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Action Alert: Biofuels to Turn Kenya's Rich Tana Delta Wetlands into Ecological Wasteland

Let the Kenyan government know destroying ecosystems for toxic sugar monocultures is unethical, and ask them to please follow their own environmental laws, and permanently cancel the project

By Climate Ark, a project of Ecological Internet - July 22, 2008

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1.) Inform Yourself

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NOTE: This is a protest, not a petition, sending emails to many real decision makers on matters vital to the Earth.

Ecosystems matter more than biofuel
Caption: Kenyan local protests against ecosystem destruction for food based biofuels (link)

Kenya has recently approved plans to destroy some 20,000 hectares of the globally important and ecologically sensitive Tana Delta for sugar and biofuel production. Covering 130,000 hectares, these wetlands' diverse riverine vegetation -- forests, swamps, dunes, beaches and ocean -- will be forever altered by widespread vast fields of toxic, monoculture sugar cane and biofuel mill. The project threatens 350 species including birds, lions, hippos, nesting turtles, elephants, sharks, reptiles and the Tana red colobus, one of 25 primates facing extinction globally.

Mumias Sugar Company, the nation's largest sugar company, owns 51 percent of the project, while most of the rest is owned by state-run Tana and Athi River Development Authority. Local people live in an intricate relationship with the delta’s ecosystems, and are generally opposed to the mill. Irrigation would cause severe drainage of the Delta, leaving local farmers without water for their herds during dry seasons. The Kenya Wetlands Forum is calling on the Government to cancel its approval given to the project. "We cannot just start messing around with the wetland because we need biofuel and sugar," Kenyan Nobel laureate and environmentalist Wangari Maathai has said.

Biofuel production worldwide continues to destroy crucial natural ecosystems required for local and global sustainability. While hailed as a climate change remedy, this destruction of natural habitats for biofuel production almost always releases more carbon than saved. Using food such as sugar for fuel has raised food prices, leading to riots globally, including in Kenya. Let the Kenyan government know destroying ecosystems for toxic monocultures is unethical, ask them to please follow their own environmental laws, and respectfully request the project be permanently cancelled.

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Sample Email Sent


Please provide assurances the Tana Delta is safe from biofuels and this campaign will end


Dear National Environmental Management Agency,

I am gravely concerned with the threat posed to Kenya's
wetland ecosystems and communities by plans to destroy
large sections of the Tana Delta for sugar and biofuel
production. Agrofuel based fuels will never satisfy more
than a fraction of your great country's energy demands yet
threatens remaining intact natural ecosystems. This protest
asks you to please immediately withdraw your environmental
approvals and work to ensure the project is permanently
cancelled.

Biofuel production worldwide continues to destroy crucial
natural ecosystems required for local, national and global
ecological sustainability. While biofuels are hailed as a
climate change remedy, this destruction of natural habitats
for their production almost always releases more carbon
than saved. Using food such as sugar for fuel has raised
food prices, leading to riots globally, including in Kenya.
Destroying ecosystems for toxic sugar monocultures simply
is unethical.

Kenyan and global ecological sustainability depend
critically upon all new sugar and other agricultural
production being kept out of intact, natural ecosystems.
Industrial sugar monocultures in wetland ecosystems that
are critical for meeting the basic needs of such a large
number of Kenyan citizens can never be environmentally
sustainable, and indeed will cause great suffering for your
people as ecosystems further collapse.

Industrial plantation agriculture in the Tana Delta's
critical ecosystems will diminish water resources, destroy
ecosystems, kill wildlife, poison local peoples and lead to
the area becoming an ecological desert. Please commit
immediately to following Kenyan environmental laws,
pursuing ecologically sustainable development and meeting
your international environmental commitments. It is up to
you and other agents of government to ensure environmental
approvals are revoked, and the Tana sugar project is
permanently cancelled.

Thank you for accepting this respectfully submitted
expression of international concern. Together those
participating in this protest seek to speak ecological
truths, not confront or impede upon your sovereignty. One
such truth is that healthy, contiguous and fully intact
natural ecosystems are needed for Kenyan and global
ecological sustainability. The world is watching and
expecting great things from your government and nation in
this regard.

Sincerely,


   Earth Action Network Protest Participants

    People from 96 countries have sent 191,578 protest emails

L S Lanham - United States
D Moss - United States
I Gray - United Kingdom
J A K Hay - United States
L Bourguignon - France
Dr. J Bartlett - United Kingdom
P Miller - United Kingdom
W Meade - United Kingdom
H Toya - France
A Aranguren - Spain
L Bertuccio - United States
V Lovejoy - United States
F Philippe - France
A Ivankovic - United States
A Wulfsohn - United Kingdom
S Häger - Germany
K Brunner - Germany
C Luciani - France
M Cuconati - Italy
B Wolfe - United States
E Parker - United States
C Rhodes - United States
S Bartrup - United Kingdom
R Kerkhofs - Belgium
K E Johnson - United States
           



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