In the 90s, Erin Brockovich, lacking any formal law school education,
was instrumental in constructing a case against Pacific Gas &
Electric Company regarding polluted groundwater supplies from the
company's natural gas operations in the southern California town of
Hinkley. After the case was settled for $333 million, the largest
settlement ever paid in a direct action lawsuit in US history,
Brockovich became unstoppable. Today, she's taking on more than local
environmental issues and turning her attention to the global water
crisis.
The famed environmentalist is featured as a prominent speaker in
Jessica Yu's new documentary “Last Call at the Oasis,” focusing on the
growing global water crisis—from the drying up of Lake Mead to the fight
to keep herbicides from tainting drinking water around the world.
In a partnership with Google, Brockovich is also involved in a project
to map disease clusters around the world, tying their relationship to
contaminated water supplies. In a roundtable discussion with the
Huffington Post, Brockovich said that the project began as she was
receiving up to 50,000 emails per month from people reporting health
issues in their communities. She then began to plot the communities on a
map, and, realizing the magnitude and importance of the research,
turned the initiative into her personal “life project.”
With children in the military, the issue also hits close to home.
Studies are currently being conducted linking past chemical exposure and
groundwater contamination at the Marine Corps' Camp Lejeune to
increased levels of disease among former residents.
Brockovich told the Huffington Post, "You are looking at soldiers who
would give their lives so we are afforded this opportunity to be here
today. They come home from three, four tours of duty, and they get
poisoned on their own soil. If we stand down on them, if we don't rally
to look at this, it will be the biggest black eye on America I've ever
known."
THE FILM
The thought-provoking documentary reveals some unnerving statistics:
Less than one percent of the world's water is actually available to
drink; by 2025, more than half of the world will lack access to adequate
water; the US has the largest water footprint in the world. The film
also singles out particularly alarming crisis situations in Las Vegas,
Los Angeles, California's Central Valley, Michigan, Texas, Australia and
the Middle East.
On a positive note, the film also highlights efforts by nongovernmental
organization Friends of the Earth Middle East, which is working with
Israeli, Jordanian and Palestinian officials to clean up the polluted
Jordan River.
“Compromise is happening in a place where you would think it would be
impossible to have cooperation,” Yu said in an interview. “We can’t all
become activists overnight, and no one thing is going to change the
situation, but there is tremendous room for improvement.”
Brockovich and Yu hope the new film will serve as a wake up call. From
the producers of “An Inconvenient Truth” and “Food, Inc.,” Yu's “Last
Call at the Oasis” is now showing in select theaters.
By
Developed, financed and executive produced by Participant Media, the company responsible for AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH, FOOD, INC. and WAITING FOR “SUPERMAN”,
LAST CALL AT THE OASIS presents a powerful argument for why the global
water crisis will be the central issue facing our world this century.
Illuminating the vital role water plays in our lives, exposing the defects in the current system and depicting communities already struggling with its ill-effects, the film features activist Erin Brockovich and such distinguished experts as Peter Gleick, Alex Prud’homme, Jay Famiglietti and Robert Glennon.
No comments:
Post a Comment