Millions
of people have fled Central America
to
escape grinding poverty, institutional collapse and untrammeled
violence. But another factor behind the exodus has received less
attention: conflicts over natural resources which have been
intensified by corporate expansion and climate change. Half a million
Hondurans heading north have been apprehended by US and Mexican
officials since October 2016. The motives
for migration are always complex, but in this region, environmental
factors are increasingly important.
In Honduras, water politics is stark: every year during the rainy
season, countless communities are cut off, lives are lost, and roads,
bridges and schools are damaged. It is a cycle of environmental
destruction that exacerbates poverty and drives migration as families
search for food, water and safety.
Vast
swathes of mangrove forests have been destroyed to make way for
industrial shrimp (prawn) farms which have proliferated even inside
protected reserves. Mangroves are essential to healthy, resilient
coastlines. The sturdy trees protect shorelines from storms and
floods, and help prevent erosion by stabilizing sediments with their
intertwined roots. They are key factors in marine biodiversity,
providing food, clean water, shelter and safety for fish and
invertebrates such as crabs, lobsters and prawns. Sales figures
suggest shrimp farms are expanding: $216m of shrimps were exported
last year, a figure expected to rise by up to 20% in 2019.
“The
industry destroys huge mangrove sites promising development, but
actually creates very few jobs – and actually increases poverty by
restricting fishing access for locals,” said Dina Morel, director
of a local marine
conservation organization, known by its acronym Coddeffagolf.
According to Morel, shrimp farms are routinely approved in protected
areas and environmental violations rarely punished as officials often
have vested interests in the profitable industry. Acres and acres of
shrimp farms have been built inland in
ocean
inlets which were once safe havens for tidal waves. But the farms
block the natural flow of water, causing high tides and storm surges
to immerse beach communities instead.
“The
consequences of losing this essential ecosystem are clear,” said
biologist Víctor Bocanegra. “Environmental vulnerability, food
insecurity, poverty and social decomposition, which all leads to
forced migration.”
The
shrimp industry in southern Honduras dates back to the 1970s, but
grew exponentially in the 1990s. As a result, in 2000, seven mangrove
forests covering over 150,000 acres were designated protected
reserves. Despite this, half the region’s
mangroves were destroyed between 2000 and 2010 – largely as a
result of fishing concessions sanctioned before the decree, according
to research by Coddeffagolf.
No
one knows exactly how much of the protected areas remain intact, but
satellite images suggest the situation is critical.
Yet,
investment in climate mitigation and adaption programmes such as
reforestation and flood defences is falling.
Only
0.5% of the central government budget is allocated to environmental
protection this year, down from 1.2% in 2010, according to analysis
by economist Hugo Pino, a former finance minister and central bank
governor.
“There
is more deforestation than reforestation, that’s evident for
everyone to see,” said Nelson Martínez, a grassroots organiser
from Guapinol, a nearby community badly damaged by a tidal surge
three years ago. “Unless the mangroves are saved, Guapinol will
disappear too.” Because of rising sea levels and tidal surges.
Between 1998 and 2017, Honduras was the second country or territory
most affected by extreme weather events such as floods, storms,
droughts and wildfires,
Since
a
2009 coup, a profusion of water-guzzling megaprojects –
including dams, mines, and African palm plantations – has fuelled
social conflicts, state repression and migration.
Pedro
Landa from Eric, a Jesuits human rights research organisation, said
the lessons from Mitch were never learned. “Since the [2009] coup,
the state has been increasingly controlled by mafia politicians with
no interest in guaranteeing water supplies or economic development
for ordinary people, just for themselves.”
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2019/jul/31/honduras-community-coastal-towns-rising-sea-le
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