Parts
of northern and inland New South Wales, along with southern
Queensland, have been in drought since 2016, severely depleting river
and dam levels.
Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology (BOM)
says the drought is being driven, in part, by warmer sea-surface
temperatures impacting rainfall patterns. Air temperatures have also
warmed over the past century, increasing the ferocity of droughts and
fires. Dubbed “day zero” by locals in New South Wales, the
government has provided estimates of an end-date to water supplies in
the worst-case scenarios. Some
of the region’s biggest towns, which include Dubbo, with 40,000
people, Armidale, 25,000, and Tamworth, 62,000, are forecast to run
out of drinking water mid-to-late next year, according to the latest
government projections. Sydney’s biggest dam, Warragamba, has
dropped to 50%, after almost being at capacity less than three years
ago.
But
links between climate change and extreme weather events have become a
political football in Australia. The conservative government has
argued stronger environmental action would cripple its economy,
pitting itself against its Pacific island neighbours which are
particularly susceptible to warmer temperatures and rising seas
Humanity
is suffering ever more extreme weather events all over the world.
Climate change is already causing enormous damage and hundreds of
millions of poor people are enduring the consequences. The people
most at risk in the future are those who are already suffering today
due to existing vulnerabilities and inequities.
We
are facing devastating consequences for global health and
humanitarian needs. Poor and marginalised communities already suffer
the worst consequences of climate change, extreme weather events and
the spread of diseases, of drought, desertification, and mass
displacement and are at greatest risk of future harm. For every
disaster making the headlines, they create related disasters and
attendant health crises including water-borne diseases like cholera
as well as diseases spread by growing numbers of mosquitoes and
ticks, such as malaria, dengue fever, and Lyme disease. Malaria
already kills more than 400,000 people a year, mostly children under
the age of five and overwhelmingly in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2012,
2014, and 2015, MSF teams observed significant spikes in malaria
cases in several sub-Saharan countries compared to long-term
averages. The weight of evidence suggests that the incidence and
prevalence of malaria will increase in Africa and beyond due to
climate change.Severe dengue affects most Latin American and Asian
countries and is a leading cause of hospitalisation and death among
children and adults in these regions, according to the WHO.
Worldwide, the incidence of dengue has increased 30-fold over the
last half century, with approximately 390 million infections in 2010,
partly due to warming temperatures and the associated spread of the
mosquito species that carry and spread the disease. Honduras,
considered a climate change hotspot, is battling its worst outbreak
of dengue fever in 50 years following a prolonged rainy season.
Overuse
and drought have left people without sufficient water for drinking,
cooking, or washing, let alone to water their crops to ensure future
yields. Children here face a high risk of malnutrition, which in turn
can stunt their development and weaken their immune systems. This
makes them more susceptible to other deadly diseases like malaria.
It’s estimated that 422 million people in 30 countries are
undernourished because of climate-related problems producing food.
Climate
change and environmental degradation could further contribute to
record levels of migration and forced displacement. Although
estimates vary widely, the most frequently cited projection is that
some 200 million climate migrants will be uprooted by 2050 if current
trends prevail. We know that most displaced people seek alternatives
within their home country before making the wrenching decision to
cross international borders. Many are moving to urban centres to seek
employment and secure livelihoods, only to find themselves living in
highly polluted neighbourhoods and working in hazardous conditions.
In Bangladesh Dhaka’s Kamrangirchar slum, many of these residents
were forced to move to the city after flooding contaminated their
farmland with saltwater.
It
is our understanding of the climate crisis that it is the economic
structure of capitalism which is the cause. The solution is to make
necessary changes by restructuring capitalism and its priorities.
Everyday it becomes obvious that the political leaders of the world
are unwilling to follow what current science indicates we must do to
avoid damaging the environment and climate change. It’s clear that
we can't consider the issue of climate change without considering
changing the system Capitalist production and the consumerist
consumption is bringing the planet to the point of no return.
Capitalism is the worst enemy of humanity. Capitalism — and I’m
speaking about irrational development — policies of unlimited
industrialisation are what destroys the environment. And that
irrational industrialisation is capitalism. It’s plundering natural
resources. We have to resolve environmental problems that Earth
faces today. And this means ending capitalism.
The
profit motive is incompatible with safeguarding the world’s
resources. So long as it is profitable, environmental destruction is
perfectly ’logical’ under capitalism. Humanity’s problem is not
scarcity of resources but the waste of resources. There is the
removal of indigenous people and their sustainable ways of life;
hijacking of fertile land for cash cropping and clearance of forest
for cattle ranching; and the impoverishment by international debt so
to extract resources for short term gain. Elsewhere
industrialisation is out of control, producing a crisis in the
accumulation of toxic waste and chemical pollution. Although the
ecology movement has been invaluable in highlighting and researching
many of the problems too often those climate activists are
integrated into and work within confines of the capitalist system.
The Socialist Party advances the view that socialist sustainable
production and living in harmony with nature are a real alternative
to the exploitative system.
The
environment impinges on all aspects of life in many areas of the
world where women are the main environmental managers. Women are
therefore not only victims of the environmental crisis but are the
major agents of rehabilitation. It is not surprising therefore that
women have taken a prominent part in the environmentalist movement.
The more empowered women become the more success will be had.
Socialism will provide the opportunity for a society planned for the
majority rather than for profit, a society where there will be of
free national self-interest, and where men and women’s strengths in
environmental issues will be able to flourish. By taking
environmental issues seriously we can realistically plan to build a
society in tune with land and nature.
No comments:
Post a Comment