October  24, 2009 was the International Day of Climate Action and I was invited by the  Lakehead University Student Union Sustainability Commissioner, Alex Boulet, to  participate in a rally at Waverly   Park  in Thunder Bay 
The  United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will take place  in Copenhagen ,  Denmark 
The  UNFCCC was started in 1990 by the United Nations. (UN) The convention sets out  the overall framework for intergovernmental efforts to deal with climate change.  It acknowledges that “the climate system is a global resource whose stability  can be affected by industrial and other emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse  gases.”  The goals of the convention are  “to stabilize the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere in such a way as  to give ecosystems the opportunity to adapt naturally.”
As of  March 2009, scientists say that we are at 387ppm of CO2 in the atmosphere. The  safe upper limit for humanity is 350ppm.
I gave  the following speech at Waverly   Park  in Thunder Bay 
I’m  John Cutfeet and I work for the Wildlands  League as the Bilingual Mining Coordinator, acting as a resource for the far  north communities dealing with mining and exploration issues. I work out of the  far north office of the Wildlands League at Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug, (KI)  which is my home community. I provide communities with the best available  information so they can make the best informed decisions. Kitchenuhmaykoosib  Inninuwug is located six hundred kilometers in the boreal forest, north of  Thunder Bay 
KI has  faced challenges from plans for unbridled development, which saw community  leadership incarcerated for preventing an exploration company, who claimed that  they needed to drill in an environmentally sensitive area so they can mine  platinum-group metals. They wanted to develop new fuel cell technology for  catalytic convertors to lower emissions from vehicles. It was to be done at the  expense of the communities who rely on the lakes, rivers and the ecosystem that  allows life to flourish and maintains the well-being of nature and  humanity
The  Elders of Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug say that Big Trout Lake, where we are  located, has springs and streams flowing in and out, connecting with other  systems along the way, each with its own unique features within the  ecosystem.
When we  were talking about protecting entire water basins, including rivers, one of the  elders pointed out that we had to protect the marshes which she described as the  lungs of  the earth.  If we didn’t, we would be allowing the air  that we breathe to be destroyed. This elder, had a limited english vocabulary  and very little formal education. Yet, she understood how the ecosystem  interacted to sustain life on earth that provides life to everything in  it.
Sustainability is a term that is applied to almost every facet of life  including over various time periods and it can be on a local and global scale.  Sustainability is often referred to by the environmental, social, economic  dimensions known as the “three pillars.” 
Science  tells us that we, as human beings are living beyond “the carrying capacity of  supporting eco-systems,” and that we are living unsustainably. Human  sustainability implies the integration of economic, social and environmental  spheres to “meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of  the future generations to meet their own needs.”
It is  understood that societies and economies rely on the natural world. One  environmentalist put it this way, “The economy is, in the first instance, a  sub-system of human society, which is itself, in the second instance, a  subsystem of the totality of life on earth.” He continues, “And no subsystem can  expand beyond the capacity of the total system of which it is part.”
Are we  beyond the point of the supporting capacity of our ecosystems?
In April  of 2009, I attended the Indigenous Peoples Global Summit on Climate Change in  Anchorage , Alaska Russia Copenhagen 
Unfortunately, we could not come to a unanimous declaration to be carried  to Copenhagen 
a)  We call for the phase out of fossil fuel development and a moratorium on new  fossil fuel developments on or near Indigenous lands.
b)  We call for a process that works towards the eventual phase out of fossil fuels,  without infringing on the right to development of Indigenous Nations.
H.E.  Miguel d’Escoto Brockman, President of the United Nations General Assembly to  Indigenous Peoples stated that, “Indigenous Peoples are amongst those who  contributed least to the climate change crisis because of their traditional  livelihoods and sustainable lifestyles. It is a bitter irony, however, that they  are suffering the worst impacts of climate change.” He continued, “The  Indigenous Peoples of the Arctic  witnessed the  unprecedented thawing of permafrost and the melting of glaciers 30 years ago,  even before the world was aware of climate change.”
Ironically, it was the Arctic  who held  out on the moratorium language as they had been fighting for 30 years to get  involved in oil and gas exploration in their territory. They were finally  getting that opportunity to reap the benefits from their lands as others had  been doing before their very eyes. 
Indigenous Peoples throughout the world have watched resources being  extracted from their territories creating great wealth to others while we live  on islands of poverty and development happening all around us in an  unsustainable manner.
President  Miguel Brockman expressed it more eloquently:
“Now is  not the time to pull any punches, we must call a spade a spade. The Third World  cannot afford to subsidize the First World anymore through unjust debt  repayments – where developed countries portray themselves as charitable donors  coming to the financial rescue and relief of the ‘pitiable beggars’ which is how  they portray developing countries.” 
The Earth  Charter goes beyond defining sustainability and seeks to establish the values  and direction in this manner: “We must join together to bring forth a  sustainable global society founded on respect of nature, universal human rights,  economic justice and a culture of peace.
KI calls  it ‘the right to exist’ in a safe and secure environment and to benefit from the  land and resources like everyone else in the world. This needs to happen. Not  only does it need to happen, but it must happen in an environmentally and  sustainable manner. Not because it is the right thing to do but because justice  demands it!
P.S.  
In my  entry on the First Peoples of Asubpeeschoseewagong, (Grassy Narrows) I reported  that Roberta Keesic was charged with building 2 cabins for shelter in her  traditional territory without a permit and refusing a stop-work order and that  her case was coming up on October 20, 2009. Her charges were dropped on October  16th, 4 days before she was to go to court. 
 
 
 
 
 
Yes, we have overshot the carrying capacity of the planet. By drawing down ecological capital, instead living off the returns of that capital, short term growth can be accomplished at the cost of reducing future carrying capacity, with generally disastrous results.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.selfdestructivebastards.com/2009/11/carrying-capacity.html