The
BBC Reith Lectures 2000
Respect
for the Earth
Questions
from the floor
Poverty
and Globalisation
by Vanadan
Shiva
Recently, I was visiting
Bhatinda in Punjab because of an epidemic of farmers suicides. Punjab used to
be the most prosperous agricultural region in India. Today every farmer is in
debt and despair. Vast stretches of land have become water-logged desert. And
as an old farmer pointed out, even the trees have stopped bearing fruit because
heavy use of pesticides have killed the pollinators - the bees and butterflies.
And Punjab is not alone
in experiencing this ecological and social disaster. Last year I was in Warangal,
Andhra Pradesh where farmers have also been committing suicide. Farmers who
traditionally grew pulses and millets and paddy have been lured by seed companies
to buy hybrid cotton seeds referred to by the seed merchants as "white gold",
which were supposed to make them millionaires. Instead they became paupers.
Their native seeds have
been displaced with new hybrids which cannot be saved and need to be purchased
every year at high cost. Hybrids are also very vulnerable to pest attacks. Spending
on pesticides in Warangal has shot up 2000 per cent from $2.5 million in the
1980s to $50 million in 1997. Now farmers are consuming the same pesticides
as a way of killing themselves so that they can escape permanently from unpayable
debt.
The corporations are now
trying to introduce genetically engineered seed which will further increase
costs and ecological risks. That is why farmers like Malla Reddy of the Andhra
Pradesh Farmers' Union had uprooted Monsanto's genetically engineered Bollgard
cotton in Warangal.
On March 27th, 25 year
old Betavati Ratan took his life because he could not pay pack debts for drilling
a deep tube well on his two-acre farm. The wells are now dry, as are the wells
in Gujarat and Rajasthan where more than 50 million people face a water famine.
The drought is not a "natural
disaster". It is "man-made". It is the result of mining of scarce ground water
in arid regions to grow thirsty cash crops for exports instead of water prudent
food crops for local needs.
It is experiences such
as these which tell me that we are so wrong to be smug about the new global
economy. I will argue in this lecture that it is time to stop and think about
the impact of globalisation on the lives of ordinary people. This is vital to
achieve sustainability.
Seattle and the World Trade
Organisation protests last year have forced everyone to think again. Throughout
this lecture series people have referred to different aspects of sustainable
development taking globalisation for granted. For me it is now time radically
to re-evaluate what we are doing. For what we are doing in the name of globalisation
to the poor is brutal and unforgivable. This is specially evident in India as
we witness the unfolding disasters of globalisation, especially in food and
agriculture.
Who feeds the world? My
answer is very different to that given by most people.
It is women and small farmers
working with biodiversity who are the primary food providers in the Third World,
and contrary to the dominant assumption, their biodiversity based small farms
are more productive than industrial monocultures.
The rich diversity and
sustainable systems of food production are being destroyed in the name of increasing
food production. However, with the destruction of diversity, rich sources of
nutrition disappear. When measured in terms of nutrition per acre, and from
the perspective biodiversity, the so called "high yields" of industrial agriculture
or industrial fisheries do not imply more production of food and nutrition.
Yields usually refers to
production per unit area of a single crop. Output refers to the total production
of diverse crops and products. Planting only one crop in the entire field as
a monoculture will of course increase its individual yield. Planting multiple
crops in a mixture will have low yields of individual crops, but will have high
total output of food. Yields have been defined in such a way as to make the
food production on small farms by small farmers disappear. This hides the production
by millions of women farmers in the Third World - farmers like those in my native
Himalaya who fought against logging in the Chipko movement, who in their terraced
fields even today grow Jhangora (barnyard millet), Marsha (Amaranth), Tur (Pigeon
Pea), Urad (Black gram), Gahat (horse gram), Soya Bean (Glycine Max), Bhat (Glycine
Soya) - endless diversity in their fields. From the biodiversity perspective,
biodiversity based productivity is higher than monoculture productivity. I call
this blindness to the high productivity of diversity a "Monoculture of the Mind",
which creates monocultures in our fields and in our world.
The Mayan peasants in the
Chiapas are characterised as unproductive because they produce only 2 tons of
corn per acre. However, the overall food output is 20 tons per acre when the
diversity of their beans and squashes, their vegetables their fruit trees are
taken into account.
In Java, small farmers
cultivate 607 species in their home gardens. In sub-Saharan Africa, women cultivate
120 different plants. A single home garden in Thailand has 230 species, and
African home gardens have more than 60 species of trees.
Rural families in the Congo
eat leaves from more than 50 species of their farm trees.
A study in eastern Nigeria
found that home gardens occupying only 2 per cent of a household's farmland
accounted for half of the farm's total output. In Indonesia 20 per cent of household
income and 40 per cent of domestic food supplies come from the home gardens
managed by women.
Research done by FAO has
shown that small biodiverse farms can produce thousands of times more food than
large, industrial monocultures.
And diversity in addition
to giving more food is the best strategy for preventing drought and desertification.
What the world needs to
feed a growing population sustainably is biodiversity intensification, not the
chemical intensification or the intensification of genetic engineering. While
women and small peasants feed the world through biodiversity we are repeatedly
told that without genetic engineering and globalisation of agriculture the world
will starve. In spite of all empirical evidence showing that genetic engineering
does not produce more food and in fact often leads to a yield decline, it is
constantly promoted as the only alternative available for feeding the hungry.
That is why I ask, who
feeds the world?
This deliberate blindness
to diversity, the blindness to nature's production, production by women, production
by Third World farmers allows destruction and appropriation to be projected
as creation.
Take the case of the much
flouted "golden rice" or genetically engineered Vitamin A rice as a cure for
blindness. It is assumed that without genetic engineering we cannot remove Vitamin
A deficiency. However, nature gives us abundant and diverse sources of vitamin
A. If rice was not polished, rice itself would provide Vitamin A. If herbicides
were not sprayed on our wheat fields, we would have bathua, amaranth, mustard
leaves as delicious and nutritious greens that provide Vitamin A.
Women in Bengal use more
than 150 plants as greens - Hinche sak (Enhydra fluctuans), Palang sak (Spinacea
oleracea), Tak palang (Rumex vesicarious), Lal Sak (Amaranthus gangeticus) -
to name but a few.
But the myth of creation
presents biotechnologists as the creators of Vitamin A, negating nature's diverse
gifts and women's knowledge of how to use this diversity to feed their children
and families.
The most efficient means
of rendering the destruction of nature, local economies and small autonomous
producers is by rendering their production invisible.
Women who produce for their
families and communities are treated as `non-productive' and `economically'
inactive. The devaluation of women's work, and of work done in sustainable economies,
is the natural outcome of a system constructed by capitalist patriarchy. This
is how globalisation destroys local economies and destruction itself is counted
as growth.
And women themselves are
devalued. Because many women in the rural and indigenous communities work co-operatively
with nature's processes, their work is often contradictory to the dominant market
driven `development' and trade policies. And because work that satisfies needs
and ensures sustenance is devalued in general, there is less nurturing of life
and life support systems.
The devaluation and invisibility
of sustainable, regenerative production is most glaring in the area of food.
While patriarchal division of labour has assigned women the role of feeding
their families and communities, patriarchal economics and patriarchal views
of science and technology magically make women's work in providing food disappear.
"Feeding the World" becomes disassociated from the women who actually do it
and is projected as dependent on global agribusiness and biotechnology corporations.
However, industrialisation
and genetic engineering of food and globalisation of trade in agriculture are
recipes for creating hunger, not for feeding the poor.
Everywhere, food production
is becoming a negative economy, with farmers spending more to buy costly inputs
for industrial production than the price they receive for their produce. The
consequence is rising debts and epidemics of suicides in both poor and rich
countries.
Economic globalisation
is leading to a concentration of the seed industry, increased use of pesticides,
and, finally, increased debt. Capital-intensive, corporate controlled agriculture
is being spread into regions where peasants are poor but, until now, have been
self-sufficient in food. In the regions where industrial agriculture has been
introduced through globalisation, higher costs are making it virtually impossible
for small farmers to survive.
The globalisation of non-sustainable
industrial agriculture is literally evaporating the incomes of Third World farmers
through a combination of devaluation of currencies, increase in costs of production
and a collapse in commodity prices.
Farmers everywhere are
being paid a fraction of what they received for the same commodity a decade
ago. The Canadian National Farmers Union put it like this in a report to the
senate this year:
"While the farmers growing
cereal grains - wheat, oats, corn - earn negative returns and are pushed close
to bankruptcy, the companies that make breakfast cereals reap huge profits.
In 1998, cereal companies Kellogg's, Quaker Oats, and General Mills enjoyed
return on equity rates of 56%, 165% and 222% respectively. While a bushel of
corn sold for less than $4, a bushel of corn flakes sold for $133 ... Maybe
farmers are making too little because others are taking too much."
And a World Bank report
has admitted that "behind the polarisation of domestic consumer prices and world
prices is the presence of large trading companies in international commodity
markets."
While farmers earn less,
consumers pay more. In India, food prices have doubled between 1999 and 2000.
The consumption of food grains in rural areas has dropped by 12%. Increased
economic growth through global commerce is based on pseudo surpluses. More food
is being traded while the poor are consuming less. When growth increases poverty,
when real production becomes a negative economy, and speculators are defined
as "wealth creators", something has gone wrong with the concepts and categories
of wealth and wealth creation. Pushing the real production by nature and people
into a negative economy implies that production of real goods and services is
declining, creating deeper poverty for the millions who are not part of the
dot.com route to instant wealth creation.
Women - as I have said
- are the primary food producers and food processors in the world. However,
their work in production and processing is now becoming invisible.
Recently, the McKinsey
corporation said: "American food giants recognise that Indian agro-business
has lots of room to grow, especially in food processing. India processes a minuscule
1 per cent of the food it grows compared with 70 per cent for the U.S...".
It is not that we Indians
eat our food raw. Global consultants fail to see the 99 per cent food processing
done by women at household level, or by the small cottage industry because it
is not controlled by global agribusiness. 99% of India's agroprocessing has
been intentionally kept at the small level. Now , under the pressure of globalisation,
things are changing. Pseudo hygiene laws are being uses to shut down local economies
and small scale processing.
In August 1998, small scale
local processing of edible oil was banned in India through a "packaging order"
which made sale of open oil illegal and required all oil to be packaged in plastic
or aluminium. This shut down tiny "ghanis" or cold pressed mills. It destroyed
the market for our diverse oilseeds - mustard, linseed, sesame, groundnut, coconut.
And the take-over of the
edible oil industry has affected 10 million livelihoods. The take over of flour
or "atta" by packaged branded flour will cost 100 million livelihoods. And these
millions are being pushed into new poverty.
The forced use of packaging
will increase the environmental burden of millions of tonnes of waste.
The globalisation of the
food system is destroying the diversity of local food cultures and local food
economies. A global monoculture is being forced on people by defining everything
that is fresh, local and handmade as a health hazard. Human hands are being
defined as the worst contaminants, and work for human hands is being outlawed,
to be replaced by machines and chemicals bought from global corporations. These
are not recipes for feeding the world, but stealing livelihoods from the poor
to create markets for the powerful.
People are being perceived
as parasites, to be exterminated for the "health" of the global economy.
In the process new health
and ecological hazards are being forced on Third World people through dumping
of genetically engineered foods and other hazardous products.
Recently, because of a
W.T.O. ruling, India has been forced to remove restrictions on all imports.
Among the unrestricted
imports are carcasses and animal waste parts that create a threat to our culture
and introduce public health hazards such as the Mad Cow Disease.
The US Centre for Disease
Prevention in Atlanta has calculated that nearly 81 million cases of food borne
illnesses occur in the US every year. Deaths from food poisoning have gone up
more up more than four times due to deregulation. Most of these infections are
caused by factory farmed meat. The US slaughters 93 million pigs, thirty seven
million cattle, two million calves, six million horses, goats and sheep and
eight billion chickens and turkeys each year.
Now the giant meat industry
of US wants to dump contaminated meat produced through violent and cruel methods
on Indian consumers.
The waste of the rich is
being dumped on the poor. The wealth of the poor is being violently appropriated
through new and clever means like patents on biodiversity and indigenous knowledge.
Patents and intellectual
property rights are supposed to be granted for novel inventions. But patents
are being claimed for rice varieties such as the basmati for which my Valley
- where I was born - is famous, or pesticides derived from the Neem which our
mothers and grandmothers have been using.
Rice Tec, a U.S. based
company has been granted Patent no. 5,663,484 for basmati rice lines and grains.
Basmati, neem, pepper,
bitter gourd, turmeric.......every aspect of the innovation embodied in our
indigenous food and medicinal systems is now being pirated and patented. The
knowledge of the poor is being converted into the property of global corporations,
creating a situation where the poor will have to pay for the seeds and medicines
they have evolved and have used to meet their own needs for nutrition and health
care.
Such false claims to creation
are now the global norm, with the Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights
Agreement of World Trade Organisation forcing countries to introduce regimes
that allow patenting of life forms and indigenous knowledge.
Instead of recognising
that commercial interests build on nature and on the contribution of other cultures,
global law has enshrined the patriarchal myth of creation to create new property
rights to life forms just as colonialism used the myth of discovery as the basis
of the take over of the land of others as colonies.
Humans do not create life
when they manipulate it. Rice Tec's claim that it has made "an instant invention
of a novel rice line", or Roslin Institute's claim that Ian Wilmut "created"
Dolly denies the creativity of nature, the self-organisational capacity of life
forms, and the prior innovations of Third World communities.
Patents and intellectual
property rights are supposed to prevent piracy. Instead they are becoming the
instruments of pirating the common traditional knowledge from the poor of the
Third World and making it the exclusive "property" of western scientists and
corporations.
When patents are granted
for seeds and plants, as in the case of basmati, theft is defined as creation,
and saving and sharing seed is defined as theft of intellectual property. Corporations
which have broad patents on crops such as cotton, soya bean, mustard are suing
farmers for seed saving and hiring detective agencies to find out if farmers
have saved seed or shared it with neighbours.
The recent announcement
that Monsanto is giving away the rice genome for free is misleading, because
Monsanto has never made a commitment that it will never patent rice varieties
or any other crop varieties.
Sharing and exchange, the
basis of our humanity and of our ecological survival has been redefined as a
crime. This makes us all poor.
Nature has given us abundance,
women's indigenous knowledge of biodiversity, agriculture and nutrition has
built on that abundance to create more from less, to create growth through sharing.
The poor are pushed into
deeper poverty by making them pay for what was theirs. Even the rich are poorer
because their profits are based on the theft and on the use of coercion and
violence. This is not wealth creation but plunder.
Sustainability requires
the protection of all species and all people and the recognition that diverse
species and diverse people play an essential role in maintaining ecological
processes. Pollinators are critical to fertilisation and generation of plants.
Biodiversity in fields provides vegetables, fodder, medicine and protection
to the soil from water and wind erosion.
As humans travel further
down the road to non-sustainability, they become intolerant of other species
and blind to their vital role in our survival.
In 1992, when Indian farmers
destroyed Cargill's seed plant in Bellary, Karnataka, to protest against seed
failure, the Cargill Chief Executive stated, "We bring Indian farmers smart
technologies which prevent bees from usurping the pollen". When I was participating
in the United Nations Biosafety Negotiations, Monsanto circulated literature
to defend its herbicide resistant Roundup ready crops on grounds that they prevent
"weeds from stealing the sunshine". But what Monsanto calls weeds are the green
fields that provide Vitamin A rice and prevent blindness in children and anaemia
in women.
A worldview that defines
pollination as "theft by bees" and claims biodiversity "steals" sunshine is
a worldview which itself aims at stealing nature's harvest by replacing open,
pollinated varieties with hybrids and sterile seeds, and destroying biodiverse
flora with herbicides such as Roundup. The threat posed to the Monarch butterfly
by genetically engineered bt crops is just one example of the ecological poverty
created by the new biotechnologies. As butterflies and bees disappear, production
is undermined. As biodiversity disappears, with it go sources of nutrition and
food.
When giant corporations
view small peasants and bees as thieves, and through trade rules and new technologies
seek the right to exterminate them, humanity has reached a dangerous threshold.
The imperative to stamp out the smallest insect, the smallest plant, the smallest
peasant comes from a deep fear - the fear of everything that is alive and free.
And this deep insecurity and fear is unleashing the violence against all people
and all species.
The global free trade economy
has become a threat to sustainability and the very survival of the poor and
other species is at stake not just as a side effect or as an exception but in
a systemic way through a restructuring of our worldview at the most fundamental
level. Sustainability, sharing and survival is being economically outlawed in
the name of market competitiveness and market efficiency.
I want to argue here tonight
that we need to urgently bring the planet and people back into the picture.
The world can be fed only
by feeding all beings that make the world.
In giving food to other
beings and species we maintain conditions for our own food security. In feeding
earthworms we feed ourselves. In feeding cows, we feed the soil, and in providing
food for the soil, we provide food for humans. This worldview of abundance is
based on sharing and on a deep awareness of humans as members of the earth family.
This awareness that in impoverishing other beings, we impoverish ourselves and
in nourishing other beings, we nourish ourselves is the real basis of sustainability.
The sustainability challenge
for the new millennium is whether global economic man can move out of the worldview
based on fear and scarcity, monocultures and monopolies, appropriation and dispossession
and shift to a view based on abundance and sharing, diversity and decentralisation,
and respect and dignity for all beings.
Sustainability demands
that we move out of the economic trap that is leaving no space for other species
and other people. Economic Globalisation has become a war against nature and
the poor. But the rules of globalisation are not god - given. They can be changed.
They must be changed. We must bring this war to an end.
Since Seattle, a frequently
used phrase has been the need for a rule based system. Globalisation is the
rule of commerce and it has elevated Wall Street to be the only source of value.
As a result things that should have high worth - nature, culture, the future
are being devalued and destroyed. The rules of globalisation are undermining
the rules of justice and sustainability, of compassion and sharing. We have
to move from market totalitarianism to an earth democracy.
We can survive as a species
only if we live by the rules of the biosphere. The biosphere has enough for
everyone's needs if the global economy respects the limits set by sustainability
and justice.
As Gandhi had reminded
us: "The earth has enough for everyone's needs, but not for some people's greed".
QUESTIONS
FROM THE FLOOR
Sujata Gupta, the Tata
Energy Research Institute: I'd like to hear your views on sustainable use
of scarce inputs like water for agriculture. What I gathered from your lecture
was total condemnation of the market system.
Vandana Shiva: Let
me first respond by saying - I love markets. I love my local market where local
"subgees" are sold, and one can chat with the women. The tragedy really is that
the market is being turned into the only organising principle for life, and
Wall St is being turned into the only source of value, and it's the disappearance
of other markets, other values that I am condemning. In terms of water, the
solution to water conservation and scarce water management is not putting it
in the hands of those who can afford to buy the last drop, but to put it in
the hands of the community, to use it sustainably within the limits of renewal.
The water must be returned to the communities and managed as a commons - it
has to be taken beyond the marketplace.
Professor Marva, University
of Delhi: Can there be sustainable development without sustainable population?
Vandana Shiva: I
think non-sustainable population growth is a symptom and product of non-sustainable
development. It's not that population grows by itself as a separate phenomena
- you look at the data - Indian population had stability till 1800 - colonisation,
dispossession of land started to make our population grow. Highest growth rates
of population in England is after the enclosures of the commons. It's the loss
of resources of the people that generate livelihood and the replacement of resources
by labour to be sold on markets in an uncertain daily wage market that triggers
population growth. Population growth is a result of non-sustainable development.
Bhoopinder Singh Hooda,
member Legislative Assembly from Haryama: I belong to a farmer family and
myself am a farmer. Farmers were exploited even when there was no globalisation.
And I totally agree with you globalisation is going to lead (to) neocolonisation,
but we can't be out of globalisation. WTO is a ground reality - no country can
get out of it like you have suggested.
Vandana Shiva: WTO
rules are written on pieces of paper - as I mentioned in my lecture they're
not God given. And therefore they are not ground reality in the way the soil
and the Ganges are ground realities that can't be changed. These are rules that
need to be changed - that was the message of Seattle and the way to change them
is to bring consideration of people's livelihoods, sustainable use of resources
at the heart of every step of trade decisions, and to ensure that trade rules
reflect sustainability and the right of people to have security.
Bhoopinder Singh Hooda:
In India farmers are getting negative subsidy - there's no subsidy for farmers,
so how can unequal competitors go for globalisation?
Vandana Shiva:
That's precisely the issue - that we were told we'd have a level playing field
- we were told when the WTO rules come into place we would have a fair market
for Indian farmers - that was the single most important reason why India justified
signing on to the GATT treaty after the Uruguay round. It turns out we have
a very unlevel playing field - the northern countries or OECD countries are
giving 343 billion dollars of subsidies and these subsidies have actually doubled
since the completion of the Uruguay round - meantime India's giving a negative
subsidy of 25 billion. Now one could keep arguing about how the north is giving
very high subsidies - I think the argument needs to shift to how can we ensure
that small farmers in every country and the soil and water and biodiversity
in every country be protected and how can we ensure that trade rules as they
are written by totally fallible trade ministers and trade secretaries should
be rewritten to ensure that this unequal playing field does not destroy the
Earth and her producers.
Dr. Sandhya Tiwari,
Confederation of Indian Industry: Dr. Shiva is it really the job of the
farmer to preserve germ plasm and biodiversity, to grow plants that are less
productive? Shouldn't this job be left to the specialists?
Vandana Shiva:
Well - I'm talking about leaving it to the specialist, which is the women farmers.
So far if we have biodiversity available to us it is because biodiversity experts
who happen to be women by gender, happen to be on small farms in poorer parts
of the world, have continued to conserve biodiversity because it is more productive
for them from their perspective. It might not be productive for a single monopoly
trading house that wants to have every farmer grow corn in a region or every
farmer grow cornola in a region, but it is highly productive and very efficient
use of land, water - to feed the family, to have a little surplus to sell on
the local market, to send your child to school and it is in fact that community
which will save these resources for us. We cannot trust them in anyone else's
hands.
Gulgit Choudhury, Ram
Organics: I have worked earlier with Monsanto. I have a simple question
to ask you. Suppose you were given the opportunity to develop parameters of
a social governance which ensures sustainability - what would you suggest for
countries like India.?
Vandana Shiva:
We are in fact involved for the last few years - generating the kind of criteria
through participatory democracy building - through ensuring that people at every
level have the information, through ensuring that communities are organised,
to manage collectively the resources that can only be sustained collectively.
If I have the money and power to drill a deep tube well I can make dry my neighbour's
shallow well and she will usually be a very poor woman. And therefore the only
way a village can conserve its ground water is to do what the "Paani Panchayath"
did in Harash - ensure that water is used within limits. Systems of governance
have to begin with where people feel the impact, and therefore we do require
the rebuilding of decentralised direct democracy. I do not see growers as isolated
individuals because the consequences of their action are felt by their neighbours.
If I am growing b.t. corn on my field I kill the monarch butterfly of my neighbour's
field. Communities, collectives are cohesiveness of societies are important
to talk about not individual growers, and that is the bottom rung of decision
making to which both which corporations as well as governments need to be accountable
- that is the experiment that started after Seattle and that experiment in accountable
localisation to ensure that decisions are made at appropriate place and production
is carried out at the appropriate level is really the new enterprise of democracy
that societies are involved in around the world, even while globalisation threatens
our lives.
Host, Kate Adie:
Thank you - we'll have some time for more questions from our audience here at
the Nehru Memorial Library in Delhi in just a moment. First I'd like to read
some of the e-mails sent to the BBC's Reith 2000 website. From Bangladesh Alimgihia
Haque says he finds himself in sympathy with both Vandana Shiva and the Prince
of Wales on the issue of GM foods. Thank God he says that the people of Britain
made their voices heard and the Prime Minister, Tony Blair had to listen.
A contributor from Malaysia
who signs himself Yong is critical of his own country's leaders. He says they
condemn globalisation on the one hand and on the other give approval for dams
and other environmentally destructive activities.
Chris Whitehouse, who sent
his e-mail from Nepal questions whether more roads, more fridges, more water
greedy flush toilets will make people in developing countries any happier? Every
society he says should decide its own vision of development.
Zeb Phibbs from Britain
says eating meat has got a lot to answer for. 70% of everything grown is used
to feed animals which are then killed to feed us. Use the land grow food directly
for people and we can easily feed everyone. Being Vegan is easy - completely
cruelty free and sustainable. What more do you need?
Finally, we had this from
last year's Reith lecturer Anthony Giddens - addressing you Vandana he says
- "I congratulate you on your challenging presentation. I have to say though
I don't agree with much of it. Isn't it a contradiction in terms to use the
global media to put a case against globalisation?"
Vandana Shiva:
I don't think BBC is a product of the economic globalisation regime that the
World Trade Organisation gave us or the new recent trade liberalisation has
given us. I think it was created in l922 and international integration, international
communication is not what economic globalisation is about. Corporate concentration,
corporate control is what recent economic globalisation is about and in fact
the BBC is a counter-example to that because the real example of globalised
media and communication is Time Warner, now bought up by American on Line, Disney,
and the News Corporation.
Prof. Vinod Chowdhury,
reader in economics at St. Stephen's College: It strikes me as very extraordinary
that Vandanaji should have such a one sided approach. And I'm saying that with
due respect to the sheer vivacity of her presentation. Vandanaji seems to believe
that there are two clearly antithetical paradigms. One is a paradigm that essentially
is based on decentralisation, democratisation - all the good things in life
- - women are cared for, poor people are cared for - this, that and the other.
And other is terribly evil. Everything's wrong with it. Now surely life cannot
be like that Vandanaji may I plead with you to please consider third paradigm,
where we take bits and pieces from here and there and get an eclectic, practical
approach, and I support Boopinder Singh Hooda - the President of the Haryama
Congress who asked you - and you didn't answer that - what is the alternative
at a time when no country can opt out of the WTO - it's not a piece of paper
madam - it is a commitment that countries have to make or they will be paraiah
countries and we cannot afford to be a paraiah country - please react?
Vandana Shiva:
I did react to him. And I said rewriting those rules - rewriting those rules
that are one sided. In fact it's the WTO rules that are totally one sided because
they really only protect the interest of one sector of the global community
which is the global corporations, not in the local industry, not even local
retail business, not small farmers anywhere, not in the north and not in the
south. And those rules can be rewritten. That is the point I'm trying to make.
Do not treat WTO rules in the Uruguay Round Treaty as the final word on how
trade should be carried out. Those rules are being reviewed. What we have called
for in Seattle is a more democratic input in what sustainable and just rules
would look like for agriculture on intellectual property rights, in the area
of services, in the area of investments, the four new areas which were brought
in. Before that - no-one had problems with the GATT. The old GATT was about
real trade in real products beyond national boundaries. The new GATT with the
Uruguay round - is about invading in every space of our everyday lives ... and
if you are a woman you do have a somewhat different point of view. That's why
we talk of gender. If you are poor, you will have a different point of view
from the rich. To have different points of view because of differences in location
in society is not a problem. It is opportunistic though to take a little element
of the perspective of the rich , a little element of the perspective of the
poor and put it into a little jigsaw of opportunistic statements. Societies
live by coherent principles, organisational systems, values and world views.
And what we are calling for is to balance out that one sided idea that we live
by commerce alone.
Rovinder Raki, student:
You seem to eulogise the fairness and efficiency of traditional agricultures,
societies and production patterns. But the reality is that the farmers were
exploited in these societies by moneylenders and feudal lords. With the market
reaching these societies that exploitative social system certainly declines.
Now what I have to ask you is what restrains you from appreciating this sanitising
effect of the market?
Vandana Shiva:
Well the sanitising affect of the market does end up treating people like germs.
Wipe them out. And it is that view of dispensability, the disappearances of
the small that I was trying to draw attention to in my lecture. There has always
been exploitation, and I agree with Mr Hooda, but no exploitation before this
period of current, economic globalisation, ever organised itself in ways that
it could totally dispense with the exploited. Even the slave system needed the
slave. Even the worst of British rule which created the Bengal famine, and led
to the "Faybehaga" movement to rise against the exploitation, it needed to keep
the peasants alive For the first time we have a system where no-one needs the
peasants, unless we realise as societies we need them, that we've reached a
period where people are actually talking in India, in other countries that you
can get rid of small producers. It's assumed that everything, real growth, real
prosperity is going to come out of cyber space, but as you can see, you can
have the best of IT technologies floating above the carcasses of people dying
in Rajisthan and Gujerat right now -- and it will not help them out. We have
to pay attention to the ecological base of our survival and the needs of all.
I personally am committed to feeling and believing that the smallest of species
and the smallest of people have as much a right to live on this planet with
dignity as the most powerful corporation and the most powerful individual.
Anurag Jacob: I'm
a card-carrying member of India's nascent dot-com economy. Dr. Shiva I just
was very disturbed by your omission of any reference to education. Communities
in today's world cannot grow in vacuum - they need to have tools to evaluate
the evils of globalisation with the good of localisation. Why is that you omitted
to talk about education?
Vandana Shiva:
For the simple reason that the Reith lecture only allows me 25 minutes. But
in any case I don't disagree with the characterisation of IT driven society
as the only knowledge society. I believe the women working in the fields conserving
biodiveristy, producing our food, cooking the food also have a knowledge society
and it's that denial of knowledge in other ways through other domains that is
the basis of the work we do against biopiracy, the work I do against monocultures
of the mind, the work I do against reductionism in science and technology, and
I think there is a real need for our future to recognise knowledge in all its
diverse forms among all the different creators of knowledge.
Anurag Jacob: I'm
not saying the knowledge that indigenous community has is rubbish. But when
a farmer is faced with the prospects of using what you call white gold as opposed
to his traditional seeds, the farmer opted for the white gold because he did
not know how to evaluate his own local seed against genetically modified foods.
Therefore don't you think we do need to educate our people so that they can
evaluate what they need to do?
Vandana Shiva:
I actually referred in the response to the person who used to work in Monsanto
- that part of democracy is to have public education, and full public awareness.
I agree with you that technologies need to be assessed and that is why for the
last 13 years we have been trying to build this system of assessing genetic
engineering, the bio-safety protocol under the convention on biological diversity,
that finally after a decade of subversion is now in place and was completed
in January in Montreal. We need people to make decisions on the basis of having
the knowledge of what the technologies are, and having processes to actually
participate. That's the basis of our plea - in the supreme court on the Monsanto
trials - that we need more knowledge dissemination, more participation, more
accountability. And finally, there are situations in which we will be ready
with the production technology long before we are ready with the capacity to
assess its impact. That is when we call for the precautionary principle. Know
the risks before you deploy technology. The result we have a precautionary principle
today is because we put out DTT - gave it Nobel prizes, now we want to withdraw
it. We put out fossil fuel now we're worried about climate change. With GM crops
you can't deploy them because there's no call back. In any case the climate
change phenomena is becoming so life threatening that people are calling for
the fact that you will never have the final ultimate deterministic linear prediction
- therefore on the basis of complex assessment, take care, take caution before
you deploy technologies on a very large scale that could be absolutely devastating
for the planet.
Rukmini Paya Naiur
- professor at the Indian Institute of Technology: Some would argue (my
institute) is exclusively focused on what you call the dot com route to success.
Listening to your strong emphasis on biodiversity, it struck me that there was
an unseen shadow twin of biodiversity which is recyclability or reusability
in our cultures. India is said to be a great recycling culture - we recycle
everything including souls...I wanted to ask you whether this shadow twin recycling
had something to contribute to the notion that the materials of the whole universe
are in fact reusable and that we have something to actually offer the world
in this sort of expertise?
Vandana Shiva:
We have been a civilisation that lived on the basis of recycling and that's
why when we today are burdened with plastic and plastic packaging now compulsory,
now required by law, people still treat that plastic bag as if is a little banana
leaf that will disappear. And even the cows are in the habit of thinking plastic
is like a banana leaf they can eat up. Some products don't disappear. Some products
don't get recycled and that's part of the crisis that as a culture which has
had such sensitive ways of ensuring that our ecological footprint is very light
on the planet - last year a scientist from Canada sent me his data on ecological
footprint and his data on resource use, and ability of eco-systems to absorb
outputs and waste was that there were only 3 countries with surpluses in resources
- Canada, Sweden - at that time India. That was India before the race to "plastic"
itself, globalise itself. Today what we need is a way to make a fit into those
systems that we have evolved so sophisticatedly, recycling organic matter to
ensure we get out of the chemical tread mill because chemicals do not get recycled.
They just bio-accumulate.
P.D. Kayra from Delhi:
While one would appreciate that biodiveristy and systems like that do help in
production, but I'm more concerned with the farmer who today I find is disenchanted
and is less and less motivated and becoming totally indifferent to his way of
life and that maybe biodiversity by itself will not be able to explain?
Vandana Shiva:
In the areas where monocultures have taken over, where external inputs and chemicals
are forcing farmers to spend the little bit of income they have to buy those
useless and costly inputs - farmers are disenchanted both because of the negative
economy I talked about - and no production can take place over time on the basis
of a negative economy - as well as the fact that the entire set of technologies
in industrial agriculture are careless technologies. They are technologies that
substitute care with carelessness. You can just spray urea - you don't have
to do composting. You don't have to weed at the right time - the few tiny weeds
that might come up, spray the herbicide and that technology of carelessness
eventually creates disenchanted people because they have no meaning, no role.
In the areas where we work through our movement called "Navdanya", for conserving
biodiveristy and we now have seed banks in seven states, eleven community seed
banks have been started - every region where after a while the farmers have
replaced external inputs with internal inputs to produce food organically, where
they have managed to get rid of their debts - a threefold increase in incomes
just by saving on expenditure - they are excited, they're enthused, they are
absolutely on the verge of a whole new determination and I invite some of you
to come and visit those regions.
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