seen different poles that placed 'the environment' low on the scale of important issues. There are perhaps different reasons for this but I personally believe that the 'average american' has lost interest in this issue to some degree simply because there is to much hype and spin accompanying the issue. (Yes I know, the hype and spin comes from the other side also)

As I said earlier, when Greenpeace was in Southeast Alaska last summer and I had the opportunity I engage their lead spokesman I really raked him over the coals pretty good. A number of times he had to acknowledge that something wasn't correct that they had put out or he didn't know the answer to questions I raised about a statement he had made. (Example, spokesman, 'we would like to see more funding going into thinning and culvert and ditch repair, upgrading etc... question by myself, 'what's the average number of acres being thinned over the last few years in the Tongass? spokesman, 'I'm not sure.' myself, 'If you are going to come here and say not enough is being done in this area shouldn't you know and be able to answer how much IS being done? spokesman, 'yes, I should have that information.)

By the end of our discussion he was clearly rattled and the crew traveling with him had that 'deer in the headlights look.' He certainly hadn't been in a situation at least recently where he had had to acknowledge that either the information they had lead their campaign with was not accurate or he didn't know the answers to some very simple questions that were raised based on statements he had made.

My point is if the environmental movement is going to make a statement, take a position, etc., it should be rock solid in true and principle. I do not believe the ends justify the means approach is in the best interests of the environment in the long run as it just leaves room for more questions.

I best stop, time for work and I hadn't intended to go this far when I started my reply to you.

By the way, I agree with your concern about the salmon industry. I've commercial fished for salmon in the past and am still involved, at a different level, in the industry today.