Ecosocialist Alliance Statement on G7 Conference

05/06/21
Author: 
Ecosocialist Alliance
System Change

June 5, 2021  •  

Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the US (and the EU) have a great part of the immense wealth of the richest countries in the world in 2021. This wealth is more than sufficient to provide for the needs for food, water, health, housing and education of the global population.

We face multiple interlinked and inseparable crises: climate, environment, mass extinctions, emergent infectious diseases, and economic. Oligarchic ownership of industry and the transnational corporations are key contributors to environmental degradation and to emergent infectious diseases crises. They are inimical and a core barrier to the urgent measures needed to address the nested crises we face.

The world and its population need system change, a just ecosocialist transition from the unsustainable chaos of neoliberal capitalism.

We call upon the G7 nations to agree on a plan in preparation for the COP26 meeting in November this year.

On the Covid-19 pandemic and emergent infectious disease crisis to:

  • Immediately introduce a patent waiver for Covid-19 vaccines that would allow countries to manufacture treatments locally, fully fund COVAX, and set up an aid fund to help with vaccine manufacturing, research and development.
  • Increase funding to the World Health Organization (WHO).

On the Climate Crisis:

  • Agree that fossil fuels must stay in the ground – (no new coal mine in west Cumbria, UK) – We need a massive global program of green public works investing in green jobs to develop renewable energy, replace harmful technology reliant on fossil fuel energy in homes, industry and agriculture, with free technology transfer for developing countries.
  • Agree and implement a significant cut in greenhouse gas emissions of 70% by 2030, from a 1990 baseline. We need honest and transparent accounting in measurement of emissions, taking account of outsourcing, exposing the dishonesty of offsetting calculations, and including military greenhouse gas emissions in calculations of the reductions needed.
  • End emissions trading schemes and make genuine reductions in harmful emissions.
  • Recognise the particular impacts of the long-term global crisis and the knock-on effects on the localised catastrophic events on women, children, elders and disabled people – catastrophe climate events and sea level rises produce the casualties of the event, but the victims are the result of systematic abuse, discrimination, and failure of governmental and corporate responsibility.

On the environment and mass extinction crises:

  • Move away from massive factory farms and large scale monoculture agribusiness as a method of producing food and support small farmers and eco-friendly farming methods, and invest in green agricultural technology to reduce synthetic fertiliser and pesticide use in agriculture, replacing these with organic methods.
  • End deforestation in the tropical and boreal forests by reducing demand in G7 countries for food, timber and biofuel imports.
  • End food and nutrition insecurity for small farmers in the global south by promoting an agricultural system based on human rights and food sovereignty through giving local control over natural resources, seeds, land, water, forests and knowledge and technology.
  • Commit to a massive increase in protected areas for biodiversity conservation, both in the G7 countries and make funding and support available to do this in the global south.
  • To recognise that migration is already and will increasingly be driven by long term environmental change and degradation resulting from climate change, driven primarily by the historic emissions of the metropolitan countries of the global north – accommodating and supporting free movement of people must be a core policy and necessary part of planning for the future.

On the Economic Crisis:

  • Increase wages and cut working hours for all G7 workers and involve trade unions in the economic transition without any loss of living standards, and to allow for greater worker involvement in workplace safety and resilience.
  • Adopt ‘Just Transition’ principles, creating well paid jobs in the new economy.
  • Outlaw tax havens, so wealthy corporations and individuals pay their fair share to the economic recovery. The economic costs of the pandemic should not be borne by those least able to do so.
  • Cancel all international debt of the global south.
  • Support urgent development of sustainable and affordable public transport.
  • Provide resources for popular education and involvement in implementing and enhancing a just transition.

If groups or individuals would like to add their name to this statement please email eco-socialist-action@proton.com, stating your country of residence. Also, get details of our Zoom public meeting on 9 June, 19:00 hours (BST). •

Groups

Individuals

  • Beatrix Campbell (UK) (OBE, writer and broadcaster)
  • Romayne Phoenix (UK)
  • Victor Wallis (USA) (ecosocialist author)
  • Professor Krista Cowman (UK), historian
  • Dee Searle (UK)
  • Lucy Early (UK)
  • Patrick Bond (South Africa)
  • Derek Wall (UK) ecosocialist author, Lecturer in Political Economy, former Green Party of England and Wales International Co-ordinator
  • John Foran (USA)
  • Felicity Dowling (UK)
  • Steve Masters (UK) (Green Party of England and Wales activist & West Berkshire District Councillor)
  • Dr. Henry Adams (UK) (ecologist & environmental activist)
  • Charles Gate, (UK)
  • Nicole Haydock (UK)
  • Gordon Peters (UK)
  • Mark Hollinrake (UK)
  • Pat McCarthy (UK)
  • Clive Healiss (UK)
  • Rafael Arturo Guariguata (Germany)
  • Declan Walsh (UK)
  • Jim Hollinshead (UK)
  • Ken Barker (UK)
  • Tina Rothery (UK)
  • John Burr (UK)
  • Emma Lorraine Coulling (UK)
  • Andrew Francis Robinson (UK)
  • Richard Finnigan (UK)
  • Frank McEntaggart (UK)
  • Roger Silverman (UK)
  • and others

The Ecosocialist Alliance was initiated by Green Left and Left Unity in the UK, to call for ecosocialist solutions to global inequality and the ecological crisis, in the run up to COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland in November. It has grown rapidly with support from other UK groups and Ireland, Canada and the USA.