Worldlog Week 41 - 2010

Source: M.L. (Marianne) Thieme i, published on Monday, October 11 2010, 18:34.

After 127 days, cabinet formation has finally occurred. Last week Thursday, the Rutte cabinet stood on the steps of Huis ten Bosch with Queen Beatrix to reveal the new cabinet members to the press and the people.

Meanwhile, government policy was placed on standby. Many civil society organisations are dreading the upcoming animal, environmental and nature policies. The minority VVD, CDA and PVV-tolerated government is after all giving the cattle industry free reign, environmental subsidies are being dramatically curtailed and the government is no longer investing in nature due to 300 million Euros of cost-saving measures.

Natuurmonumenten, an association that manages part of the Netherlands' nature reserves, states that this coalition agreement is a disaster for nature. This time I could not agree more with Cees Veerman (ex CDA Minister of Agriculture and the current chairman of the Natuurmonumenten board) and his followers.

Last week I spoke of the legislative proposal to ban mink breeding in the Netherlands. The Lower House has already agreed to the proposal and so it was the Upper House's turn to decide. The debate, however, was suspended, as those who turned in the legislative proposal will, by the end of November at the latest, provide supplemental policy for mink breeders that have to deal with the ban that will apply as of 2024. The CDA and VVD wanted to do anything they could to avoid a mink breeding ban, but because our senator was also speaking for the social liberals from D66 and the Yildirim party, their heinous plans were thwarted. I am hopeful that a ban will finally be realised in the Netherlands.

The Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) presented a worrying report last week which stated that global consumption must be reduced over the coming 40 years otherwise, we will need three planets by 2050 just to support the world's population. We are currently felling more trees than can grow and more fish are being taken from the oceans than can be replaced. We can't go on like this.

We have been arguing for ages against over consumption. We have far exceeded that which the earth can handle and we have mortgaged the future for generations to come. Unregulated consumption contributes in a significant way to the crises beleaguering the world. We need a complete 180 in the way we operate to combat environmental pollution, global warming, the loss of biodiversity loss and clean drinking water, large-scale deforestation and animal exploitation in the livestock industry. We will continue to push for a drastic action towards compassion and sustainability.

In Borgharen in the Province of Limburg, plans are afoot to build a hydroelectric power station. The Party for the Animals is a huge advocate of green electricity, but there is as yet no decent solution on the table to protect the fish in the area. We have therefore proposed a motion to prevent a permit being given for a hydroelectric station until this matter is settled.

As it stands, the fish in the current proposal for a hydroelectric station run a huge risk of ending up in the power station’s turbines, where they will be mashed to a pulp. The power station in Borgharen will be the third along the Meuse river, meaning the river will be permanently blocked for fish, which include protected species such as salmon and eel. This power station therefore has the potential to threaten their continued existence. Notably, the planned hydroelectric power station will replace a properly functioning fish ladder, that the Directorate-General for Public Works and Water Management spent 3.1 million Euros putting in place.

We heartily champion green electricity, but biodiversity must also be sufficiently protected. Pulping fish will turn the green flow of electricity blood red. How can that be what sustainable energy is all about? Now we just have to wait and see if we obtain sufficient support for the motion.

See you next week!

Marianne