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Communism and Environment


douglas r. weiner

The first venue where state power was seized by followers of Marx and
Engels was in Russia in November 1917. During the “environmental decade”
of the 1960s and 1970s scholars first wondered whether communist states
might have developed in an environmentally more sensitive way than
capitalist ones. Most concluded that not only did communist regimes fail to
realize the theoretical advantages of a dirigiste system, their careless practices
brought about, in the words of Murray Feshbach and Fred Friendly, Jr., an
“ecocide.”1 Even some Soviet authors agreed.2
“Environmentally sensitive development,” however, is not easily defined.
There is no “natural” standard for environmental purity or pollution apart
from different individuals’ or societies’ ideas of acceptable risk.3 Efforts
to curtail resource wastage, to promote the sustained use of renewable
resources and recycling, to protect habitats and life forms and to control
pollution have together come under the broad rubric of “environmental
protection.” Yet, humans, like all living things, cannot escape transforming

1 Murray Feshbach and Alfred Friendly, Jr., Ecocide in the USSR: Health and Nature Under
Siege (New York: Basic Books, 1992); D. J. Peterson, Troubled Lands: The Legacy of Soviet
Environmental Destruction (Boulder: Westview Press and RAND, 1993). The earlier works
include Marshall Goldman, The Spoils of Progress: Environmental Pollution in the Soviet
Union (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1972); Philip R. Pryde, Conservation in the Soviet Union
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972), and his Environmental Management in the
Soviet Union (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991); and Charles Ziegler,
Environmental Policy in the USSR (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1987).
2 Mikhail Lemeshev, Vlast’ vedomstv – ekologicheskii infarkt (Moscow: Progress, 1989),
translated as Bureaucrats in Power – Ecological Collapse (Moscow: Progress, 1990);
Aleksei Iablokov and Rolf Edberg, Tomorrow Will Be Too Late: East Meets West on
Global Ecology (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1991); Ze’ev Volf’son
(Boris Komarov), The Destruction of Nature in the Soviet Union, trans. Michael Hale and
Joe Hollander (London: Pluto Press, [1980]), orig. publ. as Unichtozhenie prirody: obos-
trenie ekologicheskogo krizisa v SSSR (Frankfurt-am-Main: Posev, 1978).
3 See Mary Douglas and Aaron Wildavsky, Risk and Culture: An Essay on the Selection of
Technical and Environmental Dangers (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982).

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d o u g l a s r . w ei n e r

our environment.4 The idea that we should think about the likely environ-
mental effects of our activity has roots only as far back as seventeenth-century
Europe.5 Moreover, the various policies subsumed under “environmental
protection” reflect widely divergent concerns: human health, resource avail-
ability into the future, and ethical and esthetic concerns about nonhuman life
forms and landscapes. Some societies could be concerned with one, or two, but
not all of these issues.
Finally, concern does not necessarily translate into desired outcomes.
A society might set concentration thresholds for individual chemicals, but
still be unable to control the dangerous effects of their combined action.6
In the absence of complete scientific knowledge and technical capacity
to achieve our environmental goals, there will always be a gap between
ideals or concerns and outcomes. Consequently, it is difficult to assign
“environmental” rankings to regimes.

Early Soviet Policies


Soviet environmental management has varied by time period, with
the earlier period characterized by uniquely forward-looking policies
for their day. The Bolsheviks seized power with a desire to impose
a “planned,” scientifically grounded order – including resource manage-
ment – in place of a rapacious and anarchic capitalist one. Initially, the
new regime heeded the voices of tsarist-era trained scientists, mostly
botanists, zoologists and geographers, who forcefully championed habitat
protection.7 Responsibility for nature protection was delegated to the
People’s Commissariat (ministry) for Education. Additionally, the Soviet
regime in 1918 enacted a “Law on Forests” that created a category of

4 Willliam R. Dickinson, “The Holocene Legacy,” Environmental History 5, 4 (Oct. 2000),


483–502.
5 See Richard Grove, “Conserving Eden: The (European) East India Companies and Their
Environmental Policies on St. Helena, Mauritius, and in Western India, 1660 to 1854,”
Comparative Studies in Society and History 35 (Apr. 1993), 318–35.
6 See Shepard Krech III, The Ecological Indian (New York: Norton, 1999), “Introduction”
and “Epilogue.”
7 For an extended treatment of the late tsarist period, see Feliks Robertovich Shtil’mark,
Istoriografiia rossiiskikh zapovednikov (1895–1995) (Moscow: Logata, 1996); Douglas
R. Weiner, Models of Nature: Ecology, Conservation and Cultural Revolution in Soviet
Russia (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988); and Vladimir E. Boreiko, Istoriia
okhrany prirody Ukrainy: X vek–1980. Izdanie vtoroe (Kiev: Kievskii ekologo-kul’turnyi
tsentr, 1997) and his Ocherki o pionerakh okhrany prirody, 2 vols. (Kiev: Kievskii ekologo-
kul’turnyi tsentr and Tsentr okhrany dikoi prirody SoES, 1996).

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Communism and Environment

protected forests and limited cutting in provinces with low percentages of


forested land, although research has established that the law was unevenly
observed.8
The world’s first national environmental regulatory body, the Interagency
State Committee for Nature Protection (1925–31), had a nominal right to
protest and delay implementation of economic projects and targets that were
found to harm ecological values unacceptably. The Education Commissariat
additionally sponsored the world’s first network of protected territories
(zapovedniki) exclusively dedicated to the ecological and scientific study of
“wild” nature. These were imagined as baselines (etalony) of healthy natural
communities against which changes in surrounding, once-similar but human-
affected areas could be compared. Scientists could then recommend for each
ecological region of the country forms of land use that caused the least
measurable (or visible) biotic changes. By 1933 there were seventy republic-
and local-level reserves across the Soviet Union with a total area of 6 million
hectares (about 15 million acres). Ironically, this binary of “healthy” pristine
nature and “corrupting” human society flew in the face of the Marxian
dialectical view and was based on premises that scientists now hold as faulty.9
Limited conservation activism was also permitted in the 1920s. The All-
Russian Society for the Protection of Nature (Vserossiiskii obshchestvo
okhrany prirody, VOOP) was founded in 1924; its journal Okhrana prirody
(Protection of Nature) began publishing four years later. Extensive foreign
contacts were forged.10
Building on prerevolutionary public health activism, the communist
regime created a Commissariat of Public Health which in 1923 published
“Regulations on Levels of Purity of Wastewater” and conducted chemical
and hydrobiological assays on hundreds of rivers, ponds and wells.11 Here,
too, foreign efforts were closely studied.12

8 On the forest law, see Brian Bonhomme, Forests, Peasants, and Revolutionaries: Forest
Conservation and Organization in Soviet Russia, 1917–1929 (Boulder: East European
Monographs, 2005); Stephen C. Brain, Song of the Forest: Russian Forestry and Stalin’s
Environmentalism (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2011); Weiner, Models of
Nature, 24–25.
9 On the rejection of static, equilibrium-based models of ecological communities, see
Daniel Botkin, Discordant Harmonies: A New Ecology for the Twenty-First Century
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1990).
10 See Weiner, Models of Nature, 31–84.
11 Mikhail Vladimirovich Poddubnyi, Sanitarnaia okhrana okruzhaiushchei sredy v Rossii
i SSSR v pervoi polovine XX veka. Seriia: istoriia okhrany prirody, vypusk 16 (Kiev: Kievskii
ekologo-kul’turnyi tsentr and Tsentr okhrany dikoi prirody SoES, 1997).
12 Ibid., 17. Dr. Alice Hamilton, then an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard
University and later a pioneer in environmental toxicology in the United States, visited

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The Stalin Era


Prospects both for nature protection and for control of industrial pollution
were stunted by Joseph Stalin’s revolution from above. Because it opposed
target quotas for procurement of timber and marine mammals, the
Interagency State Committee for Nature Protection was abolished in 1931.
Eight years later, vice-premier of the USSR Andrei Yanuar’evich Vyshinskii
famously propounded that pollution standards were not needed either:
“We have the Stalin Constitution. That is sufficient to ensure that our public
hygiene and public health are the best in the world!”13

The Legacy of Marx and Engels


To understand the environmental attitudes and policies of communist
regimes from the 1960s, we must first grasp the principles upon which all
Soviet-type regimes were constructed. These signally include these regimes’
selective borrowing – or rejection – of the ideas of Marx and Engels.
As presumptuous as were those philosophers’ claims to have founded the
one correct “science” of society,14 their understanding of the “man–nature”
relationship was precocious. Today, the idea of the Anthropocene is accepted
without fuss, but when Marx and Engels in 1845–46 advanced the idea that
humans and “nature” had cocreated each other, it was truly a novel
conception.15 Marx referred to “nature” as “man’s body” and to humans as
“the mind of nature,” overturning the stark division between humans and
“nature” generally held.

Moscow in 1925, where she was hosted by the Institute for Occupational Diseases. Her
observations, contained in Alice Hamilton, “Industrial Hygiene in Moscow,” Journal of
Industrial Hygiene 7, 2 (Feb. 1925), 47–61, were highly laudatory: “It would seem that we
are justified in looking forward to great things in this field to come out of Russia” (61).
See also K. F. Meyer, “Some Observations on Infective Diseases in Russia,” American
Journal of Public Health 47 (Sep. 1957), 1083–92.
13 Poddubnyi, Sanitarnaia okhrana okruzhaiushchei, 27.
14 For lucid critiques of the assumptions and claims of Marxism, see Leszek Kołakowski,
Main Currents of Marxism, vol. I, The Founders (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978);
Andrzej Walicki, Marxism and the Leap to the Kingdom of Freedom: The Rise and Fall of the
Communist Utopia (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1995); and Alexander Yakovlev
(Aleksandr Nikolaevich), The Fate of Marxism in Russia (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1993).
15 Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The German Ideology. Part One, with selections from Parts
Two and Three and supplementary texts, ed. with an introduction by C. J. Arthur
(New York: International Publishers, 1970), esp. 61–63. For a clear explanation of their
view, see Kołakowski, Main Currents, 134–37, which also includes a discussion of
relevant sections of Marx’s Paris manuscripts of 1844.

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Communism and Environment

Engels argued that humans could gain some knowledge of the world by
using experience rather than a priori metaphysics.16 “Practice . . . is the
criterion of truth,” he noted; we can only learn about the world through
our interaction with it. Yet, Engels rejected the idea that humans could fully
comprehend the totality of the universe.17 For one thing, nature is always in
flux, and humans can never be sure of the sphere of validity of the natural
laws we discover.18 And, although Engels believed that all products of the
universe could be explained through some interaction of matter and energy,
he also held the door open to the notion that humans were not always able to
provide adequate explanations of causality at any given time.
Humans – social beings – have used collectively organized labor from our
earliest days to wrest food and other products from our surroundings, and
have transformed those surroundings in the process, argued Engels. But, for
that to be successful, “our mastery of nature [ought] not resemble that of
a conqueror,” for “nature, in order to be mastered, must be obeyed.”
To proceed heedlessly was to risk unwanted consequences:
Let us not, however, flatter ourselves overmuch on account of our human
victories over nature. For each such victory nature takes its revenge on us.
Each victory, it is true, . . . first . . . brings about the results we expected, but
in the second and third places it has quite different, unforeseen effects which
only too often cancel the first . . . Those who spread the potato in Europe
were not aware that . . . they were at the same time spreading scrofula. Thus
at every step we are reminded that we by no means rule over nature like
a conqueror over a foreign people, like someone standing outside nature –
but that we, with flesh, blood and brain, belong to nature, and exist in its
midst, and that all our mastery of it consists in the fact that we have the
advantage over all other creatures of being able to learn its laws and apply
them correctly.19
Engels remained optimistic, however, that human understanding would
eventually undermine the false dichotomy of man and nature:
[A]fter the mighty advances made by the natural sciences in the present
century, we are more than ever in a position to realise, and hence to control,
also the more remote natural consequences of . . . our . . . production
activities. But the more this progresses the more will men not only feel but

16 Friedrich Engels, The Dialectics of Nature and Ludwig Feuerbach and the End of Classical
German Philosophy (London: Electric Book Co., 2001).
17 See the fine discussion again in Kołakowski, Main Currents, 376–98. 18 Ibid., 395.
19 See www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1876/part-played-labour/. This is from
F. Engels, The Part of Labor in the Transformation from Ape to Man, trans. Clemens Dutt
(Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1934).

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d o u g l a s r . w ei n e r

also know their oneness with nature, and the more impossible will become
the senseless and unnatural idea of a contrast between mind and matter, man
and nature, soul and body, such as arose after the decline of classical
antiquity in Europe and obtained its highest elaboration in Christianity.20
Marx and Engels had no place for the veneration of “pristine” nature.21
Nevertheless, they were sensitive to the dialectical or mutually transforming
feedback processes of human society and the rest of the material world.
However, that and their caution regarding the limits to human knowledge,
plus their cognizance that all choices are tradeoffs, were all disregarded by
their followers, who understood the founders more simplistically. Despite
the attraction of some early Soviet scientists and philosophers to the more
sophisticated aspects of Marx’s and Engels’s thinking, communist political
leaders and regimes – like market societies – saw “man” and “nature” as
things apart, with the latter to be vanquished by the former.22
Although nature protection activists tried to enlist Engels’s dictum that
nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed, the era of the five-year plans
ushered in a new dichotomization of humans and nature sponsored by the
regime. Reflecting this, writer Maksim Gorkii declared “a war to the death”
against nature, railing that “the blind drive of nature to produce on earth
every kind of useless or even harmful trash – must be stopped and
eradicated.”23 Conservation was accused by an influential party critic of
constituting “a land mine under socialist agriculture,”24 and the leading
scientific ecologist and conservation activist, Vladimir Vladimirovich
Stanchinskii, was arrested in 1933.25

The Soviet Political Economy and Resource Use


To understand the environmental policies of mature Soviet-type states, we
must examine not only philosophies of nature but the actual system of

20 Ibid.
21 Karl Marx, Capital, vol. III, trans. Ernest Untermann (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr and Co.,
1909), 954, quoted in Erich Fromm, “Foreword,” in Karl Marx, Early Writings, trans. and
ed. T. B. Bottomore (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964), ii.
22 See Loren R. Graham, Science, Philosophy and Human Behavior in the Soviet Union
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1987).
23 Maksim Gor’kii, “O bor’be s prirodoi,” Izvestiia (12 Dec. 1931).
24 Arnosht Kol’man, “Sabotazh v nauke,” Bol’shevik 2 (1931), 75.
25 Douglas R. Weiner, A Little Corner of Freedom: Russian Nature Protection from Stalin to
Gorbachev (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999), 44–46; Vladimir
Yevgen’evich Boreiko, Don Kikhoty. Istoriia, liudi, zapovedniki (Moscow: Logata, 1998),
223–39.

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Communism and Environment

political economy of those states. The Stalinist and post-Stalinist economic


system was based on a labor- and resource-intensive organization of inputs
designed to produce a large but limited array of products. Targets were set by
central planners in Gosplan USSR, the state planning agency, under the
supervision of the Soviet Communist Party’s Central Committee, to take
the Soviet example. If Marx had described “communism” as the transcen-
dence of the “kingdom of necessity,” then to attain that goal regime leaders
drilled that there first had to be a massive expansion of the “means of
production,” understood as heavy industry. Replacing capitalism’s “fetishism
of commodities” was Soviet-type regimes’ fetishism of heavy industrial
growth.26
These priorities were not simply ideological; they were symbolic. Huge
hydroelectric dams (Dneprstroi, Volga dams at Stalingrad [Volgograd] and
Kuibyshev [Samara]) were constructed to rival the Boulder (Hoover) and
Grand Coulee dams; together with massive canal projects (Moscow–Volga,
Volga–Don, Fergana), they served to create visible symbols of communist
progress.27 Engineers who argued that smaller thermal-generating plants
would be more cost-effective were ignored or repressed as were biologists
who warned about the effects of these projects on fisheries and other biota.
Ironically, the fulminating smokestacks of more industrialized Western
nations served as the Soviet model.28

26 See especially Thomas Remington, Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia: Ideology and
Industrial Organization, 1917–1921 (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1984); also,
Paul R. Gregory (ed.), Behind the Façade of Stalin’s Command Economy: Evidence from the
Soviet State and Party Archives (Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 2001). Lenin
famously redefined communism as “Soviet power plus electrification of the whole
country.” See his “Nashe vneshnee i vnutrenee polozhenie i zadachi partii,” in Lenin,
Polnoe sobranie sochinenii, vol. XLII (Moscow: Gos. Izdatel’stvo politicheskoi literatury,
1965), 30.
27 See Weiner, Models of Nature; Loren R. Graham, The Ghost of the Executed Engineer:
Technology and the Fall of the Soviet Union (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,
1993); Anne D. Rassweiler, The Generation of Power: A History of Dneprostroi (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1988); Paul R. Josephson, Industrialized Nature: Brute Force
Technology and the Transformation of the Natural World (Washington, DC: Island Press,
2002).
28 See readings in previous note. Thomas F. Remington, in his Building Socialism, 19,
writes: “[The Bolsheviks] cultivated an ideology of technological modernism which
linked the accumulation of national power to the liberation of society’s resources from
underdevelopment. Lenin, in particular, translated the older socialist ideals of justice
and equality into formulas of collective power through industrial progress.
Industrialism provided the mechanistic images of Lenin’s vision of society: a society
grown into the state, a state in which, to be sure, power was itself shared with the
masses and social choice was disaggregated into millions of discrete but automatic
responses . . . [N]o chaos would be tolerated.”

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Labor and natural resources were treated as free goods. Because “attrac-
tive pictures of stateless communism” increasingly seemed a vision of the far
distant future,29 the task of the moment was growth at the fastest speed
possible.30 A central goal linked to this was building the military-industrial
complex, a response to the pervasive belief among communists that the
Soviet Union was encircled by irreconcilable enemies.31
Marshall Goldman notes in his pioneering study that Soviet economic
doctrine did not admit in principle that its system could generate
externalities, i.e. social costs of production.32 Additionally, the price
structure set by Gosplan often encouraged vast waste of resources.
Thus, owing to low land rents, it was cheaper for an extractive enter-
prise to move to a new site rather than fully exploit an existing mine or
well.33 There were no mechanisms for collaboration between oil- and
gas-extraction firms, and therefore much of the natural gas tapped at oil
wells was simply flared off.34
Moreover, the enterprises of the five-year plans were heavily polluting.35
Added to these were the environmentally questionable agricultural practices
associated with collectivization, which was carried out in order to supply
tribute to pay for industrialization. Nikita Khrushchev’s Virgin Lands
Program (1954), for example, led to significant topsoil erosion owing to the
absence of soil-conservation measures.36
One partial exception under Stalin was forest policy, which protected
forests in major watersheds of European USSR in order not to jeopardize
the effectiveness of hydroelectric dams, which could be harmed by erosion

29 Ibid., 143. 30 Ibid.


31 Mark Harrison, “Providing for Defense,” in Gregory (ed.), Behind the Façade, 81–110. For
the more recent, postwar period, see Valerii I. Bulatov, Rossiia. Ekologiia i armiia
(Novosibirsk: TsERIS, 1999).
32 Goldman, Spoils of Progress, 46–63.
33 Ibid., 48. See also Marshall Goldman, Petrostate: Putin, Power and the New Russia
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2008), 41–42.
34 Goldman, Petrostate, 42–43.
35 Paul Josephson, Nicolai Dronin, Ruben Mnatsakanian, Aleh Cherp, Dmitry Efremenko
and Vladislav Larin, An Environmental History of Russia (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2013), 76. See also Marc Elie, “Desiccated Steppes: Droughts,
Erosion, Climate Change, and the Crisis of Soviet Agriculture, 1960s–1980s,” in
Nicholas Breyfogle (ed.), Eurasian Environments: Nature and Ecology in Imperial Russia
and the Soviet Union (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, forthcoming)
36 Pryde, Environmental Management, esp. 198–202; Goldman, Spoils of Progress, 167–73.
See esp. Ihor Stebelsky, “Agricultural Development and Soil Degradation in the
Soviet Union: Policies, Patterns, and Trends,” in Fred Singleton (ed.),
Environmental Problems in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe (Boulder: Lynne
Rienner, 1987), 71–96.

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Communism and Environment

and silting.37 Other exceptions included isolated, unsuccessful experiments in


closed-cycle, waste-free ore extraction.38
One environmentally “friendly” feature of Soviet life that persisted
throughout the entire Soviet period was the scarcity of private automobiles
and a reliance on a dense and serviceable network of urban mass transit and
passenger rail. Nevertheless, Soviet vehicles were much more heavily pollut-
ing than Western ones owing to their greater average age and less efficient
combustion.39

Soviet Environmental Issues 1960–1991


More often than not, Soviet development tradeoffs yielded short-term advan-
tage with heavy disregard for serious long-term costs. A classic example was
the decision to turn Central Asia into a supplier of the Soviet Union’s cotton
needs.
Although cotton as an export crop in Central Asia predated the tsarist
conquest of the region,40 Lenin promoted the notion that Central Asian
cotton would ensure self-sufficiency for the Soviet regime.41 Stalin revived
earlier plans to harness the Amu-Dar’ia and Syr-Dar’ia Rivers for irrigation.
Beginning with the Great Fergana Canal, irrigation was extended westward
to Turkmenistan, building the unlined Karakum Canal, whose seepage rate is
50 percent. It diverts up to 30 percent of the Amu-Dar’ia’s annual flow. Much
of the formerly best agricultural lands were poisoned due to soil salinization
owing to overwatering and poor drainage.42

37 Brain, Song of the Forest, esp. 115–26. Afforestation and the planting of shelter belts was
not restricted to the Soviet Union or to communist nations but has been undertaken by
many countries.
38 Andy Bruno has described this in The Nature of Soviet Power: An Arctic Environmental
History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), esp. 97, 111.
39 See the informative discussions in Goldman, Spoils of Progress, 130–34; Pryde,
Environmental Management, 22–24.
40 Jeff Sahadeo, “Cultures of Cotton and Colonialism: Politics, Society and the
Environment in Central Asia, 1865–1923,” unpublished paper, AAASS 2003 Annual
Convention, Toronto, Canada; Muriel Joffe, “Autocracy, Capitalism and Empire:
The Politics of Irrigation,” Russian Review 54, 3 (Jul. 1995), 366–89.
41 Sahadeo, “Cultures of Cotton and Colonialism.”
42 On the Aral Sea crisis and the problem of cotton-based agriculture in Central Asia, see
Tom Bissell, “Eternal Winter: Lessons of the Aral Sea Disaster,” Harper’s Magazine
(Apr. 2002), 41–56; Robert G. Darst, Jr., “Environmentalism in the USSR:
The Opposition to the River Diversion Projects,” Soviet Economy 4, 3 (1988), 226–27;
Nikolai Ivanovich Chesnokov, Dikie zhivotnye meniaiut adresa (Moscow: Mysl’, 1989);
John C. K. Daly, “Global Implications of Aral Sea Dessication,” Central Asia – Caucasus
Analyst (8 Nov. 2000); Eric Sievers (ed.), EcoStan News, www.ecostan.org/library/;

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d o u g l a s r . w ei n e r

More dramatically, the relentless withdrawal of water from the two


rivers has resulted in a regional environmental catastrophe: the disappear-
ance of the Aral Sea. Barely fifty years ago Aral was the fourth-largest lake
in the world and covered an area of 66,000 square kilometers with
a volume of 1,061.6 cubic kilometers and a salinity level of 10 parts per
1,000. Since the early 1990s Aral has consisted of two shrinking ponds
whose area together was 28,687 square kilometers in 1998 with a volume of
181 cubic kilometers. Owing to evaporation, salinity in the lake has
increased more than fourfold. This destroyed the fishery, which once
yielded an annual catch of 40,000 metric tons. Large, rusting trawlers lie
stranded on the dry seabed.
The entire regional landscape has undergone disastrous transforma-
tion. A toxic lake, Sarykamysh, with an area of 3,000 square kilometers
and 26 cubic kilometers of waste, was formed by the discharge of
drainage water from the cotton fields, and the tugai floodplain,
a species-rich habitat of tall reeds, tamarisks, poplars, willows and
oleasters, desiccated.
The desiccation of the Aral Sea has been a human health catastrophe.
From the exposed seabed tens of millions of tons of sand laden with salts,
pesticides, fertilizers and other chemicals (DDT, hexachloro-cyclohexanes/
b-isomer Lindane, Toxaphene, phosalone pesticide, PCBs, dioxins), as well as
precipitates from irrigation wastewater, are carried annually to fields and
towns. Worst hit has been the Autonomous Republic of Karakalpakstan
(in Uzbekistan), in the direct path of the prevailing northerly winds.
A recent statistic noted that 111 children per 1,000 die before their first birth-
day. As clean water has disappeared, viral hepatitis and typhoid fever and
other diarrheal diseases have become widespread, as have anemia, psycho-
neural retardation, acute respiratory diseases, cancers and especially
tuberculosis.43

Feshbach and Friendly, Ecocide in the USSR; Michael H. Glantz (ed.), Creeping
Environmental Problems and Sustainable Development in the Aral Sea Basin (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1999); Ulrike Grote (ed.), Central Asian Environments in
Transition (Manila: Asian Development Bank, 1997); “Receding Waters May Expose
Soviet Anthrax Dump,” Austin American-Statesman (2 Jun. 1999); Philip P. Micklin (ed.),
“The Aral Crisis,” Post-Soviet Geography 33, 5, special issue (May 1992); Pryde,
Environmental Management; and Erika Weinthal, State Making and Environmental
Cooperation: Linking Domestic and International Politics in Central Asia (Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, 2002).
43 Philip Whish-Wilson, “The Aral Sea Environmental Health Crisis,” Journal of Rural and
Remote Environmental Health 1, 2 (2002), 29–34.

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Another environmental problem raised by the Aral is the safe disposal of


stored chemical and biological weapons on Vozrozhdenie Island, once
located in the middle of the lake and now connected to the shore.
An accidental release could trigger a worldwide pandemic.
The party bosses of Central Asia sought to counteract the damage by
proposing a transfer of water from northward-flowing Siberian rivers such as
the Irtysh and Ob’ to their region as irrigation for cotton continued unabated.
First proposed under Stalin and approved by the Politburo in 1966, the
“Sibaral” canal, dubbed “the project of the century,” would have stretched
for 2,200 km across the Turgai watershed, delivering water to the Aral.
Because the entire country was its “patrimony” and therefore its testing
ground, the Soviet Communist Party leadership endorsed the project along
with a similar project to divert northward-flowing European rivers and
waters southward, to irrigate Ukraine, Kalmykia and the North Caucasus,
and to stem a further drop in the level of the Caspian Sea. Soviet planners
never considered foreseeable tradeoffs and never consulted with stakeholders
or considered their opinions.
Public opposition to these plans gathered force from the 1970s among
liberal intelligentsia and students, Russian nationalists and the general
public.44 Most militant were the student brigades for nature protection –
the druzhiny – who called out the semi-official All-Russian Society for Nature
Protection as a fraud. In the face of an insistent public outcry on the heels of
the Chernobyl accident, the new Soviet leader – Mikhail Sergeevich
Gorbachev – canceled the project on 20 August 1986, the first such regime
policy retreat owing to popular resistance.
Other massive Brezhnev-era water- and earth-moving schemes and indus-
trial projects served as nuclei for growing public protest. One such “great
project” was the walling off of the Kara-Bogaz-Gol, a shallow arm of the
Caspian Sea, in order to evaporate the water and mine the salts on the sea
floor. This had to be reversed once it was clear that the airborne salts posed
a major threat to agricultural land and to people.45 Another was the
“Damba,” one of the biggest earth-moving projects of all time, an earth
and stone dam across the Gulf of Finland to protect the city of Leningrad
from hundred-year inundations from the Baltic Sea. This, too, resulted in
unwanted consequences: Algal blooms appeared along the Leningrad littoral

44 Darst, “Environmentalism in the USSR.”


45 See Theodore Shabad, “Soviet Plugs Caspian Leak, Then Restores It,” New York Times
(28 Nov. 1984), A-15.

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owing to the absence of flushing from the gulf.46 Public hearings in the
Leningrad City Soviet in 1990 forced major alterations in the design.
The litany of grand projects of the Brezhnev era up to Gorbachev
(October 1964 to March 1985) also included the Katun Hydroelectric Power
Station, the Volga–Chograi Canal, the Baikal–Amur Railroad and the indus-
trial development around Lake Baikal.47 All threatened vulnerable habitats,
but none acquired such domestic and international notoriety as the situation
of Lake Baikal, the world’s deepest lake, which contains about 800 endemic
species found nowhere else.
To develop eastern Siberia, the Khrushchev regime initiated the con-
struction of a massive hydroelectic station at Bratsk on the Angara River.
A plan to widen the mouth of Lake Baikal where its waters feed the Angara
to increase water flow through the turbines was aborted after scientists
objected, but industrial development was begun around the periphery of
the lake. In 1966 and 1967 the Baikalsk and Selenginsk cellulose factories at
the southern end of the lake began operations over domestic and interna-
tional protest. A decade later, in conjunction with the Baikal–Amur
Mainline Railroad (BAM), a variety of military-related industries were
sited around the northern rim. Despite a multitude of regime blue-
ribbon commissions and injunctions against damaging the lake, thermal
and heavy-metal pollution continued unabated. No one knows precisely
the tolerances of the lake’s myriad life forms for the growing array of toxic
effluents, thermal changes and changes in dissolved oxygen and other
gases.
Another feature of communist rule was the extreme lack of information
available to the public concerning resource exploitation and environmental
risks. A decree of the Central Committee of 1957 prohibited the reporting
“of forest fires, industrial accidents, military accidents, infant mortality, or
radioactive pollution.”48 Routine Soviet practices ensured environmental

46 There are no scholarly studies on the Damba to my knowledge. See en.wikipedia.org/


wiki/Saint_Petersburg_Dam.
47 On the Baikal–Amur Railroad, see Christopher J. Ward, Brezhnev’s Folly: The Building of
BAM and Late Soviet Socialism (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2009). There
is a large literature on Baikal. Good places to start are Feshbach and Friendly, Ecocide in
the USSR; Josephson et al., An Environmental History of Russia; Pryde, Environmental
Management; Goldman, The Spoils of Progress; Weiner, A Little Corner of Freedom, 355–73;
Volf’son (Komarov), The Destruction of Nature, 3–19.
48 Josephson et al., An Environmental History of Russia, 142. This is drawn from Vladimir
Yevgen’evich Boreiko, Belye piatna istorii prirodookhrany, 2nd edn. (Kiev: Kievskii
ekologo-kul’turnyi tsentr, 2003), 289.

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Communism and Environment

censorship.49 What information was provided was not always reliable. It took
a disaster of the cataclysmic proportions of Chernobyl to eliminate much of
the censorship surrounding environmental issues.
Chernobyl itself was connected to the USSR’s larger energy dilemmas.
Energy commitments to Eastern Europe and Cuba, combined with the need
to export large quantities of oil to pay for food imports, plus the general
energy inefficiency of the Soviet economy and wasteful extraction and
transport of fossil fuels, led the USSR to turn to nuclear power to meet its
own energy needs.50 As a consequence the reactors at Chernobyl, for exam-
ple, were allowed to go on line without a backup emergency cooling system;
the bungled attempt to retrofit that two years later was the cause of the
reactor’s meltdown.51 No doubt the autocratic style of decision-making is an
extremely important part of the story of the Soviet environmental legacy.
Yet no discussion can avoid another key factor: the pervasive militarization of
the Soviet state from its beginnings.52 Dominating the Soviet economy was
its military-industrial complex.53 The Soviet regime continued the production
of chemical and biological weapons.54 Public costs included the accidental
release of anthrax near the city of Sverdlovsk (Yekaterinburg, pop. 1 million)
in April 1979, causing 64 officially reported (and, according to one scholarly
estimate, 36,000) deaths.55
Products of the 440 active and 85 demobilized atomic power stations
(55 more are under construction), spent fuel and toxic wastes now amount
to 8,700 tons in about 100 storage sites.56 Extensive regions were affected by
the atmospheric and subterranean testing of nuclear weapons, most notably
eastern Kazakhstan, where 450 nuclear tests (119 above ground) were

49 Vladislav Larin, Ruben Mnatsakanian, Igor’ Chestin and Yevgenii Shvarts, Okhrana
prirody Rossii. Ot Gorbacheva do Putina (Moscow: Scientific Press Ltd./KMK, 2003),
32–34. Most environmental information was classed as “DSP,” or for internal use only.
50 Thane Gustafson, Crisis amid Plenty: The Politics of Soviet Energy Under Brezhnev and
Gorbachev (Princeton: Princeton University Press and Rand Corporation, 1989).
51 Zhores A. Medvedev, The Legacy of Chernobyl (New York: W. W. Norton, 1990).
52 Sheila Fitzpatrick, “The Civil War as a Formative Experience,” in Abbott Gleason,
Peter Kenez and Richard Stites (eds.), Bolshevik Culture: Experiment and Order in the
Russian Revolution (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985), 57–76.
53 Bulatov, Rossiia. Ekologiia i armiia, 20.
54 Vladimir Birstein, The Perversion of Knowledge: The True Story of Soviet Science (Boulder:
Westview Press, 2001), 121–22.
55 Bulatov, Rossiia. Ekologiia i armiia, 62. S. N. Volkov, in his study “Spetssluzhby
i biologicheskoe oruzhie v dvukh izmereniiakh,” Mir, demokratiia, bezopasnost’ 12
(1998), 38–55, and his Yekaterinburg. Chelovek i gorod. Opyt sotsial’noi ekologii
i prakticheskoi geourbanistiki (Yekaterinburg, Russia: Yekaterinburgskii gumanitarno-
ekologicheskii litsei, 1997), estimates the number of fatalities at 36,000.
56 Bulatov, Rossiia. Ekologiia i armiia, 51.

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conducted between 29 August 1949 and 19 October 1989. Exposure to radia-


tion affected hundreds of thousands of people. Another eighty nuclear tests
have taken place on the fragile Arctic archipelago of Novaia Zemlia, whose
mainland and shallow shelf also constituted a “dumping ground for enor-
mous amounts of radioactive and mixed waste”: up to 17,000 containers
(150,000 cubic meters of liquid radioactive waste) plus old or damaged nuclear
reactors, some with fuel.57
Additionally, controlled nuclear explosions were used to control oil-well
fires, to increase oil and gas flow rates and to control methane seepage into
coalmines.58 More than 9 million hectares in Russia alone, not counting
Kazakhstan, have been badly polluted by the space program.59 At least sixteen
large regions of the former Soviet Union were badly polluted.60 In many
cities birth defects reached disturbing levels.61
On the other hand, the USSR’s network of protected territories,
including inviolable zapovedniki created from Lenin’s time, but ravaged
under Stalin and Khrushchev, zakazniki – or temporary areas designed to
protect particular biotic resources, pamiatniki prirody – or protected natural
features, and natsional’nye parki or tourist-oriented national parks, all
expanded from the 1960s.62 However, these were troubled by pervasive
episodes of poaching.63
Inspired by the work of Ulrich Beck,64 sociologist Oleg Yanitskii charac-
terizes Russia as the ultimate “risk society” which had sustained “genetic
damage” during the long period of totalitarianism.65 “Over the course of
eighty years,” Yanitskii writes, “[the USSR] was used as a testing ground for
the most divergent model schemes of modernization.” By the fall of the
communist regime an area occupying 2.5 million square kilometers of the

57 Anna Scherbakova and Scott Monroe, “The Urals and Siberia,” in Philip R. Pryde (ed.),
Environmental Resources and Constraints in the Former Soviet Republics (Boulder:
Westview Press, 1995), 74.
58 Alexander Yemelyanenkov, The Sredmash Archipelago (Moscow: IPPNW-Russia and
IPPNW-Sweden, 2000), 26–34.
59 Ibid., 26.
60 Philip R. Pryde, “Environmental Implications of Republic Sovereignty,” in Pryde (ed.),
Environmental Resources, 12, 14.
61 Boris I. Kochurov, “European Russia,” in Pryde (ed.), Environmental Resources, 50.
62 Feliks Robertovich Shtilmark, History of Russian Zapovedniks, 1895–1995, trans.
G. H. Harper (Edinburgh: Russian Nature Press, 2003), esp. 151–97.
63 Ibid. See also Weiner, A Little Corner of Freedom.
64 Ulrich Beck, Risk Society: Toward a New Modernity (London: SAGE, 1992).
65 Oleg Nikolevich Yanitskii, Rossiia. Ekologicheskii vyzov (obshchestvennoe dvizhenie, nauka,
politika) (Novosibirsk: Sibirskii khronograf, 2002), 41; and also Yanitsky, Russian Greens
in a Risk Society (Helsinki: Kikimora, 2000), and Yanitskii, Sotsiologiia riska (Moscow:
Izdatel’stvo LVS and Institut sotsiologii RAN, 2003).

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Communism and Environment

territory of the Russian Federation, or 15 percent, was considered to


represent “an acute ecological situation.”66 This encompassed 20 percent
of the nation’s population (about 60 million people), while 68 cities
were deemed “dangerous” by Goskompriroda, Gorbachev’s new State
Committee for Environmental Protection. In sixteen cities, the concentra-
tion of air pollutants was more than fifty times the norm.67 Safe drinking
water was a particularly low priority, with only 30 percent of wastes
satisfactorily treated and with such major cities as Baku, Riga and
Dnepropetrovsk without sewage systems.68 In Russia alone, 1 million
tons of lethal chemicals were stored in dubious conditions of security at
more than 3,500 sites. Nuclear sites, aside from the region affected by
Chernobyl, include Kyshtym in the Urals, site of a 1957 disaster,69
Krasnoyarsk, Tomsk oblast and the eastern coast of Novaia Zemlia, to
name only the most seriously polluted areas.70 By official admission, the
Soviet environmental legacy was a grim one.

Eastern Europe
Latitude for independent environmental policies in Eastern Europe was
severely constrained by the needs of the Soviet economy, which broadly
determined East European economic priorities, and by the Soviet economic
model itself that was imposed on the region. Most scholarly studies conclude
that the sensitivity of East European regimes to environmental values was
low.71 Many of the works speak of a “crisis”; perceptions of heightened risk

66 N. N. Kliuev (ed.), Rossiia i ee regiony. Vneshnye i vnutrennye ugrozy (Moscow: Nauka,


2001), 42 (“ostraia ekologicheskaia situatsiia”).
67 Ann-Mari Sätre Åhlander, Environmental Problems in the Shortage Economy: The Legacy of
Soviet Environmental Policy (Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1994), 6–8.
68 Ibid., 15.
69 Zhores A. Medvedev, Nuclear Disaster in the Urals (New York: Vintage, 1979).
70 Feshbach and Friendly, in their Ecocide in the USSR, 138, point out that only 1–2 percent
of the energy budget was devoted to maintaining natural gas pipelines. A leak in one
line, ignited by a spark, resulted in an explosion equal to 10,000 tons of TNT – half the
force of Hiroshima – on 3 June 1989, destroying two passenger trains in the Urals and
killing 300 people.
71 Joan DeBardeleben, To Breathe Free: Eastern Europe’s Environmental Crisis (Washington,
DC: Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 1991); Fred Singleton (ed.), Environmental
Problems in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1987);
Joseph Alcamo (ed.), Coping with Crisis in Eastern Europe’s Environment (Carnforth,
UK: Parthenon, 1992); Andrew Tickle and Ian Welsh (eds.), Environment and Society in
Eastern Europe (Harlow: Longman, 1998); Barbara Jancar, Environmental Management in
the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia: Structure and Regulation in Federal Communist States
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1987); Raymond Dominick, “Capitalism,

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propelled activism in Poland, East Germany, Hungary, Yugoslavia and other


countries.72
Joan DeBardeleben argues that the Stalinist model generated even greater
environmental stress in Eastern Europe than it did in the Soviet Union.
To blame were poorer endowments of mineral resources, open space and
water, a higher population density, rapid and poorly planned urbanization,
and overreliance on highly polluting, sulfur-rich lignite (brown coal),
particularly under the pressures of reducing foreign debt (higher grades of
coal were exported).73

China
Like Eastern Europe, the People’s Republic of China took its development
template initially from the Soviet Union. The Chinese were assisted
by Soviet engineers and economic advisors until Mao Zedong’s partial
rejection of the Soviet emphasis on urban industrialization – as opposed
to agriculture – during the Great Leap Forward. Despite Mao’s break with
Khrushchev and his successors, great family resemblances remained
between Chinese and Soviet ways of managing the environment. In the
mold of Stalin, Mao engaged in mass campaigns to reshape human attitudes
through the transformation of the face of the landscape. Similarly, Mao
disregarded long-term implications of policies for short-term advantage.
The success of his encouragement of population growth as a weapon in the
struggle against Soviet “revisionism” and American capitalism led his
successors to impose coercive limits on the number of children per couple.
Mao likewise repressed scientists who counseled against his population
policy and his drive to “defeat” and remold nature through sheer human
will.74 Ill-advised hydropower stations on the Yellow River, such as
Sanmenxia, and in other areas of northern China turned into expensive
debacles.

Communism, and Environmental Protection: Lessons from the German Experience,”


Environmental History 3, 3 (Jul. 1998), 311–32.
72 Barbara Hicks, Environmental Politics in Poland: A Social Movement Between Regime and
Opposition (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996); Barbara Jancar-Webster (ed.),
Environmental Action in Eastern Europe: Responses to Crisis (New York: M. E. Sharpe,
1993).
73 DeBardeleben, “Introduction,” in To Breathe Free, 3.
74 The best extended analyses of this are found in Judith Shapiro, Mao’s War Against
Nature: Politics and the Environment in Revolutionary China (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2001); and David Pietz, The Yellow River: The Problem of Water in
Modern China (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015).

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Deforestation, overdraft of water resources and soil exhaustion and ero-


sion were unwanted legacies of his rule. Even a campaign to eliminate
sparrows, viewed as competing with humans for the harvest, was pursued.
The human costs of Mao’s policies, like Stalin’s, were enormous; upward of
15 million people were estimated to have perished from famine and disease as
an unplanned consequence of the Great Leap Forward in 1959–61.75 Similar to
Soviet campaigns, wetlands were drained, grasslands plowed and irrigation
expanded to create more arable land with similar deleterious consequences
for the productivity of fisheries, especially in lakes and streams.76 Enormous
amounts of chemical pesticides and fertilizers created leaching of nitrates into
soils and water basins, eutrophication and high levels of toxic residues in
food, soil and water.77
In another parallel with Soviet experience, Mao built the massive
military-industrial complex at Panzhihua in the mountainous Sichuan
region at huge human cost (more than 5.4 percent of the workforce
perished from 1965 to 1975); filters were never installed at the steel plant,
and the valley was prone to temperature inversion.78 Panzhihua polluted
the headwaters of the Yangzi River. In another military-related campaign,
200,000 “educated youth” were exiled to the most ecologically rich and
sensitive area of China, southern Yunnan, to clear-cut the tropical forest to
plant rubber plantations. A catastrophic decline for the many rare mam-
mals, birds, insects and plants for which the area is among their last
habitats resulted.79 Ironically Yunnan rubber is also uneconomical.
Atmospheric tests of atomic bombs polluted areas in western Qinghai
province.
To be fair, there were both real and intended improvements in
public health and environmental quality. The period before the Great
Leap Forward was marked by a halving of the death rate by 1957 owing

75 Shapiro estimates 35 to 50 million deaths in this period: Mao’s War, 89. Maurice Meisner
in his Mao’s China and After: A History of the People’s Republic (3rd edn.; New York: Free
Press, 1999), 237, notes that official mortality statistics released in the early 1980s
indicate a death toll of 15 million, but notes a credible estimate by Judith Bannister of
35 million. See her China’s Changing Population (Stanford: Stanford University Press,
1987). On the anti-sparrow “Four Pests” campaign that began in 1958, see Shapiro, Mao’s
War, 86. Per capita grain output declined from 306 kg in 1957 to 240 kg in 1962, greater
than 20 percent. See Richard Sanders, “The Political Economy of Environmental
Protection: Lessons of the Mao and Deng Years,” Third World Quarterly 20, 6 (Dec.
1999), 1202.
76 Shapiro, Mao’s War, esp. 95–139. 77 Sanders, “The Political Economy,” 1203.
78 Shapiro, Mao’s War, 139–93. Particular emissions were 218 times greater than the
national recommendations (154).
79 Ibid., 169–85.

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to greater food security and improvements in hygiene, including


the composting of night soil.80 The first five-year plan of 1953 called for
the recycling of industrial wastewater, while laws were passed in 1956
prohibiting the siting of industries upstream from major cities and urging
the development of technologies that reduced emissions.81 Similar to
other communist countries, these laws were hortatory and did not
result in improvement in air or water quality. Concern over unwanted
consequences of development resurfaced only after the ebbing of the
Cultural Revolution. Under the patronage of Premier Zhou Enlai,
China participated in the 1972 Stockholm Conference on the Human
Environment, sponsored by the United Nations, and in the
following year convoked a National Environmental Conference in
Beijing.82 This resulted in the creation of a first-ever governmental body,
the Environmental Protection Leading Group of the State Council.
Nevertheless, as Judith Shapiro and Vaclav Smil have concluded, the
Mao years were ones in which there was very little concern about the
collateral effects of agricultural and industrial policies for human health or
habitat and species survival.83
Interestingly, the market reforms that were ushered in by Deng
Xiaoping spurred major spikes in deforestation and in all pollution
indicators, relative to the Mao period. Richard Sanders marks an even
richer irony: “[W]hat advances were made in terms of environmental
research, monitoring and protection were achieved as a result of tradi-
tional ‘command-and-control’ policies, and . . . their successes were
limited or negated by the drives towards liberalising markets and priva-
tisation which occurred at the same time.”84 Indeed, the breakup of the
communes in the 1980s undercut integrated pest management and
biogas development.85

80 Judith Banister, “Population, Public Health and the Environment in China,” China
Quarterly 156 (Dec. 1998), 987.
81 Sanders, “The Political Economy,” 1204. 82 Ibid.
83 Vaclav Smil, The Bad Earth: Environmental Degradation in China (New York:
M. E. Sharpe, 1984).
84 Sanders, “The Political Economy,” 1209.
85 Ibid., 1210. See also Richard Louis Edmonds, “The Environment in the People’s
Republic of China 50 Years on,” China Quarterly 159 (Sep. 1999), 640–49, for an overview
of the Deng period and the emergence of an awareness of environmental downsides to
growth. On pest management, see Sigrid Schmalzer, Red Revolution, Green Revolution:
Scientific Farming in Socialist China (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016), esp.
53–64.

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Communism and Environment

Cuba
Cuba provides a good window on the specifically “communist” contributions
to environmental spoliation for a number of reasons, argue the authors of the
most extensive study on the subject.86 Essentially, none of the conventional
contributing causes to environmental deterioration in capitalist-oriented
developing countries – population growth, income inequality, extreme
poverty and unequal access to resources – is present in Cuba.87 Instead,
we can see the Soviet communist model of capital-intensive agriculture in
isolation: disregard by central planners of local environmental conditions,
lack of citizen involvement in decision-making, an absence of a feeling of
stewardship, the structure of bonuses for managers, and the occasional
uninformed, meddlesome technical decisions by Fidel Castro and other
leaders. Adding to this are the defects of implementing laws and decrees;
they are often simply declarative.88 Of course, the authors admit, the
ultimate model for capital-intensive agriculture is the American one,
which generates similar environmental tradeoffs on a larger scale through-
out most of the globe.89
After Fidel Castro’s entry into Havana in January 1959 his new
regime soon aligned with the USSR. Although Soviet-style emphasis
on heavy industry was abandoned by 1964, light industry, particularly
sugar refining and cement works, was expanded and nickel mining also
increased. Employing Soviet and East European technology, these
industries have generated much pollution, affecting rivers and coastal
areas.90
The most serious environmental issues in post-1959 Cuba stem from
the continuing predominance of agriculture. Soviet-style irrigation
projects in Cuba resulted in soil waterlogging because of the absence of
proper drainage, soil salinization and the salinization of underground
waters owing to overpumping and the invasion of seawater.91 Soviet-
style state farms utilized copious amounts of agricultural chemicals;
integrated pest management was only seriously applied after 1991, after
the onset of the “special period” when cheap fertilizers, fuel and farm
machinery became unavailable.92

86 Sergio Diaz-Briquets and Jorge Pérez-López, Conquering Nature: The Environ-


mental Legacy of Socialism in Cuba (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press,
2000).
87 Ibid., 4–5. 88 Ibid., 5. 89 Ibid., 6. 90 Ibid., 164–202, esp. 201–02. 91 Ibid., 111–37.
92 Ibid., 109.

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However, by contrast with his predecessors and with regimes in Latin


America,93 Castro’s 1959 Reforestation Plan increased forest cover on the
island to 18 percent of the country’s area.94 About 64 percent of that is
under some form of protection. Nine national parks were added to the
preexisting five, and 200 protected areas of various types on 12 percent of
the country’s area were created; about 2 percent of national territory
is strictly protected.95 One multiple-use area, the Gran Parque Nacional
Sierra Maestra, has sought to incentivize the 200,000 people who
live there to join cooperatives with lower-impact activities such as
aquaculture.96 Cuba is a signatory of CITES, and through its National
Commission for Environmental Protection and the Rational Use of
Natural Resources (COMARNA) – from 1994, CITMA, the Ministry of
Science, Technology and the Environment – Cuba has established the
requirement of environmental impact statements for major projects.
Finally, in the 1990s Cuba amended its constitution to mandate the goal
of sustainable development.
Because communist countries have found themselves in situations of
relative commercial isolation and partial autarky, they have promoted
recycling of scarce resources. Cuba, owing to both the United States’
commercial embargo and the withdrawal of Soviet support (1991), has
been particularly energetic, using cafeteria and agricultural wastes to
produce animal feed and sugar cane husks for particle board, to name
just two programs.97 Although there are no nongovernmental conserva-
tion organizations in Cuba, individual activists such as Antonio Núñez
Jimenez, a friend of Fidel Castro, convinced the leader to halt construction
of a hydroelectric dam that could have disrupted a sensitive habitat.98
Additionally, in recent years organizations such as the MacArthur
Foundation and the Environmental Defense Fund have collaborated with
the Cuban regime on environmental issues.99
Public health has been a priority, and Cuba has both the lowest infant
mortality rate and lowest rate of mortality for poverty-related diseases in
Latin America, with a high life expectancy at birth of seventy-four years.100

93 Eduardo C. Santana, “Nature Conservation and Sustainable Development in Cuba,”


Conservation Biology 5, 1 (Mar. 1991), 13–16, quote 13; 50 percent of flowering plants and
32 percent of vertebrates are endemic to its 1,600 islands.
94 Ibid. Cuba’s forest cover was 56 percent in the late 1800s but only 14 percent by 1959.
95 Ibid. 96 Ibid., 14. 97 Ibid.
98 Saleem Ali, “Greening Diplomacy with Cuba,” National Geographic (16 Jun. 2012),
voices.nationalgeographic.com/2012/06/16/greening-diplomacy-with-cuba/.
99 Ibid. 100 Santana, “Nature Conservation,” 14.

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Communism and Environment

Population growth is near zero. As may be seen, the environmental record


has been mixed, depending on the issue examined.
Ultimately, because communist societies’ goals have been largely
borrowed from those of the capitalist world, they share many of the
same features of resource management, beginning with a reliance on
fossil fuels and nuclear energy. Until the 1970s, when Western societies
were still governed by the ideals of keeping private profit balanced with
the protection of common property resources, labor rights and public
health through regulation, there was a difference in environmental
decision-making and risk management between Western societies and
the communist states, favoring the West. Communist countries’ environ-
mental laws were declarative, their singular focus on large-scale industrial
and agricultural development was wasteful and heavily polluting, and the
political leadership often meddled in scientific issues to overrule informed
counsel.
More recently, the regulatory state in the West has been tottering.
Communism’s worse environmental reputation may turn out to be an
artifact of an anomalously progressive period in Western societies combined
with the fact that communist countries could not export risk and so had to
pollute their own people.101
Commenting on Eastern Europe, both Joan DeBardeleben and Andrew
Tickle and Ian Welsh notably reject the idea that a market-based society
alone is sufficient to guarantee significant reduction of the pollution of air,
soil and water. “Market mechanisms in Western countries,” observes
DeBardeleben, “have not provided effective safeguards against environ-
mental deterioration either.”102 “While market signals and pressures may
have encouraged individual firms to reduce the waste of resources,” she
continues, “they have not discouraged the same firms from sloughing off
the costs of pollution onto society.” And she adds that the very “imperative
to growth” of market societies encourages continuously expanding con-
sumption and the “production of throwaway commodities, forces that are
not at all inherent in a centrally planned system.”103 Newly released con-
sumerist aspirations in Eastern Europe lead DeBardeleben to a skeptical

101 Regrettably, there is little written in Western languages about environmental man-
agement either in the Korean People’s Democratic Republic (North Korea) or com-
munist Southeast Asia.
102 DeBardeleben, The Environment and Marxism-Leninism: The Soviet and East German
Experience (Boulder: Westview Press, 1985), 12.
103 Ibid.

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view that environmental protection will soon become a top priority in the
region, despite the fact that it served as a salient argument in the struggle to
topple communism.104
Paul Josephson’s argument, that “pluralist states have developed
institutions that are far more responsive to environmental problems than
[communist or postcolonial regimes], largely because of broader access by
citizens to information . . . and because of the creation of legal, scientific,
and other institutions to mitigate environmental problems,” is theoreti-
cally persuasive.105
Nevertheless, although communist regimes have not upheld pollution
control and habitat protection as high priorities, accusations of “ecocide”
must be put in comparative perspective. Western market states “followed
the same paths of breakneck development and profligate use of natural
resources,” observe Josephson and his coauthors.106 Broadening the lens
helps to put this in perspective. Because the communist regimes did not
have the benefit of overseas colonies or, later, a network of commercially
exploitable and dependent developing countries, they had to site the
production of dangerous chemicals on their own territories, unlike
Union Carbide, for example, which set up operations in Bhopal. Large
amounts of toxic waste, until the 1990s, were routinely shipped from the
First World to Africa.
Josephson’s argument must also be amended to account for changes
within the democratic market polities themselves. With the ascendancy of
corporate-friendly governments and corporate-owned media in industria-
lized countries, information to citizens has been reduced and environmental
regulation itself has been weakened. One need go no further than Flint,
Michigan, where the city’s water supply was compromised to save money
following the imposition of direct rule by the state’s governor.107 Regarding
nuclear issues, the silences and censorship within Western democracies have
been more the rule than the exception. Both the Oak Ridge National
Laboratory in Tennessee and the CIA, for example, recognized that
a major nuclear accident had occurred in Kyshtym in the southern Urals in
1957, but suppressed their reports so as not to undermine support in the

104 Ibid., 13.


105 Paul Josephson, Resources Under Regimes: Technology, Environment, and the State
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005), 20.
106 Josephson et al., An Environmental History of Russia, 12.
107 Julia Lurie, “A Toxic Timeline of Flint’s Water Fiasco,” Mother Jones (16 Jan. 2016),
www.motherjones.com/environment/2016/01/flint-lead-water-crisis-timeline.

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Communism and Environment

United States for nuclear power.108 Perhaps the most direct parallel to Soviet
practice was the censorship regime at the Hanford plutonium-processing
plant in Washington state, in which doctors colluded in falsifying radiation
sickness and where the press was obstructed from learning the degree of the
radioactive pollution of the Columbia River. Indeed, Kate Brown structures
her book, Plutopia, on the chilling similarities between the Soviet and
American nuclear weapons programs and their environmental effects.109
And the Fukushima (TEPCO) nuclear reactor meltdown has now given
market societies their own Chernobyl.
Much has been made of the penchant for communist regimes to attempt
very large scale reengineering of their landscapes. Certainly, the Volga and
Dnepr have been turned into chains of hydroelectric stations, reservoirs and
irrigation canals in adjacent arid lands. Irrigration has caused the almost
complete desiccation of the Aral Sea, and the Soviet regime seriously con-
sidered damming the Ob’–Irtysh river system and constructing a gigantic
pumping station and canal to transfer water to replenish the depleted water
of the inland sea. Arguably the Chinese government’s construction of the
Sanxia (Three Gorges) Dam, together with plans under study since the 1950s
for enormous water transfers from the south to north China represent risky
legacies of a Stalinist mode of thinking.
Yet, the great Hoover (Boulder) Dam was begun in the 1920s, the
Tennessee Valley Authority reshaped the upper South as radically as
anywhere, and the Columbia River has, in the words of Richard White,
been turned into an “organic machine,” while the US Bureau of
Reclamation has dammed and canalized just about every available water-
course in the American West. And this is only to speak of the United
States.
Without a doubt the communist command economy was inherently
more wasteful of labor and resources and more polluting per unit of usable
product than market societies. This waste was a consequence not only of
defective products but also of profligate energy use in production and what
Ferenc Fehér, Agnes Heller and György Markús called the “goal-function”
of communist economies.110 Within these “dictatorships over needs,”

108 Paul Josephson, Red Atom: Russia’s Nuclear Power Program from Stalin to Today
(New York: W. H. Freeman, 2000), 279.
109 Kate Brown, Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American
Plutonium Disasters (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).
110 Ferenc Fehér, Agnes Heller and György Markús, Dictatorship over Needs: An Analysis of
Soviet Societies (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1983).

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investment was largely geared not to the most efficient production but to
investments that could be best controlled by the commanders of the
economy and that would promote the reproduction of the regime politi-
cally. State-owned enterprises were favored over cooperatives, despite the
40 percent higher efficiency of the latter, especially in agriculture.111 This is
why large-scale, inefficient “projects of the century” were favored by those
regimes.
Yet the argument that communist states were an order of magnitude
more “environmentally delinquent” than market societies is not easily
supported. As in market societies, concerns in communist regimes
about human health, habitat preservation, species extinction and
planetary environmental systems all took a back seat to shorter-term
development goals. From the perspective of a planet facing human-
forced climate change and other big problems, those differences will
seem increasingly minute.

Bibliographical Essay
As of this writing, there is no book-length study that examines environ-
mental history and resource management across all major communist
regimes in a comparative framework. The bulk of scholarship focuses
on the Soviet Union, and here a serviceable broad-stroke overview may
be found in Paul Josephson, Nicolai Dronin, Ruben Mnatsakanian,
Aleh Cherp, Dmitry Efremenko and Vladislav Larin, An Environmental
History of Russia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013). For an
in-depth analysis of Soviet environmental policies from 1917 to the First
Five-Year Plan era, see Douglas Weiner’s Models of Nature: Ecology,
Conservation and Cultural Revolution in Soviet Russia (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1988). That work and its sequel, A Little
Corner of Freedom: Russian Nature Protection from Stalin to Gorbachev
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999), also explain the diverse
roots and significance of nature protection activism in the Soviet con-
text, focusing foremost on the struggle around protected territories
(zapovedniki). This struggle is also treated in the work of an activist,
Feliks Robertovich Shtil’mark, The History of Russian Zapovedniks,
1895–1995, trans. G. E. Harper (Edinburgh: Russian Nature Press, 2003).

111 Ibid., 66–67.

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Communism and Environment

Another fine historical work is Stephen C. Brain’s Song of the Forest:


Russian Forestry and Stalin’s Environmentalism (Pittsburgh: University of
Pittsburgh Press, 2011), which puts Stalin’s forest-protection measures
into context in addition to documenting a unique, peasant-oriented
Russian approach to forest management.
Environmental histories of Soviet geographical regions for the post-
Khrushchev period have thus far focused on the Arctic, researched by
Paul Josephson, The Conquest of the Russian Arctic (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 2014), and Central Asia, whose various late Soviet agricul-
tural problems are analyzed in chapters by Marc Elie and Julia Obertreis in
Nicholas Breyfogle (ed.), Eurasian Environments: Nature and Ecology in Imperial
Russian and Soviet History (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press,
forthcoming).
In addition to Weiner’s A Little Corner of Freedom, environmental activism
in Russia, especially among university students, is the subject of the opus of
Oleg Nikolaevich Yanitsky, notably his Russian Environmentalism: Leading
Figures, Facts, Opinions (Moscow: Mezhdunarodnyje Otnoshenija Publishing
House, 1993). Environmental activism as a vehicle for nationalist struggles
is addressed by Jane I. Dawson’s Eco-Nationalism: Anti-Nuclear Activism and
National Identity in Russia, Lithuania and Ukraine (Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 1996).
More policy-oriented works have chronicled and analyzed
Soviet resource and environmental policies and problems of the post-
Khrushchev final decades. These include Ze’ev Volf’son (Boris Komarov),
The Destruction of Nature in the Soviet Union, trans. Michael Hale and
Joe Hollander (London: Pluto Press, [1980]), originally published as
Unichtozhenie prirody, Obostrenie ekologicheskogo krizisa v SSSR (Frankfurt-
am-Main: Posev, 1978); Marshall Goldman’s The Spoils of Progress:
Environmental Pollution in the Soviet Union (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
1972); Philip R. Pryde’s Environmental Management in the Soviet Union
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991); Murray Feshbach and
Alfred Friendly, Jr., Ecocide in the USSR: Health and Nature Under Siege
(New York: Basic Books, 1992); Murray Feshbach’s Ecological Disaster:
Cleaning Up the Hidden Legacy of the Soviet Regime (New York: Twentieth
Century Fund Press, 1995); Mikhail Lemeshev, Vlast’ vedomstv – ekologicheskii
infarkt (Moscow: Progress, 1989), translated into English as Bureaucrats in
Power – Ecological Collapse (Moscow: Progress, 1990); D. J. Petersen, Troubled
Lands: The Legacy of Soviet Environmental Destruction (Boulder: Westview Press

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and RAND, 1993); and Barbara Jancar’s Environmental Management in the Soviet
Union and Yugoslavia (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1987).
A number of works focus on one resource. Thus, Brenton M. Barr and
Kathleen E. Braden in their The Disappearing Russian Forest: A Dilemma in
Soviet Resource Management (Totowa, NJ: Rowman & Littlefield, 1988) focus
on post-1960 overharvesting. For a broad look at Soviet nuclear problems, the
reader is directed to Alexander Yemelyanenkov, The Sredmash Archipelago
(Moscow: IPPNW/SLMK, 2000), and Sonja D. Schmid, Producing Power:
The Pre-Chernobyl History of the Soviet Nuclear Industry (Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 2015), while an excellent social, political and technological dissection of
the Chernobyl accident may be found in Zhores A. Medvedev, The Legacy of
Chernobyl (New York: W. W. Norton, 1990). Kate Brown’s Plutopia: Nuclear
Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013) compares the social and epidemiolo-
gical ramifications of the Soviet and American plutonium production
programs.
Although the question of ideology is raised in many of the works
cited here, Joan DeBardeleben’s The Environment and Marxism-Leninism:
The Soviet and East German Experience (Boulder: Westview Press, 1985)
compares regime and intelligentsia environmental discourse in those
states to ask whether official ideology could accommodate a more
environmentally sensitive approach to development, although, as
Ferenc Fehér, Agnes Heller and György Markús, Dictatorship over
Needs: An Analysis of Soviet Societies (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1983),
argue, official dogma may not be the actual operating software of
Soviet regimes.
On Eastern Europe, see Joan DeBardeleben, To Breathe Free: Eastern
Europe’s Environmental Crisis (Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center
Press, 1991), and on activism specifically see Barbara Hicks, Environmental
Politics in Poland: A Social Movement Between Regime and Opposition (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1996), and Barbara Jancar-Webster (ed.),
Environmental Action in Eastern Europe: Responses to Crisis (New York:
M. E. Sharpe, 1993).
Concerning the People’s Republic of China, the Mao period is examined in
Judith Shapiro’s lively Mao’s War Against Nature: Politics and the Environment in
Revolutionary China (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), and in
David Pietz, The Yellow River: The Problem of Water in Modern China
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015), while for a comparison
with the Deng Xiaoping years see Richard Sanders, “The Political Economy

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of Environmental Protection: Lessons of the Mao and Deng Years,” Third


World Quarterly 20, 6 (Dec. 1999), 1201–14. Finally, there is one monograph
devoted to the environmental history of Communist Cuba, that of
Sergio Diaz-Briquets and Jorge Pérez-López, Conquering Nature:
The Environmental Legacy of Socialism in Cuba (Pittsburgh: University of
Pittsburgh Press, 2000).

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