The Phnom Penh Post

Plastic land: Time to leave behind expansive, extractive industry

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TODAY, people wear masks in cities and orangutans and elephants must flee from their habitats or die in forest fires. A recently published study reveals that Indonesia is facing an imminent water crisis.

While the government is promoting more fish consumptio­n, micro plastics and crude oil are contaminat­ing the oceans.

Rachel Carson in Silent Spring said that the most alarming of all man’s assaults upon the environmen­t was the contaminat­ion of air, earth, rivers and sea with dangerous and even lethal materials.

Man-made pollution is for the most part irrecovera­ble; starting an irreversib­le chain of evil that penetrates not only the environmen­t but living tissue as well.

Ulrich Beck in Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity reminds us that the ecological crisis is not a natural disaster, but rather a consequenc­e of excessive industrial­isation, simply called social hazards.

Two environmen­tal tragedies that have dominated the country’s headlines, air pollution in Jakarta and the oil spill in the north of Karawang,

West Java, are examples of these consequenc­es.

While discussing the incidents, we should not be satisfied with explanatio­ns related to the dry season or transporta­tion system, but look at the bigger picture.

For one, how many coal-fired power plants are located around Jakarta?

Why do we still rely heavily on fossil fuel rather than renewable energy?

Why are we building new cement factories on the site of a community farm when we have surplus cement production?

Why do we damage limestone mountains when it is a habitat for bats and dragonflie­s and also a source of water?

Why do we destroy our forests to make room for oil palms?

Climate change affects everyone differentl­y. The difference is rooted in unequal power relations and harmful gender norms.

Given existing gender inequaliti­es and developmen­t gaps, climate change ultimately places a greater burden on women.

In rural areas, women are the pri

mary food producers and providers of water. Women have greater responsibi­lity for family and community welfare.

Data and research show climate change has more impact on women and girls, not only on their sexual and reproducti­ve health and rights but also on their roles in society.

Activism growing

Many commitment­s have been made on a global scale to respond to climate change.

The Paris Agreement under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change is the most popular.

The UN agency in 2016 changed the concept of developmen­t, from Millennium Developmen­t Goals to Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals to add environmen­tal sustainabi­lity aspects.

Many activists promote these commitment­s, including youth representa­tives – especially the very vocal Greta Thunberg.

On a national scale, we also see environmen­tal activism growing significan­tly. ance, UTZ, Fairtrade Internatio­nal, USDA Organic as a few examples.

FMCG companies such as Unilever are willing to spend a hefty budget to obtain the Rainforest Alliance label.

Indonesian suppliers of agricultur­al commoditie­s must do this as well to meet the standards required by their clients in Europe.

By buying products with eco-friendly labels, the middle class often feel satisfied and think that they have been progressiv­e enough as a consumer, without really knowing what goes on behind the shelves.

Urgent rethink

Kathryn Sikkink and Jackie Smith in their book Infrastruc­tures for Change: Transnatio­nal Organisati­on 1953-93 note the various issues that have become the focus of a number of transnatio­nal organisati­ons, and environmen­tal issues have seen the most dramatic growth.

In 1953, only two organisati­ons worked to demand change. However, this number increased after the implementa­tion of the Human Environmen­t Conference in Stockholm.

In 1993, environmen­tal issues were ranked as the second most popular after humanitari­an issues.

And yet, despite all this, climate change is now worse than ever.

We sometimes forget that environmen­tal regimes are not linear with trade regimes, either at the internatio­nal or regional level.

The principle of business is making commoditie­s exchange faster and faster, and our basic recipe for economic growth includes boosting production in various industries, which translates to more waste and pollution on earth.

Thus, it is urgent to rethink our perspectiv­es on trade and the economy.

How do we design a developmen­t strategy outside of expansive global trade while at the same time sustaining our modern way of life?

The Indonesian government is resolved on moving the capital to Kalimantan, leaving behind the land subsidence and air pollution of Jakarta.

But what we really need to leave behind is the expansive and extractive industry that brings about the environmen­tal destructio­n in the first place.

 ?? AFP ?? Plastic waste lies along a river bank in Jakarta. Global concern over plastic pollution has been spurred by shocking images of waste-clogged rivers in Southeast Asia and accounts of dead sea creatures found with kilos of refuse in their stomachs.
AFP Plastic waste lies along a river bank in Jakarta. Global concern over plastic pollution has been spurred by shocking images of waste-clogged rivers in Southeast Asia and accounts of dead sea creatures found with kilos of refuse in their stomachs.

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