(Bagnolet,
October 31, 2022) Year
after year, one UN
Climate Conference of
the Parties (COP)
after another, the
global climate crisis
only worsens. Caused
in great part by
agribusiness and the
destructive capitalist
system it fuels,
today’s crisis is a
direct result of an
economic system that
exploits every form of
life without
recognizing any limits
to nature. Mother
Earth’s intricate
systems and
life-sustaining cycles
are broken, with the
devastating Covid19
pandemic, and the
inaccessibility of
health care for many,
demonstrating just how
cruel capitalism can
be when it comes to
inflicting the pain,
suffering and loss,
caused by the
destruction of nature.
Be it in Pakistan,
Palestine or Puerto
Rico – to name just a
few – the once distant
threat of “climate
change” now comes in
wave after wave of
“catastrophic weather
events” making
climate-fueled
tragedies an
all-too-frequent part
of people’s daily
lives. From droughts
to floods, through
wildfires and
hurricanes, these
extreme manifestations
have threatened and
even destroyed
people’s lives and
food sovereignty, who
are calling for real
solutions to limit
global warming to
1.5°C. As if that
weren’t enough, wars,
occupations and
sanctions are dished
out by the
power-hungry with
little regard for the
UN-recognized rights
to Food, Health, Peace
and
Self-Determination,
much less the now
universal human right
to a “clean, healthy
and sustainable
environment” (UN
General Assembly,
2022). In addition,
The State of Food
Security and Nutrition
in the World (SOFI,
2022) reported that
the climate vulnerable
and extremes underline
rising numbers of
hungry people, poverty
and inequality.
At the UN
Framework Convention
on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) and its
annual Climate COPs,
transnational
corporations (TNCs)
use their control over
most national
governments and
multilateral
institutions to
commodify the crisis,
deny fossil fuel
capitalism has
anything to do with
it, and limit any real
possibility of
transformative change.
Though the corporate
food system is
responsible for more
than 50% of all
greenhouse gasses
(GHGs), the
Bayer-Monsanto’s of
the world offer
nothing more than
profit-hungry
proposals packaged
into shameful “net
zero” schemes. Instead
of a very real, urgent
and necessary
reduction in emissions
– whose main
responsibility lies
with the elites of
historic emitters such
as the United States,
Europe, Canada and
Australia – corporate
false solutions
provide a free pass to
the dominant colonial
core while leading a
global assault on
rural communities,
livelihoods and
territories. So-called
“nature-based
solutions” (NBS) such
as REDD and REDD+,
“soil carbon for
offsetting” and
other market-based
trading schemes, and
the corporate takeover
of agriculture through
patenting,
“digitalization”,
“sustainable
intensification” and
“climate-smart(ation)”
are all big wins for
agribusiness but
terrible losses for
peasants, indigenous
peoples, fisherfolk,
forest dwellers and
others on the
frontlines of the
global climate crisis.
And when the great
hoax of “net zero”
fails to calm the
climate, transnational
corporations promise
extremely high-risk
geoengineering will
somehow save the day
(or at least their
profit margins). This
has been the norm at
Climate COP after
Climate COP, and the
27th Annual Conference
of the Parties (COP27)
is unlikely to be any
different.
Supposedly
“Africa’s COP”, this
year’s Climate COP is
set to take place at
the elitist and
artificial enclave
that is Egypt’s Sharm
el Sheikh. Far removed
from the African and
Arab People’s
steadfast struggles
for
self-determination,
COP27 is leaving very
little room for
organized communities
to speak truth to
corporate power. For
this reason, among
others, many of our
sister organizations
of the Africa Climate
Justice Collective
(ACJC) organized the
African People’s
Counter COP demanding
real solutions rooted
in climate justice, a
prioritization of
people and the planet,
and an end to
corporate control of
the UNFCCC. These
demands are in line
with our hard-fought
UN Declaration on the
Rights of Peasants and
Other People Working
in Rural Areas
(UNDROP):“States
shall take all
necessary measures
to ensure that
non-State actors
that they are in a
position to
regulate, such as
private individuals
and organizations,
and transnational
corporations and
other business
enterprises, respect
and strengthen the
rights of peasants
and other people
working in rural
areas..(and)…take
appropriate measures
to ensure that
peasants and other
people working in
rural areas enjoy,
without
discrimination, a
safe, clean and
healthy
environment”.
It is precisely
because of this
context that La Vía
Campesina will be at
COP27. Delegates from
member organizations
will make their
voices, traditions,
experiences and
solutions heard. We
will continue to
promote, practice and
uplift Food
Sovereignty as
the right of peoples
to healthy and
culturally appropriate
food produced through
ecologically sound and
sustainable methods
and the right to
define our food and
agricultural systems.
We will explain once
again that peasants
through agroecological
practices and
territories cultivate
more than 70% of the
food produced
worldwide on less than
30% of the arable
lands available. We
will emphasize that Agroecology
is a sustainable path
forward based on
centuries of
experience and
accumulated real
evidence – it is a
science, a social
movement and a
lifestyle practised by
millions around the
world through
meaningful work,
cooperation, strategy
and organization. We
will amplify and share
UNDROP, an
international legal
instrument that we
helped to create and
that defends people’s
rights over their
territories, seeds,
waters, forests and
that promotes a more
sustainable way of
being and living. We
will stand in Solidarity
with all who
struggle for
collective rights and
reiterate the need for
“common but
differentiated
responsibilities”
among States –
including a vibrant
Green Climate Fund
free of any
International Monetary
Fund (IMF) or World
Bank (WB) influence,
void of all
neo-liberal
impositions that serve
only to further
exploit people and the
planet, and fully
financed through
climate reparations
for the colonial
legacies of the past
and present. We stand
in solidarity with and
support those in the
Climate Justice
Movement demanding
climate just
reparations, not
simple “climate
finance”. Finally, we
will be in COP27
continuing to expand
our arms and shoulders
building solidarity,
action and common
strategy with
grassroots
organizations,
alliances and social
movements from around
the world fighting for
climate and social
justice.
While most
national governments
and multilateral
institutions offer
capitalist solutions
that systematically
fail to address the
climate crisis, we,
the organized voice of
over 200 million
peasants, landless
workers, indigenous
people, pastoralists,
fishers, migrant,
farmworkers, small and
medium-size farmers,
rural women, peasant
youth and
gender-diverse persons
of La Via Campesina,
in convergence with a
diversity of movements
for Climate Justice,
reiterate here and now
our real solutions: FOOD
SOVEREIGNTY COOLS
THE PLANET ! We
will build it with
agroecology and
peasants’ rights to
ensure a Just
Transition
rooted in people’s
power, ecological and
social well being, and
solidarity at the
local, regional and
international context.
Together, in struggle,
we will win!
PEASANTS
RIGHTS’ AND
AGROECOLOGY FOR A
JUST TRANSITION!
GLOBALIZE
THE STRUGGLE!
GLOBALIZE
HOPE!
For media
inquiries, contact:
press@viacampesina.org
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