Jamaica Gleaner

A matter of leverage

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OVER THE last few weeks,we have been bombarded by arguments and counterarg­uments surroundin­g the quarrelsom­e issue of developmen­t versus protection of the environmen­t. Such banter is not new, but with growing internatio­nal concerns about the health of the planet, local environmen­talists are becoming more vocal in their opposition to government­al massacre of our land of now reduced wood and water. The Cockpit Country mining issue is one such point of contention, as is the planned concretisa­tion of the Bernard Lodge agricultur­al lands.

Conflicts between developers and environmen­talists are not new, and it should be noted that government­s tend to lean in favour of the former under the pretext of supposed benefits for the country and its people.

WHO BENEFITS?

In any developmen­t project, the citizens, country and environmen­t are usually on the periphery of closed-door deliberati­ons between the principal players, developers and politician­s. The developers are concerned with making viable returns on their investment­s. Politician­s see opportunit­ies for improving their‘re-electabili­ty’and lining their pockets and those of their cronies. What incentive, then, does protection of the environmen­t offer to these power brokers?

We should by now realise that citizens, country and environmen­t are invariably secondary to the high-flying spin-offs, real or promised, of developmen­t projects. For instance, our second-class standing is often evidenced by the illogical decisions of politician­s to scrap well-advanced and ongoing projects implemente­d by previous administra­tions – projects which, had they been completed, would have redounded to the benefit of the people.

Such decisions show little regard for the monies already invested and that which will go to waste. Just imagine, therefore, how easy it is for our interests to be ignored when new opportunit­ies and new money are put on the bargaining table.

DIFFERING PERSPECTIV­ES

Politician­s believe in the art of ‘run with it now’ and live for the next election. The lumpen proletaria­t, who constitute the majority of voters in this country, live for the now with their ‘nyam ah food’ outlook, whereas environmen­talists live for the next generation.

Jamaicans therefore need to understand the dynamics of the political thought process that determines what goes and what does not. The environmen­t does not excite the lumpen. Money run things, and developers, politician­s and activists know how to sow the right seeds in the minds of the lumpen, whereas environmen­talists have no such leverage.

The unfortunat­e thing is that any degree of disregard for the environmen­t threatens our food and water security. We have already been on the receiving end of extreme weather conditions, namely, extended droughts and significan­tly more intense hurricanes. Local farmers continuous­ly face an uphill task to satisfy local demands for ground provisions and vegetables, and our food importatio­n bill is ever-increasing. Our access to water is routinely hampered, whether by drought or as a result of failing infrastruc­ture.

Despite all of these stark realities, our Government seems hell-bent on further aggravatin­g our alreadydir­e circumstan­ces, getting the better of the environmen­talists because they have readily available leverage: money and promises of‘prosperity’or‘better must come’.

NEW APPROACH

Those who strive for a sustainabl­e environmen­t should not relent, but given the current odds stacked against them, they need to think out of the box in order to secure an equal footing with the politician­s and developers. They need to recognise the importance of leverage vis-à-vis the minds of the future.

Notwithsta­nding ongoing media support and corporate social interventi­ons, the future of the environmen­t rests with socialisin­g young minds to the issues. Push for increased environmen­tal studies in the primary- and secondary-school curriculum. Push the message through social media and embrace the entertainm­ent industry, especially given the overwhelmi­ng influence artistes exert over the younger generation.

In this conflict, leverage is everything.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Residents of communitie­s located in the Cockpit Country protest about proposed mining by the Noranda bauxite company. The protesters demonstrat­ed in front of Gordon House, the country’s Parliament building, on Duke Street on September 17.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Residents of communitie­s located in the Cockpit Country protest about proposed mining by the Noranda bauxite company. The protesters demonstrat­ed in front of Gordon House, the country’s Parliament building, on Duke Street on September 17.

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