Sheila Watt-Cloutier

Canadian Inuit Activist Slams US on Climate Change 

Agence France-Presse 15jun2005

 

OSLO — A Canadian Inuit activist fired a salvo Wednesday at Washington which she accused of doing nothing to help stop the climate change that is threatening the way of life of the Arctic's native peoples.

Sheila Watt-Cloutier: Canadian Inuit Activist Slams US on Climate Change - Agence France-Presse 15jun2005

"Are the Americans doing anything? The answer is no," said Sheila Watt-Cloutier, a leading campaigner to improve the rights of the Arctic's indigenous peoples.

She accused the United States of failing to limit greenhouse gas emissions, believed to be the leading cause of global warming which has led to a rapid ice melt in the Arctic.

Elected to represent the 155,000 Inuits living in the Arctic in the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, Watt-Cloutier is preparing to submit a petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to pressure the US to act.

In the petition, Inuits claim that their human rights have been endangered by excessive US gas emissions.

Watt-Cloutier said she regretted the slow progress being made on climate issues within the Arctic Council, an eight-member body which only decides by consensus and which comprises Canada, Finland, Iceland, Japan, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States.

"It's not because of the lack of will of most of the countries that are involved in the Arctic Council but ... it's difficult for seven countries to move forward without an eighth which is not on board," she said.

According to experts the Arctic region is warming at the twice the rate of the rest of the planet.

They have warned that the Arctic ice could melt entirely in summer by the end of the century, which would threaten the existence of numerous species and the traditional way of life of indigenous peoples who rely on fishing and hunting for their livelihood.

"You would think that there would be more very alarming measures being put in place immediately when you see what is happening in the Arctic," Watt-Cloutier said.

Washington has refused to sign the Kyoto Protocol on climate change which calls for a five percent cut in greenhouse gas emissions in 2008-2012 from their 1990 levels.

Watt-Cloutier was in Oslo to receive the Norwegian environmental Sophie Prize for her efforts to protect the Arctic from the planet's pollution.

The prize was founded in 1997 by Norwegian writer Jostein Gaarder, the author of the bestselling philosophical mystery "Sophie's World". It is accompanied by a 100,000 dollar (76,000 euros) prize sum.

Last year's prize went to Kenyan ecologist Wangari Maathai, who a few months later went on to win the Nobel Peace Prize, also awarded in Norway.

source: http://www.terradaily.com/2005/050615150440.fo2t2qv6.html 15jun2005


Interview With Sheila Watt-Cloutier 

The Great Warming 28mar2004

When she was growing up in an Inuit community in northern Quebec, Sheila Watt-Cloutier never rode anything faster than a dog sled.

Now the 50-year-old grandmother jets across the globe speaking out on environmental issues and warning of the impending catastrophe that is global warming.

A long-time political spokesperson for the Inuit, Watt-Cloutier, is actively engaged in climate change initiatives with the aim of persuading states to reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases and the use of toxins.

The very survival the Inuit is at stake, she says.

"We go out and hunt on the sea to put food on the table," Watt-Cloutier said in a recent interview. "You go to the supermarket."

And if there is one place on the planet where the effects of the "great warming" are immediately felt it is in the Arctic says Watt-Cloutier who as chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference represents some 155,000 Inuit in Canada, The USA, Russia and Greenland.

"We on a daily basis observe the minute changes that are occurring in the environment," Watt-Cloutier said. "We are the guardians of the environment, in fact, because we're on the land every day...we're the early warning system for the rest of the world."

Originally from Nunavik in Northern Quebec and educated in Manitoba, she now lives in Iqaluit capital of the new territory of Nunavut.

Her people are witnessing first hand the devastating affects of climate change and its relentless assault on their traditional way of life. "We're already living this reality," Watt-Cloutier, said. "It's not a theory in the future, it's right now in the present."

The polar ice cap ice is forming much later in the year and breaking up earlier in the spring causing havoc for both man and animals. "The sea-ice season is a lot shorter then it used to be. And as a result we have less time to hunt on the ice. Our wildlife, the polar bear, has a lot less time so they're become a lot thinner."

Streams on traditional hunting routes that were once fordable have become torrents that claims lives every year. The icepacks have become so unpredictable that even seasoned hunters with knowledge of the land and the cycles, have fallen through and drowned, she said.

"What you see on the surface is no longer what it is underneath. The arctic sink is warming from under, and the ice is changing from under as well.

"So the rules have all changed and so has the wisdom we pass on to our young people. Many of our elders are being stumped by it, because it is so unpredictable."

The damage caused by rising temperatures is evident all around north, although not all regions are affected in the same way.

In the Beaufort Sea area, for example, erosion due to the rapid melting of the permafrost is hitting the beaches hard.

"They are having to move houses because they are crumbling," Watt-Cloutier said. "In Nunavik the permafrost is melting so quickly that they are having to redo the pavement of the runways because are starting to crumble."

The minutest change in the Arctic changes everything, every eco system. The changes in climate have brought a lot more insects and bugs, and new species of birds never before seen in the arctic are appearing every year.

"I think everything is connected and meant to be where they are. It's going to be an adaptation period for every species of animal, whether you are a bug, or a human being or a polar bear."

Watt-Cloutier is fully involved in United Nations work and has for years been working on the treaty to eliminate the use persistent organic pollutants, or POP's.

The so-called "dirty dozen" are among the most fearsome toxic chemicals because of the threat they pose to both humans and animals because they last so long in the environment before breaking down.

"I was personally involved in a lot of that work. That took me to different parts of the world but its really paid off.

Some 50 nations have signed on to the new treaty making it one of the fastest test ratified UN treaties on record. But the global work to get there took some 15 years, she said.

So as they turn their attention to stemming the tide of global warming the Inuit continue to navigate the significant social and economic changes that have accompanied development of the north.

"We have gone from a nomadic society to a democratic self-governing people-proud to be Canadian.

"We have gone from the "snow age" to the "space age" in one generation.

So are the Inuit, in a sense contributing to their own demise?

"I get asked that question quite often," Watt-Cloutier said. "Yes, we own airlines, we have skidoos, we have trucks, but the reality is our contribution to this problem is very minute.

"It's off the radar in terms of what we are creating ourselves, whether it's the toxins or the greenhouse gases. These things are coming from afar."

The US is by far the biggest culprit producing 26 per cent of the greenhouse gases emitted into the atmosphere, she said.

Watt-Cloutier is one of the environmental heroes featured in The Great Warming, a three-part documentary narrated by Alanis Morissette and Keanu Reeves which premiers Earth Day, April 22, on the Discovery Channel.

source: http://www.thegreatwarming.com 15jun2005

 

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