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End Environmental Racism, Stand Up For Minorities Facing The Brunt Of The Climate Crisis
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Sponsor: The Rainforest Site
Climate crisis is real and people of color are suffering the most.
Centuries of systematic oppression have created an environmental vacuum on earth that blights Black, Brown, Indigenous and lower-wealth communities with pollution and dwindling resources.
From a local point of view, it’s called redlining, restrictive covenants and unfair zoning practices. From a global standpoint this is nothing more than economic and environmental apartheid 1.
Approximately 74 million people of color, or 57%, live in counties with at least one failing grade for ozone and/or particle pollution, compared with 38% of whites 2.
Widespread discrimination and government neglect has kept this issue out of the spotlight, but the voices of minority and indigenous continue to scream for climate justice.
“These days we go to the forest with hunger, and return bringing more hunger,” a Shawi community member, shared in the Minority Rights Group’s Key Trends Report 2019 3.
This indigenous group makes its home in 19 distinct communities in the northern Peruvian Amazon, where climate change is causing unprecedented damage. Deforestation, coupled with rising temperatures and extinction rates among native flora and fauna have made it difficult for the Shawi to survive 3.
The danger to minority communities in the U.S. is already present and getting worse. Minority populations are more likely to live near toxic facilities 4, and breathe in more polluted air than White communities across the US, according to the NAACP’s 2012 “Coal-Bloodedd” study 5. U.S. minorities are further 38% more likely to be exposed to the asthma-causing pollutant nitrogen oxide from climate-warming cars, construction equipment, and industrial sources like coal plants, despite the fact that they make up only 13% of the population 4.
This year marked 14 consecutive months of the hottest global temperatures on record, the result of human-generated carbon pollution. And we can see by failing harvests, food insecurity, droughts, floods, and with record-breaking and devastating weather disasters that the human cost will only increase if nothing is changed 6.
The Clean Power Plan, finalized in 2015, could reduce carbon emissions by 32% below 2005 levels by 2030, but it is still held up by lawsuits against an administration that denies science and compassion for profits. The EPA must approve the Clean Power Plan today to protect the lives of millions of Americans 7.
No one should be forced to live in a polluted environment because of the color of their skin. Sign the petition and tell EPA Administrator to enact rules that limit carbon emissions in predominately minority communities.