Activists
highlight the damage done to the ecology of
the South by the policies of market fundamentalism
of the countries of the North and suggest
steps to correct the historical wrongs.
THE World Social Forum (WSF) saw a renewed
call for the payback of the ecological debt
that the South believes it is owed by the
North. In a range of issues, including the
Bhopal gas tragedy, the Minamata poisoning,
big dams, corporate-controlled biotechnology,
patents of plants and dumping of toxic wastes,
groups such as the Jubilee South believe
that the North is enormously indebted to
the South. The Jubilee South's mission is
"to confront the historical roots and
structural causes of the debt problem, and
to promote lasting alternatives of economic,
social and ecological justice. We locate
our struggle in the context of the myriad
forms of resistance through which the majority
of the world's people now seek to achieve
and defend their fundamental human and collective
rights to a dignified world".
The "enemies" in this "struggle"
are obvious. They are not only the dominant
models of trade and the Bretton Woods institutions,
but also the entire gamut of free trade
agreements that guarantee investments. The
means used to fight them are primarily those
of boycott action. The definition of ecological
debt is lengthy, no doubt owing to the necessity
to fit the scale of the crime. According
to Accion Ecologica of Ecuador, ecological
debt is "the debt accumulated by the
Northern industrial countries towards Third
World countries on account of resource plundering,
environmental damage, and the free occupation
of environmental space to deposit wastes
such as greenhouse gases. Those who abuse
the biosphere, transgress ecological limits
and enforce unsustainable patterns of resource
extraction of a range of natural resources
must begin to discharge this ecological
debt. The ecological debt accumulated through
such processes as the extraction of a range
of natural resources, ecologically unequal
terms of trade externalising ecological
costs, the appropriation of traditional
knowledge - for example, of seeds and plants,
on which the modern agri-business and biotechnology
are based - contamination of the atmosphere
through the emission of various greenhouse
gases, producing and testing chemical and
nuclear weapons in countries of the South,
and the dumping of chemicals and toxic waste
in the Third World. The current system of
neoliberal globalised market economy maintains
and augments the ecological debt through
such mechanisms as the Structural Adjustment
Programmes imposed by the international
financial institutions, foreign investments,
unequal terms of trade, forcing countries
to produce export products in order to redress
financial debts; and through the Trade-related
Intellectual Property Rights within the
World Trade Organisation which protect the
patenting of genetic material for agriculture
and pharmacology by transnational corporations
without compensation for the original guardians
of the biodiversity of the South".
The rhetorical question at the heart of
the debates on ecological debt at the WSF
was: "Can nature be made into a commodity
that can be monopolised?" Vinod Raina
of the Jubilee South said: "No. It
has to be shared. Apart from the moral aspect,
it is not economically correct to have a
monopoly." Using the example of the
food and agricultural sectors, Raina spoke
about ecological imperialism of the North.
He argued that many edible commodities have
their origins in West Asia, India, China
and Latin America, but the trade in these
items was dominated by the North. Thus the
profit from the trade in products grown
in the South went almost entirely to the
North.
The pattern has not really changed. Increasing
production and trade means greater energy
requirements and the use of more natural
resources. Simultaneously, it means greater
external debt since rapid progress can only
be achieved through external financing,
which is usually available through the agencies
of rich countries of the North. Once this
is availed of, the process of paying back
the financial debt begins. It is usually
a never-ending one for poorer countries
of the South. The irony of the so-called
poverty alleviation programmes of the North
is that most of the world's resources (on
which the North is dependant) are located
in the South. However, the North believes
that the South is indebted to it. For instance,
most forests are in territories belonging
to nations of the South. Yet the North insists
that they should be seen as a global resource.
Raina argues: "The same principle
should apply to `geological forests', the
oil pools. The Texan oilfields, produced
from forests of ages ago, should then also
belong `globally' rather than to a particular
country. We should therefore calculate the
debt owed by the North for using the global
commons, the forests of the world as sinks
for their emissions, and for not sharing
their oil resources equally. The same criterion
should be used for all other natural resources,
keeping in mind that 23 per cent of the
world population consumes 80 per cent of
its resources."
Coming in for special criticism was the
United Nation's financing for development
process. It was attacked as disastrous for
development because of the "double
standards" of U.N. member-states. On
the one hand, they speak of development
and poverty reduction, on the other, they
seek financial and political favours from
multinational corporations and financial
institutions whose activities aggravate
the problems of developing countries. It
was argued that rich Northern creditors
should cancel the financial debt they believe
is owed to them by the South. The argument
is that it has been paid for historically.
Hence development financing should not be
looked at as a loan to the South but rather
as the North's way of repaying its debt
to the South.
Suggested as a solution was the doctrine
of Equitable Environmental Space, which
said that the South's financial debt was
already paid and that it was minimal in
comparison with the ecological debt that
the North continued to incur. Furthermore,
the doctrine argues, the debt should be
measured not only in financial terms but
also in terms of its devastating social,
cultural and human impacts. The destruction
of the South that is being witnessed today
is only an extension of a legacy going back
at least five centuries in which nothing
of value was left untouched - spices, plants,
animals, labour, land, minerals, precious
stones and oil.
Professor Joan Martinez-Alier of the University
of Barcelona says: "Money is not the
issue. There is a need to stop the ecological
debt from growing. The South recognises
that the past is important but the future
is more important. The North needs to see
it this way too. The South is actually a
creditor and not a debtor." Martinez-Alier
emphasised the need to look at the relationship
between ecological debt and the exploitation
of the poor. He said: "Resources that
should be free to all - clean air and water
- are being polluted. Take the cases of
Coca-Cola and water use, NALCO [National
Aluminum Corporation] and fluorosis, the
mining of precious stones and minerals and
the effects this has had on poor people.
We all know about Ken Saro Wiwa and Chico
Mendes, but you cannot forget the hundreds
who have died because of the way they have
been forced to labour."
One of the less discussed issues in the
debate is the threat posed by the North
to the ecology, culture and knowledge of
the South. It would not be far off the mark
to say that a large number of people in
Asia still depend on natural resources for
their livelihood in much the same way that
their forefathers did. Centuries of working
systems of knowledge have been evolved as
a means to manage these resources. This,
in turn, has shaped their cultures.
Exploitation by the North over the decades
has eroded these diverse identities to the
extent that the established socio-cultural
and economic processes have broken down.
Social and economic dislocation brought
about by impositions like monoculture, corporate
farming and corporate-controlled biotechnology
and the dislocation of the entire market
system have alienated rural communities
without offering them any alternatives.
Raina said: "The North owes so much
to the South in financial debt that it can
never pay it back. The ethical-moral debt
is so high that we should force the North
to change its policies and attitudes. That
would be the beginning of a payback of the
debt."