TY - JOUR
T1 - A Cross-Cutting Approach for Relating Anthropocene, Environmental Injustice and Sacrifice Zones
AU - Gayo, Eugenia M.
AU - Muñoz, Ariel A.
AU - Maldonado, Antonio
AU - Lavergne, Céline
AU - Francois, Jean Pierre
AU - Rodríguez, Delia
AU - Klock-Barría, Karin
AU - Sheppard, Paul R.
AU - Aguilera-Betti, Isabella
AU - Alonso-Hernández, Carlos
AU - Mena-Carrasco, Marcelo
AU - Urquiza, Anahí
AU - Gallardo, Laura
N1 - Funding Information: Funding for this work was provided by ANID/FONDAP/15110009, ANID-Millennium Science Initiative Program - NCN19_153, Grant ANID PIA/BASAL FB210006, Fondecyt projects #11150210, #11170566, #1201714, ESR UCV2095, PUCV DI 39.431/2020. We gratefully acknowledge the support of Isabel Cartajena and Diego Carabias in coring Los Maitenes wetland. The authors thank Yocelyn Santander for assisting sediment sampling, Francisca Flores for providing historical CASEN data for Puchuncav? and Michelle Ferrer for providing invaluable advice on the preparation of the plain language summary. Funding Information: Funding for this work was provided by ANID/FONDAP/15110009, ANID‐Millennium Science Initiative Program ‐ NCN19_153, Grant ANID PIA/BASAL FB210006, Fondecyt projects #11150210, #11170566, #1201714, ESR UCV2095, PUCV DI 39.431/2020. We gratefully acknowledge the support of Isabel Cartajena and Diego Carabias in coring Los Maitenes wetland. The authors thank Yocelyn Santander for assisting sediment sampling, Francisca Flores for providing historical CASEN data for Puchuncaví and Michelle Ferrer for providing invaluable advice on the preparation of the plain language summary. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Earth's Future published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Geophysical Union.
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - The Anthropocene is an uneven phenomenon. Accelerated shifts in the functioning of the Earth System are mainly driven by the production and consumption of wealthy economies. Social, environmental and health costs of such industrialization, however, bear on low-income communities inhabiting severely degraded territories by polluting activities (i.e., sacrifice zones). How global, national and local socio-economic and governance processes have interacted in perpetuating socio-environmental inequalities in these territories has been rarely explored. Here, we develop an historical quantitative approach integrating a novel chemostratigraphic record, data on policy making, and socio-economic trends to evaluate the feedback relationship between environmental injustice and Anthropocene in sacrifice zones. We specifically outline a case study for the Puchuncaví valley -one of the most emblematic sacrifice zones from Chile-. We verify an ever-growing burden of heavy metals and metalloids over the past five decades paced by the staggering expansion of local industrial activities, which has ultimately been spurred by national and transnational market forces. Local poverty levels have declined concomitantly, but this path toward social equality is marginal as costs of pollution have grown through time. Indeed, national and international pollution control actions appear insufficient in mitigating the cumulative impact brought by highly toxic elements. Thus, our sub-decadal reconstruction for pollution trends over the past 136 years from a sediment record, emerges as a science-based tool for informing the discussion on Anthropocene governance. Furthermore, it helps to advance in the assessment of environmental inequality in societal models that prioritize economic growth to the detriment of socio-environmental security.
AB - The Anthropocene is an uneven phenomenon. Accelerated shifts in the functioning of the Earth System are mainly driven by the production and consumption of wealthy economies. Social, environmental and health costs of such industrialization, however, bear on low-income communities inhabiting severely degraded territories by polluting activities (i.e., sacrifice zones). How global, national and local socio-economic and governance processes have interacted in perpetuating socio-environmental inequalities in these territories has been rarely explored. Here, we develop an historical quantitative approach integrating a novel chemostratigraphic record, data on policy making, and socio-economic trends to evaluate the feedback relationship between environmental injustice and Anthropocene in sacrifice zones. We specifically outline a case study for the Puchuncaví valley -one of the most emblematic sacrifice zones from Chile-. We verify an ever-growing burden of heavy metals and metalloids over the past five decades paced by the staggering expansion of local industrial activities, which has ultimately been spurred by national and transnational market forces. Local poverty levels have declined concomitantly, but this path toward social equality is marginal as costs of pollution have grown through time. Indeed, national and international pollution control actions appear insufficient in mitigating the cumulative impact brought by highly toxic elements. Thus, our sub-decadal reconstruction for pollution trends over the past 136 years from a sediment record, emerges as a science-based tool for informing the discussion on Anthropocene governance. Furthermore, it helps to advance in the assessment of environmental inequality in societal models that prioritize economic growth to the detriment of socio-environmental security.
KW - Anthropocene risks
KW - Puchuncaví
KW - paleopollution records
KW - socio-economic trends
KW - socio-environmental inequalities
KW - trace elements
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85128809647&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85128809647&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1029/2021EF002217
DO - 10.1029/2021EF002217
M3 - Article
SN - 2328-4277
VL - 10
JO - Earth's Future
JF - Earth's Future
IS - 4
M1 - e2021EF002217
ER -