As
Pakistan drowns, as Puerto Rico is cast into
darkness, and as
Jacksonians remain thirsty, it’s past time
for a climate tax on
fossil fuel companies.
What
do
Pakistan, Puerto Rico, and
Jackson, Mississippi, have in
common?
They’ve all recently experienced
climate-related catastrophic rains
and flooding, resulting in the
loss of homes, electricity, and
running water. But, even more
importantly, they are all
low-income
regions inhabited by people of
color—the prime victims of climate
injustice. They face inaction from
negligent governments and struggle
to survive as fossil fuel
companies reap massive profits—a
status
quo that United Nations
Secretary-General António Guterres
has
called
a
“moral and economic madness.”
Pakistan,
which
relies on yearly monsoons to
enrich its agricultural industry,
has had unprecedented
floods
since
June,
impacting
30
million people
and
killing
more
than
1,500—a third of them
children.
Zulfiqar
Kunbhar,
a Karachi-based journalist with
expertise in climate coverage,
explains
that
“things
are very critical” in the
rain-affected areas of his
nation. Kunbhar has been visiting
impacted regions and has seen
firsthand the massive
“agricultural loss and livelihood
loss”
among Pakistan’s farming
communities.
Sindh,
a
low-lying province of Pakistan, is
not only one of the most
populous in the nation (Sindh is
home to about 47 million people),
but it also produces about a third
of the agricultural produce,
according to Kunbhar. Twenty years
ago, Sindh was stricken with
extreme drought.
In the summer of 2022, it was drowning
in
chest-deep
water.
The
UN
is
warning
that the water could take months
to recede and that this
poses serious health risks, as
deadly diseases like cerebral
malaria
are emerging. Kunbhar summarizes
that provinces like Sindh are
facing
both “the curse of nature” and
government
“mismanagement.”
Climate
change
plus government inaction on
mitigation and resilience equals
deadly consequences for the poor.
This same equation plagues Puerto
Rico, long relegated to the status
of a United States territory. In
September 2022, on the fifth
anniversary of Hurricane Maria,
which
devastated Puerto Rico in 2017 and
killed
nearly
3,000
people,
another
storm named Fiona
knocked
out power
for
the entire region.
Julio
López
Varona, chief of campaigns at Center
for
Popular Democracy Action,
spoke
to
me
from
Puerto
Rico, saying, “the storm was
extremely slow, going at like 8
or 9 miles an hour,” and as a
result, “it pounded the island for
more than three days” with
relentless rain. “Communities were
completely flooded; people have
been displaced,” he says.
Eventually, the electrical grid
completely failed.
Days
after
the storm passed, millions of
people remained without
power—some even lost running
water—leading the White
House
to declare a major disaster
in
Puerto
Rico.
Even
on
the U.S. mainland, it is poor
communities of color who have been
hit the hardest by the impacts of
climate change. Mississippi’s
capital of Jackson, with an 82
percent
Black population
and
growing
numbers of Latin American
immigrants, struggles with
adequate
resources and has had problems
with its water infrastructure for
years.
Lorena
Quiroz,
founder of the Immigrant
Alliance
for Justice and Equity,
a Jackson-based group doing
multiracial grassroots organizing,
told
me
how
the
city’s residents have been
struggling without clean running
water since major
rains
and resulting floods
overwhelmed
a
water treatment plant this summer.
“It’s
a
matter of decades of disinvestment
in this mostly Black, and now
Brown, community,” says Quiroz. In
a state run by white
conservatives, Jackson is overseen
by a Black progressive mayor,
Chokwe Antar Lumumba, who is now suing
the
state government over
inaction
on
the
city’s water infrastructure.
Quiroz
says
it’s “painful to see how
government is not doing what they
should, how the state government
is neglecting its most vulnerable
populations.”
Over
and
over, the same pattern has emerged
on a planet experiencing
catastrophic climate change.
Setting aside the fact that we are
still
spewing
greenhouse
gasesinto
the
atmosphere as the world burns and
floods, the impacts of a
warming climate are
disproportionately borne by poor
communities of
color as evidenced in Pakistan,
Puerto Rico, Jackson, and
elsewhere.
The
UN
head, Guterres is doing what he
can in using his position to lay
blame precisely on the culprits, saying
in
his
opening remarks to the UN General
Assembly in New York recently,
“It is high time to put fossil
fuel producers, investors, and
enablers on notice. Polluters must
pay.” Guterres specifically
touted the importance of taxing
fossil fuel companies to cover the
damage they are causing in places
like Pakistan. According to the
Associated Press, “Oil companies
in July reported unprecedented
profits of billions of dollars per
month. ExxonMobil posted three
months profits of $17.85 billion,
Chevron of $11.62 billion, and
Shell of $11.5 billion.”
Contrast
this
windfall with the countless
numbers of people who lost their
homes in Pakistan and are now
living in shanties on roads where
they
have found some higher ground from
the floods. “If you lose a crop,
that’s seasonal damage, but if you
lose a house, you have to pay
for years to come,” says Kunbhar.
Kunbhar’s
view
of what is happening in Pakistan
applies equally to Puerto Rico
and Jackson: Society is “divided
between the haves and have-nots,”
he says. “The poorest of the poor
who are already facing an
economic crisis from generation to
generation, they are the most
vulnerable and the [worst] victims
of this crisis.”
In
Puerto
Rico, Varona sees displaced
communities losing their lands to
wealthier communities. He says
that the local government in
Puerto
Rico is “allowing millionaires and
billionaires to come and pay no
taxes and to actually take over
many of the places that are safer
for
communities to be on.” This is an
“almost intentional
displacement of communities… that
have historically lived here,”
he says.
And
in
Jackson, Quiroz says she is aghast
at the “mean-spiritedness”
of Mississippi’s wealthier
enclaves and state government. “It
is
so difficult to comprehend the way
that our people are being
treated.”
Although
disparate
and seemingly disconnected from
one another, with many
complicating factors, there are
stark lines connecting climate
victims to fossil fuel profits.
Pakistan’s
poor
communities are paying the price
for ExxonMobil’s
billions.
Puerto
Rico
remains in the dark so that
Chevron may enjoy massive
profits.
Jackson,
Mississippi,
has no clean drinking water so
that Shell can enrich its
shareholders.
When
put
in such terms, Guterres’s idea for
taxing the perpetrators of
climate devastation is a
no-brainer. It’s “high time,” he said,
“to put fossil fuel producers,
investors and enablers on notice,”
so that we can end our “suicidal
war against nature.”
This
commentary
was produced by Economy
for
All,
a project of the Independent Media
Institute.