Toward a Sustainable Israel: News from Shatil’s Environmental Justice Project


World Environment Day (June 5) was created by the United Nations to encourage awareness about and action on the critical environmental issues all of us now face. But for Shatil's Environmental Justice Project, every day is Environment Day. As the Earth heats up, so does the Project's work. Begun 13 years ago by the late Alona Vardi in response to unrestrained development and explosive population growth that severely strain Israel's natural resources and public health, the Project now employs five organizers and consultants who work throughout the country to increase government responsiveness and empower citizens to promote greater environmental justice.

Alona Vardi was a pioneer in Israel's environmental movement and the founder of Shatil's Environmental Justice Project. She was instrumental in moving the movement from one which addressed itself solely to fixing environmental problems to one whose actions were based on a deeper analysis and understanding of the social and economic causes of those problems. She stood at the forefront of the struggle for the rights of citizens - especially those on the social and geographic periphery -- to influence environmental policy. (See previous article.)

As part of the day, laws on which Shatil worked -- including one to encourage use of bicycles, another protecting weak local authorities from having their water cut off when they can't pay their bills, and laws that enable enforcement of environmental statutes - are meant to be passed.

On Thursday, Life and Environment will present the 2008 Green Globe Award, initiated five years ago by Alona Vardi, to environmental organizations that have made outstanding contributions to the environment. Winners include Shomera, a Jerusalem organization that works to protect the Jerusalem forest and educates and initiates projects in many sectors - including the ultra Orthodox and at-risk youth -- in recycling, urban gardens, and more.

The past month has seen a flurry of Shatil activity on environmental issues including successes and new beginnings. In a testament to Shatil's environmental leadership, the Finance Ministry and the Knesset Environment Lobby asked Shatil to coordinate the creation of a five-year operating plan for the environment, An Environmental Agenda for Israel. Shatil has finished the first draft of its recommendations, which focus on energy, transport, land, water, industry and local economy. Shatil recently began a series of meetings with the director of the Finance Ministry to review the proposals.

Shatil Environmental Justice Project staff has fanned throughout the country, training local activists in how to get environmental issues on the agendas of candidates running for local elections; teaching environmental organizations to use non violent tactics in managing conflicts; and lending our expertise to important environmental campaigns.

In June, Shatil will launch the Environmental Fellows Program in the south, which will bring together environmental leaders - including heads of NGO's, local authorities and businesses - to develop a vision of sustainable environmental practices in the south and work to promote that vision.

Last week, saw the first meeting of a new Shatil-led coalition of environmental, social and consumer organizations and academics to fight the planned privatization of the electric company and to provide an alternative to this government "reform." And the Shatil-led Ramat Hovav Coalition is working to submit a petition to the Supreme Court, together with the Law Clinic for Environmental Justice at Tel Aviv University, to force the government to abide by laws pertaining to hazardous chemicals in the area.

Shatil's one-year-old Palestinian Forum for Environmental Justice is about to finish gathering data about the specific environmental dangers in Arab population centers throughout Israel. On the basis of the data, the Forum will formulate its action plan.

More good news: After a campaign led by the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel succeeded in defeating a development plan in one of Jerusalem's last large wild tracts of land, the Regional Planning Council accepted residents' plan to create a park in the Deer Valley. The valley is so called because a flock of deer has managed to survive there in the midst of a bustling urban environment. Reporting on the success on May 28, the Walla internet news site headline announced: "A Revolution in the Capital: Deer Overpower Real Estate."

Most recently, Shatil has become involved in the campaign to stop the building of a coal power plant in Ashkelon. Last week, Minister of the Environment Gideon Ezra announced his opposition to the plan. The organizations involved, with Shatil's help and backing, are about to launch an awareness campaign on public busses.