Friday 26th of April 2024

kicking the can down the road...

tragictragic

Almost half of all children globally are at Extremely High risk of suffering harmful consequences of climate change and other environmental shocks. Frogs and pollinators are at the sharp end of the loss of biodiversity. Fast fashion: first world behaviour with third world environmental and social consequences. Third world?? – bah, who cares?

 

By Peter Sainsbury

 

 

The evidence clearly indicates that children and young people are particularly vulnerable to climate change and other environmental shocks. Regardless of location, the increased vulnerability is attributable to both their immature physiological, anatomical and psychological systems and their social environments. Greta Thunberg has, almost single-handedly, led to a spotlight being shone on the climate-related concerns, frustrations, anger and agency of children and young people themselves. In the aptly titled ‘The climate crisis is a child rights crisis’, UNICEF reports the development of a Children’s Climate Risk Index and its measurement in 163 countries. The Index incorporates 57 variables into two elements: a measure of exposure to eight climate and environmental shocks and stresses (water scarcity, riverine floods, coastal floods, tropical cyclones, vector-borne diseases, heatwaves, air pollution, and soil and water pollution), and a measure of four factors that influence child vulnerability (child health and nutrition; education; water, sanitation and hygiene; and poverty, communication assets and social protection).

UNICEF’s findings are alarming:

  • In 33 countries the Child Climate Risk Index is classified as Extremely High (over 7/10). These countries contain 1 billion children, nearly half of all children globally. The Extremely High risk countries are mostly in Africa and South Asia and produce less than 10% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
  • In a further 83 countries the Index is classified as High or Medium High (3.8-7/10). This group includes the USA and UK.
  • Only 6 countries are classified as Low Climate Risk (under 2/10). These are mostly in Scandinavia and New Zealand.
  • Australia scored 3.6, being quite high on exposure (5.4) but low on vulnerability (1.2).
  • 850 million children are exposed to four or more of the eight climate and environmental stressors. The commonest stressors are air pollution (2 billion children), water scarcity (920 million), heatwaves (820 million), lead pollution (815 million), vector-borne diseases (600 million) and cyclones (400 million).
  • Almost all children on Earth are exposed to at least one stressor.

UNICEF is unequivocal that the only long-term solution is reducing emissions. Many actions can, however, reduce children’s exposure and vulnerability: principally poverty reduction; improved access to reliable, clean water, sanitation and hygiene services; better education, health and nutrition services; and improved social protection. But, importantly, UNICEF recommends that children and young people must be brought into policy development processes, not just heard but also involved in the decision-making.

I’ll finish with a quotation from the Foreword written by four young people: ‘Our futures are being destroyed, our rights violated, and our pleas ignored. It is immoral that the countries that have done the least are suffering the first and worst. We must acknowledge where we stand, treat climate change like the crisis it is and act with the urgency required to ensure today’s children inherit a liveable planet’.

Most readers will be aware that one aspect of the massive loss of biodiversity that is occurring globally is the loss of pollinators – mostly insects but also birds and bats – and that this has enormous implications for many of the crops on which humans rely for food. The consequences for crop productivity, nutritional security and economies are immense. Twenty pollinator experts from around the world participated in a structured process to determine the relative regional and global importance of eight drivers of pollinator decline. Globally, the order of importance of the eight drivers was:

  1. Changing land cover and configuration (i.e. destruction of habitat)
  2. Land management practices (e.g. mowing, cultivating, grazing, burning, cropping regimes)
  3. Pesticide use

(1-3 are considered ‘Very Important’ drivers)

  1. Climate change
  2. Pests and pathogens
  3. Management of bees and other insects for honey production and pollination
  4. Invasive alien species

(4-7 are considered ‘Important’ drivers)

  1. Genetically Modified Organisms (considered ‘Little Important’)

While there was inter-regional variation in the relative importance of each of the drivers, all regions were exposed to at least three ‘Very Important’ regional drivers. South America was the region where pollinator decline poses the greatest risk to humans.

The priority actions for halting the decline of pollinators in the immediate future should clearly focus on reducing the pressures from changes in land cover and configuration, improving land management practices and reducing pesticide use. Climate change was rated ‘Very Important’ or ‘Important’ in all six regions but overall it ranked only fourth in importance. None the less, limiting climate change remains a priority as it is likely to have serious long-term effects on pollinators

Closer to home, twenty-six species of Australian frogs (over 10% of our total) are at imminent risk of extinction – in fact four are probably already extinct and another four are hanging on by the skin of their teeth (yes, yes, I know). More than half of the threatened species are in Queensland. The problem is caused by the usual extinction culprits (climate change, altered fire regimes, loss of habitat, and invasive species, particularly fish and feral pigs in this case) and the worldwide chytrid fungal pandemic – a disease with consequences far more disastrous for amphibians than COVID has for humans. Apart from the problem of tackling chytrid, it’s pretty obvious what needs to be done to save the frog species that remain. Captive breeding programs and better population monitoring would also help. Apart from anything else, imagine losing animals with such great names as the Northern gastric-brooding frog, the Kroombit tinker frog, the Armoured mist frog and the Mountain top nursery frog. It would be a combined batrachological and etymological tragedy.

Cattle grazing on top of a 20-metre-high pile of landfill, most of it unwanted clothing. Unwanted not by bored, locked-down Australians clearing out their wardrobes but unwanted by some of the poorest people on earth – people in Accra, Ghana, the final destination of the discarded clothes that the West’s charity shops reject. A dozen people pushing each other around as they dive into and grab items from a newly opened bale of discarded clothes from Europe, North America or Australia – not for their own personal use but for potential sale. A young mother who makes about $4.50 a day by carrying 55kg bales of second-hand clothes on her head – enough for her to live on and to send some back to her family in the country. Piles of discarded clothes washed up on Ghana’s beaches, having been washed down the sewers, flushed out to sea and then dumped back on shore. These are some of the images that stand out from ‘Dead white man’s clothes’, a recent Foreign Correspondent program on the ABC that exposed some of the consequences of the West’s obsession with fashion. An obsession that has seen the global production of clothing double since 2000, with ‘fast fashion’ encouraging people to buy cheap, buy often, wear twice, discard quickly. Overproduction and waste are simply business expenses for many fashion companies. On a per capita basis, Australia is second only to the USA in its consumption of textiles. An obsession that has, on the other hand, also created a global trade in second-hand clothing that is worth about $4.6 billion per year and created around two million jobs in Accra alone.

Talking of women carrying heavy loads, have a look at the task undertaken by Birma, a health worker in Nepal.

And if you’ve got 30 seconds to spare this weekend and you want to do one good deed for biodiversity, you might like to tell the WA government to listen to the Traditional Owners and not allow the Fitzroy River to be dammed so that water can be drawn from it for irrigation. Amongst other harmful effects, changing the water flow in the Fitzroy and increasing the pollution from agriculture will put added pressure on the already threatened Freshwater Sawfish.

If you were busy mid-week, you may have missed the two excellent P&I articles in which Rhonda Boyle provided succinct and clear overviews of Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions (a sort of ‘Australia’s GHGs 101’). The first article identified the various greenhouse gases and how their emissions are measured, and explained where Australia’s emissions originate (the table and figure are particularly illuminating) and how they have changed (overall, not very much) over the last 30 years. In her second article Boyle examines the Commonwealth government’s greenhouse gas emission projections. She demonstrates that even if Australia’s current extremely modest goal of a 26-28% reduction in emissions between 2005 and 2030 is achieved (not a certainty), the annual rate of reduction in emissions after that will have to increase by a highly unlikely 3-4-fold for Australia to reach net zero emissions by 2050. Boyle sees little likelihood of the much-needed Commonwealth leadership on emissions reductions as they are ‘not serious about the mammoth task ahead, they are simply ‘kicking the can down the road’.’

 

Depressing but can’t help feeling there’s more than a grain of truth in the Tragedy World Map.

 

 

Read more: 

https://johnmenadue.com/sunday-environmental-round-up-19/

 

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forgetting western "sins"...

 

Remember Mao’s famine, forget Churchill’s racism: how the West colonised Asian minds - SCMP August 23 2021

 

In late June and early July, First Nations communities in Canada found over 1,000 unmarked graves of children in Indian residential schools, which were run by the Roman Catholic Church from 1899 to 1997. This has led to activists burning Catholic churches and taking down statues of Queen Elizabeth II and Queen Victoria.

 

By Chandran Nair

 

These residential schools often coercively separated First Nations children from families, forcing them to speak English and learn European curriculums. Any attempt to dress, speak, or act like a First Nations individual was punished. There were 130 schools like this, with estimates that over 6,000 children died due to poor sanitation, little protection from the cold, or abuse from school staff. Similar practices existed in Australia, where up to one in three First Nations Australian children were taken by federal, state and church education initiatives. They are collectively referred to as the Stolen Generation, and it has led to social trauma and inequality that persists today.

However, these tragic events are largely hidden in Canada’s history, and certainly from international perceptions of the country. Instead, Canada has a global reputation for being friendly and polite, and is not known for this “cultural genocide”, as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada described it in 2015.

But other countries around the world are absolutely defined by unsavoury moments in their history: global media will refer to Tiananmen Square when discussing  China; to state-backed assassinations in discussions of  Russia; to corrupt, incompetent leaders in African countries and dictators in Latin America.

Yet is America defined by “pioneers” destroying First Nations culture and committing genocide? No. Is Australia defined by settlers waging war on the First Nations people who until 1967 were not even considered citizens in their own country? No. Is tiny Belgium defined by its horrific colonial treatment of the population in Congo? No. The list is long.

Here, a pattern begins to emerge in how Western and non-Western countries are portrayed and perceived in lay understandings of historical events.

Common historical narratives of Western countries cover up or dilute colonial atrocities, war crimes and genocides. This includes even recent ones, such as the illegal invasion of Iraq. Sometimes these events are espoused as “building civilisation or bringing freedom”. Conversely, non-Western nations are defined by their historical stains, which cling to them like monikers, while the larger body of their histories are quieted or ignored. China’s celebration of the 100th Anniversary of the  Communist Party in July was invariably criticised with references to its dark past, including famine and the  Cultural Revolution. Yet celebrations in the West are hardly ever viewed in the same way. For example, July 4 celebrations are rarely discussed with reference to the slaughter of First Nations Americans.

This is not accidental. It is a selective retelling of history that enables the West to maintain its global dominance through the indoctrination of Westerners and non-Westerners alike – or as the brilliant French-West Indian political philosopher Frantz Fanon called it: colonisation of the mind.

It is critically important that young people understand what “colonisation of the mind” means so they begin to ask the right questions about their countries and the current world order. In the context of retelling history, it refers to how curated historical viewpoints are used to construct opposing identities in the minds of Westerners and non-Westerners, to the benefit of the former. For a Westerner, this identity is based on superiority: believing you and your culture are better than others, and that the West’s current global dominance is unrelated to the colonial rape of the world. For a non-Westerner, this identity is based on subservience: believing Western people and cultures are better than your own and should be emulated because they represent advancement and equality.

Some may scoff and consider this as outdated postcolonial rhetoric and an attempt to twist history or even a conspiracy theory. But to quote an oft-used phrase: “History is written by victors.” This aptly – if simplistically – explains why the world has been spoon-fed certain re-tellings of history, because the victors of the last few centuries have been Western colonialists and conquerors. In fact, the phrase itself is an example: it is attributed to Winston Churchill, though he did not invent it (the source is unknown). The man is lauded for the wisdom of a phrase that is not his own, but is he known for passing deeply racist foreign policy that resulted in the starvation of three million Bengalis? No. British students are taught about famines caused by Mao, but not those caused by Churchill.

It is in schools around the world where much of this conditioning occurs, through syllabuses that stem from Western colonial education systems, particularly those exported by France, Spain, Portugal and Britain. These curriculums were replicated in colonies across Africa, South America, Southeast Asia, India, and Japan, and their modern-day counterparts often do not explain how colonisation has enabled the West to continue its economic and cultural influence into the present day. Young people in Hong Kong are a good example, as they are taught through a British education system to dislike China and worship the West. They are enamoured by all things Western and some even educated to believe they are not Chinese. Missionary schools throughout the colonies played an important role in this “mind capture” with religion sadly used as an instrument of subjugation.

Instead, imperialism, colonialism, and racism are painted as things of the past, as if ended by the decolonisation and civil rights movements of the twentieth century. This selective teaching promotes the myth of the “benevolent West”: that the West has acted as a benign force towards other cultures and that it continues to have a positive influence on the world through its economic models, governance systems, cultures, and more.

Essentially, it is very effective propaganda.

The movie Crazy Rich Asians is an example of Asia’s fetishisation of Western culture.

And this propaganda does not just obscure the dark parts of Western history; it also ascribes global progress and modern civilisation to the West, which leads non-Western populations to believe that Western civilisation is the greatest. Westerners attribute the origin of many scientific concepts and theories to the Ancient Greeks or Renaissance thinkers: Plato, Aristotle, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and others.

In fact, the Renaissance is described in history books as the apex of human achievement in art and science, almost as if the rest of the world lived in darkness and ignorance before it. Yet this is patently not true: the Indian mathematician Baudhayana wrote a theorem on right-angled triangles one hundred years before Pythagoras; the Bengali Jagadish Bose was the first to discover ways to receive and emit radio waves, before Marconi; the Persian mathematician Muḥammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi introduced the concept of zero to the West; the Arab writer Al-Jahiz proposed the concept of natural selection far before Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and Charles Darwin did.

By excluding the innovations of non-Western thinkers from school syllabuses around the world, Western countries enable their societies to be held in the highest regard, as the founders of the modern world. By contrast, non-Western peoples are more likely to be unaware of their historical lineage, which has been eroded by the combined forces of colonialism and globalisation. Most Asian millennials have very little appreciation of the harm inflicted by the French and Americans in  Vietnam through wars that killed millions.

This subservience explains why many of the elite in former colonies – such as Hong Kong, Singapore, India, and  Malaysia – are more interested in emulating British and Western culture than their own or that of any others. The movie Crazy Rich Asians is a great example of this fetish.

So, when will the West come clean on this? The world is increasingly “woke” to the selective nature of global history, especially as more tragedies like these unmarked graves are revealed. But will the United States fund studies to determine how many million Native Indians were actually killed by the settlers? Will Australia come clean on the same subject so that there is a proper account in history? 

It is unlikely, and we cannot wait for the West to repent or admit its crimes. It is incumbent on others to fund the research and writing of their story before it is too late. I would encourage everyone, especially Millennials – Westerners and non-Westerners – to pick up an alternative history book and get the facts. Then think about history as it is being written now – what is being doctored as you read this? What is your understanding of China? Do you understand the historical context of what is going on in Myanmar now? Do you understand how democracy was thwarted in  Iran by the West and what led to the current state of affairs? Do you even know what happened in Iraq less than twenty years ago? And as the poor people of  Afghanistan yet again endure another unravelling of their country, do you know how the country has been a pawn in wider geopolitical struggles going back decades and involving Western powers?

It is time for the West to stop using historical legitimacy to claim ownership of leading the world into the future by its own reckoning. And it is also time for Westerners and non-Westerners alike to produce alternative and more honest narratives, to unmask this privilege and help create a fairer world.

 

Read more: https://johnmenadue.com/remember-maos-famine-forget-churchills-racism-how-the-west-colonised-asian-minds-scmp-august-23-2021/

 

 

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