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Home » The Hidden Cost of the Green Transition’s Mineral Rush: Galina Angarova (Transcript)

The Hidden Cost of the Green Transition’s Mineral Rush: Galina Angarova (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Indigenous advocate Galina Angarova’s talk titled “The Hidden Cost of the Green Transition’s Mineral Rush”, recorded at TED Countdown: Overcoming Dilemmas in the Green Transition on October 30, 2024.

Listen to the audio version here:

Galina Angarova: A trusted elder once told me, “Pay your attention to your intention, or other people’s intentions. They may come in shiny packages, and they can be reinventions of the same old.” The same old is the centuries old paradigm of take and extract. They do come in shiny packages, but the core of them stays the same, extractive. So when we are paying attention to the intention, we ask ourselves the question, is it to take or is it to give? Is it to extract or is it to regenerate?

I come from the Abzai clan of the Heret nation of the Buryat peoples. We are indigenous peoples in Siberia, on both sides of Lake Baikal, which is the largest freshwater lake in the world. In many indigenous cultures, including mine, we are taught from very early childhood, take only what you need, leave something behind so it can regenerate itself, and think seven generations ahead. That’s what I learned from my grandmother.

Today leading a global coalition to secure indigenous peoples’ rights in the green economy, I’m led by these values. They are core tenets of harmonious and truly sustainable living.

The Arctic Disaster That Changed Everything

So the idea of paying attention to the intention became all too real for me in May 2020. In Taimyr Peninsula, in the Russian Arctic, a large fuel tank owned by the subsidiary of Norilsk Nickel, the largest producer of nickel, ruptured. It spilled 21,000 tons of diesel into the local waterways. It has become the worst environmental disaster in the history of the Arctic.