The Guardian (USA)

'A lot at stake': indigenous and minorities sidelined on climate change fight

- Emily Holden in Washington

Bernadette Demientief­f, a representa­tive for the indigenous Gwich’in nation, finds Washington DC anxietyind­ucing, especially compared to the wide open spaces and tall mountains of Alaska.

She makes frequent trips to the US capital to fight oil drilling in what she considers sacred caribou calving grounds in the Arctic. But Demientief­f is an outsider in the nation’s capital, where her concerns have fallen on deaf ears with the Trump administra­tion. She’s also a bit of an outsider to the national environmen­tal movement, too.

“I’m not an activist. I’m not an environmen­talist. I don’t like to be branded because I care about our land and our animals,” she said. She sees herself as a human rights advocate. And she doesn’t look like or have the same life experience­s as many activists.

“I feel that all of our voices are important, but it’s just, it’s personal for us. This is not a job for us. There’s just a lot at stake and it’s hard to explain to somebody that lives in New York or somebody that lives in DC.”

Indigenous people and communitie­s of color have historical­ly seen the worst environmen­tal degradatio­n and biggest health risks from pollution, yet campaigns to protect the environmen­t and fight climate change have often sidelined them. The mainstream movement has a well-documented diversity problem that is not quickly improving.

As some Democrats propose a radical Green New Deal centered around justice and equity, backstage they’re facing a reckoning over the environmen­tal movement’s homogeneit­y.

According to the 2014 Green 2.0 report, people of color were 36% of the US population, but they made up no more than about 12% of environmen­t organizati­ons studied. A 2019 update to the report found that diversity actually got worse over the past few years.

Some groups are taking steps to improve, but progress has not been even.

One philanthro­py fund – the Solutions Project – announced last week that it will direct almost all of its grants to organizati­ons run by leaders of color and women, such as Scope, or Strategic Concepts in Organizing and Policy Education, in South Los Angeles. The group aims to put low-income communitie­s of color, where highways and oil wells converge, at the forefront of green jobs growth.

“These women are working on the front lines of this issue because they are the ones who are going to be most greatly affected by it,” actor and Solutions Project board member Don Cheadle said. “They are actually making solutions for themselves when they are empowered to do so.”

Research repeatedly shows communitie­s of color are more likely to be subjected to pollution. The parts of the country with dangerous, cancerrela­ted air pollution have lower percentage­s of white residents, according to an analysis by the Intercept.

At the same time, most environmen­t and climate change funding goes to groups with white leaders. Research has shown 95% of the $60bn in annual foundation funding for all causes goes to organizati­ons led by white people and 70 to 80% goes to those led by men, the Solutions Project notes.

Mustafa Santiago Ali, who coor

dinated environmen­tal justice efforts under the Obama administra­tion’s Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA), said “there’s no way to sugarcoat” the scope of the problem.

“I don’t know how you go backwards, especially in the time that we’re living in when you definitely need folks coming together,” Ali said.

Ali was recently named vice-president for environmen­tal justice at the National Wildlife Federation (NWF), a decades-old conservati­on group.

“If an organizati­on like NWF can make the investment at the senior level, there’s no reason why others can’t be doing the same thing,” he said.

Julian Brave NoiseCat, a policy analyst for 350.org and a member of the Canim Lake Band Tsq’escen who writes for the Guardian, said the anti-fossil fuels group is “undergoing a transforma­tion to become a multiracia­l organizati­on”.

NoiseCat believes the environmen­tal movement historical­ly has been “premised upon empire and colonizati­on and racial exclusion”. Founding fathers of environmen­talism, like Teddy Roosevelt and John Muir, he said, “had essentiall­y racist views”, with the creation of national parks depending on the removal of indigenous people.

“More recently the sort of core constituen­cies of the environmen­tal movement have primarily been white, liberal, middle-class suburbanit­es,” he said.

The representa­tion problem stretches beyond environmen­tal advocacy and into green energy. A recent survey of 173 solar organizati­ons and businesses in the Washington area found that just three were minority or woman-owned.

That disparity stems in part from banks’ legacy of withholdin­g credit from people of color, said Jigar Shah, co-founder of Generate Capital and the former CEO of SunEdison.

“There wasn’t a lot of attention paid to whether or not we were including women or whether or not we were marketing to the right groups,” he said.

Things are beginning to change. Now that the solar sector’s more stable, “you’re seeing a tremendous amount of focus on how we serve the entire market, not just the folks who raise their hand initially. You’re seeing a lot of self-reflection,” Shah said.

The mainstream movement has a welldocume­nted diversity problem that is not quickly improving

 ??  ?? Native Americans and indigenous rights activists march and hold up signs in protest during a NativeNati­ons March in Denver, Colorado on 10 March 2017. Photograph: Jason Connolly/AFP/Getty Images
Native Americans and indigenous rights activists march and hold up signs in protest during a NativeNati­ons March in Denver, Colorado on 10 March 2017. Photograph: Jason Connolly/AFP/Getty Images

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