A/HRC/48/78
jeopardizes Black lives.10 Ms. Pichon Battle defined broadly the concept of “preparedness”
for an climate emergency, including investment and providing information to Black
communities, were clearly not a priority of State actors in the Gulf South. Preparedness
involved moving infrastructure to renewable energy, namely, to sources that were available
in the immediate aftermath of a climate disaster. Preparedness also required a conversation
about the climate crisis and solutions in order to be able both to adapt to imminent events and
to mitigate the impact of human exploitation and extractivism. The context must also be
acknowledged; access to clean water and sewage was already limited in southern
communities, Black communities and frontline communities even before climate disaster
became the norm. Moving away from fossil fuel-based energy and combustion engines
towards renewable, clean energy also implied commitments to effective disaster recovery,
given that access to solar, wind and water energy would allow communities to recover more
quickly. A key obstacle to the conversation on climate was that it was still rooted in
capitalism, oppression and profitmaking for only a few. This dialogue failed to embrace
principles of equity, repair and justice or to consider other complex conversations being held
by social movements around the world. The climate crisis was a Black issue, affecting people
of African descent everywhere. Equity, repair and justice were urgently required.
33.
Miriam Miranda of the Black Fraternal Organization of Honduras (OFRANEH) stated
that climate change had made Honduras extremely vulnerable to natural disasters and the
impact of hurricanes. Garifuna, Honduran people of African descent, live in the most affected
coastal regions of the country. The national production model saw the country as a
monoculture, agricultural society, generally to the detriment of local people. Huge
plantations of African palm had replaced food crops. Traditional methods of food production
had been lost as numerous hectares of forest had been replaced by monocultures. Throughout,
decision-makers had failed to acknowledge the true effects of disregard, or to learn from
diverse community experiences and issues. The climate crisis required a re-examination of
existing production and consumption models, given the disproportionate cost-benefit ratio of
industrial mega projects to their impact. Existing production and consumer models affected
the whole of humanity, and vulnerable Black communities in particular.
34.
Sharon Lavigne, the founder of RISE St. James, discussed the impact of decades of
environmental racism. She stated that the sickness of industry greed and systemic racism
were evident in the soil and the air of “Death Alley” in Louisiana. Ms. Lavigne was a lifelong
resident of St. James Parish in Louisiana, United States of America, a town in which 85 per
cent of residents were African American and located in the 85-mile stretch along the
Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. In that area, more than 100
petrochemical plants and refineries defined the popularly-termed “Cancer Alley,” given the
prevalence of cancer among its residents, and recently recharacterized as “Death Alley” by
the community. St. James had been devastated by industrial exploitation; people could not
drink the water, plant a garden or breathe clean air. St. James residents suffered high rates of
cancer, respiratory diseases and other severe health problems from exposure to industrial
pollutants. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, a disproportionate number of residents died
because of their immune-compromised status due to industrial pollution. Racial disparities
were evident even in real estate buyouts, which favoured white property owners and left
Black homeowners involuntary holdouts amidst the industrial development of the area.
Nonetheless, State leadership continued to see the community as expendable: in spring 2018,
without community consultation, the Governor of Louisiana announced that a site had been
approved for a new project involving the creation of 14 chemical plants by Formosa Plastics
Group, a Taiwanese supplier of plastic resins and petrochemicals, in St. James parish. The
announcement reflected how easy it was to establish environmentally toxic plants in
communities where the residents were poor, Black and without powerful protectors. Even
though the project would desecrate ancestral burial grounds, community members had
already been threatened with arrest, ejected from land and prevented by police from placing
flowers on graves. The community had sought assistance and advocated for a moratorium on
industrial exploitation and extractivism in St. James Parish and throughout “Cancer Alley”,
including by seeking to bar new industries and the expansion of existing industries, and to
obtain reparations for the people of St. James, an investigation into the cause of the high rates
10
8
See https://redblackgreennewdeal.org/.