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A TALE OF TWO CITIES          -By Doug Dowd

The two cities are Bologna and Venice. The environmental
problems threatening both, despite well-publicized "remedies," have
not improved but worsened in recent decades; the cities, their
problems, and their failure to deal with them exemplify all too well
what is happening all over the world. For purposes of
"qualification," I begin with a note on my experience in Italy.

I first went there, for a year, in the late 1960s, to study the
economic history of certain Italian cities, and to teach in Bologna.
There were many return visits in the '70s and '80s. In the mid-'80s I
married a Bolognese; subsequently I have lived in Bologna about half
of every year. Over those several decades I have of course visited
much of the rest of Italy; most often, Venice. What has been
happening this year prompted this essay.

Both physically and culturally, Bologna and Venice are beautiful,
Venice exquisitely so. What are now major problems for both had just
begun to emerge in the 1960s; in the all too foreseeable future,
disaster awaits. Their troubles are seemingly quite different --
Bologna gasping for air, Venice near to drowning -- but their origins
are the same: the "triumph" of contemporary industrial capitalism,
led and shaped by the USA.

Bologna was generally seen as the best-run city in Europe ten to
fifteen years ago; now it sits in the bottom half of that spectrum,
shoved there by its foul air and its foul politics -- outdone in
both, sadly, by Milan, Naples, Palermo and Rome. The lethal air comes
from under- or uncontrolled industrial pollutants mixed with the CO2
from always more numerous motor vehicles. Linked with that, in recent
years Bologna's politics have swerved from Left to Right, marching in
lockstep with an always more feverish consumerism. The latter (not,
of course, only in Bologna or Italy), in addition to creating what
has become a fanaticism for owning and using motor vehicles, has also
substantially eroded a once notable Italian sense of solidarity; its
place has been taken by the successes of the "consciousness industry"
in leading people "to want what they don't need and not to want what
they do." (as Paul Baran once put it). If there is anything left
of civic consciousness, its energies are dissipated in rooting for
the local soccer team -- the Italian equivalent of the U.S. passions
for NY-Mets/Jets, SF-49ers/Giants, et al. (Except that, more's the
worse, we've never had much civic consciousness, let alone
solidarity, to erode.)

The "acqua alta" that floods Venetian streets from high tides did not
begin recently, but what was once very rare is now very common: two
to three years ago it was occurring a stunning 100+ days a year; a
few years from now those will be remembered as the palmy days.
Setting off for a weekend in Venice recently, expected high water led
us to postpone for a day. The day after was dry, we went, and Venice
was its usual marvelous self; but we left hurriedly the next morning,
as water was breaching the pavements.

To describe Venice as "marvelous"is to refer not only to its
architecture, its canals, its museums, its food, etc.; it is
marvelous -- and unique -- also in that it is the only city in the
world where there are NO motor vehicles (on land); if present trends
continue, one day there will be no people. Venice is not "sinking,"
as the news misleadingly puts it; the sea is rising.

In the face of these severe problems, what have the two cities done?
They have adjusted; and in this they are representative of the world
as a whole. Thus, in Venice, in the middle of most streets there are
now what are called "duckboards,"stacked upside down. They are wooden
"paths" to walk on, about two feet in width and in height, easily
placed rightside up when the waters rise. This year, something new
has been added: now, all over Venice, one may find shops that sell
pullover rubber boots (of the consistency of rubber gloves), just in
case the tidal forecast was overly optimistic. They cost little, are
used just once, and thrown away. Soon, they say, the duckboards will
be made broader and higher (and be left standing rightside up).
Also soon, one hopes not too soon, Venice will be under water more
than half the year; some day.... Meanwhile: adjust.

The regular flooding of Venice is caused by global warming, of
course, not by the activities of Venetians. Notwithstanding, the
Venetian authorities have sought to do something about the problem.
Thus there have been several years of squabbling over a multibillion
($$$, not lire) project to put down some kinds of "gates" to hold off
or divert the tides. The project has bogged down, not because of its
unworkability (according to experts), but because of rivalrous
factions who would profit more from some other (also unworkable)
project.

In Bologna the authorities have for years dealt with the motor
vehicle/air problem: no personal car use inside the city (ha!), no
cars at all on certain days (ha!), and, two years ago, unleaded
gasoline and emission controls required (at last!). The air stinks
and tastes of car fumes always more: in November, 2000 the official
reports were for the worst air ever, in a rising trend. Also in
November, as much of Italy suffered from disastrous and unprecedented
floods, an Italian meteorological center reported that the rains this
fall had, for the first time, become like the monsoons of Asia; and
that for five cities, among them Venice, rainfall rates this year
were the double of the annual average for the preceding 30 years.

As for the air, it is relevant -- shocking would be the better word
-- to note that the deadliness of the air mostly harms the very young
and the very old, both traditionally treasured in Bologna (as in all
of Italy); wittingly or no, Italians' love affair with their
automobiles (40 million for a population of 53 million, plus
countless trucks and many millions of two-wheeled polluters) has come
into deadly competition with that familial love. Step by step with
restrictive measures to lower pollution by motor vehicles, their use
has heightened: the tightly and often double-parked streets have led
increasingly to the gradual and official transformation of once
beautiful piazzas into parking lots, and the horrific buzzing and
gas emitting motorini and motocicli now park in row after row under
the once beautiful porticoed sidewalks: adjust!

So much for the deteriorating lungs and hearts of numberless people
over the globe; then add this: is it not likely that, some day soon,
there will be vehicle gridlocks in Bologna -- and in Milan, Rome,
Florence..., Manhattan, London, Mexico City, Beijing, Moscow, Buenos
Aires, Johannesburg....?

The only way for gridlocks to become unlocked is with cranes; so,
just as there are duckboards all over Venice, it is not joking to
ask: Will there be cranes at all major intersections in all major
cities? And like the duckboards, would the cranes -- which of course
cannot get through a gridlock -- not come to be left in place? And,
as with the prison-industrial complex, mightn't we expect the crane
industry to lobby against "cures" going beyond that "adjustment"?

In that dark future Venice will come to be known only through books
and old photographs; already by this time, Bologna, once known as
"the buckle on the red belt of Italy," has installed a rightwing
mayor, and he and his cronies are busily unadjusting what little was
done by their relatively enlightened predecessors.

.....................

The tides are rising and heavy rains fall all over the world, while
the air is already or is becoming lethal. Most of the damage from
heat-trapping gases is done by the top industrial countries, 25
percent of it by the USA alone: with only 4 percent of the world's
people, we have three times the per capita responsibility of any of
the other rich countries, and, to boot, ours has the largest
population by far. After the USA, Russia and China lead that race to
hell.

Back in 1997 the so-called Kyoto Protocol was enacted; it was aimed
at cutting 1990 emissions levels of the leading countries by 5
percent by 2012. It remains unsigned. It is universally agreed that
the USA has effectively blocked that agreement, by stalling and
dealing -- "dealing" to sign if and only if it can meet the
requirements by doing something other than cutting emissions: 1) by
counting as reducing emissions what our existing or new forests do
(or could do, many years after their planting) in absorbing
them, and, 2) by using the U.S. invention of buying and selling
"rights to pollute" (call for George Orwell!) absent any essential
limiting/enforcing regulations.

These U.S. proposals, opposed by the Europeans, have essentially made
Kyoto a memory, despite a last ditch attempt in November. At a
special UN meeting of about 180 nations at The Hague, desperate
attempts were made to frame an agreement that would allow Kyoto --
whose 5 percent aim was, in any case, about one-tenth of what is a
minimally safe goal -- to become real. However. Under the headline
"Climate Talks Fail Amid Deadlock" (NYT, November 25, 2000) we read
"A bitter wrangle between the European Union and the United States
over how to curb greenhouse emissions brought a U.N.
climate conference to an ignominious end today."

�h, sure, a few big corporations (such as Ford, Sunoco, Du Pont and
Texaco) have recently announced that they think they can make profits
by making environmentally acceptable technologies; that was
accompanied by a statement of one of their leaders that "this has
nothing to do with altruism." Indeed it does not. And that's the
catch. "Altruism" in this context would mean doing something to save
the environment in order to save the environment, and not because you
can make a profit from it. And if you can't? Do these guys have some
other planet to move to when this one can no longer support life? Are
they all childless, as well as heedless?

More to the point: are there enough profitable ways to deal with
global warming, ozone depletion, water and soil contamination, the
destruction of forests..., and to do so in time and everywhere? To be
sure a few big companies, even some hundreds of big and small
companies, can make money with new technologies, etc.; but the fact
remains that the numberless changes in technology and in behavior
required to save the planet entail also numberless efforts that will
be helpful but not be profitable; moreover, they will require much in
the way of coordination, subsidization, regulations and planning. And
thank you very much, we do not want the giant companies, who, seeking
profits, created the problems, to do our planning for us.

The wrong things they know how to do very well, and continue to do.
In the very period since 1997 as Kyoto has been under debate, the
auto industry in the USA announced that it must and that it plans to
increase its annual sales by three percent; and the hoped-for markets
(and new investments) are critically outside the rich countries:
item: in the past month, China has reported its expectation to have
170 million automobiles running about before too long -- although
Beijing and Shanghai are already among the worst polluted cities on
the face of the earth.
......................

Brooding in England in 1925, T.S. Eliot produced the famous dirge
that begins

We are the hollow men
We are the stuffed men
Leaning together
Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!

................
Shape without form, shade without colour
Paralyzed force, gesture without motion....

And that closes with the unforgettable

This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.

There will be whimpers to be sure, even more than Eliot expected, for
we are always more infantile as a people; but to those, add gasps and
gurgles, gridlocks and screaming -- and, given the way the world now
spins, probably a very big bang. But all that is not likely to happen
for many years.

Meanwhile....: Altogether now: adjust! And mourn, if it suits you.
Or organize?  " JC



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