|
tuesday 16th october
2001
san salvador
international environmentalist delegation
tours el salvador to assess human triggered
disasters, promote solutions
Today an
international delegation of prominent
environmentalists completed a three-day
mission to assess the impacts of
human-triggered environmental disasters in El
Salvador. They are seeking to compare such
disasters to those in other developing
countries and highlight solutions to
increasingly urgent environmental crises.
"The world's attention is
understandably gripped by the current
conflict. However, we believe that natural
disasters with unnatural origins are major
contributors to global insecurity," said
Ricardo Navarro, a doctorate of engineering
and Chair of the million-member environmental
network Friends of the Earth. "We believe
true international security can only be
achieved if we live within environmental
limits, and promote just societies and
sustainable economies," continued Navarro, a
recipient of the prestigious Goldman
Environmental Prize and Global 500 Award.
The number of people affected
by human-triggered environmental disasters is
massive and rising -- and El Salvador is no
exception. A January 2001 earthquake there
killed 2000 people, 25 per cent of them
buried by a mountain landslide.
"Preventing earthquakes is
obviously beyond our control," said Dr.
Navarro, "But if not for deforestation and
ill-conceived development of the type we
campaigned against for eight years at La
Cordillera El BĀ·lsamo, I'm convinced the
human toll would have been significantly
lower."
The El Salvadorian situation
is echoed around the developing world.
According to the 2001 World Disasters Report
by the International Federation of Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies, a major cause of
the rising number of people affected by
disasters is the increase in the number of
hydro-meteorological disasters such as
floods, wind storms and droughts.
"Natural disasters, in many
cases, are simply manifestations of deeper,
structural problems, namely climate change,
unsustainable development, and unchecked
economic globalization," said Dr. Otto
Sieber, biologist and Director of
Switzerland's well-known environmental
organization Pro Natura, part of the Friends
of the Earth network. Natural disasters in
1998 created 58 per cent of the world's
refugees
[1]
, exceeding those
displaced by war for the first time. In 2000,
the number of people affected by disasters
went up to 256 million, compared with an
average from 1991 to 2000 of 211 million per
year.
[2
]
Climate change increasingly
contributes to natural disasters, including
flooding from sea level rise, forest fires
and extreme weather events. Climate research
suggests that climate change makes El Nino
events more frequent and severe. In El
Salvador, the 1997 El Nino event generated
serious droughts that adversely affected most
agricultural areas. It resulted in forest
fires that triggered soil erosion and air
pollution, and even forced closure of the
international airport due to reduced
visibility from smoke particles. The 1998
Hurricane Mitch, though touching only briefly
in El Salvador, killed 250 people and
inundated homes and agricultural areas.
"We are sounding the alarm,
but we also have solutions. Our challenge is
to communicate them." said Sieber.
In addition to visiting
disaster sites in El Salvador, the delegation
will examine solutions in the form of local
and national environmental and social
projects that include reforestation and
erosion control, management of solid wastes,
sustainable transportation, sea turtle
conservation, use of medicinal plants and
promotion of nutritious crops (including
amaranth, a drought-tolerant grain packed
with minerals and vitamins, all but
eradicated by the Spanish conquerors but now
undergoing a resurgence in its 7,000 year
history of cultivation on the continent)
.
"The projects we see here
typify the Friends of the Earth network in
its grassroots approach to finding and
carrying out workable solutions to
environmental and social problems," says
Elias Diaz, Director of Sobrevivencia/FoE
Paraguay.
"These projects in El
Salvador -- and across the network -- are
living, working testaments that a sustainable
future is possible," said Milegros
Ballesteros, Associate Executive Director of
Legal Rights and Natural Resources Center/FoE
Philippines. "They are beacons of hope for a
troubled world."
The environment delegation
includes individuals from: the Philippines,
Paraguay, the Netherlands, Sweden,
Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.
Contact:
Ricardo Navarro phone: +503 220 0046, +503
220 6479 (office) +503 314 0819 (home)
For more information:
toward
sustainable economies
foei
30th anniversary report
outlining
solutions
Notes
1
World Disasters Report 1999,
International Federation of Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies.
2
World Disasters Report 2001,
International Federation of Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies.
|