ERRIi=a0+a1ln(Y i
1997)+a2C i+a3Zi+ei.
With the audacity of mathematical formulas like this
one, young Italian economist Lorenzo Pellegrini has tried
to describe the complexity of the environmental issue in
his graduation thesis “Corruption, Development and the
Environment”*, written for the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
in 2008. The particularity of Pellegrini’s approach lies in the
links that he attempts to identify and define, with the charisma
of exact science, between “green” political decisions, development
problems, and the world’s widespread corruption,
particularly in areas that in the 1960s would have been called
“underdeveloped”. In the above formula, the power exponent i
represents the individual countries examined; ERRI stands for
Environmental Regulatory Regime Index, meaning the varying
degrees of attention for the environment found in different
countries’ legislations; Y1997 is the per capita income in 1997; C
is the index of perceived corruption in 2001; and lastly, Z is a
vector of additional explicative variables that is useful for verifying
the consistency of the results obtained in the research. In
a nutshell, the results lead to observations that are only seemingly
obvious and finally backed scientifically. Richer countries
tend to have more restrictive environmental policies, while in
countries with a high degree of perceived corruption (as chance
would have it, these are also the poorest) the ERRI index is
drastically lower. Pellegrini’s research is far-reaching in its
attempt to evaluate environmental risks brought on by new
countries joining the European Union – some of them with a
high C and quite a low ERRI. In the light of a technical and cultural
overview of the globe, and certainly of Europe, where the
subject of sustainability plays an increasingly important role in
design and architecture, there is a strong impact from serious
disparity between countries that are associated under a common
political banner, but this impact is more on an ideological
plane than on a concrete one. Just as it is unthinkable to have a
“two-speed” economy for European countries, it is equally difficult
to imagine an environment that gets cleaner the higher a
country’s income and development rate are. Global pollution
certainly does not stop within the limits established by countries,
much less in those established by local organisations, as
ideologists and the inventors of Ecopass zones, Carbon Taxes,
Carbon Credits and similar economic expedients would have
us think.
AN UGLY SHADE OF GREEN CONSCIENCE
A strident phenomenon among the indicators that point to
objective disparity between rich and poor economies, the sign
that some are trying to cheat at the sustainability game, is precisely
the new financial market of Carbon Credits. This concept
of certificates obtained for CO2 (carbon dioxide) emissions is
based on a mechanism that might work on a logical level, but
that seems quite muddy from an ethical point of view. Polluting
countries, industries and economic operators can calmly continue
to dirty the world, all the while muffling their conscience
(and that of many environmental organisations in the same
manner) by literally buying certificates from those
who don’t pollute and are even (supposedly) countering
the effects of emissions: forest reserves, in
the first place, but also entire Third World countries
where forests are often one of the few available
resources. Firstly there is controversy over
how the compensation values should be established:
should forests be planted in areas that lie
close to where the damage is being done or in the
other hemisphere? Over what time frame should
the actual effect of CO2 reductions be measured?
One year? Two? Three? One hundred?
Beyond this, the Carbon Credit market, like
any financial market – in 2008 the programme
was worth approximately 30 billion euros in Europe – is subject
to the symptoms of general hebephrenia suffered by the world’s
stock markets. Too many certificates flooding the market, or
ambiguity and vacillations in government decisions concerning
environmental issues, can cause their price to fall as much as
one hundredfold. This means that enterprises wishing to take
maximum advantage of the beneficial effects of greenwashing
(that layer of ecological varnish that anyone can coat themselves
with, even manufacturers of weapons of mass destruction)
can harness the market’s “useful” instability to pursue
kamikaze strategies at a very favourable price. Indeed, instead
of trying to reduce or limit pollution and decrease the ecological
footprint produced by the processes of design, production,
transportation and distribution of goods, they only need to wait
for the right moment in order to activate speculation that will
allow them to obtain a bright, almost fluorescent, green image
with all the ensuing benefits connected to governmental facilitations
and the easing of global commercial operations.
Yet not all manufacturers are content to wash their hands
of the environmental issue in this hypocritical way. Some
actively commit themselves to the nature-friendly redesigning
of their products’ entire lifecycles. In this special issue of
Domus we present the cases of several manufacturers (fortunately
some are Italian) that are rising to the challenge of the
environment issue (on different scales and markets) by studying
and proposing solutions for energy and resource savings.
They are also inventing new manufacturing procedures in which
poisons and polluting constituents are eliminated, and working
towards effective traceability of their products’ green potential,
including raw materials and the way they are obtained.
Whether they are handles or flooring, sanitary appliances or
light switches, coffee or laptops, they might be drops in the
ocean compared to the tidal waves wreaked on the climate by
global warming. But they have the power to dig into the rock
of public indifference and the indulgence among politicians
towards polluters and pollutants – more than a zillion phoney
Carbon Credits.
A SUSTAINABLE PEACE
The recent events in the Gaza Strip, aside from the horror
and compassion aroused in the civilised world’s humanitarian
conscience, have also upset the environmental issue,
at least symbolically, in terms of architectural design and its
representativeness. On 26 October 2008, about two months
before the outbreak of Israeli military attacks on Gaza, the new
Peres Peace House was inaugurated in Jaffa. The building was
designed by Massimiliano Fuksas for the Peres Peace Centre,
founded by Simon Peres, the “enlightened” statesman now
President of Israel. Its inauguration was attended by a very
mixed bag of personalities: formerly glamorous film actresses
like Sharon Stone or Anouk Aimée, classical/pop singers like
Andrea Bocelli, Mercedes Sosa and Slash, were joined by politicians,
intellectuals and scientists. They discussed the themes
to which the Peres Centre is actively committed, with numerous
projects for collaboration between it and Arab and Israeli
institutions. The following speakers, for example, addressed
the subject of the emergency food shortage in poor countries
caused by the combined effects of the environmental and economic
crises: Walid Abed-Rabboh, leader of the organisation
Horizon for Sustainable Development and former Palestinian
Minister of Agriculture; Fouad Abou-Hadb, General Supervisor
of Egyptian Agriculture, Co-Chairman of the Joint Agricultural
Committee Egypt-Israel Cooperation; Guido Barilla, President
of Barilla Holdings; Ilan Chet, ex-President of the Weizmann
Institute, a microbiologist and professor at the Hebrew
University. The atmosphere was full of high hopes and Fuksas’s
project poetically stressed the ideal of collaboration beyond
peace and war. It is in fact situated on the very edge of the
sandy coast, like a refuge for all those in flight from conflict
and catastrophe. This architecture, albeit in its
ambiguity between reality and representation,
manages to convey the optimistic sensation that
peace, at least culturally, is at last possible.
Instead, the fighting in Gaza that started the
year 2009 under a cloud of civil irresponsibility,
accompanied by the massive destruction and hundreds
of lives lost, dragged the dialogue between
Palestinians and Israelis right back to square one.
It has seriously jeopardised any possibility of acting
in the Middle East towards a peaceful coexistence,
sustained by an economy and an environment
that is not poisoned, either chemically or
morally. The signal is truly a premonition: ideal
sustainability, allowing the most peaceful possible, dignified
and unpolluted survival of people, a coexistence of nations and
populations, involves at all events an existence. In the natural
desert, as in the one that might follow successive, small and
large-scale environmental or war-related apocalypses, the
ecological balance is probably perfect. But it is certainly a
balance that has no room for any existence, starting from that
of human beings, with its eternal, arduous issues, including
those of architectural design.
Green Peace
A gren project for the global environment demands equality between designers, builders and users – plus geopolitical equilibrium as an alternative to terror tactics. Text Stefano Casciani.
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- 24 February 2009
- Jaffa