Environment
Background
Liberalization of investment and the opening of trade through the free trade
agreements signed to date, especially the North American Free Trade Agreement,
have had severe social and environmental impacts on peoples and workers. The
peoples of the Americas aspire to an international economy based on different
principles-an economy that makes sustainability a priority.
The problem with classic trade and investment policy from an environmental
perspective is that it "externalizes" (does not account for) environmental and
social costs, while fostering more intense energy use, over-exploitation of
natural resources, and damage to biodiversity, all of which erode the underlying
basis of the economy and society. Such policies intensify the expropriation
of genetic resources, the destruction of natural ecosystems, environmental degradation
in agricultural and urban areas, environmental deregulation, and the violation
of the individual and collective civil rights of generations present and future.
Environmental degradation has also had a disproportionate effect on people
living in poverty, especially women, as these groups tend to live with the impact
of contaminated habitats and resources in places where there is less political
will to improve conditions. Supporters of these policies view components of
sustainable development as limitations to trade (e.g., food security, the protection
of collective wisdom about and use of biodiversity, the sustainable use of ecosystems
and the existence of fair and equitable ways of sharing the benefits of natural
resources). Governments for the most part have rejected these ideals, yielding
instead to international market pressures.
Environmental concerns cut across all topics. Therefore the points set out
below are taken up more concretely or complemented in other chapters, such as
those on energy and intellectual property rights.
Guiding Principles
- The precedence of environmental accords signed by the governments of the
Americas should be established in the negotiations around, and agreements
on, investment and trade. Environment and sustainability should not be limited
to a single area of economic-financial accords, but rather be addressed as
an overarching dimension and perspective throughout any such agreements.
- Quality of development should be a key priority. Governments should establish
social and environmental limits to growth on the basis of environmental sustainability
and social equity.
- International trade agreements and nation states should establish plans
to gradually internalize environmental and social costs arising from unsustainable
production and consumption. If this leads to higher prices, governments should
conduct awareness-raising campaigns to encourage high-income consumers to
purchase goods produced in a sustainable way.
- The environmental costs of transition to trade and investment practices
that are fair and environmentally sustainable should be dealt with equitably,
acknowledging that the parties to an agreement may have different responsibilities
for achieving common goals.
- Governments should recognize that there is an existing ecological debt among
nations. This has resulted from richer nations occupying an "exaggerated environmental
space," meaning that they utilize and exploit a share of the world's natural
resources that is disproportionate to their population and territory.
- Governments should establish strict timelines to end international trading
of products that harm the environment. During the transition period, tariffs
should be imposed to discourage trade in such products and prevent their use.
- Environmental regulations should be governed by the precautionary principle
(i.e., the principle that, when in doubt, we should take the most environmentally
cautious course of action), rather than risk assessment (which applies economic
cost-benefit analysis to environmental resources).
- Trade should be accompanied by incentives for the conservation of soil and
natural resources and to reduce and move towrds the elimination of chemicals
that damage the environment. It should encourage sustainable development and
production close to the place/site of consumption.
- Social and ecological dumping should be rejected.
- Trade liberalization must not hinder countries' capacity to channel foreign
investment toward those sectors in which sustainable development can be strengthened.
- Trade and investment liberalization must not hinder the regulation and control
of companies and investors to ensure compliance with a country's sustainable
development objectives.
- Foreign companies and investors should be held to the highest environmental
standards, and obliged to share technologies that preserve the environment
and create jobs.
- Countries should maintain their sovereignty over the right to restrict investment
that aggravates social or environmental problems and their disproportionate
impact on the most vulnerable sectors of society, such as women and indigenous
peoples.
Specific Objectives
Sustainable energy development is predicated on respect for the right of communities,
energy savings, and the fight against excessive energy consumption. Energy sources
should be renewable, clean and low-impact, and equitable, democratic access
to them must be ensured. Energy integration should be a process that allows
for the growth of potential and for cooperation among different countries, under
equitable conditions that reflect each nation's economic, social and cultural
characteristics.
Therefore, the following are proposed:
- Redirect investment, loans and subsidies toward clean-energy projects and
energy efficiency based on equity of access and national priorities, including
sustainable transport; giving precedence to public over private, and democratic
access to energy for residential, craft, business and industrial use.
- Eliminate direct and indirect subsidies for fossil-fuel energy.
- Develop a legislative and institutional base for the promotion of sustainable
energy production. This entails support for clean energy research and dissemination
capacity.
- Declare a moratorium on coal, natural gas and oil exploration in new areas
as part of the transition to clean, renewable and low-environmental-impact
energy sources.
- Respect the right of communities in areas affected by energy production,
especially indigenous communities.
- Enforce the use of environmental impact studies for all energy-related projects.
Mining
Mining in the Americas has involved many decades of heavy metal pollution and
the destruction of land and sea habitats, as well as threats to the health and
safety of mine workers and their families, who often live near hazardous work-sites
and suffer effects to their physical and reproductive health due to contact
with such contamination. These conditions are present throughout the hemisphere
and reflect the inability of the public sector to control effectively the environmental
impact of this activity. The accelerated expansion of mining carried out by
international companies has not been accompanied by stronger controls, regulations
or safeguards for human or environmental health. Rather, it has generated a
demand for greater use of resources such as water and energy.
Therefore, the governments of the Americas must ensure the following:
- The development of mining must be approved in advance by the communities
that will be affected, especially when it would have an impact on other production
or soil use. The land rights of indigenous communities must be respected.
- Implement and enforce the highest health and safety standards for workers
and environmental protection as conditions for mining development.
- Declare a moratorium on mining exploration and development in ecologically
and culturally significant areas.
- Establish priorities and incentives in mining aimed at reducing consumption
and increasing the efficiency of mineral processing.
- Revisit the recommendations presented by non-governmental groups at the
Sustainable Development Summit held in Santa Cruz in December 1996.
Biodiversity and Intellectual Property
Conservation of biodiversity has been the responsibility of thousands of communities
which use and cultivate resources for subsistence rather than for profit. The
international exchange of the resources of biodiversity has historically been
of benefit to many peoples, although benefits have been distributed less equitably
over the last decades. Conservation and development of genetic resources in
"scientific" centres, combined with institutionalized intellectual property
systems, has caused looting and monopolization of genetic resources.
The hemisphere of the Americas currently faces enormous threats to its biodiversity
from international trade liberalization treaties and the actions of multinational
corporations. This creates a tremendous challenge to citizens, leading to the
following demands (for a broader discussion of proposals on intellectual property,
see Chapter 11):
- Reject intellectual property claims over life-forms and associated knowledge.
- Recognize and protect collective rights of local communities in the conservation
and raising of species within biodiversity. This requires collective rights
to community property (which in many communities is the historic knowledge
transmitted by women) to take precedence over the provisions of any trade
treaty or intellectual property instrument.
- Based on ILO Convention 169, ensure the inalienable right of peoples and
"traditional black and indigenous communities" to full autonomy in decisions
over their traditional habitats and the biodiversity associated with them,
and the use and management of same, according to their cultural systems and
traditional rights.
- Ensure the precedence of the Biological Diversity Convention over trade
agreements.
- Guarantee free circulation of knowledge and access to genetic resources
for research in the service of the needs of local communities and residents,
as well as to public research centres.
- Recognize and compensate communities that create and conserve biodiversity
for the historical ecological debt owed them because of profits made by others
through genetic resources and associated knowledge. Trade and investment accords
must incorporate international cooperation for the preservation of biodiversity.
- Promote joint accords between governments and civil society over a country's
right to discover, conserve and have primary use and benefit of the biological
and genetic properties of plants and animals in the region where they are
found.
Labour