Maude Barlow, head of the Council of Canadians –Canada’s largest public advocacy organization, and a founder of the Blue Planet Project.
Transcript follows:
AMY GOODMAN: We’re broadcasting, yes, from the World Peoples’
Summit on Climate Change and Rights of Mother Earth in the Bolivian
town of Tiquipaya just outside Cochabamba on this Earth Day.
Glaciers are considered to be one of the most sensitive
indicators of climate change. In the Andean highlands of South America,
climate change isn’t just an abstract threat. Glaciers are melting here
at what experts say is an alarming rate as a result of rising global
temperatures. Earlier this month, a huge glacier broke apart in Peru,
sending a block of ice into a lake in the Andes and triggering a
tsunami wave. According to the World Glacier Monitoring Service,
glaciers across the globe are continuing to melt so fast that many will
disappear by the middle of this century.
As the glaciers on Bolivia’s Mount Illimani continue to melt,
villagers living nearby are deeply concerned with the threat of drought
and dwindling water supplies. They want compensation from the
international community for environmental damage that they blame on
greenhouse gas emissions from rich, industrialized nations.
Well, for more on the melting glaciers, climate change and
water, I’m joined now by Maude Barlow. She heads the Council of
Canadians, Canada’s largest public advocacy group. She’s founder of the
Blue Planet Project.
Welcome to Democracy Now! Why did you come to Bolivia, Maude?
MAUDE BARLOW: Well, to support the climate justice
movement; to support the Bolivian government and the social movements
here in their rejection of the Copenhagen Accord, which has been
imposed on the world, which really is in opposition to the UN process;
and also to try to merge the analysis of water and justice, water
justice and climate justice, and the movements, because they tend to be
working in separate silos, and it’s really important that we put them
together.
AMY GOODMAN: So, when we flew in—maybe you did, too—we
flew into La Paz—El Alto, to be exact. And this largest urban area in
Bolivia is being deeply affected now by the melting glaciers. Explain
what’s happening here.
MAUDE BARLOW: Well, remember it’s a landlocked country,
so their only water that they have, really, is the water of the
glaciers, and they’re melting very quickly. The Mount Illimani is
really the only one left, and it’s receding very quickly.
What’s happening is, as the glaciers melt, the people have no
water, they can’t grow food, they have to move, so they move to the
periphery of large cities. And of course then there’s the demand on the
government to bring in modern water supplies, which cost a lot of
money. And then, of course, the World Bank comes in and says, “OK, but
we’ll give you the money, if you privatize.” So it’s kind of a bad
one-two-three scenario.
What we’re finding is, in many of these countries and
communities around the world, we’re losing whole peoples, we’re losing
whole cultures, because their cultures were based on their ancient
traditions, their ancient birthplace, which was mountains. We’re losing
a lot of mountain people around the world.
AMY GOODMAN: And what could stop this process?
MAUDE BARLOW: Well, obviously, if we’re successful in
sounding the alarm about greenhouse gas emissions and the need to go
far deeper than the Copenhagen Accord went with all of our
governments—I mean, I’m a Canadian, and I’m totally ashamed of my
government. We’re the only government in the world that signed the
Kyoto Accord and then backed out and went into Copenhagen announcing
that we were—intended to fail, and we won’t touch our greenhouse gas
emissions from the notorious tar sands. I call them Canada’s Mordor. So
we have to sound the alarm.
It’s our job to go back and say this isn’t some kind of
esoteric, off-in-the-future thing; this is ground zero. There are
people going to be dying. There are going to be climate refugees in the
very near future, or right now. And we have to understand our part in
this. I mean, this country has contributed—I think it’s 0.17 percent of
the entire greenhouse gas emissions in the world. They don’t deserve to
have their glaciers melt. They’re holding onto their lifestyles, their
traditions and their own food sustainability, and we’re destroying it
with our greenhouse gas emissions from abroad.
AMY GOODMAN: As people describe it here, the glaciers are their bank, their reservoir, for water.
MAUDE BARLOW: Yeah, their water towers. We call them water towers.
And what we’re trying to do here—it’s been a big part of the
work, and it’s been successful—is trying to put the analyses together,
because not only do greenhouse gas emission fuel climate change, melt
glaciers, melt snow packs, and so on, but conversely, the way we take
water from where it exists, in watersheds and in some cases mountains—I
mean, we do remove the glaciers for water for cities, so it’s not just
that it’s melting, or we displace water to grow inappropriate crops in
deserts, or one of the many things that we do—we’re actually destroying
the world’s freshwater stock, which is something we all learned
couldn’t happen back when—I don’t know, grade six. But it is happening.
There’s a brand new World Bank study that says that in twenty
years our global demand for water will outstrip supply by 40 percent. I
mean, that is a stunning statistic, if you can try to imagine the human
suffering and the loss of biodiversity behind a number like that. There
isn’t enough water, if we continue to treat it this way, for all of us.
And now we know who’s going to go first: it’s going to be the poor,
it’s going to be the marginalized.
So we’re saying we have to—if the displacement of water and
abuse of water is one of the causes of climate change, and not just
greenhouse gas emissions, then that has to be put into the official
debate, the official agenda. It’s got to be put on the table. And then
we have to put our movements together, because not only are there
multiple causes of climate change, but there are similar solutions that
are being proposed, which is privatize the air, privatize the water,
continue with economic globalization, market-based growth, just
continue everything, but let’s make money on it, let’s, you know, make
derivatives out of pollution and trade them. That’s a very similar—oh,
and technology, in the end, will save us. So the answers that we’re
getting from northern governments around how, you know, cap and trade
and how technology will save us are the same answers that we’re getting
for, you know, desalination and recycling, and, you know, somehow
technology is going to be the savior. So we continue to abuse water.
Where these come together is something wonderful that’s happened
here, and that is a declaration that we’re putting forward here to go
to the United Nations and to the peoples of the world to be a companion
piece to the 1948 document on human rights, Declaration of Human
Rights. And this will be the Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth.
And this has, not surprisingly, come from the people and the government
of Bolivia, one of the poorest countries in the world, that, as I say,
is ground zero for the destruction that we’re doing.
They’re saying, if we don’t reverse it, if we don’t [stop]
seeing all the resources—the water and the air and the soil—as just
resources for us to make us rich and to make us comfortable, and we
don’t understand they’re a living, breathing ecosystem that has to be
respected, then this will be the story for the world. You think, you
know, melting glaciers are only going to happen in the Global South?
Uh-uh, talk to Europe. I mean, look at the glaciers in the Alps. Look
at the glaciers in the Himalayas that supply all of the water to Asia.
We are marching far quicker down this path, in terms of climate change,
than scientists were even talking about ten years ago.
AMY GOODMAN: Maude Barlow, this clearly is critical. The
question is, how will this summit, the World Peoples’ Summit here in
Cochabamba, affect all of us? Will it have meaning?
MAUDE BARLOW: Well, truly—
AMY GOODMAN: It’s not coming out with binding decisions.
MAUDE BARLOW: No.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s not part of the UN process, though it wants to affect what happens in Cancun.
MAUDE BARLOW: That’s right. No, I think what’s absolutely
wonderful here, I mean, that the police are here to help you—imagine
that, right?—give you directions and make sure you’re safe and maybe
even help you get food. This is a process for the social movements and
the governments that are saying basically no to a hijacking of the
process that took place in Copenhagen at the UN.
And I think their voices will not be heard by most Northern
press. And thank goodness for you, Amy, and I mean that. But, you know,
I know a lot of the mainstream Canadian press will kind of poopoo this,
and I know our government is not here officially, nor is yours. And so,
it’s this kind of—this is just a kind of a, you know, let them have
their little fun, and it won’t mean anything.
But in fact, I think they’re going to be very surprised, when
they get to Cancun, at the movement that is building. They
underestimated this movement ten years ago in Seattle, and we shut the
World Trade Organization down. I’m not saying anybody is going to
Cancun to shut it down, but when you underestimate the power of a
movement of people who are getting together from the North and South,
from peoples, you know, from all over the world, of all ages and all
backgrounds, who are saying this is a life-and-death struggle and our
governments are failing us, they underestimate a very powerful force.
And they underestimate it at their peril.
AMY GOODMAN: The British environment secretary Greg Clark called President Morales’s form of activism “watermelon environmentalism.”
MAUDE BARLOW: Yeah.
AMY GOODMAN: Meaning?
MAUDE BARLOW: Green on the outside and red on the inside.
It’s insulting. It’s insulting. And if he would come here and he would
go visit the communities affected by glacial melt and global warming, I
think he would—it would take his breath away. And the beauty of the
people and the kindness and the tragedy that’s unfolding here and in
communities around the world—if they would leave their ivory tower and
their five-star hotels and their, you know, their fancy offices, and if
they’d come here and they would actually meet people, they’d meet the
miners or the people in the mining communities who are being so
devastated by the terrible effluent, toxic effluent from mining
companies—and many of them Canadian, I have to say—they might find
their humanity. They might look to the core of themselves and find
their humanity. That’s an insulting and racist statement, and
[inaudible], in my opinion.
AMY GOODMAN: We have thirty seconds. Tar sands?
MAUDE BARLOW: Tar sands is Canada’s shame. They’ve taken
down a boreal forest the size of Greece. And I call it Canada’s Mordor,
because it’s the death of nature. We have a planned fivefold increase
in production.
AMY GOODMAN: What is tar sand?
MAUDE BARLOW: The tar sands is a northern Alberta heavy
oil mining operation, and they have to steam-blast the oil out of this
bitumen, this very heavy sand mix. They do it by destroying water. For
every barrel of oil we get, we destroy three—
AMY GOODMAN: The US getting much of it?
MAUDE BARLOW: The US getting most of it. We call
ourselves America’s gas tank. And this all comes from NAFTA, because in
NAFTA we signed a proportional sharing agreement on our energy. So as
we’re running out of conventional energy to send to the US, we’re now
having to tap these terrible new sources. We’ve got cancer clusters in
the First Nations communities all around, all in the Athabaska. It’s
our shame. And, you know, it really brings us closer to people here who
are suffering the same thing. It’s not like everything’s fine in the
North and everything’s bad in the South. This is what brings our
movements together.
AMY GOODMAN: Maude Barlow, I want to thank you for being with us. She heads the Council of Canadians, Canada’s largest public advocacy organization. She’s a founder of the Blue Planet Project and a Right Livelihood Award winner.