Reflections by the Commander in
Chief:IT IS IMPERATIVE TO IMMEDIATELY HAVE AN
ENERGY REVOLUTION
I hold nothing against Brazil, even thought to more than a few
Brazilians continuously bombarded with the most diverse arguments,
which can be confusing even for people who have traditionally been
friendly to Cuba, we might sound callous and careless about hurting
that country’s net income of hard currency. However, for me to
keep silent would be to opt between the idea of a world tragedy and a
presumed benefit for the people of that great nation.
I do not blame Lula and the Brazilians for the objective laws which
have governed the history of our species. Only seven thousand
years have passed since the human being has left his tangible mark on
what has come to be a civilization immensely rich in culture and
technical knowledge. Advances have not been achieved at the same
time or in the same geographical latitudes. It can be said that due to
the apparent enormity of our planet, quite often the existence of one
or another civilization was unknown. Never in thousands of years had
the human being lived in cities with twenty million inhabitants such
as Sao Paulo or Mexico City, or in urban communities such as Paris,
Madrid, Berlin and others who see trains speeding by on rails and air
cushions, at speeds of more than 250 miles an hour.
At the time of Christopher Columbus, barely 500 years ago, some of
these cities did not exist or they had populations that did not exceed
several tens of thousands. Nobody used one single kilowatt to light
their home. Possibly, the population of the world then was not
more than 500 million. We know that in 1830, world population
reached the first billion mark, one hundred and thirty years later it
multiplied by three, and forty-six years later the total number of
inhabitants on the planet had grown to 6.5 billion; the immense
majority of these were poor, having to share their food with domestic
animals and from now on with biofuels.
Humanity did not then have all the advances in computers and means
of communication that we have today, even though the first atomic
bombs had already been detonated over two large human communities, in
a brutal act of terrorism against a defenseless civilian population,
for reasons that were strictly political.
Today, the world has tens of thousands of nuclear bombs that are
fifty times as powerful, with carriers that are several times faster
than the speed of sound and having absolute precision; our
sophisticated species could destroy itself with them. At the end of
World War II, fought by the peoples against fascism, a new power
emerged that took over the world and imposed the absolutist and cruel
order under which we live today.
Before Bush’s trip to Brazil, the leader of the empire decided that
corn and other foodstuffs would be suitable raw material for the
production of biofuels. For his part, Lula stated that Brazil
could supply as much biofuel as necessary from sugar cane; he saw in
this formula a possibility for the future of the Third World, and the
only problem left to solve would be to improve the living conditions
of the sugarcane workers. He was well aware –and he said it-- that the
United States should in turn lift the custom tariffs and the subsidies
affecting ethanol exports to that country.
Bush replied that custom tariffs and subsidies to the growers were
untouchable in a country such as the United States, which is the first
world producer of ethanol from corn.
The large American transnationals, which produce this biofuel
investing tens of billion dollars at an accelerated pace, had demanded
from the imperial leader the distribution in the American market of no
less than thirty-five billions (35,000,000,000) of gallons of this
fuel every year. The combination of protective tariffs and real
subsidies would raise that figure to almost one hundred billion
dollars each year.
Insatiable in its demand, the empire had flung into the world the
slogan of producing biofuels in order to liberate the United States,
the world’s supreme energy consumer, from all external dependency on
hydrocarbons.
History shows that sugar as a single crop was closely associated
with the enslaving of Africans, forcibly uprooted from their natural
communities, and brought to Cuba, Haiti and other Caribbean islands.
In Brazil, the exact same thing happened in the growing of sugar cane.
Today, in that country, almost 80% of sugar cane is cut by hand.
Sources and studies made by Brazilian researchers affirm that a
sugarcane cutter, a piece-work laborer, must produce no less than
twelve tons in order to meet basic needs. This worker needs to perform
36,630 flexing movements with his legs, make small trips 800 times
carrying 15 kilos of cane in his arms and walk 8,800 meters in his
chores. He loses an average of 8 liters of water every day. Only
by burning cane can this productivity per man be achieved. Cane cut by
hand or by machines is usually burned to protect people from nasty
bites and especially to increase productivity. Even though the
established norm for a working day is from 8 in the morning until 5 in
the afternoon, this type of piece-work cane cutting tends to go on for
a 12 hour working day. The temperature will at times rise to 45
degrees centigrade by noon.
I have cut cane myself more than once as a moral duty, as have many
other comrade leaders of the country. I remember August of 1969.
I chose a place close to the capital. I moved there very early every
day. It was not burned cane but green cane, an early variety and high
in agricultural and industrial yield. I would cut for four hours
non-stop. Somebody else would be sharpening the machete. I
consistently produced a minimum of 3.4 tons per day. Then I
would shower, calmly have some lunch and take a break in a place
nearby. I earned several coupons in the famous harvest of 1970.
I had just turned 44 then. The rest of the time, until bedtime, I
worked at my revolutionary duties. I stopped my personal efforts
after I wounded my left foot. The sharpened machete had sliced through
my protective boot. The national goal was 10 million tons of sugar and
approximately 4 million tons of molasses as by-product. We never
reached that goal, although we came close.
The USSR had not disappeared; that seemed impossible. The
Special Period, which took us to a struggle for survival and to
economic inequalities with their inherent elements of corruption, had
not yet begun. Imperialism believed that the time had come to finish
off the Revolution. It is also fair to recognize that during years of
bonanza we wasted resources and our idealism ran high along with the
dreams accompanying our heroic process.
The great agricultural yields of the United States were achieved by
rotating the gramineae (corn, wheat, oats, millet and other similar
grains) with the legumes (soy, alfalfa, beans, etc.). These
contribute nitrogen and organic material to the soil. The corn crop
yield in the United States in 2005, according to FAO (Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations) data was 9.3 tons per
hectare.
In Brazil they only obtain 3 tons of this same grain in the same
area. The total production registered by this sister nation that
year was thirty-four million six hundred thousand tons, consumed
internally as food. It cannot contribute corn to the world
market.
The prices for this grain, the staple diet in numerous countries of
the region, have almost doubled. What will happen when hundreds of
millions of tons of corn are redirected towards the production of
biofuel? And I rather not mention the amounts of wheat, millet,
oats, barley, sorghum and other cereals that industrialized countries
will use as a source of fuel for its engines.
Add to this that it is very difficult for Brazil to rotate corn and
legumes. Of the Brazilian states traditionally producing corn,
eight are responsible for ninety percent of production: Paraná,
Minas Gerais, Sao Paulo, Goiás, Mato Grosso, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa
Catarina y Mato Grosso do Sul. On the other hand, 60% of sugar cane
production, a grain that cannot be rotated with other crops, takes
place in four states: Sao Paulo, Paraná, Pernambuco and Alagoas.
The engines of tractors, harvesters and the heavy machinery
required to mechanize the harvest would use growing amounts of
hydrocarbons. The increase of mechanization would not help in the
prevention of global warming, something which has been proven by
experts who have measured annual temperatures for the last 150 years.
Brazil does produce an excellent food that is especially rich in
protein: soy, fifty million one hundred and fifteen thousand
(50,115,000) tons. It consumes almost 23 million tons and
exports twenty-seven million three hundred thousand (27,300,000).
Is it perhaps that a large part of this soy will be converted to
biofuel?
As it is, the producers of beef cattle are beginning to complain
that grazing land is being transformed into sugarcane fields.
The former Agriculture Minister of Brazil, Roberto Rodrigues, an
important advocate for the current government position, --and today a
co-president of the Inter American Ethanol Commission created in 2006
following an agreement with the state of Florida and the Inter
American Development Bank (IDB) to promote the use of biofuel on the
American continent-- declared that the program to mechanize the
sugarcane harvest does not create more jobs, but on the contrary it
would produce a surplus of non-qualified manpower.
We know that the poorest workers from various states are the ones
who gravitate towards cane cutting out of necessity. Sometimes,
they must spend many months away from their families. That is what
happened in Cuba until the triumph of the Revolution, when the cutting
and hauling of sugarcane was done by hand, and mechanized cultivation
or transportation hardly existed. With the demise of the brutal system
forced on our society the cane-cutters, massively taught to read and
write, abandoned their wanderings in a few years and it became
necessary to replace them with hundreds of thousands of voluntary
workers.
Add to this the latest report by the United Nations about climate
change, affirming what would happen in South America with the water
from the glaciers and the Amazon water basin as the temperature of the
atmosphere continue to rise.
Nothing could prevent American and European capital from funding
the production of biofuels. They could even send the funds as gifts to
Brazil and Latin America. The United States, Europe and the other
industrialized countries would save more than one hundred and forty
billion dollars each year, without having to worry about the
consequences for the climate and the hunger which would affect the
countries of the Third World in the first place. They would always be
left with enough money for biofuels and to acquire the little food
available on the world market at any price.
It is imperative to immediately have an energy revolution that
consists not only in replacing all the incandescent light bulbs, but
also in massively recycling all domestic, commercial, industrial,
transport and socially used electric appliances that require two and
three times more energy with their previous technologies.
It hurts to think that 10 billion tons of fossil fuel is consumed
every year. This means that each year we waste what it took nature a
million years to create. National industries are faced with enormous
challenges, including the reduction of unemployment. Thus we
could gain a bit of time.
Another risk of a different nature facing the world is an economic
recession in the United States. In the past few days, the dollar has
broken records at losing value. On the other hand, every country has
most of its reserves in convertible currencies precisely in this paper
currency and in American bonds.
Tomorrow, May Day is a good day to bring these reflections to the
workers and to all the poor of the world. At the same time we should
protest against something incredible and humiliating that has just
occurred: the liberation of a terrorist monster, exactly when we are
celebrating the 46th Anniversary of the Revolutionary
Victory at the Bay of Pigs.
Prison for the assassin!
Freedom for the Five Cuban Heroes!
Fidel Castro Ruz
April 30, 2007
6:34 p.m.