13) A SPECIES IN DANGER
OF EXTINCTION
(The following
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Reflections by Comrade
Fidel, Sept. 21, 2009
Today I would have liked to speak
about the extraordinary "Paz sin Fronteras" (Peace without Borders)
Concert held at the José Marti Revolution Square 24 hours ago,
but the
stubborn reality forces me to write about a danger that threatens not
just peace but the survival of our species.
The United
Nations Organization,
whose task is to safeguard the peace, security and rights of almost 200
states that represent more than 6.5 billion inhabitants on our planet,
is about to begin the General Assembly debates, with the participation
of heads of states. This time, it will dedicate a senior-level session
on climate change as preparation for the Copenhagen Conference to be
held between December 7-18 of this year.
At the
International Conference
on the Environment called by the UN in Rio de Janeiro, I stated as the
then head of state of the Cuban state: "A species is in danger of
extinction: man". When I uttered and backed up those words, received
and applauded by the heads of state in attendance - including the
president of the United States, a Bush less dismal than his son George
W. - they still believed that they had several centuries to confront
the problem. I myself did not envision a date any closer than 60 or 80
years.
Today we are
dealing with a
truly imminent danger and its effects are already visible... Average
temperatures have increased 0.8 degrees Centigrade since 1980 according
to the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. The last two decades
of the twentieth century were the warmest in hundreds of years. The
temperatures in Alaska, the Canadian West and eastern Russia have gone
up at a pace that doubles the world average. Arctic ice has been
quickly disappearing and the region can experience its first completely
ice-free summer as soon as the year 2040. The effects are visible in
the 2 kilometre high masses of ice melting in Greenland, the South
American glaciers, from Ecuador all the way to Cape Horn, fundamental
sources of water, and the gigantic ice cap covering the extensive area
of Antarctica.
Current
carbon dioxide
concentrations have reached the equivalent of 380 parts per million, a
figure surpassing the natural range of the last 650,000 years. The
warming is already affecting the natural systems throughout the world.
If this should occur it would be devastating for all peoples.
Scientists
have discovered that
no less than 3 billion years ago the first basic life forms on planet
Earth appeared. Since then, these same life forms have evolved non-stop
towards higher and more complex forms by virtue of the inexorable laws
of biology. Our current species, Homo sapiens, has existed for barely
150 thousand years, an insignificant fraction of time from the
beginning of life. Even though the Greeks, hundreds of years before our
era, were already in possession of certain astronomical knowledge,
barely more than 500 years ago, after a long period of medieval
darkness, Man discovered that the Earth was round and not flat. An
audacious Genovese admiral with solid understanding proposed to sail
eastward in search of India instead of circumnavigating southern
Africa. European colonization of this hemisphere and the rest of the
planet would commence.
The human
species could measure
with sufficient precision the rotation of the Earth every 24 hours and
its movement around the enormous incandescent mass of the Sun
approximately every 365 days. These and other singular circumstances
were associated with the existence and life for all species in
existence at that time.
Since
antiquity, the most
advanced philosophers and thinkers have sought social justice. In spite
of this, physical slavery legally lasted until 129 years ago at which
time slavery was abolished in the Spanish colony of Cuba.
From my
point of view, the
Theory of Evolution as presented by Darwin in his book Origin of the
Species has been one of the two most important scientific discoveries.
Some people saw in this an antagonistic element for religious beliefs;
however, no scientist today refutes it and many of them who profess
sincere religious beliefs see in evolution the expression of Divine
Will.
The other
decisive contribution
was Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity, presented in 1915.
Few persons have so much influenced the future of the world as he did.
Einstein persuaded Roosevelt to start research to produce the atomic
bomb fearing that it would be developed by the Nazis. When Truman
dropped them over the defenceless civilian cities of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, the event had such an impact on him that he became a
confirmed pacifist. Today, the US possesses thousands of nuclear
weapons much more powerful than those; they could exterminate the
population of the world several times over. At the same time, they are
the greatest producers and exporters of all kinds of weapons.
The
accelerated pace of
scientific research in all fields of material production and services,
under the economic order imposed on the world following World War II,
has led humanity towards an unsustainable situation.
It is our
duty to demand the
truth. The populations of all countries have the right to know the
factors causing climate change and the current scientific possibilities
to reverse the tendency, if indeed we still really have any.
The Cuban
people, especially its
magnificent youth, demonstrated yesterday that even in the midst of a
brutal economic blockade, it is possible to overcome unimaginable
obstacles.