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Tuesday, Feb 27, 2007
By: Eva Golinger - Venezuelanalysis.com
We are an oil producing country and that obligates us to take even
more care of the environmenton an extreme leveland to avoid
contamination, and to reduce contamination in all areas: earth, water
and air. President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, February 24, 2007.
Did anyone from Greenpeace or Earth First! ever imagine that the
worlds first environmental president would come from Venezuela? Many
Greens might find such an idea ludicrous considering that the South
American nation is one of the largest oil producing countries in the
world and a major resource for heavy mineral and coal mining. However,
ever since Hugo Chávez Frías first won office back in 1998, he has been
developing a very green conscience that simultaneously is reflected in
the nations policies and social programs.
Chávez probably wasnt an environmental activist in his youth, yet one
of his finest characteristics is his openness and his willingness to
listen and learn. And President Chávez has been listening to calls from
anti-globalization and environmental activists around the world now for
years and learning how to change Venezuelas form of governance so as
to support and endorse efforts of conservation, balanced consumption
and decontamination campaigns.
Last year, President Chávez launched Misión Arbol (Mission Tree) to
combat deforestation and to create a community-based model of
sustainable development with a social consciousness based on the
recuperation, conservation and maintenance of the nations forests. The
mission - or social program - has encouraged local communities,
environmental activists, ecologists and Ministry of the Environment
employees to together plant more than ten million trees throughout the
country, in both rural and urban areas. The program is aimed at
generating environmental consciousness nationwide about the importance
of ecological equilibrium and the recuperation of damaged forests in
order to improve quality of life.
During a press conference on Saturday, February 24, 2007, President
Chávez announced the elaboration of a new law to control emissions and
to defend the environment. We have to place controls on those
companies that continue to openly contaminate the environment with
clear disregard and disrespect, from the largest State industries to
the smallest private companies. They must respect the law. Speaking
directly about world environmental concerns, the Venezuelan leader
declared, environmental issues should concern us all, especially
climate changes, global warming and other aspects of the planet. We
must continue to raise our consciousness about this problem
No previous Venezuelan head of state has ever addressed these issues on
an effective and profound level. In fact, governments preceding Chávez
have been responsible for the massive contamination of Venezuelas
lakes and rivers, as well as deforestation efforts in the Amazon region
that, thanks to President Chávez, have now been stopped. Moreover,
during 2005, the Chávez administration together with the State-owned
oil company, PDVSA, announced the elimination of lead-based gasoline.
PDVSA has been implementing an environmentally-friendly plan over the
past few years that includes recuperating green areas, decontaminating
rivers, lakes and land, and reducing emissions. You should all know
that the gasoline produced in Venezuela is now green gasoline, we
dont use lead anymore, claimed Chávez proudly during his Saturday
meeting with local journalists.
Through Venezuelas Ministry of the Environment, thorough and complex
efforts are underway to decontaminate the nations rivers and lakes in
both urban and rural areas. President Chávez himself initiated the
decontamination program, bolding remarking that one day soon he hopes
to swim in the River Guaire, a stream that runs all through the capital
city of Caracas and frankly has looked and smelled like a sewer up
until now.
While the leader of the worlds most powerful nation, George W. Bush,
denies the existence of global warming, Venezuelas Chávez has made
environmental issues a top concern of his government and is actively
engaging in efforts to raise awareness throughout South America about
the importance of conservation. Venezuela also recently initiated
Misión Energía (Mission Energy), a social program aimed at energy
conservation that has funded hundreds of brigadiers (young activists)
all over the country in efforts to replace common heat-burning light
bulbs with more environmentally friendly cold energy bulbs. President
Chávez has ordered that all government buildings must use the energy
conserving light bulbs and must lower excessive air conditioning in
State offices. During television and radio appearances, Chávez never
fails to comment on the importance of turning off water faucets when
not in use, not leaving televisions on when they are not being watched
and switching off unnecessary lights.
A nation under the constant aggression and verbal attack of the United
States, as well as the victim of several direct interventions (such as
the failed coup detat against Chávez in April 2002), Venezuela is
setting an important example about how government truly can play a
protagonist role in stopping global warming and environmental decay.
Greens and activists around the world should support and encourage, as
well as aid with expertise and solidarity, Venezuelas green agenda.
Eva Golinger is a Venezuela-American attorney and the author of The
Chávez Code: Cracking US Intervention in Venezuela (2005) and most
recently, Bush vs. Chávez: Washingtons War on Venezuela (2006).
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