Durante generaciones, mi pueblo, el pueblo Maya Ch’orti’, ha vivido en nuestro territorio en Guatemala. Pero hace algunos años, la locura de los biocombustibles aterrizó en nuestro país. Las empresas empezaron a monopolizar los recursos hídricos y desplazaron a nuestras comunidades locales de nuestras tierras y territorios con el objetivo de expandir los jatropha monocultures, a crop used for ethanol fuel, a biodiesel highly demanded by the European markets.
Biodiesel is not the easy climate solution portrayed by politicians and corporations. Nobel prize winning chemist Paul Crutzen proved that growing and burning large amounts of biofuel in fact raises greenhouse gas emissions. 20´000 litres of water are used for every litre of biodiesel. It severely threatens our food supplies and the livelihood of us farmers.
Since municipalities are refusing to register lands under indigenous communities’ names, we the Ch’orti’ women took action. We put our ancestral knowledge on conserving and protecting water into practice, and pursue legal actions to grant us proper land rights and guarantee our access to water sources.
We advocate for implementation of a policy to reforest communal areas, and we take actions before courts of justice to legitimise our rights and hold those responsible for the environmental damage accountable. We built reservoirs to store water which has allowed us to diversify our crops and plant native species which are less vulnerable to the droughts caused by climate change.
Biodiesel claims to be a climate responsible alternative to fossil fuels, but its production only deepens the ecological crisis in our territories. We call on governments and investors to shift resourses away from biodiesel fuel production. It is contributing to the climate crisis and violating indigenous rights. We ask for funds to be redirected to the true gender-just climate solutions being implemented by us, women and girls from the Mayan Ch'orti´ people. The network of Indigenous Mayan Ch’orti’ women and COMUNDICH are supported by Fondo Tierra Viva, which is part of the GAGGA network. You can follow the work of COMUNDICH here.