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Action Alert: Fund Ecuador to Keep Oil Underground and Rainforests Standing for Our Shared Climate
It is time for the international community led by Europe to step up and finance large-scale Amazon rainforest preservation to protect the Earth's atmosphere, biodiversity, and life-giving ecosystems; while helping meet needs for national advancement
By
Rainforest Portal, a project of Ecological Internet
-
August 20, 2008
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1.) Inform Yourself
NOTE: This is a protest, not a petition, sending emails to many real decision makers on matters vital to the Earth.
Caption:
Europe talks alot about protecting climate, rainforest and biodiversity -- now it is time for them to ante up and pay Ecuador to keep their oil in the ground (link)
The Western Amazon -- home to some of the most biodiverse and intact
rainforest left on Earth, which are critical for driving regional and global
ecosystems and climatic patterns necessary for life -- may soon be decimated by
oil rigs and pipelines. Record oil prices and growing global demand are now
stimulating unprecedented levels of new oil and gas exploration and extraction
in the Western Amazon. Regional governments, international donors and global
citizens must decide whether every last bit of the Earth's wilderness; and
intact, large ecosystems, will be sacrificed to delay having to transition now
to renewable energy sources, ensuring abrupt run-away climate change in the
process.
According to a new study in the open-access journal PLoS ONE, over 180 oil and
gas "blocks" – areas zoned for exploration and development – now cover the
Western Amazon, which includes Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and western
Brazil. These oil and gas blocks stretch over 688,000 km2 (170 million acres), a
vast area nearly the size of Texas. This energy production is to be concentrated
in the Amazon's largest un-fragmented wildernesses containing the most
biodiverse areas for birds, mammals, and amphibians. It will encroach upon
titled lands of indigenous peoples as well as other tribes living in voluntary
isolation. Loss of the Amazon's rainforests and burning of this oil may well push the Earth past the climate change tipping point.
Yet there is hope, as Ecuador's new forward-thinking government led by President
Rafael Correa announced in June 2007 the innovative Yasuní-ITT Initiative which
offers to keep Ecuador's largest untapped oilfields unexploited in exchange for
financial compensation from the international community. The ITT oil fields are
located in the core of the renowned Yasuni National Park, widely recognized as
one of the most biodiverse spots on Earth. Plans to build oil roads into this
protected area were earlier suspended after many local and global scientists and
activists mobilized to achieve temporary victory. Ecological Internet Earth
Action Network was the first to campaign internationally on the matter,
successfully internationalizing the issue.
The ITT-Yasuni Initiative is widely viewed as not only an innovative proposal to
combat climate change by keeping fossil fuels underground, but it also protects
biodiversity and uncontacted indigenous peoples. In exchange for leaving the oil
in the ground and rainforests intact, Ecuador fairly seeks half of oil's
projected revenues, roughly $350 million per year for 10 years. This initiative
is a potentially precedent-setting example of how the global north and south can
collaborate on protecting the Amazon, combating climate change and meeting needs
for national advancement. Yet given international rhetoric regarding the need
for climate and rainforest protection, international donors have been slow to
respond and this critical initiative appears dangerously close to failure.
As the Yasuni-ITT proposal enters its potentially final stage, the deadline has
recently been pushed back to the end of December 2008, we urge careful
consideration by potential donors, including philanthropists, multilateral banks
and governments. The German Parliament recently gave the initiative new life by
passing a measure formally supporting the initiative. But more parties must
follow their lead -- particularly in Europe given their historical strong rhetoric on the need to protect global climate and biodiversity. If successful, this type of initiative could be replicated in
other parts of the Amazon and around the world. Global ecological sustainability
including solutions to the climate and biodiversity crises depends up the rich nations anteing up. Please ask European aid agencies to lead the effort below.
Sample Email Sent
Please fund Ecuador to keep oil underground, rainforests standing and shared climate intact
Dear European aid agency,
I am gravely concerned about the global climate and
biodiversity crises, and how the planned proliferation of
oil and gas activities across the Western Amazon will
exacerbate these problems. Ecuador has proposed an
innovative solution to this complex problem, offering to
keep its largest untapped oil fields unexploited in
exchange for financial compensation from the international
community.
Ecuador's Yasuni-ITT Initiative is a potentially
precedent-setting example of how the global North and South
can collaborate on protecting the Amazon, combating climate
change and meeting needs for national advancement. Such
ambitious and sufficient policies are required to achieve
global ecological sustainability. Given Europe's strong
rhetoric on the need to protect climate and rainforests, I
urge you to support Ecuador's plea.
It is my understanding that Europe is committed to
addressing the climate and biodiversity crises. Why then
are you not making resources available to this innovative
offer that will keep carbon in the ground, and Amazon
rainforests and the atmosphere intact? Regional
governments, international donors and global citizens must
decide whether every last bit of the Earth's wilderness;
and intact, large ecosystems, will be sacrificed to delay
having to transition now to renewable energy sources,
ensuring abrupt run-away climate change and widespread
ecosystem collapse in the process.
According to a new study in the open-access journal PLoS
ONE, over 180 oil and gas "blocks" – areas zoned for
exploration and development – now cover the Western Amazon,
which includes Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and
western Brazil. These oil and gas blocks stretch over
688,000 km2 (170 million acres), a vast area nearly the
size of Texas. This energy production is to be concentrated
in the Amazon's largest un-fragmented wildernesses
containing the most biodiverse areas for birds, mammals,
and amphibians.
Ecuador's ITT oil fields are located in the core of the
renowned Yasuni National Park, widely recognized as one of
the most biodiverse spots on Earth. In exchange for leaving
the oil in the ground and rainforests intact, Ecuador
fairly seeks half of oil's projected revenues, roughly
three hundred and fifty million dollars annually for 10
years.
As the Yasuni-ITT proposal enters its potentially final
stage, I urge you to generously donate to this critically
important initiative. Global ecological sustainability
depends upon the rich world paying not-yet-over-developed
countries to protect ecosystems that make the Earth
habitable for us all. Please get Europe behind the
Ecuadorian proposal now.
With grave concern,
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