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On March 28, less than two months ago, when
Bush proclaimed his diabolical idea of producing
fuel from food, after a meeting with the most
important U.S. automobile manufacturers, I wrote
my first reflection.
The head of the empire was bragging that
the United States was now the first world
producer of ethanol, using corn as raw
material. Hundreds of factories were being
built or enlarged in the United States just for
that purpose.
During those days, the industrialized and
rich nations were already toying with the same
idea of using all kinds of cereals and oil
seeds, including sunflower and soy which are
excellent sources of proteins and oils. That’s
why I chose to title that reflection: “More than
3 billion people in the world are being
condemned to a premature death from hunger and
thirst.”
The dangers for the environment and for the
human species were a topic that I had been
meditating on for years. What I never imagined
was the imminence of the danger. We as yet were
not aware of the new scientific information
about the celerity of climatic changes and their
immediate consequences.
On April 3, after Bush’s visit to Brazil, I
wrote my reflections about “The
internationalization of genocide.”
At the same time, I warned that the deadly
and sophisticated weapons that were being
produced in the United States and in other
countries could annihilate the life of the human
species in a matter of days.
To give humanity a respite and an
opportunity to science and to the dubious good
sense of the decision-makers, it is not
necessary to take food away from two-thirds of
the inhabitants of the planet.
We have supplied information about the
savings that could be made simply by replacing
incandescent light bulbs with fluorescent ones,
using approximate calculations. They are numbers
followed by 11 and 12 zeros. The first
corresponds to hundreds of billions of dollars
saved in fuel each year, and the second to
trillions of dollars in necessary investments to
produce that electricity by merely changing
light bulbs, meaning less than 10 percent of the
total expenses and a considerable saving of
time.
With complete clarity, we have expressed
that CO2 emissions, besides other pollutant
gases, have been leading us quickly towards a
rapid and inexorable climatic change.
It was not easy to deal with these topics
because of their dramatic and almost fatal
content.
The fourth reflection was titled: “It is
imperative to immediately have an energy
revolution.” Proof of the waste of energy in
the United States and of the inequality of its
distribution in the world is that in the year
2005, there were less than 15 automobiles for
each thousand people in China; there were 514 in
Europe and 940 in the United States.
The last of these countries, one of the
richest territories in hydrocarbons, today
suffers from a large deficit of oil and gas.
According to Bush, these fuels must be extracted
from foods, which are needed for the more and
more hungry bellies of the poor of this Earth.
On May Day 2006, I ended my speech to the
people with the following words:
“If the efforts being made by Cuba today
were imitated by all the other countries in the
world, the following would happen:
“1st The proved and potential
hydrocarbon reserves would last twice as long.
“2nd The pollution unleashed on
the environment by these hydrocarbons would be
halved.
“3rd The world economy would
have a break, since the enormous volume of
transportation means and electrical appliances
should be recycled.
“4th A fifteen-year moratorium
on the construction of new nuclear power plants
could be declared.”
Changing light bulbs was the first thing we
did in Cuba, and we have cooperated with various
Caribbean nations to do the same. In Venezuela,
the government has replaced 53 million
incandescent light bulbs with fluorescent in
more than 95% of the homes receiving electrical
power. All the other measures to save energy
are being resolutely carried out.
Everything I am saying has been proven.
Why is it that we just hear
rumors
without the leadership of industrialized
countries openly committing to an energy
revolution, which implies changes in concepts
and hopes about growth and consumerism that have
contaminated quite a few poor nations?
Could it be that there is some other way
of confronting the extremely serious dangers
threatening us all?
Nobody wants to take the bull by the horns.
Fidel Castro Ruz
May 22, 2007
5: 10 pm
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