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Irish NGOs Highlight Environmental Costs of the Celtic Tiger at Earth Summit

category national | environment | feature author Thursday August 22, 2002 03:32author by IMC Editorial Group - IMC Ireland

ESI Report: 'Telling it like it
is' Representatives of Irish environmental NGOs are in Johannesburg countering the government glossover of the serious social and environmental costs of the Celtic Tiger. Under the banner of Earth Summit Ireland groups ranging from An Taisce and Coastwatch to Friends of the Irish Environment and the Irish Peatland Conservation Council have produced a comprehensive report highlighting a wide range of deeply unsustainable practices occuring in Ireland.

'Telling it like it is - 10 years of unsustainable development in Ireland', uses 34 stories of unsustainable practices in Ireland as examples of how the government has paid only lip service to the main international environmental treaties that it has signed. Since Ireland is held up internationally as a model of development through the pursuit of globalisation and neo-liberal policies, this report is globally important to show the international community that the Celtic Tiger has not been cost-free.

The report describes how Ireland is burning its last remaining boglands at a rate of 1,500 ha per year to put even more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Another story highlights the mercuric soap factory that was expelled from Britain for poisoning its workers, which sells a toxic and illegal product to Africa - and that got £750,000 from the IDA. There's an overview of how local authorities in Galway ignored over half of the 3,266 submissions received about a controversial road project because they were deemed to be 'in the wrong envelopes' and of the Aghafad 'pig production unit' in which 100,000 pigs are crammed onto a 40 acre site in a factory 'farm' of horrific suffering and vast pollution? Other stories contrast the obsession with road building with the decay of public transportation, the continued favouring of landfill over recycling, and how Ireland is ignoring its obligations under the Kyoto Protocol on climate change.

Earth Summit on Sustainable
Development The World Summit on Sustainable Development is taking place in Johannesburg from August 26 to September 4. It is a follow-up to the Rio Earth Summit held 10 years ago which produced many aspirational statements but little real action. It is becoming clearer to NGOs, activists and those concerned with global environmental destruction and social inequality that the problem lies in the almost complete absence of political will. This lack of will to introduce change in the direction of sustainability is particularly probounced in Ireland where companies, local authorities and successive governments seem content to pass on the huge costs of overconsumption to future generations.

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