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Environmental Thumbs-Down for Mexico's Presidential Candidates |
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By Diego Cevallos*
Vague
and contradictory -- that's how activists describe the environmental
proposals of the presidential candidates for Mexico's July 2 elections.
If natural gas and gasoline prices are cut, consumption and air
pollution will skyrocket, they warn.
MEXICO CITY - Dangerous, unstructured, too
general, and even contradictory are the environmental platforms
of the three leading candidates for the Mexican presidency, say
activists and academics.
They had hoped that the candidates running in the July 2 election
would present viable and verifiable proposals for confronting the
environmental emergency they believe the country faces. But the
activists and experts have been disappointed.
"The concern is no longer who is going to win, but rather in the
coming six years (the term of the new president) that we will have
a completely retrograde environmental agenda," José Juan González
Márquez, coordinator of environmental law at Mexico's Metropolitan
Autonomous University, told Tierramérica.
According to official figures, the current destruction and degradation
of ecosystems is equivalent to an annual 10 percent loss of Mexico's
gross domestic product (GDP).
Mexico is ranked fifth in the world as a destroyer of forests, with
some 600,000 hectares lost each year. Furthermore, most of the country's
farmland suffers some degree of erosion, and one-third of the population
lives in areas where air pollution is a problem.
The polls of voter preference indicate that the candidates with
the greatest chances of winning the July 2 elections -- and being
sworn in as president in December -- are Felipe Calderón, of the
ruling, conservative National Action Party (PAN), and Andrés López
Obrador, of the left-leaning Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD).
In a distant third place is Roberto Madrazo, of the Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI), which governed Mexico from 1920 to 2000,
and even farther behind are Patricia Mercado, of the Alternative
party, and Roberto Campa, of the New Alliance.
The Espinosa Yglesias Research Center, which subjected the platforms
of the aspiring successors to President Vicente Fox to a rigorous
analysis of design, viability and implementation, resulted in failing
grades for the environmental proposals.
Of the three leading candidates, López Obrador's environmental plans
were the worst, with an average grade of 1.1 out of a maximum of
4 (0 being "very poor" and 4 being "very good"). Calderón's plans
received an average of 1.8 and Madrazo's, 1.9.
As usually occurs in other countries during election season, environmental
issues have not carried much importance in the Mexican campaign.
Nevertheless, in April, during the first of two televised debates,
the candidates discussed water, forests and sustainable development.
Expert González Márquez criticized Calderón, López Obrador and Madrazo
for having offered "in a totally irresponsible way and with political
malice" to cut prices for natural gas and gasoline. In his opinion,
"that will only stimulate consumption and lead to higher emissions
of gases" that contribute to the greenhouse effect and climate change.
"It's an environmentally destructive proposal," said the academic,
who is also president of the non-governmental Mexican Institute
of Environmental Law Research.
The director of the Mexican branch of the environmental watchdog
Greenpeace, Alejandro Calvillo, said he, too, was disappointed by
the candidates' proposals. "They don't go very deep, they are very
general and some are frankly worrisome," he said in a conversation
with Tierramérica.
He said he was surprised that none of the candidates have a clear
proposal for confronting impunity in environmental crimes. None
has committed himself to giving independent power to the Federal
Procurator's Office for Environmental Protection, an ongoing demand
of communities and environmental groups.
Calvillo also is concerned that neither Calderón nor Madrazo link
agricultural policy with environmental policy, and that none of
the candidates has talked about genetically modified crops or biopiracy.
Two of López Obrador's proposals in particular sound an alarm with
Greenpeace: promoting nuclear energy and burning low-cost petroleum
derivatives instead of gas to generate electricity, which, says
the activist, "would represent an aggression against the health
of the Mexican people," due to the toxins produced by those fuels.
Activists also denounce the "absolute closemindedness" of the PRD
candidate about allowing foreign investment in developing renewable
energy sources, like wind, solar and others. López Obrador has said
that power generation must remain in the hands of the Mexican government.
According to Calvillo, PRI candidate Madrazo has no notable environmental
proposals, but PAN candidate Calderón does -- "although many of
them are too general, and even contradictory." But his credibility
is questionable, because his party, the PAN, "has been a failure
in environmental terms, and did not comply with expectations," said
the Greenpeace chief.
Very few activists have any applause for the Fox administration
when it comes to its record for protecting the environment.
During the Fox's term in office, which began in December 2000, there
have been three secretaries (ministers) of Environment, who most
observers agree did not meet their objectives.
Spokeswoman Claudia Suárez, of the Mexican Environmental Law Center,
says the environmental proposals of the candidates "have very little
content." They talked about water, forests and energy, but did not
lay out any concrete plans, she said.
"They lacked substance, and that disappointed us," Suárez told Tierramérica.
Suárez, Calvillo and González Márquez all agreed that Mexico's environmental
future will enter unknown territory after the elections, because
the country's environmental agencies are still weak and will be
at the mercy of the will and the abilities of the new government.
* Diego Cevallos is an IPS correspondent.
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