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Saturday, March 29, 2025

Building back better must be people-led

by

1761 days ago
20200602
 An excavator clears land in Mon Desir, Fyzabad, last month. The area is being cleared for work on the Mon Desir leg of the highway to Point Fortin but is being challenged by the Highway Reroute Movement.

An excavator clears land in Mon Desir, Fyzabad, last month. The area is being cleared for work on the Mon Desir leg of the highway to Point Fortin but is being challenged by the Highway Reroute Movement.

KRISTIAN DE SILVA

CEO, The Crop­per Foun­da­tion

Peo­ple feel ig­nored. Peo­ple feel pow­er­less. Peo­ple feel help­less. This has been the com­mon re­frain that we at the Crop­per Foun­da­tion heard, two years ago, as we start­ed work on a three-year Ac­tion “CSOs for Good En­vi­ron­men­tal Gov­er­nance.” In this EU-fund­ed Ac­tion, along with our part­ners, we learnt just how alien­at­ed, ex­clud­ed and dis­en­fran­chised our com­mu­ni­ties have felt as they try and ad­vo­cate for a health­i­er and more sus­tain­able en­vi­ron­ment.

This ini­tia­tive, which seeks to en­hance the ca­pac­i­ty of Trinidad and To­ba­go’s civ­il so­ci­ety for the gov­er­nance of en­vi­ron­men­tal trans­paren­cy and ac­count­abil­i­ty in the coun­try’s ex­trac­tive in­dus­tries, builds on the con­cepts of en­vi­ron­men­tal and cli­mate jus­tice. These com­mu­ni­ties, like the small is­land states of the Caribbean, have done the least to dam­age their en­vi­ron­ment but will suf­fer the most con­se­quences. From re­gion­al sea-lev­el rise due to car­bon emis­sions by the ‘West,’ to flood­ing in the East-West cor­ri­dor caused by il­le­gal quar­ry­ing - it is usu­al­ly the most mar­gin­alised and vul­ner­a­ble among us that pay the price for en­vi­ron­men­tal degra­da­tion.

Rarely do these com­mu­ni­ties get the chance to rem­e­dy these sit­u­a­tions. At the glob­al scale, most of the dis­cus­sions around en­vi­ron­men­tal and cli­mate jus­tice are played out at the elite lev­els of diplo­ma­cy and pol­i­tics, that still de­pends on a top-down view of the world. Rarely, if ever, are the true voic­es of com­mu­ni­ties around the world rep­re­sent­ed or make sig­nif­i­cant im­pacts in these con­ver­sa­tions.

At the na­tion­al lev­el, the same of­ten oc­curs with com­pa­nies com­ing in­to com­mu­ni­ties, host­ing pub­lic con­sul­ta­tions on ob­tuse and high­ly tech­ni­cal sub­jects—pre­sent­ed many times by con­sul­tants with mul­ti­ple ad­vanced de­grees. When com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers are not able to re­spond ef­fec­tive­ly to this high­ly tech­ni­cal ma­te­r­i­al or re­act in a way that re­sponds to per­ceived con­de­scen­sion, they are eas­i­ly dis­missed as hav­ing noth­ing use­ful to con­tribute. This is the re­al­i­ty for dozens of com­mu­ni­ties around Trinidad and To­ba­go. Even na­tion­al­ly, much of the con­ver­sa­tions around en­vi­ron­men­tal sus­tain­abil­i­ty still takes place in fan­cy rooms and work­shops that as Dan Gilmoor puts it, re­main in the do­main of the al­ready priv­i­leged through ed­u­ca­tion, ac­cess or con­nec­tions to in­form the con­ver­sa­tion to meet their in­ter­ests, as no­ble as they may be.

Peo­ple care about their com­mu­ni­ties and the world around them and, if giv­en the op­por­tu­ni­ty, will strive to make things bet­ter. Two years in­to the work of “CSOs for Good En­vi­ron­men­tal Gov­er­nance”, we see this hap­pen­ing. As one com­mu­ni­ty ac­tivist bat­tling il­le­gal quar­ry­ing said “… now I know the rules and reg­u­la­tions and I know where to go,” while an­oth­er leader of a com­mu­ni­ty women’s group stat­ed that they saw, through the Ac­tion, how unchecked de­vel­op­ment de­stroyed oth­er com­mu­ni­ties and “…we will not let that hap­pen to us.”

Groups worked to­geth­er to lob­by for a bridge to be re­built that had cut off an en­tire com­mu­ni­ty. Com­mu­ni­ty groups that thought they were too small to make a dif­fer­ence, helped stop amend­ments of na­tion­al leg­is­la­tion that would have worked against trans­paren­cy ef­forts.

• Con­tin­ues on Page 11

• From Page 10

Just a few days ago, these groups once again came to­geth­er re­cent­ly to sup­port their friends and fam­i­ly in the north-east of Trinidad by send­ing in com­ments against the pro­posed To­co port.

Now more than ever, as we seek to build back bet­ter in a post-COVID world, we must em­pow­er our com­mu­ni­ties. Most of us who were stuck at home and were on­ly able to ven­ture out in small jaunts ‘down the road’ should un­der­stand how im­por­tant well-func­tion­ing com­mu­ni­ties are to a coun­try. This is a new re­al­i­ty for every­one and there is still much un­cer­tain­ty in how we will build back an econ­o­my in a world that is reel­ing from the mas­sive shock of a pan­dem­ic, plung­ing oil prices and the loom­ing greater threat of cli­mate change. How­ev­er, just as we did for COVID-19, we should lis­ten to the sci­ence. It tells us that such re­build­ing must put the en­vi­ron­ment at the heart of re­cov­ery for us to build re­silient na­tions.

To do this, we must cre­ate and re­spect the space for com­mu­ni­ties to speak their truth about their en­vi­ron­ment. We can­not keep on over­whelm­ing their voic­es to favour de­vel­op­ment par­a­digms that are cen­tred, in many cas­es, around an un­sus­tain­able en­er­gy and high-car­bon econ­o­my. These 25+ civ­il so­ci­ety groups and many more com­mu­ni­ties across Trinidad and To­ba­go must be key com­po­nents of a re­cov­ery that is both eq­ui­table and sus­tain­able.

COVID-19


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