The Scotsman

Four steps to helping poor in a harsh world

Don’t complain about the rain when across the globe drought is threatenin­g the lives of our fellow man, writes Val Morgan

-

While Scotland can expect its fair share of rain this autumn, many poor countries are in the grip of a life-threatenin­g drought.

In Nicaragua whole villages have been left deserted as wells and rivers have dried up and people’s crops have withered in the ground. Families have been forced to move to nearby towns and cities in search of food and work. The traditiona­l rains they depend on to grow crops like maize, beans and vegetables, which would normally sustain them through the dry season, simply haven’t come.

Climate change is leading to more frequent and severe droughts globally, hitting the world’s poorest people first and hardest, despite them having done the least to cause the problem. That’s why it’s crucial that here in Scotland we do everything we can to help those in need, and reduce our own impact on the climate.

Money from people in Scotland and the Big Lottery Fund is helping more than 1,000 families in Nicaragua and El Salvador survive the current drought crisis. Emergency food supplies are being given to the most vulnerable families, including the elderly.

For the longer term we’re also providing families with new seeds to replace those they’ve lost, installing emergency water storage tanks and deepening wells to capture more water when it does rain, and training communitie­s in water and soil conservati­on.

Work like this is becoming more important all around the world. In Malawi and Zambia we’re working with poor farmers to help them cope with the onset of climate change. Money from SCIAF and the Scottish Government is enabling them to grow a wider variety of crops, conserve water and improve the quality of their soil so they can grow more food.

While this work is vital, wealthy countries like Scotland must do more to reduce the impact they have on the environmen­t.

Today, nearly a hundred people from all over Scotland – from as far afield as the Western Isles, Highlands and Borders – are meeting their MSPS in the scottish parliament to demand action in Scotland on climate change.

During today’s Stop Climate Chaos Scotland event, they will be urging their MSPS to ensure the Scottish Government does more to reduce Scotland’s greenhouse gas emissions. A Climate Plan for Scotland and a new Climate Change Bill are expected in the months ahead. MSPS and the Scottish Government must set out clear plans to ensure Scotland does its fair share to tackle climate change.

As part of the Stop Climate Chaos Scotland coalition, we’re urging MSPS and the Scottish Government to look at four key areas.

In recent years Scotland has made good progress in promoting renewable electricit­y – the same focus must now be applied to generating cleaner heat for our homes and businesses, which currently account for half of the total emissions Scotland generates.

What we eat, how it’s produced and how we dispose of food waste, all have a big influence on the emissions we produce too. We can reduce these emissions by wasting less food, promoting organic farming and putting in place regulation­s to get farmers to use less fertiliser.

We also need to make homes across Scotland much more energy efficient and invest the money that is needed to make this happen.

Finally, we need to look at how we travel. Low carbon transport must be a priority, with significan­t investment put into promoting cycling and walking, alongside a move away from travel by private car.

Scotland, together with other countries around the world, must do everything­it can to address the problems of climate change if we are to prevent a future in which more and more people in poor countries like Nicaragua, El Salvador, Malawi and Zambia are hit by worsening droughts, storms and floods.

As Pope Francis highlighte­d in his most recent encyclical, Laudato Si: On care of our common home, we have a moral duty to care for our environmen­t and its destructio­n hurts the poor the most.

We urgently need to look at our own lives and how we can reduce the impact we have on the planet and its most vulnerable people, and ensure that our elected representa­tives make the policy changes that are needed to create a more positive climate for everyone in the years ahead. Val Morgan is the Media and Communicat­ions Officer for the Scottish Catholic Internatio­nal Aid Fund (SCIAF), www.sciaf.org.uk

 ??  ?? 0 Atradition­al-style Ethiopian weather forecaster stands in a deep well in the district of Borena, hoping that the rains will come
0 Atradition­al-style Ethiopian weather forecaster stands in a deep well in the district of Borena, hoping that the rains will come
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom