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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2001

Kyoto treaty scandal

Last month the world's nation-states finally agreed on rules to implement the 1997 Kyoto treaty on global warming. While their Marrakech, Morocco, conference was busy turning the budding disaster into a business opportunity, opposition came from within and without the conference hall. A new category of "climate justice" has emerged from the convergence of environmental justice, indigenous and solidarity groups, who link the problems of climate change to racial justice, workers' rights and social transformation.

Kyoto's great scandal is its transformation into opposite from an instrument to control global warming, into the basis for a new "carbon trade" industry. Over the last four years, the U.S., Russia, Japan, Canada, Australia and New Zealand won unfettered trading in greenhouse-gas emission rights, plus massive credits for scientifically discredited and unverifiable "carbon sinks" forest and farm practices that theoretically withdraw carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. As a result, few countries will have to take action to reduce emissions. Instead of being cut, emissions will keep growing.

As Tom Goldtooth of the Indigenous Environmental Network declared, "With emissions trading, corporations have found a new way of continuing their ruthless commodification of nature....We need real solutions that address the root causes of climate change and environmental racism, not corporate solutions like carbon trading that will not do anything to stop greenhouse gases in the U.S."

The "Clean Development Mechanism" (CDM), originally meant to help transfer renewable energy and energy-efficient technologies to poor countries, has been turned into its opposite to provide credits for environmentally damaging industries nuclear power, giant dams and "clean" coal to make a killing through mega-projects in those countries. Even environmental groups that accept this "first step" vow to fight such projects.

Last year's Declaration of Indigenous Peoples on Climate Change denounced the CDM for reducing forests to their carbon sequestration capacity, resulting in "projects which adversely impact upon our natural, sensitive and fragile eco-systems, contaminating our soils, forests and waters"; and the "intervention of oil, gas, nuclear and large hydroelectric power station, logging and mining companies, in their exploitation of natural resources in indigenous territories."

Not only did the declaration attack the policies and mechanisms that exclude participation of indigenous peoples and "permit developed countries to avoid their responsibility to reduce emissions at source, promote the expansion of global capital, and deepen our marginalization." It pointed to new concepts and practices of development, as opposed to current practices in both industrialized and Third World countries.

Franklin Dmitryev 

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