Ny rapport: Frihandelsaftale har tæret gevaldigt på Mexicos miljø

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Frihandelsaftalen NAFTA, som Canada, Mexico og USA indgik for nøjagtigt 20 år siden, har slidt på miljøet gennem udvidelse af storlandbrug og minedrift – samtidigt har private domstole for virksomheder svækket miljølovgivning, konkluderer nyt studie

WASHINGTON DC, Tuesday, March 11 2014: A massive free trade deal went into effect 20 years ago and has had very harmful effects on communities and the environment in the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, The Sierra Club writes Tuesday.

January 1, 1994 marked the first day of the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and nearly 20 years later, communities are still suffering from its consequences.

Among other conclusions, this report finds that NAFTA:

– Facilitated the expansion of large-scale, export-oriented farming that relies heavily on fossil fuels, pesticides, and genetically modified organisms;

– Encouraged a boom in environmentally destructive mining activities in Mexico;

– Undermined Canada’s ability to regulate its tar sands industry and locked the country into shipping large quantities of fossil fuels to the United States;

– Catalyzed economic growth in North American industries and manufacturing sectors while simultaneously failing to safeguard against the increase in air and water pollution associated with this growth; and

– Weakened domestic environmental safeguards by providing corporations with new legal avenues to challenge environmental policymaking.

“These are not unfortunate side-effects, but rather the inevitable results of a model of trade that favors corporate profits over the interests of communities and the environment,” said the report, written by the Sierra Club, Sierra Club Canada, the Mexican Action Network on Free Trade (RMALC), the Institute for Policy Studies, and the Council of Canadians.

“It is time to recognize that the NAFTA model of trade is failing communities across the North American region and harming our shared environment.”