Fortune | FORTUNE 09月08日
矿产开发威胁瑞典萨米人的传统驯鹿放牧文化
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瑞典北部矿产开发项目,包括扩建的铁矿和稀土矿,正威胁着萨米原住民及其驯鹿的传统生活方式。不断扩张的矿山破坏了古老的驯鹿迁徙路线,而气候变化加剧了这一困境。萨米人表示,若稀土矿Per Geijer项目建成,将可能完全阻断其祖传的迁徙路线,对萨米文化造成毁灭性打击。尽管政府和矿业公司声称矿产开发有助于减少欧洲对中国的稀土依赖,但萨米人面临巨大的挑战,他们依靠法律手段抗争,但资源和财力悬殊。气候变化导致降雨代替降雪,冰层阻碍驯鹿觅食,高温也影响其夏季采食,传统放牧模式面临严峻考验。

⛏️ **矿产开发与文化生存的冲突:** 瑞典北部日益扩张的矿产开发项目,特别是Per Geijer稀土矿的潜在建设,正严重威胁萨米原住民的传统驯鹿放牧文化。该矿区若建成,可能完全阻断萨米人世代相传的驯鹿迁徙路线,这对以驯鹿为文化根基的萨米人来说,意味着生存的终结。

🌍 **气候变化加剧传统挑战:** 北极地区加速变暖导致冬季降雨代替降雪,形成的冰层阻碍驯鹿觅食,而夏季高温则影响其采食量。这些气候变化带来的影响,叠加矿产开发对地理空间的挤压,使得传统的驯鹿放牧方式难以维持可持续性。

⚖️ **资源悬殊下的抗争:** 萨米人为了保护其祖传的放牧土地,正通过法律途径与强大的矿业公司和政府进行抗争。然而,他们面临着巨大的资源和财力劣势,这场斗争充满了挑战,萨米人仅凭“生存的意志”和对子孙后代的承诺在坚持。

💡 **稀土矿的战略意义与代价:** 瑞典官方和矿业公司强调,Per Geijer稀土矿的开发有助于减少欧洲对中国稀土的依赖,并对向可再生能源经济转型至关重要。然而,这一战略目标是以牺牲萨米原住民的传统生计和文化为代价的,引发了深刻的伦理和社会公平问题。

High atop the Luossavaara Mountain in northern Sweden, Sami reindeer herder Lars-Marcus Kuhmunen mapped out a bleak future for himself and other Indigenous people whose reindeer have roamed this land for thousands of years.

An expanding iron-ore mine and a deposit of rare-earth minerals are fragmenting the land and altering ancient reindeer migration routes. But with the Arctic warming four times faster than the rest of the planet, herders say they need more geographic flexibility, not less, to ensure the animals’ survival.

If a mine is established at the deposit of rare-earth minerals called Per Geijer, which Sweden heralds as Europe’s largest, Kuhmunen said it could completely cut off the migration routes used by the Sami village of Gabna.

That would be the end of the Indigenous way of life for Kuhmunen, his children and their fellow Sami reindeer herders, he said, in this far-north corner of Sweden some 200 kilometers (124 miles) above the Arctic Circle.

“The reindeer is the fundamental base of the Sami culture in Sweden,” Kuhmunen said. “Everything is founded around the reindeers: The food, the language, the knowledge of mountains. Everything is founded around the reindeer herding. If that ceases to exist, the Sami culture will also cease to exist.”

Sami reindeer herders follow generations of tradition

Sami herders are descended from a once-nomadic people scattered across a region spanning the far north of Sweden, Norway, Finland and the northwestern corner of Russia. Until the 1960s, members of this Indigenous minority were discouraged from reindeer herding, and the church and state suppressed their language and culture.

In Sweden alone there are at least 20,000 people with Sami heritage, though an official count does not exist because an ethnicity-based census is against the law. Today, a Sami village called a sameby is a business entity dictated by the state, which determines how many semi-domesticated reindeer each village can have and where they can roam.

“It’s getting more and more a problem to have a sort of sustainable reindeer husbandry and to be able to have the reindeers to survive the Arctic winter and into the next year,” said Stefan Mikaelsson, a member of the Sami Parliament.

In the Gabna village, Kuhmunen oversees about 2,500 to 3,000 reindeer and 15 to 20 herders. Their families, some 150 people in total, depend on the bottom line of the business.

Even before the discovery of the Per Geijer deposit, they had to contend with the expanding footprint of Kiirunavaara. The world’s largest underground, iron-ore mine has forced the village’s herders to lead their reindeer through a longer and harder migration route.

Mining could reduce dependence on China but hurt Sami herders

Swedish officials and LKAB, the state-owned mining company, say the proposed Per Geijer mine could reduce Europe’s reliance on China for rare-earth minerals. LKAB hopes to begin mining there in the 2030s.

Besides being essential to many kinds of consumer technology, including cellphones, hard drives and electric and hybrid vehicles, rare-earth minerals also are considered crucial to shifting the economy away from fossil fuels toward electricity and renewable energy.

But if work on Per Geijer goes forward, Kuhmunen said there will be no other routes for the Gabna herders to take the reindeer east from the mountains in the summer to the grazing pastures full of nutrient-rich lichen in the winter.

The village will contest the mine in court but Kuhmunen said he is not optimistic.

“It’s really difficult to fight a mine. They have all the resources, they have all the means. They have the money. We don’t have that,” Kuhmunen said. “We only have our will to exist. To pass these grazing lands to our children.”

Darren Wilson, LKAB’s senior vice president of special products, said the mining company is seeking solutions to assist the Sami herders, though he would not speculate on what they might be.

“There are potential things that we can do and we can explore and we have to keep engaging,” he said. “But I’m not underestimating the challenge of doing that.”

Climate change’s impact on reindeer husbandry

Climate change is wreaking havoc on traditional Sami reindeer husbandry.

Global warming has brought rain instead of snow during the winter in Swedish Lapland. The freezing rain then traps lichen under a thick layer of ice where hungry reindeer can’t reach the food, according to Anna Skarin, a reindeer husbandry expert and Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences professor.

In the summer, mountain temperatures have risen to 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit) and left reindeer over-heated and unable to graze enough to gain the weight needed to sustain them in winter.

Some in Sweden suggest putting the reindeer onto trucks to ferry them between grazing lands if the Per Geijer mine is built. But Skarin said that isn’t feasible because the animals eat on the move and the relocation would deny them food to be grazed while walking from one area to another.

“So you’re kind of both taking away the migration route that they have used traditionally over hundreds and thousands of years,” she said, “and you would also take away that forage resource that they should have used during that time.”

For Kuhmunen, it would also mean the end of Sami traditions passed down by generations of reindeer herders on this land.

“How can you tell your people that what we’re doing now, it will cease to exist in the near future?” he said.

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Pietro De Cristofaro in Kiruna, Sweden, contributed to this report.

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The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find the AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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萨米人 驯鹿放牧 矿产开发 气候变化 原住民文化 瑞典 Sami Reindeer Herding Mineral Development Climate Change Indigenous Culture Sweden
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