Reflections by Comrade Fidel
THE OTHER TRAGEDY
In the meeting I had with the economists
of CIEM (World Economy Research Center) on Tuesday, July 13, I talked to them about an excellent
documentary film by the French director Yann Arthus-Bertrand which includes
statements by the most farsighted and well informed international personalities
about another terrible danger threatening the human species that is cropping up
right before our eyes: the destruction of the environment.
The documentary clearly and categorically
asserts as follows:
“In the great adventure of life on Earth, each species has a role to play; each
species has its place. None of them is
either useless or harmful; they all balance one another. And it is right there when you, Homo
sapiens, the intelligent human, come into history. You are the beneficiary of the fabulous
legacy of 4 billion years provided by the Earth. You are only 200 000 years old, but you have already changed the face of
the world.”
“The invention of agriculture changed our
history. This happened less than 10 000
years ago”.
“Agriculture was our first great
revolution. It produced the first surpluses and gave rise to cities and
civilizations. The memories of the
thousands of years spent looking for food faded away. Having turned grains into the yeast of life, we multiplied their varieties and learned
to adapt them to our soils and climates.
We are like any other species on Earth. Our main daily concern is
feeding ourselves. When soils are less than generous and water becomes scarce
we are capable of making incredible efforts to get enough from the earth in
order to continue living.”
“Half of mankind tills the land; more than
three fourths do it with their bare hands.”
“Pure energy. The energy that comes from the sun has been
captured by millions of plants for more than 100 million years. It is coal; it is gas, but, most of all, it is oil.”
“During the last 60 years, the Earth population has almost
tripled. More than 2 billion people have
moved into the cities.”
“New York, the world’s first megalopolis, is the symbol of the exploitation of the
energy that the Earth provides human ingenuity with: The labor of millions of
immigrants, the energy that comes from coal, the indispensable power of oil. The United States was the first to ride on the phenomenal, revolutionary power of ‘black gold’. In the countryside, machines replaced men. One liter of oil generates as much energy as
100 pairs of hands in 24 hours.”
“They produce enough grain to feed 2
billion people. But much of that grain
is not used to feed persons. Here, as well as in other industrialized
nations, grains are transformed into animal feed
or biofuels.”
“Fertilizers below and plastics above as
far as the eyes can see. The greenhouses of Almería, in Spain, are Europe’s vegetable garden.
Day after day, a
city of vegetables,
all of them the same size, awaits the hundreds of trucks that will take them to
the supermarkets of the continent. The more developed a country is, the more meat its inhabitants
consume. How could the world demand be
satisfied without resorting to concentration camp-like cattle farms? Things
move faster every time. It is like the life cycle of cattle; quite likely they
never catch sight of a prairie.”
“In these food plots, crowded with millions of livestock units, not even a blade of grass grows. A whole fleet of trucks coming from every
part of the country bring in tones of grain, soybean food and granules of proteins
that will be turned into tones of meat. As a result, 100 liters of water are required to produce 1 kilogram of potatoes; 4000 liters are required to produce I kilogram of
rice and 13 000 liters are required to produce 1 kilogram of beef, not to mention the amount of oil burned
during production and transportation.”
“We know that the end of cheap oil is
imminent, but we refuse to believe it.”
“Los Angeles.
In this city that spans more than 100 kilometers, the amount of cars is almost the same as
the amount of inhabitants.”
“Daytime is nothing but a faint image of
the nights that turn the city into a star-spangled sky.”
“Everywhere there are machines digging, extracting and grabbing the pieces of
stars buried deep into the Earth since its creation: The minerals.”
“…Eighty per cent of that mineral wealth
is consumed by 20 per cent of the world population. Before this century comes to an end, excessive mining would have used up
almost all reserves in the planet.”
“Since 1950, the volume of international trade has
twenty folded; 90 per cent of trade is travels by sea; 500 million containers
are transported every year; they are sent to the biggest consumption centers…”
“Since 1950, fishing has five folded –from 18 to 100
million metric tones per year. Thousands
of factory-vessels are leaving the oceans empty. Three fourths of the fishing areas are depleted, terminated or face the risk of becoming
so.”
“Five hundred million human beings live in
the desserts of the world –this is more than the total population of Europe.”
“Israel turned the dessert into arable land.
While these farms now have a drip
irrigation system,
water consumption continues to grow as much as exports.”
“The once powerful Jordan river is now only a stream. Its waters have flown inside fruits and
vegetables crates to supermarkets all over the world.”
“India is facing the risk of becoming the
country that would suffer the most in the coming century out of lack of
water. Mass irrigation has nurtured its
growing population and during the last 50 years 21 million new wells have been
dug.”
“Las Vegas was built in the dessert. Millions of persons live there. Thousands arrive in every month. Its inhabitants are among the world’s biggest
water consumers.”
“Palm Springs is another dessert city with tropical
vegetation and luxurious golf courts.
For how long will this mirage continue to thrive? The Earth can not
withstand it.”
“The Colorado River, which supplies water to these cities, is one of those rivers that no longer
make it to the sea.”
“The lack of water could affect 2 billion
people before 2025.”
“All living matter is interconnected:
water, air, earth, trees.”
“Primitive forests provide a habitat to three
fourths of the biodiversity of the planet –that is, three fourths of the whole life on
Earth.”
“…in only 40 years, the Amazon, the world’s biggest rainforest, has shrunk by 20 per cent to make room
for cattle farms or soybean fields; 95 per cent of this soybean is used to feed
livestock and poultry in Europe and Asia.
Thus, a forest has been turned into meat.”
“More than 2 billion people, almost one third of the world’s
population, still depend on charcoal. In Haiti, one of the poorest countries in the world, charcoal is one of the population’s main
consumer goods.”
“Up in the mountains of Haiti, only 2 per cent of forests remain…”
“Every week, the cities of the world increase their
population by more than one million persons. One out of six human beings lives
now in a precarious,
unhealthy and overpopulated environment, deprived from daily needs such as water, sewage or electricity. Hunger is expanding again. It is affecting almost 1 billion people. All over the planet, the poor are struggling to survive, while we continue digging for the
resources we can no longer live without.”
“Our actions cause the release of huge
amounts of carbon dioxide. Without even realizing
it, we have affected, molecule by molecule, the climate balance on Earth.”
“The ice cover of the Arctic is melting away as a result of global
warming. After 40 years it is now 40 per
cent thinner. This area shrinks year
after year during summer time. It could
disappear by the summer of the year 2030.
Some say it could disappear by the year 2015.”
“By 2050, one fourth of the terrestrial species
could be facing the risk of extinction.”
“…Since Greenland is warming up very quickly, the fresh water of a whole continent is
flowing into the ocean.”
“The ice of Greenland accounts for 20 per cent of all the fresh
water of the planet. If it melts away
the sea level will increase by almost 7 meters.
Our planet’s atmosphere is an indivisible whole. It is an asset we all share.”
“Lakes are becoming part of Greenland’s landscape. The ice cover is melting at a pace not even
the most pessimistic scientists could have predicted 10 years ago. More and more these rivers, nurtured by the glaciers, are merging and emerging to the surface.
It was thought that,
deep into the ice,
water would freeze. Quite on the
contrary, water flows under the ice, pushing the ice cover into the sea, where it breaks up and become an
iceberg.”
“Only in the 20th century, the expansion of warmed up water caused a
20 cm sea level increase.
Everything becomes unstable. Coral reefs are extremely sensitive to the
slightest change in water temperature.
Thirty per cent of them have disappeared. They are an essential link in
the chain of species.”
“If the sea level continues to rise
quicker and quicker,
what will big cities like Tokyo –the most densely populated of the world-
do?”
“…in Siberia as well as in many other parts of the world it is so
cold that the soil is permanently frozen.
This phenomenon is known as permafrost. Beneath that surface lies a climatic time
bomb: methane, a greenhouse effect gas that is twenty
times more powerful than carbon dioxide.
If the permafrost melts, the release of methane could cause the
greenhouse effect to go out of control, the consequences of which no one could predict.”
“Twenty per cent of the world’s population
consumes 80 per cent of the world’s resources.”
“The world invests twelve times more in
military expenses than in the assistance to developing countries.”
“Five thousand persons die everyday after
drinking contaminated water; 1 billion persons do not have access to potable
water.”
“Around 1 billion are afflicted by
hunger.”
“More than 50 per cent of the grain that
is marketed in the world is used for animal feed or biofuels.”
“Species are dying one thousand times
faster than the natural pace.”
“Three fourths of the fishing areas are
depleted, diminished or are dangerously
decreasing.”
“The average temperature during the last
15 years has been the highest ever recorded.”
“The ice cover is now 40 per cent thinner
that it was 40 years ago.”
During the final minutes of the
documentary, director Yann Arthus-Bertrand uses a
milder language to praise some positive actions by countries he was forced to mention
–and I don’t mean to offend or hurt anyone.
His final words went as follows:
“It is time for us to be all together.
What matters now is not what is gone, but what still prevails. There are still half of the
world’s forests, thousands of rivers, lakes and glaciers and thousands of
successful species. Today we know that solutions are right here. We all have the power to change. Then, what are we waiting for?
It is up to us to write what comes next, together.”
The topic that has absorbed most of my
efforts –the imminent risk of a war that would be the last in the prehistory of
our species-, to which I have devoted 9 Reflections
since June 1st, is a problem that becomes more and more serious by
the day.
Obviously, 99.9 per cent of persons
entertain the hope that elemental common sense would prevail.
Unfortunately, based on all the elements
from the reality I perceive, I don’t see there is the slightest chance that this
could be so.
Therefore, I think it would be far more
practical for our peoples to be prepared to cope with that reality. That would be our only hope.
The Iranians have done precisely that, just as we did in October 1962, when we would rather disappear than put
down our banners.
Out of mere chance -and not because of the
merits of the intelligence or the individual history of anyone of us- things
are evolving today just as they were then.
News coming from Iran everyday are not
even one millimeter away from their announced position to uphold their just
rights to peace and development, but they include a new element: they have already
managed to produce 20 kilograms of 20 per cent enriched uranium –an
amount enough to produce a nuclear artifact-, which is making all those who long ago decided
to attack them to go even crazier. I
discussed this with our ambassadors on Friday 16.
Not even Obama could change that decision
–nor has he given so far any indication he would be determined to do that.
Fidel Castro Ruz
July
18, 2010
4:28 p.m.