top
OUR VIEWPOINT
-
Forests
and Monocultures: Change something so that nothing changes
For centuries, forest and forest-dependent
peoples were able to carry out agricultural and cattle-raising activities
in a way that was compatible with forest ecosystem conservation. What
was later described in pejorative terms by Western experts as "slash-and-burn"
agriculture was in fact a system that had proven to have minor and reversible
impacts on the forest while providing livelihoods to the communities
involved. A system that in today's language would be termed "sustainable".
Everything changed with colonization,
which not only deprived local peoples of their freedom, but also disrupted
their production systems through land appropriation and the introduction
of large-scale monocrops, both accompanied by production systems alien
to local cultures and societies. Tea, coffee, rubber, cocoa, sugar cane,
bananas were some of the new crops, which were not aimed at providing
people with food and other necessary products -as traditional systems
did- but at exploiting local environments and peoples to serve the colonizers'
economic interests.
The situation worsened with
the development of Western science and technology and particularly with
the imposition of the "Green Revolution" and its technological
fix. Modern machinery allowed for the destruction of the forest (by
means of tractors and chainsaws), while the use of so-called "high-yielding"
varieties of seeds opened the door to the application of highly toxic
chemicals (pesticides) and chemical fertilizers which degraded even
further the forest ecosystem and its peoples' health.
Large-scale cattle raising came
in later in the tropics, but also within the framework of Green Revolution
thinking. Different races of cattle and different species of grass were
identified to adapt to tropical and sub-tropical environments, resulting
in widespread deforestation wherever the correct choice of animal and
grass was successful.
The result is dismal, both in
social and environmental terms. The Green Revolution has resulted in
widespread hunger, poverty, agrochemical-related diseases, displacement
and human rights abuses; it has also resulted in soil erosion, salinization,
water pollution and depletion, natural and agricultural biodiversity
loss as well as in global deforestation.
The world -and particularly
the Third World- is still waiting for the UN Food and Agriculture Organization
-the main promoter of the Green Revolution- to come up with a serious
assessment of all the suffering it has caused to millions of human beings
and to the world's ecosystems.
To make matters worse, the mass
production of the same agricultural commodities in scores of countries,
coupled with the tight control over prices by a few transnational companies
and northern governments, has resulted in ever diminishing prices for
those commodities and increasing prices for northern-controlled machinery
and agricultural inputs. To meet external obligations, southern governments
have promoted the expansion of the agricultural frontier, thus increasing
the problems inherent to the Green Revolution model and pushing the
prices further down due to higher levels of production.
In spite of all those problems,
the fact is that the system is working very conveniently to serve the
interests it was intended to serve. The North is increasingly affluent
and so are the local elites in the South. The fact that there are important
numbers of poor in the North and massive poverty in the South does not
seem to matter much in international commerce and trade. What really
matters is that transnational corporations (TNCs) are extremely happy
with the profits they manage to achieve.
The above partly explains why
such a destructive model is still in place. Another part of the explanation
lies in the contradicting interests within different TNCs. In this respect,
it is interesting to note that the official solutions to deforestation
focus more on the implementation of protected areas than on addressing
the real problems. Why? The fact is that some TNCs need biodiversity
conservation (as an input for the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries)
while others need abundant and cheap supplies of commodities from large-scale
monocultures. At the same time, some TNCs are focusing on the appropriation
and commercialization of water resources -and therefore are interested
in the conservation of water sources- while others depend on the commercialization
of products (such as agrochemicals) that result in water pollution.
Protected areas offer a solution to both: conservation of biodiversity
and water inside and widespread environmental destruction outside.
This situation brings to mind
one of the masterpieces of Italian cinema -Il Gattopardo- where one
of the main characters -belonging to the feudal class- explains to his
uncle his reason for embracing the struggle against the Monarchy by
saying: "Let something change so that everything goes on the same
as before."
|
top
|
next page
|
|