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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2><FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3>CAMPAIGNS:
Climate Justice Initiative<BR><BR>Environmental Justice Appeal to President Bush
on Climate Change<BR><BR>This letter, signed by leaders of the environmental
justice movement in the<BR>U.S. and around the world, marks a significant
broadening of the<BR>constituency involved in the climate change issue. We
circulated it as part<BR>of the CorpWatch Climate Justice
Initiative.<BR><BR>April 19, 2001<BR><BR>George W. Bush President of the United
States of America The White House<BR>1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, DC
20500 U.S.A.<BR><BR>Dear Mr. President,<BR><BR>We are writing you today to
express our profound concern with your new<BR>climate change policies with
respect to their impacts on poor people and<BR>people of color in the United
States and around the world.<BR><BR>It is our firmly held belief that climate
change is not only an ecological,<BR>economic or political question, but it is a
moral issue with profound<BR>ramifications for all of the inhabitants of this
planet Earth. It is a<BR>question of environmental justice and human rights. It
is also an issue of<BR>equity between nations.<BR><BR>Particularly hard hit will
be low-lying countries like Bangladesh and small<BR>island states whose very
existence is threatened. The poor here in the<BR>United States -- especially
poor people of color -- will also bear the brunt<BR>of climate change. Your
policies will only intensify those impacts.<BR>Given its potentially profound
ramifications, climate change must be tackled<BR>with serious and vigorous
leadership and international cooperation rather<BR>than a misguided isolationist
approach that protects a handful of powerful<BR>fossil fuel
corporations.<BR><BR>The United States, whose four percent of the world's
population generates<BR>one-quarter of all man made carbon dioxide -- the
leading global warming gas<BR>-- must take the lead in reversing its role as the
main contributor to this<BR>looming global crisis.<BR><BR>Certainly, your
predecessor's climate change policies came up well short of<BR>the measures we
believe are necessary to address the problem. But your<BR>administration's
response so far-your failure to follow through on campaign<BR>promises to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions and your abandonment of the<BR>Kyoto Protocol-borders
on nothing short of gross global negligence.<BR><BR>Your negation of the
increasingly irrefutable scientific evidence on climate<BR>change is
distressing. It is no longer a question of whether climate change<BR>will occur,
but rather of how bad it will be. It is no longer a question of<BR>whether sea
levels will rise, but rather of how many coastlines, people,<BR>communities, and
entire island nations will be submerged.<BR><BR>Global warming is starting to
make itself felt. The 1990s was the warmest<BR>decade and 1998 was the warmest
year on record. The icecap atop Mount<BR>Kilimanjaro in Africa is melting away
and will completely disappear in less<BR>than 15 years. It is an abuse of power
to turn your back on this, the most<BR>serious environmental issue ever to
confront humanity.<BR><BR>If it is not halted, climate change will probably
result in increased<BR>frequency and severity of storms, floods and drought. And
it will cause the<BR>spread of diseases, such as malaria. It will increase
hunger and bring about<BR>displacement and mass migrations of people with
ensuing social conflict.<BR><BR>Mr. President, you claim that you don't want to
harm the American consumer,<BR>yet you're setting us all up to pay a huge price
in the future. This is<BR>especially true for the poor. Earlier this year, the
United Nations<BR>Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded
that the impacts<BR>of global warming "are expected to fall disproportionately
on the poor."<BR><BR>People who are highly dependent on farming, fishing or
forestry, especially<BR>indigenous people, are most likely to see their
livelihoods destroyed by<BR>climate change. Meanwhile, the urban poor- mostly
people of color in the<BR>U.S. --will be most vulnerable to climate-change
related heat waves,<BR>diseases and respiratory ailments.<BR><BR>Many of us come
from or work with communities that are already directly<BR>affected by the oil
industry. These are communities and workers that are<BR>suffering the social and
environmental effects of oil exploration,<BR>production, transportation,
refining, distribution and combustion. These<BR>communities are also some of
those who will be hardest hit by climate change<BR>-- whether they are in
Nigeria's Niger Delta, in Arctic Village Alaska, or<BR>in Louisiana's "cancer
alley." These communities face a "double whammy" --<BR>suffering oil's acute
toxic impacts first and then its long-term effects in<BR>the form of the harsh
hand of global warming.<BR><BR>Rather than cater to the socially and
ecologically destructive oil industry<BR>Mr. President, you should severely curb
U.S. carbon emissions and support<BR>the Kyoto Protocol. At home you should also
support a just transition for<BR>fossil fuel industry workers and fenceline
communities while investing the<BR>United States' resources in energy efficiency
and renewable energy<BR>resources, such as solar, wind and biomass.<BR><BR>Mr.
President, we urge you to reconsider your position on climate change<BR>before
the United States becomes universally known as an environmental rogue<BR>state,
and you go down in history as G.W. Bush, the Global
Warming<BR>President.<BR><BR>Sincerely,<BR><BR>Nnimmo Bassey, Oilwatch
Africa<BR>Chee Yoke Ling, Third World Network, Malaysia<BR>Oronto Douglas,
Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth, Nigeria <BR>Tom Goldtooth,
Indigenous Environmental Network, U.S.<BR>Sarah James, Gwich'in Steering
Committee, U.S.<BR>Esperanza Martinez, Oilwatch International,
Ecuador<BR>Richard Moore, Southwest Network for Environmental and Economic
Justice,<BR>U.S.<BR>Ricardo Navarro, CESTA/Friends of the Earth, El
Salvador<BR>S. Bobby Peek, groundWork, South Africa<BR>Amit Srivastava/Joshua
Karliner, CorpWatch, U.S.<BR>Connie Tucker, Southern Organizing Committee for
Economic & Social Justice,<BR>U.S.<BR>Dr. Owens Wiwa, African Environmental
and Human Development Agency, Nigeria<BR>Ricardo Carrere, World Rainforest
Movement, Uruguay<BR><BR>Cc: Christie Todd Whitman, Administrator, U.S.
Environmental Protection<BR>Agency<BR><BR>If you would like to add your
organization to the list of endorsers, please<BR>send the name of your group,
contact person, city and country where the<BR>organization is located to
</FONT><A href="mailto:cwadmin@corpwatch.org"><FONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3>cwadmin@corpwatch.org</FONT></A><FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3>. At
this time we are<BR>asking, organizations only, not individuals, to sign on.
Thank you for
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