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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/summary-for-download">
    <title>annual report 2009 - executive summary</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/summary-for-download</link>
    <description>Download a summarized version of the 2009 annual report.</description>
    
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-10-04T14:46:55Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>File</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/financial-report-2009">
    <title>financial report 2009</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/financial-report-2009</link>
    <description></description>
    
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-08-19T07:50:43Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>File</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/communications/media/journalist-trainings-communications-strategies">
    <title>training for campaigners, communicators, and journalists</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/communications/media/journalist-trainings-communications-strategies</link>
    <description>In April 2009, Friends of the Earth International organized a one-day training for campaigners in Amsterdam, in the Netherlands, during which participants started developing a federation-wide communications strategy on food sovereignty. During a skill-share, participants also improved their media messaging skills.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/2b34330c768cb86942722eaa6dcb3c52/image_preview" alt="comms training.jpg" />The training, which included a hands-on session with camcorder
interviews reviewed on-screen, was delivered in partnership with<a href="resolveuid/5a538453f71031d12101491c7e47a1eb" class="internal-link" title="partnership with ips news agency"> IPS
news agency</a>.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Friends of the Earth International also organized two separate trainings in Brussels, Belgium, in September 2009. One was for journalists and the other for&nbsp;non-profit&nbsp;communications staff. The two target groups also participated in a joint session, sharing their experiences and opinions.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The communicators' training was delivered to 18 spokespeople and communicators from NGOs, mostly from European FoEI groups. Participants discussed and practiced the skills and tools needed to reach specific target audiences and media outlets with their messages.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The journalists' training was delivered to 14 accredited journalists from important mainstream media outlets based in the EU (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Poland and Slovakia). It provided them with useful tools with which to produce news stories related to climate justice and biodiversity in Europe and in developing countries.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The journalists' training included presentations about climate and biodiversity-related issues in Nigeria, Paraguay, Uruguay and Colombia. Journalist participants were particularly interested in these presentations from developing countries, and most of them produced related stories in the following months.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The vast majority of journalists attending stated that their ability to report on climate change issues had improved considerably following the training. 90% stated that they were interested in attending other workshops on sustainable development issues organized by FoEI.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;<em><img class="image-left" src="resolveuid/41de21b94d4634bda8b06f48ab32570c/image_mini" alt="eu-flag" height="50" width="75" /></em>These trainings were possible thanks to the financial assistance of the European Union.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>PhilLee</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-04-14T20:20:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Page</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/agrofuels">
    <title>Agrofuels campaign highlights</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/agrofuels</link>
    <description>The campaign’s main objective is to stop the production, trade and consumption of agrofuels, by raising public awareness about its negative impacts on local communities and globally.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/74a65ddc2cebc0b22d112db31de141d7/image_preview" alt="David Gilbert, USA - 2nd place" />
<p>In 2009, the campaign focused on strengthening local communities’ defence of their territories, and exposing ‘false solutions’ to the climate and energy crisis. A prerequisite for this was compiling research, reports, and national and regional positions from the federation’s members, as agrofuels is a relatively new issue and data is sparse.&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Nevertheless, there have already been some excellent external achievements by this relatively young campaign, in part because of its links to FoEI’s ongoing campaign against the deforestation caused by oil palm plantations.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>2009 was particularly notable because of the World Bank’s suspension of its investments in oil palm plantation companies. In September 2009, the International Finance Corporation (the IFC, the World&nbsp;Bank's private sector arm) announced that it would halt all palm oil investments until a revised strategy for financing the sector was in place. The World&nbsp;Bank&nbsp;Group statement was unveiled on 9 September in a letter from its president Robert Zoellick, who was responding to an appeal from Indonesian and international NGOs. A coalition of local and international NGOs, spearheaded by the UK organization Forest Peoples Program and including FoE Netherlands, had previously filed a complaint with the IFC's internal watchdog, the Compliance Advisory Ombudsman office (CAO) about a series of loans to palm oil giant&nbsp;Wilmar International. A joint report by three NGOs (FoE Netherlands, Kontak Rakyat Borneo and Gemawan), had examined&nbsp;Wilmar's plantations in Sambas, West Kalimantan, Indonesia, and found that the company was working with dubious licenses, and was entangled in land rights conflicts and illegal logging activities. This complaint triggered an audit by the CAO, which concluded that the IFC had violated its own procedures, and that commercial interests had overruled the IFC's environmental and social standards.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Indonesian President has also identified illegal logging as another form of entrenched corruption, saying that he appreciated the efforts of Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth which have been active in criticising the forest management of his government, saying, "I want to give my appreciation for their concerns and hope they will continue their partnership with Indonesia."</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Friends of the Earth groups from Indonesia, Malaysia and Papua New Guinea also joined forces to develop and propose a mandatory code of conduct for Malaysian palm oil companies operating in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. An intense advocacy campaign was directed at the Malaysian opposition group in Parliament; the Malaysian Palm Oil Association, Board, and Council; and the Human Rights Council. The groups also tried to lobby the Ministry of Plantation Industries and Commodities, and the Prime Minister. The three groups, together with Sawit Watch, testified to the failure of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) process, and requested the introduction of the proposed legally binding code of conduct. They have so far received positive responses from the Human Rights Council and the Opposition Party, who have accepted that Malaysian palm oil expansion has created adverse impacts, including haze from forest and land fires during land clearing, social conflicts with local communities, and environmental impacts.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Friends of the Earth also filed a complaint with the UK Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) against the Malaysian Palm Oil Council for falsely advertising that palm oil is the "only product able to sustainably and efficiently meet a larger portion of the world's increasing demand for oil crop-based consumer goods, foodstuffs and biofuels." The ASA ruled that this statement was misleading, and that the Malaysian Palm Oil Council’s claim that palm oil contributes to alleviation of poverty was also misleading. The ASA found there was “not a consensus of the economic impact of palm oil on local communities” and stated that the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil certification scheme was “still the subject of debate”; and that making a claim that palm oil could be wholly sustainable, which cannot be substantiated, was deemed to be misleading. In November 2009, we followed up on this ruling by filing a grievance with the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) against the Malaysian Palm Oil Council, for violating the members' Code of Conduct and continuing to mislead the public and make unsubstantiated claims about the production, procurement and use of palm oil.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoE Indonesia has played an important role in these campaign actions, and regional coordination of oil palm activities in the Asia Pacific. The group also facilitated communications, and coordinated capacity-building on agrofuels, land rights and monocultures issues, including with communities in remote areas such as Kupang in Indonesia (2,000 miles from Jakarta).</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI is committed to strengthening local communities’ capacity to defend their territories. We have worked with and supported communities that are keen to find out more about isolating and analyzing some of the ‘false solutions’ to the climate change and energy crises commonly proposed. A process of capacity-building on agrofuels, land rights and monoculture has also been initiated in Central America. We have also helped to coordinate different groups and communities wanting to work together on agrofuels. In Latin America, for example, this has involved bringing together the food sovereignty network in Guatemala, the food sovereignty and agrarian reform network of Honduras, the Water Valley communities in Honduras, victims of kidney failure due to sugar cane plantations in Nicaragua, and Via Campesina and World March of Women groups in El Salvador, amongst others. A video on "Monocultures, Land and Agrofuels in Central America" was created by FoE El Salvador with these communities’ support.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI also organized an international delegation to gather evidence on the impact of agrofuels in Colombia, 1-10 July, with 40 international participants. Several members of FoEI took part: FoE Indonesia, FoE Uruguay, FoE Paraguay and FoE Brazil. The main objective of this delegation was to gather empirical evidence about the environmental impacts of agribusinesses producing biofuels (ethanol and biodiesel). This involved identifying and documenting human rights, economic, social and cultural rights violations, as well as violations of ethnic and environmental rights, and infringements on the food sovereignty of afro-Colombian, peasant and Indigenous communities in the country.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Lobbying efforts in Europe remain focused on challenging the EU’s target of 10% of all road transport fuel coming from ‘renewable’ sources by 2020, with a majority likely to come from agrofuels. Key to this is increasing Europeans’ awareness of the impacts of agrofuels and about potential alternatives. This included the publication of "Biofuels: handle with care," an analysis of EU biofuels policy with recommendations for action, in November 2009. This document contains a clear set of policy recommendations focusing variously on European policy, European member states, and investors and industry.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Advocacy by FoE Netherlands and allied Dutch NGOs has also led to some important national developments that are influencing the course of EU debates relating to agrofuels. Palm oil remains excluded from the Dutch subsidy ruling for green electricity for 2010, despite RSPO certified palm oil becoming available. However, palm oil is however still part of the agrofuel mix in the Netherlands, and the hard won&nbsp;promise from Dutch Minister Cramer that sustainability concerns would take priority cannot be fulfilled because it is over-ruled by the weaker EU Renewable Energy Directive. However, the Dutch position in Brussels includes having at least some sustainability criteria for solid biomass in the Renewable Energy Directive, and promoting the use of an indirect land use change factor for calculating emissions for agrofuels. This resulted in the postponement of an EC decision, planned for 2009, that was supposed to state that solid biomass would not be subject to sustainability criteria.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoE Netherlands also commissioned a publication on alternative implementation of the EU Renewables Directive for Transport in the Netherlands, "New Roads for Transport - Towards a sustainable solution for the 10% renewable transport energy target in 2020." This report on agrofuels alternatives also found its way to Brussels and the UK, and has been quoted frequently by industry players from the electric car and food industries.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In April 2009, FoE US and Earthtrack published a report "A Boon for Bad Biofuels: federal tax credits and mandates underwrite environmental damage at taxpayer expense," which focuses on US subsidies to the biofuels industry.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In September, comments were also submitted by the environmental community in the US, including FoE US, on the US Environmental Protection Agency’s draft regulation on the United States Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS). The RFS, in the&nbsp;Energy&nbsp;Independence Security Act of 2007, mandates a massive fivefold&nbsp;increase in agrofuels use and is a major driver of agrofuels production in the&nbsp;United States&nbsp;and abroad.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI also facilitated research into agrofuels in many parts of the world, including on:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">the increase in agrofuel plantations in Central America and the link with the free trade agreement between the US and Central America;&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">the financing policies of the Inter-American Development Bank and how they are exacerbating climate change by promoting dirty energy and the promotion of agrofuels in Latin America;&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">the size and scope of subsidies for agrofuels in the US;&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">jatropha production in Swaziland;&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">land grabbing in Africa; and&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">agrofuels production in Mozambique.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>This research has also been used to develop position papers on the activities of the Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), the Roundtable on Responsible Soy (RTRS), and the Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels. It also laid the foundations for the proposed mandatory code of conduct for palm oil companies in Malaysia. FoE has also conducted research into the position of Dutch banks financing agrofuel plantations, and how much money oil companies receive for using agrofuels.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Friends of the Earth’s aim of reaching a broader public was also substantially achieved through the broadcasting of footage from our commissioned film, "Lost in Palm Oil," which was broadcast on ARTE channel (30 million audience); on Dutch public broadcaster VARA; on Spanish national television (TVE); and on NDR&nbsp; (Germany).</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In keeping with FoEI’s commitment to awareness raising and mobilization we also:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Participated in a tour to raise awareness about the threats posed by biofuels in Costa Rica and other Central American countries.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Held a forum in El Salvador on the international day against plantations, denouncing regional plans to promote monocultures of sugar cane, palm and jatropha for agrofuels.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Participated in public activities such as ‘Biofools Day’ activities, on 1 April. Over 10,000 activists participated, selecting Hugh Grant of Monsanto as 2009’s biggest&nbsp;Biofool.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Held an agrofuels awareness raising event in Tokyo, which was hosted by FoE Japan and its allies.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Created or participated in many other ‘solidarity spaces’ including an international forum on agrofuels in Sao Paolo, Brazil; an international forum on agrofuels in Paraguay; the dialogue of the Americas on agribusiness and agrofuels, "Building Alternatives from the food and energy sovereignty perspectives"; and the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) forum in Nigeria.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The EJRN Program has also collaborated with the Agrofuels Campaign to organize a set of concrete activities including a publication on the role of private banks and their funding to promote agrofuels, a photo exhibition and activities on plantations and agrofuels at the European Social Forum.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Stop Agrofuels Campaign working areas are:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Defence of land</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Building a movement against agribusiness</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Certification mechanisms</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">EU and US goals for agrofuels</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Cross-cutting areas include:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the EJRN Program - a focus on exposing and countering the role of corporations, trade and investments in the agrofuels sector.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Food Sovereignty Program - on Plantations.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Coordinators&nbsp;and participants</h3>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">Co-Coordinators:</p>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">Silvia Quiroa, FoEI El Salvador, yada@navegante.com.sv</p>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">Torry Kuswardono, FoE Indonesia, torry@foei.org</p>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">The Stop Agrofuels Steering Group includes:</p>
<ul><li>For Africa: Thuli Makama, FoE Swaziland</li><li>For North America: Kate Horner, FoE US</li><li>For Latin America: Elias Diaz, FoE Paraguay, and FoE Brazil</li><li>For Asia Pacific: Damien Ase, FoE Papua New Guinea</li><li>For Europe: Adrian Bebb, FoE Europe</li></ul>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px;">Groups that have actively participated in the Stop Agrofuels Campaign in 2009 include: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, El Salvador, Guatemala, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay and Uruguay.</p>
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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2009-07-08T17:50:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/agrofuels/agrofuels">
    <title>Agrofuels campaign highlights in 2008</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/agrofuels/agrofuels</link>
    <description>The main goal of FoEI's agrofuels campaign is to halt the development, production and trade of agrofuels, which is threatening food sovereignty and biodiversity, and has been shown to be a false solution to the climate crisis.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/7e5cc6214ac1d0476fa71d451da3e52b" alt="foei's agrofuel campaign highlights in 2008" />
<p>During the past two years, agrofuels have been a top advocacy priority for the federation, cutting across almost all of our program areas. During this period, more than 35 FoEI groups in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cyprus, Denmark, El Salvador, England Wales &amp; N Ireland, France, Germany, Ghana, Guatemala, Haiti, Hungary, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Malta, Mozambique, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Scotland, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Spain, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo, Uganda, Uruguay and US, worked in solidarity to achieve this goal.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>accomplishments</h3>
FoEI launched its international <a href="resolveuid/0ed98f02d22415e1fe738e5d54f9c188" class="internal-link" title="agrofuels">Agrofuels campaign</a> in 2008, raising the profile of local and national struggles to stop the expansion of <a href="resolveuid/117afc5d32a561f1bbe56ce1e7bc8994" class="internal-link" title="against certification of monocoltures">monoculture plantations for agrofuel production</a>. During 2008, FoEI was able to expose the <a href="resolveuid/2f57814c45e4548aa2f8d3a88f8a0146" class="internal-link" title="fighted financial support to agrofuels">factors and institutions that are driving destructive agrofuels production</a>, and link affected communities facing similar problems around the world, strengthening their capacity to promote national and international policies that support their rights to sustainable livelihoods.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We received a lot of press attention and succeeded in helping to shift public opinion on agrofuels, not just in Europe but throughout producer countries. The fact that increasing attention has been paid to food production, because of the global food crisis, meant that we were presented with an important opportunity to raise concerns about competition between crops for food and crops for fuel (although we approached this issue cautiously as we believe that the food crisis is driven by many significant factors, including speculation in agricultural commodities, and false solutions such as genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and increased dependence on artificial inputs to agriculture).</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Our various activities also reinforced national and regional alliances with social movements fighting for food sovereignty and resisting large scale monocultures, raised FoEI’s profile in debates about energy and climate justice, and contributed to the implementation of FoEI’s Agrofuels campaign internationally.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2009-07-08T17:50:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Page</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/ejrn/ejrn">
    <title>Economic Justice - Resisting Neoliberalism (ejrn) program</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/ejrn/ejrn</link>
    <description>The overall goal of the EJRN program for 2008 was to create sustainable societies by building people’s power and dismantling corporate power, stopping corporate-led neo-liberalism and globalization, and challenging the institutions and governments that promote unequal and unsustainable economic systems.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p><img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/0c1042a991388b547cd96a56a9bfa729/image_preview" alt="Economic Justice - Resisting Neoliberalism " />In 2008, around 30 FoEI member groups from Brazil, Cameroon, Costa Rica, Colombia, Denmark, EWNI, El Salvador, Finland, France, Germany, Guatemala, Honduras, Liberia, Malawi, Malaysia, Mali, Mexico, Mozambique, Netherlands, Nigeria, Paraguay, , Philippines, Slovakia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Togo, Uganda, Uruguay, and the USA, actively participated in FoEI's EJRN Program, and worked in solidarity to achieve its goal. <br /><br />During this period, the program focused on five specific working areas: <br /><br /></p>
<h4><a href="resolveuid/ee08f80e6715e0b7adae3889595237be" class="internal-link" title="global europe">global europe</a></h4>
<p>The <a href="resolveuid/ee08f80e6715e0b7adae3889595237be" class="internal-link" title="global europe">Global Europe campaign</a> aims to expose the negative impacts and the corporate bias of the Global Europe&nbsp; strategy; and to counter trade and investment agreements that harm men, women and the environment in the Global South, but also harm Europe's peoples as well.<br /><br /></p>
<h4><a href="resolveuid/8db1ba96d044f69f6e1c2234d27b65f3" class="internal-link" title="corporate power">corporate power</a></h4>
<p>The <a href="resolveuid/8db1ba96d044f69f6e1c2234d27b65f3" class="internal-link" title="corporate power">Corporate Power campaign</a> campaign focuses on dismantling corporate power by exposing and countering corporate crimes and their social, environmental and human rights impacts, specifically on women’s and men’s productive and reproductive activities. It also counters corporate influence over governments and institutions, including international financial institutions and the World Trade Organization (WTO); and building peoples' power by developing and advocating for legal measures to give rights to women, men and communities and to protect them against corporate power.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4><a href="resolveuid/ffa72624c892d045dcb618c458976127" class="internal-link" title="plantations">plantations</a></h4>
<p>EJRN is also engaged in the <a href="resolveuid/ffa72624c892d045dcb618c458976127" class="internal-link" title="plantations">Plantations campaign</a> (led by the <a href="resolveuid/33475dd9d3423dd67b499ea67a2e5579" class="internal-link" title="fb">Forests and Biodiversity program</a>) through exposing and countering the role of relevant corporations, and trade and investment flows, and by promoting resistance activities.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Further, the EJRN program also contributed to the <a href="resolveuid/6b9e032c0e7b5d60bb5cf4cd65ec0281" class="internal-link" title="agrofuels">Agrofuels campaign</a> by exposing and countering the role of corporations, trade and investments in that sector.&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Finally, the EJRN program contributed to the <a href="resolveuid/a73e0ace8558a4286551d77cbf18cf65" class="internal-link" title="Prioritizing local communities’ needs and challenging false solutions to the climate change crisis">Climate and Finance campaign</a> (which is led by the Climate Justice and Energy program) by exposing and rejecting the World Bank’s involvement in controversial projects on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD); stopping the World Bank’s Climate Investment Funds (CIFs) and other World Bank involvement in fighting climate change; and proposing and promoting an alternative climate financing mechanism <br /><br /></p>
<h3>accomplishments</h3>
<p>In 2008, FoEI's EJRN Program successfully:</p>
<ul><li><a href="resolveuid/46f8d4c3835b066c2219539c6f07a4f5" class="internal-link" title="Strengthened the fight against the EU’s Global Europe policy">Strengthened the fight against the EU’s Global Europe policy</a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/26baa44f9a99495cbaa943704c398880" class="internal-link" title="Continued the fight against free trade agreements">Continued the fight against free trade agreements</a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/971be48590c840fedc574ea4f380df5f" class="internal-link" title="Disclosed the truth, built awareness and mobilized against specific corporate abuses">Disclosed the truth, built awareness about and mobilized against specific corporate abuses</a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/2b46438ee3f2e24ed8334ebf58d93fb9" class="internal-link" title="Tackled corporate lobby and greenwash">Tackled corporate lobby and greenwash</a><br /></li><li><a href="resolveuid/fde3bb3b79ede25c8d015bb9dfdad38d" class="internal-link" title="Halted destructive projects">Halted destructive projects</a><br /></li><li><a href="resolveuid/739c95d6ac392002157fe8e4b51a5f89" class="internal-link" title="Denounced corporate-driven policies">Denounced corporate-driven policies</a><br /></li><li><a href="resolveuid/a5c2eb6a5279c53311fdd4371de3945e" class="internal-link" title="Used legal strategies to defend people from corporate abuses">Used legal strategies to defend people from corporate abuses</a></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>justice</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>economics</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2009-07-08T17:15:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/industrial-agriculture-and-agriculture">
    <title>focusing on the links between industrial agriculture and trade</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/industrial-agriculture-and-agriculture</link>
    <description>In 2008, FoE groups from all regions compiled case studies focused on defending territories and land rights from agribusiness and controversial agricultural expansions, such as deforestation for palm plantations in Asia or land evictions for soy and tree monocultures in South America.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/4ead505000b960afb7a66a1396478469/image_preview" alt="focusing on the links between industrial agriculture and trade" />
<p>FoEI has also consolidated the joint work with social movements and
organizations around Agribusiness. This will allow the Federation to strengthen their resistance strategies, as well as the promotion of
solutions, throughout the joint fight with our allies.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
FoE groups have produced materials (documented studies, briefings, fact
sheets and websites in different languages, and short films) and have
made strategic use of the internet for media outreach and advocacy
work to fight corporate control over food systems. This corporate
control includes monopolistic technologies such as the production and
commercialization of GMOs, agrofuels, industrial fishing and
aquaculture. For example:</p>
<ul><li>FoE EWNI’s <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JamriYNT9t4">Food Chain Campaign</a> and report “What's feeding our food?” (December 2008), which highlights the environmental and social impacts of the intensive livestock sector.</li><li>FoE Australia’s <a class="external-link" href="http://www.foe.org.au/sustainable-food">Real Food Campaign.</a></li><li>FoE Uruguay’s influential research work and publications on agribusiness such as: “<a class="external-link" href="http://www.redes.org.uy/2008/03/01/agronegocios-versus-soberania-alimentaria/">Agronegocios Ltda. Nuevas modalidades de colonialismo en el Cono Sur de América Latina</a>”; and their documentary: <a class="external-link" href="http://www.redes.org.uy/2008/06/24/soberania-alimentaria-en-marcha-recuperacion-del-molino-santa-rosa">Soberanía Alimentaria en marcha. Recuperación del Molino Santa Rosa.</a> </li><li>The report “<a href="resolveuid/3f8552ea912a0539edc5e8ddf0f5f4e4" class="internal-link" title="malaysian palm oil: green gold or green wash?">Malaysian palm oil - green gold or green wash?</a>” (October 2008), which reveals that Malaysian palm oil exported for use in food, biofuels and cosmetics is far from 'green', contrary to claims by Malaysian palm oil producers. <br /></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>These materials are helping to mobilize people; they help European
consumers to make informed choices; help to ensure that social and
environmental issues are taken into account by companies; mobilize the
public and decision-makers to support changes that will help to build a
more equitable North-South relationship in a key area affecting
biodiversity, food security and poverty reduction; and contribute to
the debate about Europe’s overall levels of consumption.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
The EU is one of the world’s biggest importers of agriculture
commodities, to supply a range of needs, from the food on our plates to
animal feed for our livestock. In addition, in response to demands to
reduce dependence on oil imports, and in order to minimize
climate-damaging greenhouse gas emissions, EU and national energy
policies are now resulting in the rapid increase of a new commodity –
agrofuels.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
This has raised new and complex challenges for developing countries
that are expanding agricultural production to meet Europe’s demand. In
2008, FoE groups in Europe (Austria Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark,
England Wales &amp; N Ireland, Estonia, France, Malta, the Netherlands,
Poland and Spain) developed a campaign called “<a class="external-link" href="http://www.foeeurope.org/activities/general.htm">Feeding and Fuelling
Europe</a>” to raise public awareness in the EU about the impacts of the food
commodities trade, on food security, rural livelihoods and the
environment in developing countries. The campaign provides
opportunities, solutions and recommendations for citizens, policy
makers and industry. The work is coordinated with national campaign
activities aimed at fighting agribusiness and promoting food
sovereignty in FoE groups in Asia (Indonesia, Malaysia and
Philippines), Africa (Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria and Sierra Leone) and
Latin America and the Caribbean (Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay).</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/food-sovereignty">
    <title>Food Sovereignty Program highlights</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/food-sovereignty</link>
    <description>The Food Sovereignty Program’s objective is to resist and expose industrial corporate-led agriculture and promote food sovereignty.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/6ef284ac882e886f944566b8c883c31a/image_preview" alt="FoodSovGroup20Apr2009 USED FOOD.jpg" height="249" width="325" />
<p>Friends of the Earth is developing its Food Sovereignty Program in close conjunction with allies, including La Via Campesina. We attended the High-Level Meeting on Food Security in Madrid (26-27 January) where Via Campesina and FoE Spain’s joint actions outside the conference got excellent coverage in the Spanish media, and Henry Saragih from Via Campesina was eventually invited to speak on behalf of civil society in the final plenary session.&nbsp;The response from the conference was striking: the applause was deafening and continued for a full two minutes despite repeated attempts by the Chair to move on to the next agenda item.&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Critically, the meeting ended without consensus on a new 'Global Partnership', which was in line with civil society proposals. However, the official website is less clear about this outcome and presents a non-negotiated and non-adopted 'Final Statement' that still talks about a new Global Partnership. In general we were extremely disappointed to find that proposed solutions to the food crisis still include pesticides, genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and fertilizers.</p>
<p><br />The 17th session of the UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) in May, in New York, saw important progress on food sovereignty however, when the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Olivier De Schutter's proposals included the right of peoples to access land and define their own food policies, as well as the principles that the government should support the least protected (including rural) people and implement production models that do not contribute to climate change. The UN Special Rapporteur’s position strongly echoes the new production model that La Vía Campesina and FoEI have been promoting for years, although it does not yet go far enough: people also need to have the right to define and control their own food and food production systems. A successful side event on GMOs and the food crisis was also held during this event. <br /><br />Together with the EJRN Program, the Food Sovereignty Program is also starting to build a new global campaign challenging agribusiness. This lengthy undertaking is being undertaken in conjunction with Via Campesina and the World March of Women, and is a follow up to the Food Sovereignty Forum, which took place in Nyeleni, Mali in February 2007. <br /><br />The plan is to build up from the regional sphere to the global. To this end, we have started organizing regional forums to launch the regional processes; from these we can then decide where to concentrate forces in our struggles for food sovereignty, how to strengthen our coordination and our joint campaign efforts. To date regional food sovereignty forums have been held in Paraguay (21-23 August) and Nigeria, with representatives from different regions of FoEI and strategic allies present at each. The meeting in Nigeria focused on Opposing Land Grabs, AGRA and Non-Ecological Agriculture, and took place in Abuja, Nigeria, 20-23 October. AGRA is an organization that focuses on the Green Revolution, and it represents agribusiness in Africa at its worst. <br /><br />In April 2009, when FoEI activists from around the world were in Amsterdam for internal strategy meetings, FoEI and FoE Netherlands also co-hosted a public discussion on "Food sovereignty versus certification: the soy case in the Netherlands," with politicians, academics and members of the Dutch farming community.<br /><br />In-line with the program’s objective to expose industrial corporate-led agriculture and promote food sovereignty, Friends of the Earth, together with Food and Water Watch and the European Co-ordination of Via Campesina, also produced a groundbreaking film, "Killing Fields: the battle to feed factory farms," which investigates the impacts of growing soy in South America to feed factory farms in Europe. Few people realize that a hidden chain of destruction stretches from factory farms in Europe to the forests of South America – where huge soy plantations are wiping out wildlife and making climate change worse. To make way for soy plantations, thousands of people are being forced from their land and with it, losing their ability to grow their own food. Indigenous People are being evicted and forests are being cleared. Many of the soybeans are genetically modified and massively increase the use of pesticides – resulting in the poisoning of rural communities, water sources and the natural environment.<br /><br />As part of its collaborative approach, FoEI has been increasingly involved with the International NGO/CSO Planning Committee for Food Sovereignty (IPC), participating in the drafting committee of the IPC’s "Eradicate Hunger" document, and in the Steering Committee of the People’s Food Sovereignty Forum that paralleled the FAO Summit on Food Security in Rome, 16-18 November&nbsp;2009. As soon as the summit was announced, social movements, NGOs and other civil society organizations started a dialogue with FAO to organize the parallel civil society forum, which included some 500 farmers, Indigenous Peoples, rural youth, women and others. The forum addressed the hunger crisis affecting over one billion people and nearly one sixth of the world's population. FoEI was also involved in preparations for activities in parallel to the 3rd Session of the Governing Body on the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, in Tunisia, in June. FoEI has been invited to join the IPC’s international facilitation group, which has been formed to work on the FAO process for the adoption of voluntary guidelines on land and natural resources tenure. This group will also be a space for reflection and articulation on land rights and land grabbing. <br /><br />The struggle for a GM-free world also remains a priority for the food sovereignty movement and Friends of the Earth International continues its campaign against the GM industry. Working against GMOs includes struggling against soy monocultures and the dominant model of production. We are campaigning to stop GM food aid, and to increase land available to family farmers and for rural agriculture.<br /><br />In 2009, we published our annual research report on GM crops," Who Benefits from GM Crops? Feeding the biotech giants, not the world’s poor," which focused on the importance of democratic decision-making in food production and distribution, and raised questions about the ability of GM crops to contribute to poverty reduction, global food security or sustainable farming. <br /><br />Friends of the Earth groups and allies are also maintaining pressure on the GM industry at the national and regional levels. This has had a particularly marked impact in Europe. At the beginning of the year, the European Commission issued proposals for two new varieties of genetically modified (GM) maize to be grown in Europe despite ongoing safety concerns. In a proposal sent to EU member states, the Commission also said it wanted to force Greece, Hungary and France to drop their national bans on a similar GM maize. But the European Commission was defeated when member states voted on this issue, with many member states holding fast with their position on GMOs. Civil society organizations were clearly instrumental in this. <br /><br />In Hungary, for example, Friends of the Earth, along with other civil society organizations, farmers’ organizations and politicians held a demonstration to keep Hungary free of genetically-modified organisms and demonstrators dispatched representatives to every EU foreign representative in Budapest to ask other European countries to vote against the Commission’s proposal. FoE Spain and other Spanish civil society organizations coordinated a hugely successful action against genetically modified organisms (GMOs), with more than 100 actions and protests across the country. 8,000 people also took part in a national demonstration in Zaragoza, the capital city of the GM maize-growing region. With support from FOE Europe, FoE Spain also organized actions and sent letters to the Spanish Embassies in the EU.<br /><br />This European resistance received a further boost in April, when Germany banned Monsanto's GM maize MON810 as allowed under EU law (known as the ‘safeguard clause’). Germany joins Hungary, Greece, Austria, Luxembourg, France, Poland and Italy who all effectively have bans in place. The German decision is based on new scientific research, which shows that the crop damages ladybirds, butterflies and <em>daphnia magna</em> (water organisms). This was a huge success for FoE Germany and other environmental and agricultural organizations, who have worked hard for this outcome for many years. Furthermore, 73% of Germans polled in April said they would favor products labeled as being GM free.<br /><br />In July 2009, a scientific analysis commissioned by Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth Europe showed that an opinion by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), which advocated the safety of the only genetically modified (GM) crop grown in Europe, was fundamentally flawed. The report revealed serious mistakes and omissions, which completely undermined EFSA’s conclusion. The report was submitted to a public consultation on Monsanto’s MON810 maize, and the groups called on the European Commission and EU countries to reject the authorization of this crop. <br /><br />In a related action organized by FoE Spain in September, activists dressed as Spanish maize fled to the French Embassy in Madrid to seek asylum, fearing contamination from genetically modified varieties, which are being grown in Spain without any precautions against contamination. FoE Cyprus has also been active, hosting a lecture on GMOs, and speaking at a seminar designed to educate teachers about organic food and its benefits, organized by PASYBIO (the Cyprus Organic Farmers Union). <br /><br />Other national campaign successes and activities in Europe in 2009 included the following:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">On 6 March, during an extended session on food safety and regulation in the Georgian Parliament, Georgia’s Minister of Agriculture unexpectedly supported citizens’ demands to declare Georgia a GM-free country. This is an abrupt change in the political discourse, after many years of campaigning by FoE Georgia and other Georgian NGOs, and a significant public victory.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In its Renewed Programme for Government, published on 10 October 2009, the Irish Government declared that it “will declare the Republic of Ireland a GM-Free Zone, free from the cultivation of all GM plants.” This will make it the ninth country in the EU to prohibit the cultivation of transgenic plants.</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">A protest outside the head office of WWF-Netherlands with a weeping panda, a Monsanto circus director, and various people in white overalls spraying ‘Roundup’, protesting against WWF’s support for the Round Table on Responsible Soy (RTRS) proposal to certify GM Roundup Ready soy as 'responsible'. Another action followed days later outside the head office of Ahold, which is a prominent member of the RTRS, in response to RTRS’s newly agreed criteria for ‘responsible’ soy, which will allow the continued expansion of soy and even certify GM soy.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p><br />There have also been strong FoE campaigns against GM crops in other regions. For example:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In Mexico, Friends of the Earth Mexico organised a festival event in the square Plaza de Mexicanos in San Cristobal, to mark World Food Day on 16 October.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In Nigeria, Friends of the Earth launched a campaign against field trials of the so-called ‘super cassava’, which is engineered for enhanced levels of Vitamin A. FoE Nigeria has published a detailed report arguing that the trials would be a breach of the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, which Nigeria has signed.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">In Paraguay, the Paraguayan Senate has been discussing a new law on agrochemicals, which would dramatically increase the environmental, health and other social impacts of soy and other crops in Paraguay. Several key clauses of the existing law would be weakened, such as the requirement to have vegetation barriers and to warn surrounding communities in advance of spraying. Also, as the new law would be easier for soy growers to comply with, their crops – including GM crops – could be more likely to acquire Round Table on Responsible Soy (RTRS) certification, which calls for adherence to national laws. Friends of the Earth and others, including small farmers’ movements, several Ministers and the World Health Organization have all strongly opposed this proposal.</span></li></ul>
<p><br />The Food Sovereignty Program is also starting to develop its work around climate and agriculture, together with the CJE Program. It is important to analyze and expose the links between climate justice and agriculture including emissions from long distance transport of food for international trade; the impacts of changes in land use; the impacts of industrial agriculture on climate; and the impacts of agrofuels production. In addition, we will report on the impacts of false solutions to the climate crisis on food sovereignty, expose the impacts of climate change on women, and analyze and report the increasing control of agribusiness transnationals in the UN’s climate change negotiations.<br /><br />The first steps in this process were the development of an analysis of the role of GMOs in climate change, and a seminar at the Klimaforum09 in Copenhagen in December. On 11 December, a major event&nbsp;on "Food, Energy Sovereignty and Climate Justice" (which also included several presentations on REDD)&nbsp;was also co-organized in Copenhagen, by Friends of the Earth International, the Global Forest Coalition, Via Campesina and the World March of Women.</p>
<p><br />Developing strategic relationships and alliances is a priority for the Food Sovereignty Program, especially with Via Campesina and the World March of Women, and has been a focus throughout the year, including in preparations for and actions at the Forum Against Agribusiness in Asuncion, the Conference against Land Grabbing and AGRA in Abuja, the Global Action Day against Monsanto on 16 October, and events in Copenhagen in December. This has included a number of joint letters and statements, including:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Preparing and coordinating a statement from FoEI and Via Campesina within the framework of the 17th Session of the UN Commission on Sustainable Development: "Food sovereignty: A new model for a human right" (May).</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Civil Society open letter to FAO regarding the High-Level Expert Forum on "How to feed the world in 2050" (September).&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">An open letter to The Bill &amp; Melinda Gates Foundation with regard to their participation in AGRA.</span></li></ul>
<p><br />Other key meetings that the Food Sovereignty Program has participated in include:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The High-Level Meeting on Food Security for All, Madrid (January)</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">CSD Intergovernmental Preparatory Meeting (February)</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">17th Session of the UN Division for Sustainable Development (May)</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Activities prior to the WTO Ministerial Conference, Geneva, (November-December), and the</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Trade to Climate Caravan, Geneva to Copenhagen, organized by the Trade and Climate Change Working Group of Our World Is Not For Sale and other organizations prior to COP15 (December).&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p><br />The Food Sovereignty Program’s main working areas are:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Resistance to land grabbing and agribusiness</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">A GM-free world, and&nbsp;</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Climate and agriculture.&nbsp;</span></li></ul>
<p><br />Internal cross-cutting themes include:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The promotion of food sovereignty and solutions; and&nbsp;</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Gender</span></li></ul>
<p><br />Collaboration with other programs and campaigns:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With EJRN and Agrofuels - resistance to land grabbing and agribusiness, including Stora Enso.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>International Co-coordinators</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li>Martín Drago, FoE Uruguay, martin.drago@redes.org.uy</li><li>Kirtana Chandrasekaran, FoE EWNI, kirtana.chandrasekaran@foe.co.uk</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Regional Coordinators:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li>For ATALC: Caludia Jerónimo, FoE Guatemala, and FoE Paraguay as alternate</li><li>For Africa: Marianne Bassey (Nigeria) and Sicelo Simelane (Swaziland) as alternate</li><li>For Asia Pacific: Choony Kim (South Korea)</li><li>For Europe: Helen Holder (FoE Europe) and Kirtana Chandrasekaran (FoE EWNI) as alternate</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Groups that participated actively in 2009:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Costa Rica, Cyprus, Denmark, El Salvador, EWNI, France, Georgia, Germany, Guatemala, Hungary, Ireland, Mexico, Netherlands, Nigeria, Paraguay, Spain, Uruguay, and members of the Feeding and Fuelling Europe project in Europe.&nbsp;</p>
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    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
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      <dc:subject>food</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>sovereignty</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2009-07-08T17:05:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/food-sovereignty">
    <title>Food Sovereignty Program highlights in 2008</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/program-highlights/food-sovereignty/food-sovereignty</link>
    <description>In 2008, FoEI’s Food Sovereignty Program contributed effectively to the implementation of the agenda agreed by the food sovereignty movement at the Nyeleni Forum, (the first International Forum for Food Sovereignty organized in Selingue, Mali, in February 2007). </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[The <a href="resolveuid/7ab51f466f971e56ed380078fba39846" class="internal-link" title="foei advances food sovereignty agenda with 2007 summit">Nyeleni Forum</a> helped to shape a common international agenda, and increase the visibility of the food sovereignty movement. It clearly described how we can realize food sovereignty in our various countries, and the pressures that have to be resisted, because they devastate peasant-based food production and local markets, destroy food sovereignty, and increase people’s dependence on transnational companies and international markets (<a href="resolveuid/855f7fad72e9a095c96405f6bb07c0d1" class="internal-link" title="Nyeleni Forum for Food Sovereignty">pdf: Nyéléni 2007 - Forum for Food Sovereignty</a>).
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/c49210a72801e52180407808f5587086/image_preview" alt="Food Sovereignty" />
<p>The Nyeleni Forum was crucial in helping FoEI to frame its Food Sovereignty Program, continue to build its strategic alliance with La Via Campesina, and act more strongly at both the grassroots and international levels. In 2008, around 30 FoEI member groups from Australia, Brazil, Cameroon, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, El Salvador, England Wales &amp; N Ireland, Guatemala, Haiti, Hungary, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Mali, Mauritius, Mexico, Nepal, Netherlands, Nigeria, Paraguay, Philippines, South Korea, Spain, Swaziland, Uruguay and the USA actively participated in FoEI’s Food Sovereignty Program, and worked in solidarity to advance the food sovereignty agenda globally.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
The Food Sovereignty Program has been working hard over the past two years to cultivate international activities in line with its agreed framework and in support of local and national work towards food sovereignty. This includes strengthening the fight against <a href="resolveuid/14d68130f23110a76f06d16e4fa73706" class="internal-link" title="resisting gmos">GMOs</a>, linking climate to agriculture, rebuilding FoEI’s work on trade and agriculture, developing a new line of work focusing on territories and land rights (and against agribusiness), capturing groups’ local work on building food sovereignty, and promoting international solidarity around those efforts.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>accomplishments</h3>
<p>In 2008, FoEI's Food Sovereignty Program was able to:</p>
<ul><li><a href="resolveuid/e6ad6192070559623810cd46a1c7f193" class="internal-link" title="advanced foei’s food sovereignty agenda">advance the food sovereignty agenda globally</a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/6a869cdf269284ceff1d9349e0b5664b" class="internal-link" title="strengthened the fight for a GM-free world">strengthen the fight for a GM-free world</a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/e9b948817e6f89d6d5503d904529aa54" class="internal-link" title="linked climate with agriculture">focus on the links between industrial agriculture and climate change</a></li><li><a href="resolveuid/2d3598e126f8e685d6226730200ae48e" class="internal-link" title="focused on the links between industrial agriculture and agriculture">link trade to food sovereignty and defend territories and land rights from agribusiness</a><br /></li></ul>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>food</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>sovereignty</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2009-07-08T17:05:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Page</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/cje">
    <title>Climate justice and energy program highlights</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/annual-report-2009/what-we-achieved-in-2009/program-highlights/cje</link>
    <description>The CJE Program’s overall objective is to build a diverse, effective and global movement for climate justice. Climate justice is a right-based approach to the climate crisis with holds those historically responsible for the climate crisis to account. Climate justice demands structural changes to tackle neo-liberalism and radically reduce consumption. In keeping with FoEI’s mission to influence policies and policy dialogue, the CJE Program also aims to ensure that by rich industrialized Annex I countries commit to needed emissions reductions, and appropriate and sufficient financing and transfers of technology to help developing countries mitigate and adapt to climate change, allowing a just transition to sustainable, fossil-free societies.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/18777fc177f1e2acc55cfba4c3fee419/image_preview" alt="IMG_3730 USED CJE.jpg" />
<p>An excellent example of our work to empower communities is the Movement of Victims Affected by Climate Change in Central America (MOVIAC) initiative, which continued in 2009. As part of this, more than a hundred representatives of Central American movements, organizations and networks, met in June, in El Salvador. MOVIAC is an invaluable and inspirational component of the Affected Peoples Campaign. Many other FoEI member groups are now inspired to create similar national and regional grassroots movements with affected communities.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI’s work with affected communities also included the Climate School: Building and Mobilizing Climate Justice, which took place on 24 March 2009, in Medellin, Colombia, within the framework of the actions against the Inter-American Development Bank’s 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting, also in Medellin. In addition, a series of community exchanges between communities in Central America has enabled 120 individuals to live in and exchange experiences with other communities challenged by climate change.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI has also focused on developing and deepening key alliances, in order to contribute to building a diverse, effective and global movement for climate justice and energy sovereignty. For the CJE Program this has involved working closely with key social movements such as La Via Campesina and the World March of Women, throughout the year. In particular, we agreed to cohost a joint assembly at Klimaforum09 in Copenhagen, to advance the design of a political agenda that would allow us to move forward in mobilizing and organizing the defence of land. Additionally, we enhanced our cooperation with other coalitions and strategic alliances including Indigenous Peoples’ organizations, Jubilee South, the Global Forest Coalition, Jubilee South, the Durban Group, REDLAR and others.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Key moments in the evolution of these alliances in 2009 included:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">An event, "Talks between Environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples," at the World Social Forum, 31 January 2009, Belem do Para, Brazil. Organized by FoEI and the Global Forest Coalition, these strategic talks between Indigenous Peoples and environmentalists, with over 100 participants, allowed us to advance in the establishment of political agreements and strategic actions to build climate justice and to fight against the exploitation of nature.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">"Environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples united for Climate Justice," at the Foro Andino, in Colombia, 18-19 March 2009. Organized by Friends of the Earth, this event also strengthened the developing relationship between environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples from the Andean region including the U`wa, Wayuú, Nasa, Misak, Quichua and Aymara. The focus of the meeting was the impact of climate change on Indigenous Peoples’ lands and the need to move forward with a shared strategy and joint actions for climate justice.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The 5th REDLAR Mesoamerican Conference, Boquete, Panama, 22-25 April 2009.&nbsp;FoE was able to promote the idea of combining Energy Sovereignty, Climate Justice and <em>buen vivir</em>&nbsp; (literally ‘good living’) to the 264 representatives from Mesoamerica and other areas of the continent. This latter concept is central to the social movement and Indigenous Peoples in America, and is referred to as Abya Yala.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">1st Continental Summit of Indigenous Women of Abya Yala and the 4th Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities of Abya Yala, in Puno, Peru, 27-31 May 2009. Together with over 5,000 attendees, Friends of the Earth participated in talks, workshops and meetings at both summits. This was an excellent opportunity to contribute to the establishment of the concept of <em>buen vivir </em>and to strengthen ties and move forward with strategies for climate justice.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Friends of the Earth also participated in the Asia Pacific Peoples’ Solidarity for Climate Justice organizing meeting, to contribute to preparations for the week of civil society activities that took place in parallel to the Bangkok UNFCCC intersessional meeting, 28 September to 9 October 2009.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">At the 1st International Climate Justice Tribunal, Cochabamba, Bolivia, 14-16 October 2009, FoEI presented a case about sugarcane cutters in South-western Colombia to the tribunal, contributing to the debate on environmental crimes, the climate and environmental debt. This case was the direct result of an international mission for the verification of agrofuels in Colombia, which FoEI organized in July 2009, with the participation of more than 40 international delegates. The mission visited five regions in Colombia which have been severely impacted by the expansion of sugar cane and palm oil to produce agrofuels.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">The months preceding COP-15 in Copenhagen involved extensive and improved collaboration with social movements - especially Via Campesina and the World March of Women - and other civil society organizations, around plans for Copenhagen, including the joint Klimaforum events, mobilizations and media work. FoEI also participated in Climate Justice Action preparations, and organized and participated in a Climate Justice Now! strategy meeting in Bangkok in October.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In 2009 FoEI's campaigning on the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations&nbsp;involved the production and distribution of a substantial number of policy proposals and analyses in the run-up to COP-15 in Copenhagen. A new and rapidly developing focus in this respect is climate finance, a cross-cutting campaign being run with FoEI’s&nbsp;Economic Justice Resisting Neoliberalism (EJRN) program. We developed a robust position paper in collaboration with campaigners from the EJRN campaign, which formed the foundation for much of our campaigning before and during Copenhagen. FoEI also began to contribute to the climate finance debate within the climate justice movement. Nearly 10,000 copies of our climate finance materials, "Financing Climate Justice: Ensuring a Just Agreement on Climate Change," and "Financing Climate Justice: Summary of Demands and Ethical Criteria Matrix" were distributed in Copenhagen, in English, French and Spanish. FoEI’s ethical criteria matrix provides governments with a set of criteria for judging climate financing mechanisms proposed during negotiations.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Thousands of copies of our 2008 publication "REDD Myths: a critical review of proposed mechanisms to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation in developing countries" were also re-printed and distributed in Copenhagen, as was "Voices from communities affected by climate change." In addition, 5,000 copies of the popular FoEI newspaper, "Climate Justice Times," were also distributed. &nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The joint efforts of FoEI and key allies has helped to ensure that a number of governments, such as Bolivia, have officially voiced their concerns about the potential negative impacts of UNFCCC, World Bank and national policies to finance Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD), especially if REDD is used to support plantations and is funded through carbon markets. As a result of lobbying by FoEI and allies, the UNFCCC’s REDD draft reflected these concerns. A key element in this effort was a side event on the potential impacts of REDD on Indigenous Peoples’ rights and biodiversity and the risks of GE trees, on 3 June, parallel to the meetings of the Subsidiary Bodies to the UNFCCC in Bonn. This was co-organized with the Global Forest Coalition and the International Alliance on Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forest. Many FoEI member groups have also been informed and thus enabled to participate in national REDD policy discussions currently underway.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>During the year we also produced a video trilogy, "Towards Solutions on Sustainable Energy Practices". In addition, we distributed and publicized a Friends of the Earth Europe Study entitled "The 40% Study: Mobilizing Europe to Achieve Climate Justice," which shows that domestic emissions cuts of at least 40% in Europe by 2020 are both feasible and affordable.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>This research, combined with our advocacy activities, also allowed us to be particularly effective in persuading governments in many countries in the global North to introduce binding climate change laws that will help to reduce those countries’ carbon emissions. This was especially the case in Europe where FoE has focused on its Big Ask campaign: France, Scotland and the UK passed climate change laws setting emissions reductions targets, and it seems likely that similar laws will soon be passed in a number of other European countries including Austria, Belgium, Hungary, Ireland and Slovenia.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Other member groups have also been very active on climate change. In March 2009, for example, FoE Japan organized an international workshop on climate change impacts and solutions faced by developing countries, with presentations from the Japanese government, the World Bank and several international organizations. FoEI’s involvement focused on showing how climate change and its false solutions are a result of the current neoliberal production and consumption model.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Although Copenhagen was an abject failure, it was a key moment in the intergovernmental debate on mitigating and adapting to climate change, because of the urgent need to agree and develop a successor to the first phase of the Kyoto Protocol before it expires in 2012. FoEI took a team of 400 activists to Copenhagen: some of them were engaged in lobbying and advocacy work within the Bella Center, whilst others were focused on the daily mobilizations and alternative events, including the Klimaforum, which were so important to ensuring governments heard the critical voices of civil society.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>From the talks in the Klimaforum, demonstrations on the streets, and actions in the conference centre, the message was loud and clear: any climate agreement must be based on climate justice. This was an important development: before Copenhagen the term ‘climate justice’ was much discussed in civil society meetings but more-or-less unknown elsewhere. During Copenhagen on the other hand, it began appearing frequently in the mainstream media.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We promoted the development of many actions/spaces for campaigning and mobilizing during COP-15 and Klimaforum09. This included FoE Europe’s work developing the Flood for Climate Justice, an extremely successful demonstration which more than 5,000 people from many countries participated in. The event also involved mock carbon traders trying to sell carbon offsets to protestors, and a fake carbon stock exchange. It ended in front of the Danish Parliament with the creation of a massive human banner reading “Offsetting is a false solution.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoEI also drew public attention to our positions and alternatives for sustainable livelihoods through both traditional and new creative media activities and actions. During Copenhagen, we posted 37 blog entries and 9 videos on FoEI's You Tube channel, and 300 high-quality images on Flickr. Prior to Copenhagen, we created a website to feature the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.angrymermaid.org/">Angry Mermaid Award</a> which included an animation story on the effect of corporate neglect of climate change on communities in the South: the website had 23,851 views. In Copenhagen's Klimaforum09, we presented an interactive <a href="resolveuid/db198cf5963d5772e8101fc159a5ef49" class="internal-link" title="climate capsule delivers people’s messages to copenhagen">Climate Capsule installation</a> with videos, photos and drawings from around the world. We also conducted outreach on climate change during the international tour of the rock band Radiohead, and produced the graphic novel "<a href="resolveuid/f3678b505ac03a6bc426a34b6809e7d9" class="internal-link" title="speechless: a wordless history of the world">Speechless</a>" about the history of economic globalization.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>A further key objective for the CJE program is to stop World Bank pollution of the climate debate. During 2009 we continued to monitor and conduct advocacy around the World Bank’s framework on clean energy investment and the emission-trading schemes promoted by IFIs. In September we organized a public forum on climate debt alongside the Intersessional Meeting on Climate Change in Bangkok, and a public forum on climate change and financing. FoEI was co-organizer of an international meeting on Financing Strategy and Climate, along with other networks and organizations including Jubilee South, Focus on the Global South, and Oilwatch. FoEI also supported the production of the FoEI Asia Pacific (APac) region’s first climate publication, "Climate Impacts of the ADB's Business: How the Asian Development Bank Finances Climate Change."</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FoE also participated in the civil society campaign to stop governments subsidizing the climate-wrecking fossil fuels industry. In April 2009, we published Public Money for Fossil Fuels in the EU and three EU Member States, to identify the many sources of public investments in harmful industries. In 2009, both the G-20 and the UN made agreements to phase out subsidies for fossil fuels, which will have a positive impact on policies regarding renewable energy.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Some FoE groups are also focusing on private finance and its role in driving climate change. FoE Netherlands, for example, has conducted research into systems for measuring carbon footprints, which was presented during a Banktrack meeting for private banks in Washington. The Climate Working Group of banks involved in the Equator Principles is now organizing workshops to develop and implement such a methodology. The outcome of our activities is that among these banks the question is not 'whether' or 'why' they should measure carbon footprints, but 'how'. FoE Netherlands has also convinced private banks in the Netherlands to commit to improving their energy-related investment policies.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Climate Justice &amp; Energy Program working areas are:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span"></span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Energy sovereignty</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Climate and finance / Carbon and forest markets</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">UNFCCC (including REDD), and</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">Stopping World Bank pollution of the climate debate.</span></li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Cross campaign areas include:</p>
<ul><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Forests and Biodiversity Program - the REDD campaign</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the Forests and Biodiversity Program, the Food Sovereignty Program, and the EJRN Program - Agrofuels</span></li><li><span style="line-height: 18px;" class="Apple-style-span">With the EJRN program - Financing and Climate, particularly building a common position at the federation level, including on carbon markets and the Clean Development Mechanism</span></li></ul>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<h3>Coordinators and participants<br /></h3>
<p>In 2009, the co-coordinators of the Climate Justice &amp; Energy (CJE) Program were:</p>
<ul><li>Hildebrando Vélez and Irene Vélez, FoE Colombia</li><li>Joseph Zacune, FoE EWNI</li><li>Stephanie Long, FoE Australia<br /></li></ul>
<p><br />&nbsp;The CJE Steering Group included:<br /><br /></p>
<ul><li>For ATALC: Eduardo Giesen, FoE Chile,</li><li>For Europe: Sonja Meister, FoE Europe,</li><li>For Africa: Michael Keania Karikpo, FoE Nigeria</li><li>For North America: Karen Orenstein, FoE US</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Groups that participated actively in the CJE Program in 2009 included: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Belgium (Flanders and Brussels), Brazil, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, El Salvador, England, Wales &amp; N Ireland, Finland, France, Germany, Ghana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Liberia, Malawi, Malaysia, Mauritius, Mexico, Mozambique, Nepal, Netherlands, Nigeria, Norway, Palestine, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Philippines, Poland, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Uganda, Ukraine, Uruguay and the US.</p>
<p><br /><br /></p>
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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>justice</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>climate</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2009-07-08T16:40:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Page</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/latin-america-and-the-caribbean/argentina-music">
    <title>argentina: attracting attention to water with art, music and stories</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/member-groups/latin-america-and-the-caribbean/argentina-music</link>
    <description>Today, one in six people lack access to safe, affordable water, and two in five lack access to adequate sanitation. The United Nations expects these numbers to rise. But in Argentina, as in many other countries, there is still very little information available about the importance of using water sustainably and democratically.  There is also a lack of emphasis on the use of public spaces as places where people can enjoy themselves and meet their families, friends and others.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<h4><img class="image-right" src="resolveuid/c9b12fb30974168026b2c6b37d4b2081/image_preview" alt="argentina: attracting attention to water with art, music and stories" /></h4>
<h4>what happened?</h4>
<p><a href="resolveuid/c4a91526017ac39ea6557450d4b7fb1d" class="internal-link" title="argentina">Federación Amigos de la Tierra Argentina / Friends of the Earth Argentina</a> is collaborating with other organizations around the word who have formed a new and vibrant international movement challenging the corporate control of this precious resource, and defending water as a public good and an inalienable right.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a class="external-link" href="http://www.blueoctobercampaign.org">Blue October</a> is an international month of action dedicated to protecting water as a shared natural resource available to all. As part of Blue October 2008, FoE Argentina organized an event entitled AGUARTE – Art for Water, which aimed to focus on water and public spaces in an entertaining and interesting way. On four Sundays in October and November, multiple coordinated art activities took place in different locations along the main circuit of Buenos Aires ecological reserve ‘Costanera Sur’.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Visitors to the park on those days were able to enjoy ten different activities, all of which had been designed to convey messages about healthy natural water and some of the problems associated with its management. Professional artists gave performances using stilts and juggling, magic and mime, violins and flutes, murals, cartoons, stories and more, and all the activities were carefully sequenced to allow visitors arriving at different times to enjoy them all. Extra information was available in many different forms too – oral, written and illustrated.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>what changed?</h4>
<p>Visitors to the park enjoyed finding out about people’s right to water in a novel way. They came away from AGUARTE inspired and informed about the use of and access to water, water quality, community management, and the sale of water. They also found out about the social, ecological, political and economic dimensions of water use. This project in Argentina is another example of activities coordinated within the Blue October campaign by FoE member groups in Uruguay, Paraguay, Colombia, Malta, Denmark, Finland, France, UK, Papua New Guinea, Nepal, Nigeria, and FoE affiliate groups like the Council of Canadians and the Corporate Europe Observatory, effectively contributing to build the movement of people demanding access to water as a human right.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4>lessons learned</h4>
<p>A comprehensive and colorful 35-minute audio-visual record of the event was made, for other groups to use and learn from. This has already been shared with other organizations around the world, when it was shown at the International Conference of Affected People in Honduras, November 2008.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<strong><em>with thanks to our funders: the sigrid rausing trust</em></strong>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2009-04-01T13:40:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Page</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/communications/creative-approaches/international-photo-competition-and-calendar-2008">
    <title>international photo competition and calendar 2008</title>
    <link>http://www.foei.org/en/resources/publications/annual-report/2008/what-we-achieved-in-2008/communications/creative-approaches/international-photo-competition-and-calendar-2008</link>
    <description>Friends of the Earth International ran our third annual photo competition in 2008 on the theme of "Dreams, Hopes and Possibilities for a Better World." </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<div style="clear: left;">&nbsp;</div>
<img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/88923fc1a17922602ca94c72e9892538/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb1" width="87" /><img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/d9174422451366d0f84a2bc34c711201/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb2" width="87" /><img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/725606d48d210503b3d81df692d4eb9a/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb3" width="87" /><img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/7658ee32f9eb11ac2ed7437a22b056c3/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb4" width="87" /><img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/1b3b5ddf78bc7af18f1e254ce581b021/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb5" width="87" /><img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/c5718fa5a9b05ddc7cd51b4b97207759/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb6" width="87" /><img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/53804ffa4f9498069e7f75096badee62/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb7" width="87" /><img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/2485ca4a02b04ad631023521fcf22222/image_preview" alt="winners2008thumb8" width="87" />
<div style="clear: left;">&nbsp;</div>
<p>The competition brought in more than 600 photos from 62 countries around the world, from amateur and professional photographers ranging in age from 10 to 67 year old. Our panel of judges included many high-profile photographers and some of our own campaigners:</p>
<ul><li><a class="external-link" href="http://www.yannarthusbertrand.com">Yann Arthus-Bertrand</a>, world renowned aerial photographer of the planet's ecosystems; </li><li><a class="external-link" href="http://www.menzelphoto.com">Peter Menzel</a>, author of "Hungry Planet: What The World Eats"; </li><li>Bangladeshi photographer G.M.B. Akash, first-place winner of the 2006 photo competition; </li><li><a class="external-link" href="http://www.akintunde1.com">Akintunde Akinleye</a>, first-place winner World Press Photo 2007 in "Spot News" category, from Nigeria; </li><li><a class="external-link" href="http://www.danielbeltra.com">Daniel Beltrá</a>, Seattle-based Spanish environmental and nature photography specialist and winner of the 2007 World Press Photo prize for his work on soy plantations and Amazon deforestation; </li><li>Indian photographer Shantanu Das, first-place winner of the 2008 Friends of the Earth International photo competition. </li><li>Judy Pasimio from Friends of the Earth Philippines </li><li>Oscar Rivas from FoE Paraguay </li><li>Zenabu Sakibu from FoE Ghana </li><li>Bente Hessellund Andersen from FoE Denmark </li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The winning photos were profiled in our trilingual wall calendar, which was distributed through our member groups and through retailers. The winning photos can be viewed on the <a href="resolveuid/24b3ff2d76334c6f1bb43bf7fa91e0d4" class="internal-link" title="Photo Competition Winners Announced">FoEI website</a>. You can also read interviews with some of the winning photographers from around the world on these pages.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/99e86e16ad984804ded00dcada540891/image_preview" alt="Michael Foley, Ireland. First place, Reclaiming Traditions category. Friends of the Earth groups favorite: second place (tied)." width="357" />
<img class="image-inline" src="resolveuid/a9983f4ea2d2cea1acfaff2e11bb8244/image_preview" alt="Julius Mwelu, Kenya. First place, Building Towards the Future category. Friends of the Earth groups favorite: first place." width="357" />
<div style="clear: left;">&nbsp;<br /><em><strong>with thanks to our funders: oxfam novib<br /></strong><br /></em></div>
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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>UrskaMerc</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2009-04-15T16:05:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Page</dc:type>
  </item>





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