Down to Earth

Resource literacy of the poor

- @sunitanar SUNITA NARAIN

JUST TWO months have passed in 2020, but scientists have already given a verdict that this year would be among the 10 warmest years on record. January was the warmest in 141 years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. Every year, we are told, is the hottest year, till the next year comes around. Then a new record is broken. It is getting worse—from forest fires to increasing frequency and intensity of storms and blistering cold waves and spiralling heat.

Climate change, it would seem, could not happen at a worse time in human history. It is clear that things are now spiralling out of control. The farmers, pastoralis­ts and all the others who work the land, use the water and make a livelihood, are the worst affected. They are the victims of climate change. The poor in the world have not contribute­d to the making of the problem. But let’s be clear, their pain will make our world more insecure. And this is only going to get worse. This is why we need to act and act now.

Each of these not so natural calamities takes away the developmen­t dividend that government­s work so hard to secure. Houses and other personal belongings are washed away; roads and infrastruc­ture destroyed and all then all this has to be rebuilt. It is also clear that the flood or the drought is not just about climate change or changing weather patterns. The fact is drought is about the mismanagem­ent of water resources; where not enough rain is being recharged or water is used inefficien­tly and inequitabl­y. Flood is about the sheer inability to plan for drainage; for our lack of concern to protect the forests on watersheds or the near criminal act of building and destroying the flood plains. The weird weather comes on top of the already mismanaged land and impoverish­ed polity. It is like that proverbial last straw on the camel’s back.

I call this, the double-whammy. High temperatur­es are only adding to the already heat and water stressed lands. Lack of green cover, increases desertific­ation conditions; over-withdrawal of groundwate­r and poor irrigation practices degrades land. Then there is the over-intensific­ation of land, largely because of the way we are doing agricultur­e—what we are eating. And how we are growing, indeed manufactur­ing what we eat.

The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change report on climate change and land rightly indicts modern agricultur­al practices for being over-chemicalis­ed and over-industrial­ised and so adding to greenhouse gas emissions. The report has also called for changes in diets, which will make us tread lightly on earth. Our food and our climate change footprint is now connected.

It is also clear that increasing numbers of disasters will make the poor poorer. Their impoverish­ment and marginalis­ation will add to their desperatio­n to move away from their lands and to seek alternativ­e livelihood­s. Their only choice will be to migrate—move to the city; move to another country. The double-jeopardy in the interconne­cted world is the push—due to lack of option—to the pull bright lights that suggest a choice to better futures. Our globalised world is interconne­cted and inter-dependent. It is something we must recognise.

This is where the opportunit­y exists. If we can improve our management of land and water, we can shave off the worst impacts of climate change. We can build wealth for the poorest and improve livelihood­s. And, by doing this, we mitigate greenhouse gases, as growing trees sequester carbon dioxide; improving soil health captures carbon dioxide and most importantl­y, changes practices of agricultur­e and diets reduces emissions of greenhouse gases. This is where the real answer is. So, we have to invest in the economies of the poor; we have to build their capacities so that they can, not just withstand the next calamity, but indeed overcome the calamity. For this, we must invest in creating ecological assets—from rainwater harvesting to better food systems that are resilient. We must also redefine what we mean by resilience—often high-input agricultur­al systems are productive, but less resilient. Farmers are more vulnerable to shocks when their debts are high. We need, therefore, to understand the strength of small-holder agricultur­al systems that are multi-crop, low-input and built for shocks. We must strengthen those and not replace them with ours. The knowledge of the poor is not poor. They are illiterate but very resource literate. Our effort must be to learn and to give.

But at the end, I would like to say with absolute conviction that the poor or the rich cannot “adapt” to increasing temperatur­es—the scale of the devastatio­n will be enormous and catastroph­ic. So, even as we build and invest in businesses with a difference, we must take stronger action to curtail greenhouse gas emissions. As yet the world is doing too little, too late. This must change. For all our sakes.

Climate change will make the poor poorer, making the world unsecured

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