South could become scene of wars over
water
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Govt promotion of irradiated food
for schools challenged
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Bird populations plummet under weight
of humanity
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ENVIRONMENT BREIFS
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South could become scene of wars over
water
By Mario Osava
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, Mar. 21 (IPS) Developing
countries rich in water resources could become scenarios of war similar
to what is happening today in Iraq if water continues to be privatized
and sold like any other merchandise or good, warned Leonardo
Morelli, the organizer of the Social Water Forum, taking place in Brazil.
Today war is being waged over oil; tomorrow it will be for water,
Morelli, who is also the coordinator of the Brazilian Shout for Water
Movement, told IPS in a telephone interview in a break in the debates
and seminars that have drawn activists from around South America this
week to Cotía, a city on the outskirts of Sao Paulo.
Conflicts on a planetary scale could arise from the fact that the developing
South has the worlds greatest reserves of freshwater, while those
who have the money are in the industrialized North, he augured.
Morelli pointed out that Israel has just 500 liters of water a year
per person, while in Brazil and Paraguay the average is 10,000 and 63,000
liters a year per person, respectively.
Water, a patrimony of humanity, must not be governed by
market forces, but by public systems based on the concepts of cooperation
and solidarity, due to the possibility of growing shortages caused by
pollution and the wasteful use of water, he argued.
Control over Iraq is strategic not only because of the countrys
oil reserves, but also due to the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which
make that country important in a region with scarce sources of water,
noted US writer Norman Mailer in an article on the Iraq crisis published
earlier this month by the Brazilian newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo.
The Social Water Forum and similar gatherings in the northern Italian
city of Florence, New Delhi, India, and New York are being held as sort
of counterpoints to the third World Water Forum, which opened Mar. 16
in Kyoto, Japan.
Some 10,000 experts and representatives from 160 countries, international
bodies, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are taking part in
the World Water Forum in Japan, which ends on Mar. 23.
The parallel social forums, organized by environmental groups and social
movements, are being held to protest the approach taken by the Kyoto
forum and to defend water as a human right and a common resource, whose
management must be under public control.
The roughly 400 experts and delegates of NGOs participating in the Social
Water Forum in Brazil have been discussing the social issues that arise
in the global debates on managing water.
The participants maintain that clean and affordable water for all is
a human right, and that water management must be environmentally sustainable
and socially fair.
Prevailing at the Kyoto meeting, on the other hand, are financial aspects,
the economy-based focus of the World Bank, like the idea
of charging user fees and thus controlling water consumption, Morelli
criticized.
That approach was confirmed, he said, by the Moroccan governments
decision to award the King Hassan II Great World Water Prize, which
includes an award of $100,000, to the president of Brazils National
Water Agency, Jerson Kelman, at the third World Water Forum.
According to the prize-givers, Kelman led the effort to put together
a legal and institutional framework for an integrated water resources
management system in Brazil.
But Morelli complained that what the National Water Agency did was to
introduce a water management model that favored powerful economic players
at the expense of environmental and social aspects, and allowed power
plants to use too much water, thus triggering the 2001 energy crisis.
It also allowed transnational corporations to gain control over underground
water, which they sell as mineral water, while the Brazilian population
must make do with surface water, which is far more exposed to pollution,
he added.
The Social Water Forum is promoting a plan for mobilization by civil
society in defense of water sources that Brazil shares with neighboring
Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay, such as the Amazon
jungle rivers and the Rio de la Plata.
The plan also covers the Guarani aquifer, one of the worlds largest
water reservoirs, which extends from south-central Brazil to Argentina,
Paraguay and Uruguay (the four countries that make up the Mercosur or
Southern Common Market trade bloc).
The idea is to promote coordinated actions by a network of social and
environmental groups from the Mercosur nations as well as the eight
countries that share the Amazon jungle, and file complaints with the
International Court of Justice in the Hague over serious violations
of the right of all living things to water, said Morelli.
One illustration of the problems caused by the privatization of water
was a series of social protests in the central Bolivian department of
Cochabamba between Apr. 4-11, 2000, in which several people were killed
and almost 200 injured.
Peasant farmers in Bolivia who depend on irrigation to grow their crops
took to the streets to protest a government decision to grant a 40-year
privatization contract over all water sources to a private company,
Virginia Amurrio, one of the leaders of the Cochabamba Federation of
Irrigators, told IPS by phone from Cotía.
The privatization allowed Aguas del Tunari, a subsidiary of the giant
Bechtel corporation, to charge fees for the water consumed, at prices
pegged to the dollar, to which a tax was added. That led to an immediate
skyrocketing of utility fees, which climbed by as much as 200 percent
in some cases.
In a country where the minimum wage is less than $100 a month, some
families were paying $20 a month in water bills.
The protesters also complained that the privatization failed to
respect the rights and customs of the local communities that depended
on irrigation, said Amurrio.
The protesters blocked roads and engaged in fierce battles
with the police until the law on Potable Water and Sanitation, which
authorized the privatization, was repealed and replaced by legislation
that guaranteed life-long access to water resources for the roughly
15,000 peasant families in the region.
Women, who bear the main responsibility for fetching water in that region,
took part in organizing the protests. In the confrontations with the
police, they joined the fray with slingshots, stones, and even
biting, when they saw their men being injured or killed,
said Amurrio.
But small farmers in Bolivia must now fight another threat, a law on
national parks, under which private companies could be granted concessions
to administer and exploit natural resources, including water, she lamented.
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Govt promotion of irradiated food
for schools
Washington, DC, Mar. 18 (ENS) The US Department
of Agriculture is considering lifting its ban on the use of irradiation
for ground beef purchased for the National School Lunch Program. A new
pilot informational program in Minnesota is part of the agencys
effort to increase acceptance of irradiation for meat served in schools.
Five public interest organizations today sent a letter to Eric Bost,
undersecretary for Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services with the US
Department of Agriculture (USDA), urging him to halt an irradiation
promotion program that his department has funded in Minnesota.
The program is intended to increase public acceptance of irradiated
foods in school lunch programs, by educating the public about irradiation.
Materials developed as part of the program in Minnesota are to be used
in other school districts across the country.
For the rest of this article, please see www.ens-news.com.
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Bird populations plummet under weight
of humanity
y J.R. Pegg
Washington, DC, Mar. 24 (ENS) Bird species today
face a wave of extinction not seen on Earth since the dinosaurs died
out some 65 million years ago, according to a new report from the Worldwatch
Institute.
Pressures from a human population of more than 6.2 billion have put
about 12 percent of the worlds 9,800 bird species at risk of extinction,
the report finds, and species across the globe are showing increasing
signs of distress.
This potential extinction wave has implications beyond the immediate
fate of these bird species, says the author of the report, titled Winged
Messengers: The Decline of Birds.
Declining bird populations mark the unraveling of delicate natural
balances, said author Howard Youth.
For the rest of this article, please see www.ens-news.com.
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