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Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

If we have any hope of a thriving planet—much less a business—it is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have. This is what we can do.

Read Yvon’s Letter

Reflections on the International Day of Action Against Dams and for Rivers

 /  Mar 8, 2012 6 Min Read  /  Activism

by Jason Rainey

FreeTheRiversKid_2005-0314

Water is life. Our bodies are about 60% water. Over two thirds of the surface of the Earth is covered by water, but only 0.006% of the Earth’s freshwater reserves is stored in rivers. As Patagonia's Our Common Waters campaign points out, the rivers of today’s world are broken. Roughly two-thirds of the world’s rivers have been dammed and diverted, and many major rivers of the world are tapped out before they reach the sea. Fifteen percent of the annual rainfall around the globe is now sequestered in reservoirs instead of replenishing floodplains and carrying nutrients to the sea.

The Colorado, the Indus, the Nile and the Yellow are just a few of the rivers that have had their perennial connection to the ocean broken. And nations that are rapidly industrializing threaten the remaining great rivers of the world with new dam-building schemes.

ThreatenedTapajosRiver_Brazil

In the Amazon Basin, over 60 large dams are proposed for key tributaries to the Amazon River. The world’s most productive inland fishery, the mighty Mekong River, is threatened with a series of proposed dams across the mainstream, beginning with the Xayaburi Dam in Laos.

But this is the wrong climate for investing in dams. What’s most cynical about these mega-dam schemes and literally thousands of other proposed destructive dams globally is that energy corporations are arguing that dammed rivers are necessary for a “sustainable” future. But, the trillions of dollars poured into big dams don’t provide affordable, decentralized and truly sustainable energy for the millions around the globe who live in energy poverty. Dammed rivers lose their resiliency in the face of a changing climate, and they lose their life-sustaining biodiversity. A world of healthy rivers is essential to sustaining healthy communities and a healthy planet.

What Can Be Done?

Pakistan_Indus_2010-0314

courtesy Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum

Communities and organizations are coming together to stop the most destructive proposed dam projects. My organization works with a network of partner groups and dam-affected people to campaign against the worst big dams, and to reform climate and international finance policies to ensure we’re investing in real solutions for meeting the energy and water challenges facing communities throughout Africa, Asia and Latin America. We help amplify the voices throughout the world saying “No!” to damming rivers and “Yes!” to development pathways that respect indigenous cultures and their aspirations of self-determination.

We’re also working to counter the mis-representation by hydro-energy corporations that attempt to greenwash the public into believing that damming rivers will somehow save our ailing planet. Did you know that methane emissions from dams are responsible for around 4% of human-caused climate change – roughly the equivalent of global emissions from the aviation industry? Further, big dams have displaced about 80 million people worldwide, with perhaps 10 times that number impacted downstream of dams.

We need to build a new model of human development that abandons big dams and elevates truly sustainable, decentralized and democratic water and energy solutions. This will take more than just the dam-affected communities banding together. It will take you and me and thousands of other people who care about rivers. We need to deepen our resistance to dam-building and organize a political force to demand policy shifts toward just economies and a restorative ecology.

Local_solar_Cuba

courtesy of Fabiola Bueno Sanchez

How Can You Get Involved?

DoAfR_logo

For the past 15 years, March 14 has been the time when communities across the globe stand up for their common waters and shine a light on the broken rivers that follow in the wake of destructive big dams during the International Day of Action Against Dams and for Rivers.

Actions to highlight the plight of our world’s rivers on March 14 take many forms – from kayaking trips to conferences, film screenings to music festivals, religious ceremonies to the occupation of dam sites. Here in Berkeley, my organization International Rivers will be holding our own annual March 14 event to celebrate the world’s rivers, while others on our staff will be involved with events in Guatemala, Marseilles and Chiang Mai.

Our friends and partners around the world have already confirmed that more than 50 River Actions are planned in over 30 countries. Here are some of the ways communities around the world are organizing to protect Our Common Waters:

  • Activists in Chile will gather in front of the offices of HidroAysén in the capital of Santiago to protest the company's proposal to build 5 dams on two of the most beautiful rivers in Patagonia.

Patagonia_Baker_DoAfR_2011-0314

  • At the World Water Forum in Marseille, France, activists will counter corporate attempts to greenwash dams as clean energy.
  • Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum will begin a campaign against the Bhasha Dam on the Indus River.
  • In Taiwan, the Meinung People's Association will gather many anti-dam organizations and people affected by dams to show support for free-flowing rivers.
  • The Movement of People Affected by Dams in Brazil is bringing together a wide range of social movements and communities in protest of corporate control of rivers.
  • Activists and community members in Portugal are organizing a week-long camp to protest construction of the Foz-Tua Dam, which would flood a World Heritage Site, farmland and other ecosystems. The camp will also serve as a place of networking, cultural exchange, artistic expression and campaign planning.
  • In the Philippines, the campaign against the Pulangi Dam 5 in the Southern Bukidnon province will show Wrong Climate for Damming Rivers, translated into the local dialect.

Are you inspired to be part of the action? Find out if there’s an International Day of Action for Rivers event near you. If not, get your friends together and organize one yourself. Have a picnic by a river, go ice-skating on a frozen lake, or clean up a stretch of river or beach. Whatever you do on March 14, know that you are not alone. Thousands of people around the world will be celebrating their rivers along with you.

Kayaks_Portugal_2010-0314

 courtesy of COAGRET

Jason Rainey is the Executive Director of International Rivers, a global river advocacy organization with staff on four continents. International Rivers has been coordinating March 14th as the International Day of Action for Rivers since 1998. Before joining International Rivers in 2011, Mr. Rainey served as Executive Director of the South Yuba River Citizens League (SYRCL) in northern California from 2005-2011, where he built a grassroots movement to restore a healthy Yuba River, championed the decommissioning of two federal dams, protected wild salmon runs, improved water quality and habitats, and fought new dams.

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