UK factories - poisoning
poor people
Pollution hits poor people
hardest. This is the message to the UK Government from Friends of
the Earths new work linking pollution to poverty.
Environmental issues are
inextricably linked to global inequalities - for example, the UKs
contribution to climate change will harm todays children and
future generations far more than ourselves. Climate change and other
environmental problems also hit people in poorer countries harder.
But environmental impacts within the UK are unjust as well - a point
policy makers generally miss. By spelling out how tackling environmental
problems can reduce inequalities, we can help persuade the Labour
Government that environmental action is good for people, equality
and the environment. Friends of the Earth plans to work more on
inequalities within countries, between countries and between generations
- so that governments consider the rights of everyone when making
policies. We see this as the need for environmental justice.
Friends of the Earth started
by looking at pollution injustice in England and Wales. Our Factory
Watch website shows where and how much factory pollution is churned
out, and now we have matched this information with income data for
almost 10,000 areas in the country. These new maps show that the
grime of industrial pollution settles on poorer communities most,
an unjust situation which deepens inequalities. There are 662 polluting
factories in areas with less than £15,000 annual average household
income, compared with only five factories in the areas above a £30,000
average. In Londond, 90 per cent of polluting factories are in poorer
areas. One area in Teesside has 17 factories - and an average household
income of just £6,200.
This work shows that environmentalism
is not only a concern for wealthy or well-off people - a common
misconception in the UK. Reducing pollution, like reducing traffic
or investing in energy efficiency, is an environmental measure which
will benefit poorer people the most.
This work is just a beginning.
One of the first steps for local people fighting to improve their
communities is to know what is going on in their area. Friends of
the Earth aims to help people get that information with continuing
campaigns for freedom of environmental information. And we want
to work with groups who are trying to show the links between environment
and inequality - whether this is about factory pollution, fumes
from cars, or poor quality housing - and showing who this affects
- whether this is poorer people, ethnic communities or people in
poorer areas or regions.
Every citizen has the right
to good health. No one should suffer ill health because of a poor
quality environment, and the environmental inequalities faced by
millions of people in the UK need to be exposed, fought and eradicated.
Environmentalists, community workers, poverty activists and professionals
can all work together to help people get control over their environment,
and make environmental justice an issue the Government cannot ignore.
See Friends of the Earths
pollution injustice website on: http://www.foe.co.uk/pollution-injustice
Simon Bullock
Poverty 103 Summer
1999
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