Tag Archives: Council of Canadians

Rio+20: Canada finally recognises human right to water and sanitation

In the run-up to Rio+20, Canada became one of the last Western nations to drop its opposition to a reference to water and sanitation as a human right in the zero draft outcome document The Future We Want [1]. This was achieved by an international lobby led by the likes of Maude Barlow’s Council of Canadians and UN Special Rapporteur Catarina de Albuquerque.

Maude Barlow. Photo: Council of Canadians

Until a month ago, Canada was the only country to publicly claim there was no legal basis for the right to water and call for deletion of paragraph 67, which referred to this right, from the Rio+20 document, said Anil Naidoo of the Council of Canadians’ Blue Planet Project.

The U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution in July 2010 recognising water and sanitation as a basic human right [2] and on 30 September 2010, the UN Human Rights Council recognised the right as legally binding in international law [3].

At the initial Rio+20 negotiations last year, several human rights and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) warned that the human right to water and sanitation was under threat. This started when the UK, working inside the European Union (EU), first proposed to delete paragraph 67 from the zero draft.

Catarina de Albuquerque. Photo: OHCHR

After pressure from several international NGOs and an appeal [4] by Special Rapporteur on the human right to safe drinking water and sanitation Catarina de Albuquerque, the EU backed down and other governments pushed back against the UK, notably Spain, said Naidoo.

But still, Canada, later joined by the United States and Israel, continued to call for deletion of paragraph 67. Intense lobbying, supported by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navanethem Pillay, who called for human rights to be protected in the Rio negotiations [5], finally convinced Canada to drop its opposition to the recognition of water and sanitation as a human right.

[1] Rio+20 - The Future We Want – Zero draft of the outcome document

[2] Right to water and sanitation: UN General Assembly passes landmark resolution, E-Source, 08 Sep 2010

[3] Right to water and sanitation: finally declared legally binding in international law, E-Source, 19 Oct 2010

[4] Rio+20: “Do not betray your commitments on the human right to water and sanitation”, OHCHR, 22 Mar 2012

[5] Navanethem Pillay, Open Letter, OHCHR, 30 Mar 2012

Related web sites:

Source: Thalif Deen, Canada, Last Holdout, Drops Opposition to Water as Human Right, IPS, 31 May 2012

Canada: First Nations chief wants UN to investigate right to water violation

Geordie Rae from St.Theresa Point First Nation dumps a slop pail full of sewage in a dump outside his home. Winnipeg Free Press

Leaders of First Nations (indigenous peoples) from northern Manitoba want the United Nations to investigate the violations of rights imposed by the lack of water.

Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak Grand Chief David Harper told a Senate committee hearing Tuesday [15 February 2011] the lack of running water in more than 1,000 homes in northern Manitoba is a violation of the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People.

Living in “Third World conditions”, families in the Island Lake region of Manitoba “have less water every day than people in refugee camps”.

Many people in the Island Lake region get by on 10 litres per day, usually lugged by family members in pails from local water pipes. Additional water comes in untreated from lakes and rivers that have tested positive for contaminants including E. coli.

The S-11 bill currently being considered by the aboriginal peoples committee of the Senate seeks to regulate water quality on reserves but will not ensure the delivery of clean water to the First Nations families in Manitoba, according to Harper.

The Council of Canadians called for the scrapping of Bill S-11 and the development of new legislation. The Council says that the ACT is flawed because First Nation communities were not consulted and there is a risk that water systems could be privatised.

On 14 January 2011, Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) Manitoba held a awareness raising event, Just Water, to highlight the poor living conditions in Manitoba’s Island Lake communities.

“Our concern is that the lack of clean water and adequate sewage (disposal) in many homes is a severe health hazard for the First Nations people in the Island Lake communities — people who are our neighbours, fellow citizens and, as descendants of the original inhabitants of Canada, with whom we share a treaty,” MCC executive director Peter Rempel said.

Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak (MKO), Manitoba’s northern chiefs association, is calling for CA$ 35 million (US$ 36 million) to install plumbing in the 1,000 homes around Island Lake and on other northern reserves.

The 2006 report of the Expert Panel on Safe Drinking Water for First Nations urged rapid action by Indian and Northern Affairs Canada to help communities without running water.

Four years later, Island Lake communities are still waiting. The logistical challenges of digging water and sewage lines are probably the reason for the delay, said Harry Swain, the report’s author.

Related web sites:

Source: Mia Rabson, First Nations to alert UN to water woes, Winnipeg Free Press, 16 Feb 2011 ; Alexandra Paul, Third World aid agency looks north, Winnipeg Free Press, 07 Jan 2011 ; Council of Canadians, 09 Mar 2011

G8 meeting: a thirst for water justice

Activists Maude Barlow and Meera Karunananthan of the Council of Canadians criticize their country’s Prime Minister for positioning “himself as a champion of maternal and child health at this year’s G8 and G20 meetings” on the one hand, while on the other hand refusing to recognize water as a human right.

What Stephen Harper fails to acknowledge is that women need greater control over the factors that contribute to their health and well-being. Charity-based models like aid packages are not sufficient.

Poor women in the global South have borne the brunt of neoliberal economic policies that have placed profits for transnational corporations above the environment and human health. They need international support for strong public services and healthy environments.

Take water for example. Canada has prevented the recognition of water as a human right and promotes the privatization of water services while Canadian mining companies destroy watersheds throughout the world. This has disproportionately affected poor women.

After stressing that women and girls are more adversely affected when access to water is restricted, they add:

While several countries are working to have water recognized as a human right through a covenant at the UN, the Canadian government has opposed it. Such a covenant would provide a legal tool for communities that are denied access.

Yet Canada has voted against resolutions to officially enshrine water as a human right at several key UN meetings.

Canada is also a strong proponent of water privatization. It funds and plays an active role within the Public Private Infrastructure Advisory Facility which promotes the privatization of drinking water and sanitation systems around the world.

Canada also directly invests in private water through pension funds.

Yet experiences around the world show that private water has denied women their basic needs. [..] A recent report published by the National Network on Environments and Women’s Health highlights the disproportionate impacts of water privatization on women.

Barlow and Karunananthan claim that Canadian mining companies “are notorious for their disregard of the environment and human health”.

In Mexico, for example, 87 per cent of the mining projects are run by Canadian mining companies that continue to destroy land and contaminate water supplies despite massive protests by farmers, indigenous communities and environmentalists.

Groups like Mining Watch and the Council of Canadians are hoping Bill C-300, a new bill that passed a narrow vote in the House of Commons in April 2009, will make Canadian extractive industries accountable for their actions abroad.

Source: Chronicle Herald, 28 Apr 2010

Climate change: no water in Copenhagen talks

In the last two years, the conclusion among decision-makers has been that the only way to solve the climate crisis is to turn carbon into a commodity and privatise the atmosphere.

Similar market-based solutions will be used to “solve” the growing water crisis, warned experts at the Klimaforum09, a parallel meeting a few kilometres away from the official 15th Conference of Parties (COP15) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, held Dec. 7-18 in Copenhagen.

Adriana Marquisio and Maude Barlow at the Klimaforum09

Adriana Marquisio and Maude Barlow at the Klimaforum09. Photo:Stephen Leahy/IPS

“Corporations do not want regulations and have convinced governments that they can deliver continued economic growth and save the planet,” said Maude Barlow, chair of the Council of Canadians, the largest citizens group in Canada and author of several books about water issues.

“It shows the power of the corporate lobby that nearly everyone, including many big NGOs, all see the market as the solution to climate change,” Barlow told Tierramérica.

Meanwhile, the climate justice movement is fighting against carbon trading and carbon offsets and advocating for real emissions cuts, while recognising that the commons – air and water – are a public trust, she said.

“I’ve spent five days in the Bella Centre (the site of the official COP15 negotiations) and the real issues around water and land are being ignored,” said Adriana Marquisio, vice president of FFOSE, the union of employees of Uruguay’s public water agency. “The little countries who are suffering real impacts (of climate change) are trying to bring attention to this,” Marquisio told Tierramérica.

Both Uruguay and Bolivia have pushed hard to broaden the vision on this issue, but the United States is dominating the talks with its agenda of corporate interests, she said.

In 2004, Uruguay approved a reform that gave constitutional priority to the right to water, and banned its privatisation. Other countries are considering similar measures.

To properly address vital issues dealing with water and climate, “we can’t be talking about profits,” she said.

“Why should we have to defend water or air as a commons?” wondered Italian expert Riccardo Petrella, founder of the International Committee for the World Water Contract and a member of the World Political Forum’s Scientific Committee.

“If water or air are turned into commodities, that is equivalent to commodifying life itself and leads to the privatisation of democracy,” Petrella said. “If we do this, it will make democracy a lie.”

The negotiations to reach an agreement for confronting climate change ignore water, biodiversity and land. It is all about energy and finance, which are the only interests of the rich countries, he says.

But water is an essential ingredient for energy production: 44 percent of freshwater in France is used by its energy sector. And the portion reaches 60 percent in some other countries, according to Petrella.

“The reality of resource depletion, including water, and the reality of two billion hungry people are peripheral in the official talks,” he said.

The central focus of climate justice is food, land and water, he explained.

Petrella and others are lobbying for a global agreement on water and a new United Nations agency to “prevent and settle international disputes on the property and use of water through common monitoring systems,” states a proposal [Memorandum for a World Water Protocol] from the World Political Forum.

Having seen the widespread distribution of mobile phones in Africa and elsewhere, some water companies believe they can do the same with bottled water so that their products become the only source of drinking water and negate the need for investing in public water infrastructure, said Barlow.

“Around the world, investors are buying up water rights and land. India and China are doing this already in Africa,” she said.

If water becomes just another commodity, in many parts of the world farmers will sell water rather than grow food because they can make more money that way, she said.

Water is also a crucial element in the manufacture of many goods: an automobile requires 400,000 litres of water to produce the steel, plastic, electronics and other components.

Oil production also uses enormous amounts of water. Petrella believes that the urgency of the water crisis is such that no country in the developing South should export products to the industrialised North that require water to produce.

It is equivalent to exporting water, he said, and “that is one of the biggest problems we have to deal with in future.”

A model for effective water protection is that of the small northeastern U.S. state of Vermont, says Barlow. Water there belongs to all the people of the state and the government oversees its distribution.

The state issues permits for water use, with first priority going to people, nature and agriculture. Industrial uses are second, and the government has the right to deny water access to companies that pollute.

Looking to the future and the potential for millions of climate refugees, Barlow believes that most of those forced to relocate will be due to lack of water.

With water excluded from the formal climate negotiations and the predominance of corporate interests, the best outcome in Copenhagen is a total failure, she said.

Petrella argues that peace, justice and democracy have never come from pricing common resources: “Commodification of carbon and privatisation of the atmosphere will cause enormous conflict and devastation.”

Source: Stephen Leahy, IPS, 17 Dec 2009

Commenting on COP-15 and the Copenhagen Accord, WaterAid commented on their web site that:

“The crucial subject of water didn’t even figure in the discussions and there were no real signs that Copenhagen’s delegates would make water adaptation strategies a priority.”

[...]

“It is clear from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that climate change will have significant impacts on water resources and access to drinking water and sanitation, but where and how these impacts will be felt is less clear. The projections for rainfall, evaporation and run-off show a high degree of variability across countries and regions. All these impacts, whether they are long-term water stress or an increased frequency of storms and flooding, will be keenly felt by those who have limited or no access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation, pushing more and more into water poverty.”

“In response to this, WaterAid has developed its responses to minimise the impact.”

“The Copenhagen Accord promises to deliver $30bn of aid for developing nations over the next three years and outlines an aim of providing $100bn a year by 2020 to help poor countries cope with the impacts of climate change.”

“What remains to be seen is whether any of that aid will go towards supporting adaptation strategies to protect existing water and sanitation systems, as well as expanding access to climate-resilient water and sanitation services for all.”

Source: WaterAid, 23 Dec 2009

World Water Council: UN agencies join board despite activist lobby

Three UN agencies, UNESCO, FAO and UN-HABITAT, have been elected on the new Board of Governors of the World Water Council (WWC), organisers of the World Water Forum (WWF). Activists see the election as a reaction to their own lobby to get the United Nations to organise the next World Water Forum instead of the WWC. The activists say that 26 countries’ governments had endorsed their call for a UN-led forum after the 5th WWF in Istanbul in March 2009.

After it became known that the WWC was lobbying to get the UN on board, activist groups started a counter-lobbying offensive with a petition directed at the UN’s Secretary General to prevent UN agencies from joining. The petition, which attracted nearly 700 signatories, was an initiative of the Blue Planet Project of the Council of Canadians.

Reacting to the news of the UN agency sign-on to the WWC, Anil Naidoo of the Blue Plant Project said “it was not unexpected, but is a disappointment. The reality is that these UN agencies have been under severe pressure for some time. I can tell you that there are many good people within the UN who are disturbed by the degree of corporate influence within their agencies”.

The WWC’s new Board of Governors will oversee and guide the Council’s work for the coming three years. The elections took place during the triennial General Assembly for which more than 280 members had gathered in Marseille, France. Through majority rule voting, the members elected the 36 Governors from 74 candidatures and appointed Loic Fauchon to continue to serve as President of the World Water Council.

The rector of UNESCO-IHE Institue for Water Education Andras Szollosi-Nagy was elected as one of the four WWC Bureau Members. UN-HABITAT Executive Director Anna Tibaijuka and the Service Chief of FAO’s Water Development and Management Unit (NRLW) Pasquale Steduto are the two other UN representatives on WWC’s board.

Several other UN agencies are WWC members. In the June 2009 membership list we find the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), the World Bank and the World Meterological Organisation (WMO).