Guest guest Posted November 11, 2007 Report Share Posted November 11, 2007 At 01:53 AM 11/11/07, you wrote: >11 Solutions to Halting the Environmental Crisis >By Yifat Susskind, AlterNet >Posted on October 31, 2007, Printed on November 11, 2007 >http://www.alternet.org/story/66451/ >You probably don't need to be told that the threat of climate change is >real. If you're concerned about the issue, it's fairly easy to conjure the >apocalyptic scenes of widespread drought, frequent deadly storms, mass >hunger, and wars over natural resources like oil and water. Much harder to >come by are examples of positive actions that can avert these disasters >and ease the crisis in places where they are already in play. So let's >skip the litany of catastrophes that await if global warming is not >controlled. Instead, why not focus on some solutions? None are perfect or >complete, but each offers a model of positive change that is more than >theoretically possible -- it is already happening. >Many of these examples are small-scale and local. That's instructive >because our best hope for sustainability -- in agriculture, industry, >energy, community design, and government -- may lie in local, small-scale >models like some of those presented here. It may seem as though >large-scale problems require large-scale solutions. But most big >institutions and processes are driven by the very people and ideas that >have generated our global crisis. It's in the local and the small that the >majority of people can exercise agency and decision-making power. >While we may not be looking to create large-scale models of every success >story, we do need to replicate, adapt, and institutionalize what works for >people, communities, and the environment. We need to link local >initiatives and build on them by enacting policies that can sustain their >momentum. >To overcome our global environmental crisis, we need solutions that are at >once visionary and concrete. Here are some of the many innovations that >are ours to develop. >1. What if women -- the majority of the world's farmers -- could resist >the commercialization of agriculture and strengthen food-centered economies? >When the World Bank forced Kenyan farmers to start growing tea for export >instead of food, Kenyan women took the lead in resisting those policies. >Through their Green Belt Movement, the women planted over 40 million trees >to offset deforestation caused by tea plantations and created initiatives >to promote sustainable farming. Today, the Green Belt Movement includes >hundreds of thousands of rural people across Africa. >2. What if poor rural families were given land so that they could grow >their own food? >Through mass civil disobedience and political organizing, the Landless >Workers' Movement (MST) in Brazil succeeded in overturning government >policy and securing 15 million acres of farmland for 250,000 families. The >families' average income is now four times the minimum wage. Infant >mortality is half the national average and many MST settlements are models >of sustainable agriculture. >3. What if Indigenous Peoples' collective rights were recognized, ending >the attack on those who have managed and maintained the world's most >delicate ecosystems for millennia? >This year saw a major step in this direction with the passage of the UN >Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The Declaration >recognizes Indigenous Peoples' right to control their territories and >resources, which hold much of the Earth's remaining biodiversity and half >its untapped fossil fuels. Now, Indigenous women are working to ensure >that governments honor the Declaration. >4. What if economic policies recognized that preserving the environment >was more important than obtaining fossil fuels? >Ecuador's President Correa has announced that he will not drill for oil in >Yasuni National Park. The decision marks the first time an oil-producing >country has formally chosen to forgo oil exploration and shift its economy >from oil dependency to more sustainable alternatives that protect >ecosystems and Indigenous rights while averting more global carbon emissions. >5. What if governments valued people's happiness over economic growth? >The government of Bhutan has replaced the singular, narrow standard of >Gross Domestic Product with a measure it calls Gross National Happiness. >Bhutan is not a utopia, but it has made remarkable progress in building >its economy while preserving the environment, limiting corruption, and >supporting education and healthcare. Life expectancy in Bhutan has risen >by 19 years since the " happiness index " was established in 1972. >6. What if genuine democracy -- the precondition for policies that benefit >people over profits -- were to flourish? >In the past eight years, Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela, Ecuador, Uruguay, >and Bolivia have elected governments that are forging alternatives to >US-led corporate globalization. The Indigenous and social movements that >brought these governments to power are not just reforming, but redefining >the state through a shift from representative democracy (easily controlled >by elites) to participatory democracy, where power is devolved to >communities and the principle of majority rule with minority rights is upheld. >7. What if we could redress the forced impoverishment of the Global South? >Debt cancellation, carbon fees, and international taxes on arms sales and >on profits derived from financial speculation are some of the complex yet >concrete proposals at hand. Communities around the world have formed a >broad movement working to craft debt cancellation policies that can >support national sovereignty and women's human rights. Not long ago, it >seemed impossible. Today, debt cancellation has been partially implemented >and is squarely on the agenda of economic policymakers. >8. What if climate change could be stopped? >Climate change can be stopped, with existing technologies, if governments >use their prerogative to regulate and tax corporations so that they limit >resource use and generate funds for sustainable development. According to >the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, we have the know-how to >reduce global carbon emissions by 26 billion tons by 2030 -- that's more >than enough to avoid the 2-degree Celsius rise in temperatures that would >bring on the worst consequences of global warming. >9. What if governments realized that striving for limitless economic >growth is not a solution, but a cause of poverty and ecological collapse? >Thailand has pioneered a " sufficiency economy, " based on low growth to >reduce poverty and conserve natural resources. The model aims to promote >economic self-reliance, rural development, and environmental protection. >According to the Thai government, " during these times of rapid >globalization and global warming, emphasizing moderation, responsible >consumption, and resilience to external shocks is of great relevance not >just to Thailand but to countries and communities across the world. " >10. What if we saw the need to de-industrialize our societies as an >opportunity, not a crisis? >In the UK, " transition towns " are creating new modes of locally rooted >agriculture, commerce, energy, transportation, housing, and government >that are the building blocks of a " post-carbon future. " This " transition >movement " holds that the need to consume less oil can lead to a healthier, >happier future in places where the shift is well-planned, locally >grounded, and democratic. Sweden has announced its intention to be >oil-free by 2020, and Finland may soon follow. Cuba has already >transitioned from being one of Latin America's most industrialized >countries to being one of the most sustainable. For decades, Soviet oil >imports and trade fueled Cuba's economy. Today, 80 percent of Cuban >agriculture is organic and the country is largely self-sufficient. >11. What if a critical mass of people the world over realized the need for >urgent action? >People on every continent are mobilizing to address our global crisis. >They are not waiting for governments or outside leadership, but are >organizing their own community-based solutions, including local food >systems; community-controlled, renewable sources of energy; and >sustainable modes of manufacturing, trade, and consumption. Women are at >the heart of much of this organizing. Working at the crossroads of economy >and ecology, they are propelling a transformation of global values and >policies on which our future depends. >Yifat Susskind is communications director of MADRE, an international >women's human rights organization. >© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved. >View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/66451/ > > >-- >Dear Friends, >Sending this mail keeping you in mind. If you do not want to receive such >mails let me know. >Please consider the environment before printing this message. >Sincerely, >Dr. Vispi Jokhi >MS (Orthopedics) >660/6 S. Palamkote Road, Parsi Colony, >Dadar, Mumbai-400014. >91 22 32440710 >9323351529 >e mail: vhjokhi > ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 12, 2007 Report Share Posted November 12, 2007 >Sun, 11 Nov 2007 12:40:20 -0500 > > > >>11 Solutions to Halting the Environmental Crisis >>By Yifat Susskind, AlterNet >>Posted on October 31, 2007, Printed on November 11, 2007 >>http://www.alternet.org/story/66451/ >>You probably don't need to be told that the threat of climate change is >>real. If you're concerned about the issue, it's fairly easy to conjure >>the apocalyptic scenes of widespread drought, frequent deadly storms, >>mass hunger, and wars over natural resources like oil and water. Much >>harder to come by are examples of positive actions that can avert these >>disasters and ease the crisis in places where they are already in play. >>So let's skip the litany of catastrophes that await if global warming is >>not controlled. Instead, why not focus on some solutions? None are >>perfect or complete, but each offers a model of positive change that is >>more than theoretically possible -- it is already happening. >>Many of these examples are small-scale and local. That's instructive >>because our best hope for sustainability -- in agriculture, industry, >>energy, community design, and government -- may lie in local, small-scale >>models like some of those presented here. It may seem as though >>large-scale problems require large-scale solutions. But most big >>institutions and processes are driven by the very people and ideas that >>have generated our global crisis. It's in the local and the small that >>the majority of people can exercise agency and decision-making power. >>While we may not be looking to create large-scale models of every success >>story, we do need to replicate, adapt, and institutionalize what works >>for people, communities, and the environment. We need to link local >>initiatives and build on them by enacting policies that can sustain their >>momentum. >>To overcome our global environmental crisis, we need solutions that are >>at once visionary and concrete. Here are some of the many innovations >>that are ours to develop. >>1. What if women -- the majority of the world's farmers -- could resist >>the commercialization of agriculture and strengthen food-centered economies? >>When the World Bank forced Kenyan farmers to start growing tea for export >>instead of food, Kenyan women took the lead in resisting those policies. >>Through their Green Belt Movement, the women planted over 40 million >>trees to offset deforestation caused by tea plantations and created >>initiatives to promote sustainable farming. Today, the Green Belt >>Movement includes hundreds of thousands of rural people across Africa. >>2. What if poor rural families were given land so that they could grow >>their own food? >>Through mass civil disobedience and political organizing, the Landless >>Workers' Movement (MST) in Brazil succeeded in overturning government >>policy and securing 15 million acres of farmland for 250,000 families. >>The families' average income is now four times the minimum wage. Infant >>mortality is half the national average and many MST settlements are >>models of sustainable agriculture. >>3. What if Indigenous Peoples' collective rights were recognized, ending >>the attack on those who have managed and maintained the world's most >>delicate ecosystems for millennia? >>This year saw a major step in this direction with the passage of the UN >>Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The Declaration >>recognizes Indigenous Peoples' right to control their territories and >>resources, which hold much of the Earth's remaining biodiversity and half >>its untapped fossil fuels. Now, Indigenous women are working to ensure >>that governments honor the Declaration. >>4. What if economic policies recognized that preserving the environment >>was more important than obtaining fossil fuels? >>Ecuador's President Correa has announced that he will not drill for oil >>in Yasuni National Park. The decision marks the first time an >>oil-producing country has formally chosen to forgo oil exploration and >>shift its economy from oil dependency to more sustainable alternatives >>that protect ecosystems and Indigenous rights while averting more global >>carbon emissions. >>5. What if governments valued people's happiness over economic growth? >>The government of Bhutan has replaced the singular, narrow standard of >>Gross Domestic Product with a measure it calls Gross National Happiness. >>Bhutan is not a utopia, but it has made remarkable progress in building >>its economy while preserving the environment, limiting corruption, and >>supporting education and healthcare. Life expectancy in Bhutan has risen >>by 19 years since the " happiness index " was established in 1972. >>6. What if genuine democracy -- the precondition for policies that >>benefit people over profits -- were to flourish? >>In the past eight years, Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela, Ecuador, Uruguay, >>and Bolivia have elected governments that are forging alternatives to >>US-led corporate globalization. The Indigenous and social movements that >>brought these governments to power are not just reforming, but redefining >>the state through a shift from representative democracy (easily >>controlled by elites) to participatory democracy, where power is devolved >>to communities and the principle of majority rule with minority rights is >>upheld. >>7. What if we could redress the forced impoverishment of the Global South? >>Debt cancellation, carbon fees, and international taxes on arms sales and >>on profits derived from financial speculation are some of the complex yet >>concrete proposals at hand. Communities around the world have formed a >>broad movement working to craft debt cancellation policies that can >>support national sovereignty and women's human rights. Not long ago, it >>seemed impossible. Today, debt cancellation has been partially >>implemented and is squarely on the agenda of economic policymakers. >>8. What if climate change could be stopped? >>Climate change can be stopped, with existing technologies, if governments >>use their prerogative to regulate and tax corporations so that they limit >>resource use and generate funds for sustainable development. According to >>the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, we have the know-how to >>reduce global carbon emissions by 26 billion tons by 2030 -- that's more >>than enough to avoid the 2-degree Celsius rise in temperatures that would >>bring on the worst consequences of global warming. >>9. What if governments realized that striving for limitless economic >>growth is not a solution, but a cause of poverty and ecological collapse? >>Thailand has pioneered a " sufficiency economy, " based on low growth to >>reduce poverty and conserve natural resources. The model aims to promote >>economic self-reliance, rural development, and environmental protection. >>According to the Thai government, " during these times of rapid >>globalization and global warming, emphasizing moderation, responsible >>consumption, and resilience to external shocks is of great relevance not >>just to Thailand but to countries and communities across the world. " >>10. What if we saw the need to de-industrialize our societies as an >>opportunity, not a crisis? >>In the UK, " transition towns " are creating new modes of locally rooted >>agriculture, commerce, energy, transportation, housing, and government >>that are the building blocks of a " post-carbon future. " This " transition >>movement " holds that the need to consume less oil can lead to a >>healthier, happier future in places where the shift is well-planned, >>locally grounded, and democratic. Sweden has announced its intention to >>be oil-free by 2020, and Finland may soon follow. Cuba has already >>transitioned from being one of Latin America's most industrialized >>countries to being one of the most sustainable. For decades, Soviet oil >>imports and trade fueled Cuba's economy. Today, 80 percent of Cuban >>agriculture is organic and the country is largely self-sufficient. >>11. What if a critical mass of people the world over realized the need >>for urgent action? >>People on every continent are mobilizing to address our global crisis. >>They are not waiting for governments or outside leadership, but are >>organizing their own community-based solutions, including local food >>systems; community-controlled, renewable sources of energy; and >>sustainable modes of manufacturing, trade, and consumption. Women are at >>the heart of much of this organizing. Working at the crossroads of >>economy and ecology, they are propelling a transformation of global >>values and policies on which our future depends. >>Yifat Susskind is communications director of MADRE, an international >>women's human rights organization. >>© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved. >>View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/66451/ >> >> >>-- >>Dear Friends, >>Sending this mail keeping you in mind. If you do not want to receive such >>mails let me know. >>Please consider the environment before printing this message. >>Sincerely, >>Dr. Vispi Jokhi >>MS (Orthopedics) >>660/6 S. Palamkote Road, Parsi Colony, >>Dadar, Mumbai-400014. >>91 22 32440710 >>9323351529 >>e mail: vhjokhi >> ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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