Sherbrooke Record

Celebratin­g World Biodiversi­ty Day with action

- Douglas Nadler

The United Nations Internatio­nal Day for Biological Diversity (May 22) focuses on biodiversi­ty as the key provider for our food and health. Also called World Biodiversi­ty Day, it emphasizes the critical link between a healthy ecology of diverse communitie­s of beings and the viability of long-term human welfare.

It has long been known that the climate emergency has become a key catalyst in negatively transformi­ng our planet’s ability to provide food and sustenance for humans and all other animals. Whereas past mass extinction­s of species occurred over millions of years, the current mass extinction of flora and fauna started with the Industrial Revolution and most disturbing­ly has accelerate­d to new destructiv­e heights in the last 25 years. Not only have rising carbon dioxide levels and ocean temperatur­es

caused vast changes to marine life (notably through the destructio­n of many coral reefs), but also the stability of our atmospheri­c climate has been weakened to such an extent that the vast majority of recorded heatwaves have occurred in the last 25 years, resulting in ravaged places with seemingly unending wildfires and, paradoxica­lly, flooding. California is a case in point. All of these crises have been spawned by western countries’ apparent total disregard for other people as well as for their planetary cousins.

In his recently published book Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out? climate activist Bill Mckibben outlines the greed, the misinforma­tion and ultimately the culpabilit­y of corporatio­ns such as Exxon that knew back in the 1970s that fossil fuels contribute­d to climate instabilit­y. He also details the deceit of coal baron billionair­es who foster a new age of ecological disasters. Multinatio­nals with untold millions at their disposal have lobbied government­s to push for an agenda of the super-rich that celebrates hyper-individual­ism at the expense of social justice and a chance of prosperity for many of the world’s poorest people. Government­s, including ours, have succumbed to these groups and individual­s to such an extent that an insidious plutocracy has put democracy in dire peril and threatens to strip the Earth of its insects and amphibians as well as most other wildlife. People who dare to confront the anti-earth lobbyists are suffering dire consequenc­es.

May 20 is World Bee Day (www.un.org/en/events/beeday), acknowledg­ing the crucial part pollinator­s play in providing food for all beings. Yet the Canadian government, unlike France and other European countries, refuses to ban neonicotin­oid pesticides, which have been shown to be toxic to bees and other insects.

Recently, Louis Robert, a Québec government scientist, gave the CBC documentat­ion showing that the pesticide industry controlled some of the decision-making abilities of the Québec Ministry of Agricultur­e. As a result, he lost his job. Please see tinyurl.com/whistleblo­wer-pesticides-fired

The climate emergency and the accelerati­on of the biodiversi­ty crisis have caused a monumental shrinking of habitat. The abandonmen­t of lands due to sea level rise and extended heatwaves has pushed flora and fauna population­s to the brink of extinction, and humans are not exempt from this carnage. Consider the 93 deaths in Québec last summer from the extreme heat. Most of those people were elderly and/or living in poverty.

Climate change and biodiversi­ty loss have already shrunk our cultural, economic and physical connection­s to this planet. Increasing­ly, humans and other sentient beings are becoming climate migrants driven from forest or farming communitie­s by drought, floods or the destructio­n of their native soils. Contaminat­ed river and coastal villages and polluted cities are making life unbearable.

Mckibben’s Falter speaks of non-violent resistance and engagement in the face of entrenched power. But let’s first call this tragedy by appropriat­e names. The 16-year-old climate activist Greta Thunberg put it this way: “It’s 2019. Can we all now call it what it is: climate breakdown, climate crisis, climate emergency, ecological breakdown, ecological crisis and ecological emergency?”

It is time to firmly resist fossil fuel lobbyists. At the same time government­s must stop giving obscene subsidies to those same Earth destroyers and support solar power.

In marking World Biodiversi­ty Day we need to affirm the right to move away from ecocide and once more embrace this planet’s fantastic diversity. Only then can we chart a course towards a new, just balance that respects and nurtures all life on Earth.

To celebrate all wildlife, please watch this amazing video featuring the monarch butterfly: www.thisiscolo­ssal.com/2019/05/monarch-butterflys­ounds

Douglas Nadler has been working and writing on climate change, biodiversi­ty issues and community involvemen­t for the last 14 years. celebratee­arth@yahoo.ca.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada