RESOURCE EXTRACTION

Oil flares in Ecuador

Poor countries that are rich in natural resources have too often seen the well-being of their people and ecosystems deteriorate as a result of destructive, irresponsible resource extraction. This is commonly known as the “resource curse,” whereby foreign investors and local elites extract great wealth from poor countries while leaving behind a legacy of social inequality, political corruption, and ecological damage. KAIROS works with our global partners to play our part in breaking this curse.

One cornerstone of sustainability is the right of communities to exercise free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) over developments that will affect their well-being, their enjoyment of human rights, and the integrity of local ecosystems. KAIROS partners are working to empower poor and marginalized populations in resource-rich countries to participate in decision-making that affects their lives. Our partners in the global South are opening up democratic space in their countries to debate the role of resource extraction in reducing poverty. They are challenging economic policies that promote foreign-owned resource extraction as the only path towards development. In some cases, they are advocating for stronger regulatory regimes to maximize fiscal and economic benefits to the local population, and hold companies responsible for cleaning up their environmental messes. In other cases, they are rejecting resource extraction and embracing alternative economic development paths such as sustainable agriculture and forestry, ecotourism and other activities. This movement to “keep the oil in the soil” and promote food sovereignty is emerging as a popular response to the triple crisis of hunger, poverty and climate change.






RESOURCE EXTRACTION NEWS

Fundamental Justice Issues at Stake in Gateway Pipeline Debate

SUS-RE-SaraFortMac-Feature

Enbridge’s Northern Gateway project, comprising two 1,170 kilometre pipelines from northern Alberta across Indigenous lands to Kitimat, BC, would carry 525,000 barrels a day of diluted bitumen from the tar sands to the west coast for export, and return 193,000 barrels of condensate (used to thin the bitumen) to Alberta each day, allowing the cycle to continue. This venture poses fundamental questions of social and ecological justice. … [Read more...]

Fate of Tar Sands Pipelines Crucial for Climate Justice

Tar Sands Factories

KAIROS' August 2011 paper outlines the key issues in the controversy over both the Gateway and Keystone pipelines.  Both violate the principle of Free, Prior and Informed Consent as enshrined in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which Canada has signed. There should be no further approvals of tar sands projects due to their projected carbon emissions, negative impacts on land and biodiversity and on the rights of Indigenous peoples. … [Read more...]

Policy Briefing Paper #30: Coal and Shale Gas Obstacles to Climate Justice

SUS-RE-Fracking

While much attention has focused on the tar sands as the fastest growing source of Canadian greenhouse gas emissions, climate justice demands that we also curb emissions from coal and shale gas. The most recent KAIROS briefing paper examines these two carbon-intensive energy sources, the dangers they pose and movements to curtail their use. … [Read more...]

Arctic Melting Sounds the Alarm for Life on Earth

Ice Island

Accelerated melting of Arctic ice and permafrost is among the clearest signals that climate change is rapidly approaching a point of no return. This latest KAIROS Briefing Paper “Arctic Melting Sounds the Alarm for Life on Earth” summarizes several recent scientific studies. Like canaries in a coal mine, Arctic melting is a clear warning that we must curtail greenhouse gas emissions before it is too late. … [Read more...]

Ecuador’s Oil Struggle: Reflections on an Amazonian Journey

SUS-CJ-11-11-AmazonJourney

In July 2011, KAIROS staff Rachel Warden and Sara Stratton, together with Fort Chipewyan activist George Poitras, travelled to Ecuador to learn more about the impacts of oil exploration on the Indigenous peoples and ecosystems of Ecuador’s Amazon region. The following is Sara's reflection in words and images of her time in Ecuador. Canadian church leaders and KAIROS partners from Nigeria and Ecuador had been hosted by George and his community when the KAIROS Church Leaders’ Delegation to the Tar Sands visited Northern Alberta in May 2009. We were eager to continue building on that relationship, particularly between peoples of the global South and the global South in the … [Read more...]

KAIROS plays key role in World Council of Churches North American Hearings on Poverty, Wealth and Ecology.

WCC - Poverty Wealth Ecology logo

From November 6th to 11th, representatives from churches in Canada and the United States, joined by guests from every continent, met in Calgary, Alberta for a consultation convened by the World Council of Churches on issues of poverty, wealth and ecology. Some participants travelled to Fort McMurray to witness the scale and impact of the tar sands and to dialogue with local residents. After hearing testimonies on issues of social, financial, migrant labour, indigenous and climate justice, the participants issued a call to action entitled "There’s A New World in the Making." In preparation for the hearings, the World Council of Churches commissioned two studies on the inter-relationships … [Read more...]

Call to Action: Vigil for human rights and social justice in Colombia

Vigil for human rights and social justice in Colombia

On Thursday September 22nd, those able to afford the minimum $1,000 ticket price will attend a gala at the Ritz-Carlton in Toronto to honour Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos as Statesman of the Year. The award from the Canadian Council for the Americas comes little more than a month after President Santos hosted Prime Minister Harper in Bogota to officially launch the Canada Colombia Free Trade Agreement. Amnesty International and Colombian human rights organizations continue to document widespread, grave human rights abuses, particularly in areas of economic interest, amidst massive levels of impunity. Join Amnesty outside the Ritz-Carlton to honour those who continue to lose … [Read more...]

KAIROS is deeply saddened and troubled by the recent murder of Father José Reinel Restrepo

Fr Jose Reinel Restrepo

View the Joint Letter 'Re. the Assassination of Father José Reinel Restrepo of the municipality of Marmato, Colombia'   KAIROS is deeply saddened and troubled by the recent murder of Father José Reinel Restrepo, parish priest of the municipality of Marmato in the department of Caldas, Colombia.   On September 2nd, the body of Father Restrepo was found shot dead near his motorcycle.  The 36-year old priest had served for two years as the parish church of Maramoto.  The persons responsible for his murder have not yet been identified, nor has the motive of the attack on Father Restrepo been determined. Father Restrepo had been an outspoken opponent to the development of an … [Read more...]

Action Opportunity: Keystone Tar Sands Pipeline – Ottawa, September 26, 2011

Keystone Pipeline Protest

On September 26, KAIROS will join with allied Indigenous, civic and environmental organizations on Parliament Hill to protest a new export pipeline from the Alberta tar sands to the Gulf of Mexico. This pipeline would violate the rights of Indigenous peoples in both Canada and the United States to Free, Prior and Informed Consent, as enshrined in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, over resource extraction projects. Furthermore, the amount of additional bitumen that would have to be extracted to fill the pipeline would significantly increase greenhouse gas emissions and be contrary to KAIROS policy against further approvals for tar sands projects. For more information … [Read more...]

Fate of Tar Sands Pipelines Crucial for Climate Justice

Tar Sands - Clearing Forest

Please read KAIROS' Report "Fate of Tar Sands Pipelines Crucial for Climate Justice" President Barack Obama is facing a crucial decision that will define the U.S. position on climate justice. He can heed the advice from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and refuse a permit for the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline from the Alberta tar sands to refineries in Texas. Or Obama could agree with the petroleum industry lobby and approve the pipeline. With the EPA strongly opposed and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton "inclined" to approve the project, the final decision will fall to Obama himself. Construction of the Keystone XL pipeline violates the principle of Free, Prior … [Read more...]