Ishinomaki before the tsunami - not an enviable model of urban planning -
little green space, high density neighborhoods, the lowland ecosystem
completely paved over.
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There
has been an impolitic and perhaps insensitive thought on my mind since the
first days I saw towns in northern Japan swept away by the tsunami. I could cry
for the loss of lives, homes, communities and jobs, but I hesitated to say that
I couldn’t regret the loss of a slice of 20th century Japanese urban landscape. Perhaps
it is time now to have a conversation about what is obvious to everyone who has traveled through Japan. Many towns look like they have already been hit by a slow-moving disaster.
Japanese
cities were rebuilt quickly after WWII. Even if there had been planners with
inspired visions for new urban landscapes, the nation was bankrupt and starting
over from zero. The emphasis of national planners was all on industrial
revitalization. The result was densely packed cities with very limited zoning
to separate heavy, polluting industries from residential neighborhoods. Streets
are narrow, often with no sidewalk for children to safely walk to school. Parks
are an afterthought, and if they exist they are located in a place that was
worthless for any other use.
In
addition to the lack of funding and imagination, another factor that made
Japanese cities an irregular jumble of aluminum siding and wooden firetraps is,
ironically, a certain degree of freedom that is not allowed to prevail in the
freedom-loving West. Rational zoning and urban planning require top-down
governance and a willingness of individual stakeholders to go along with what
has been decided through the democratic process - to accept land swaps and buyouts, for example. In Japan, much is decided by
consensus, which means that quite often nothing is done at all because it takes
only one individual to shut down a proposal. This might be why the big national
projects, like the construction of Narita Airport, failed so badly. When the
government knows the consensus building approach won’t work, they ram through
their plans unilaterally. So in Japan the landscape is either an un-zoned
chaotic expression of freedom, or a heavy-handed obliteration of it.
Nowadays
urban planning and ecological sciences are more advanced than they were in the
mid-20th century, and Japan is not devastated from a recent war, but
it seems like Japanese bureaucrats are not able to imagine anything other than
the urban environment that they are accustomed to living in. On an individual
level, people are turned inward, focused on the meticulous cultivation of their
inner environments, but oblivious to a local environment of bleak architecture,
pachinko parlors, and small industrial incinerators.
The
plans for rebuilding the northeast coast are stuck in the old mindset, as they
are influenced by an unattainable wish to bring back exactly what was lost. The
global fame of the victims and the disaster is getting in the way of clear
thinking about what should be done with the region. The victims genuinely
deserve the sympathy, and deserve much more material support than they have
received, but it would be wrong to go along with a nostalgic wish to give them
back their towns just as they were before. This is a chance to build something
much better in their place.
Is anyone really going to miss above-ground wires or the kitsch of
Statue of Liberty replicas? Will reconstruction consist only of
continued destruction of the environment?
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I
understand why the towns’ elders want to rebuild what was there before. It is possible
to long for an ugly place and not realize that the longing is for something
other than the parking lots, aluminum siding and billboards. I can get very sentimental
for the suburban landscape of strip malls and freeways where I grew up, but I have
to remember that I am really missing what I was then, and the moments and the
people I was with. I might suffer from the illusion that the place was
beautiful, but this is only because of the associations it has for me. As much
as the whole world sees the pain of people in places like Ishinomaki, it would
be a shame if Japan spent its precious remaining wealth on a promise to the
middle-aged and elderly to bring back all that has been lost.
There
are signs that two years after the disaster, others are raising the alarm about
the way rebuilding has been conceived so far. Winnie Bird wrote in The Earth Island Journal this month
about the possibility that Japan is losing a chance to move away from disaster
capitalism toward disaster environmentalism. The former consists of the
traditional approach to development: pouring concrete. Heavy machinery is to be
applied to building seawalls and rebuilding towns and roads on the flood plains
behind them. The latter concept, disaster environmentalism, would see the
disaster as a chance to restore what had already been destroyed before the
disaster.
The
plan would consider whether economically viable towns could or should exist in
the same places. Since before the disaster young people were already leaving
for the big cities, and they are unlikely to come back. If the majority of the
population is going to be senior citizens, they can collect their pensions
anywhere. These regions might be more valuable to the nation as protected
floodplains free of human habitation. Farmers and fishermen can commute from
residences inland and leave the shoreline for better uses. Rather than just
letting the land go back to nature – which would result only in weed-infested lots among
the concrete rubble – managed ecological preserves could be established.
Wildlife could be restored for the enjoyment and economic profit of people
living nearby but not on the valuable floodplains that will, in any case, be
hit by a tsunami again someday.
Winnie
Bird visited the coast near Sendai and spoke with ecologist Takao Suzuki there:
To
our left, bulldozers and cranes shaped a huge mound of earth into a new
seawall. Suzuki told me walls like this one could threaten the future of tidal
flats by cutting them off from the ocean and rivers. “The government didn’t
consult biologists when planning the seawalls. When the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure,
Transportation and Tourism proposed the walls, they issued a statement saying
they would consider ecosystems. But the ecosystem is different in each
location, and they don’t have specific information about each one,” he had
explained earlier in his office. He is lobbying the government to modify
the plans in order to preserve at least some important tidal flats.
She
goes on to write, “… much of what I saw this time around looked like plain old
disaster capitalism — devastation as a chance for the government to funnel
money towards huge corporations and promote a pro-business agenda… In the case
of sea walls and breakwaters, which are being rebuilt taller and more
extensively than ever before by Japan’s infamous concrete and construction
companies, the recovery threatens to create new environmental problems." She described
the situation further by relating what she was told by long-time resident of Japan
and environmental writer, C.W. Nicol:
“Seventy
hectares of [rice] paddy land has been submerged in Higashi Matsushima. It was
formerly wetland. The land sunk a meter or so, and also, the tsunami and tidal
water since then has made trenches four to five meters deep, with a covering of
water everywhere. We are doing surveys on water birds . . . fantastic! There
are shellfish clinging to half-submerged telephone poles, and I know that the
area is thriving with sea life.” Nicol wants to transform the area into a
wetland park, but says local officials insist on reclaiming the land for
agriculture. “The cost for this will be astronomical and nobody really wants to
farm the place anyway,” he concluded.
Two
years after the disaster, the political machinery that built Japan’s urban
landscape is back in power. So far, their vision of the future is entirely
retrograde. The best they can think of is to suggest that hosting the Olympics,
pouring concrete and printing cash will produce the pixie dust that takes the
nation back to an imagined better past. Just as the radioactive “decontamination”
around Fukushima was a farce that funneled money to a few construction firms,
the reconstruction projects for the towns destroyed by the tsunami might end up being more of
the same - a sham that will fail to improve the ecology or the lives of the people in the
affected regions.
Sources:
Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, 2008.
From Amazon.com review:
“Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine advances a truly unnerving argument: historically, while people were reeling from natural disasters, wars and economic upheavals, savvy politicians and industry leaders nefariously implemented policies that would never have passed during less muddled times. As Klein demonstrates, this reprehensible game of bait-and-switch isn't just some relic from the bad old days. It's alive and well in contemporary society, and coming soon to a disaster area near you.”
Short video about The Shock Doctrine.
Winnie Bird, "Japan’s Reconstruction Two Years On — Plain Old Disaster Capitalism," The Earth Island Journal, March 11, 2013.
Just after I wrote this post, Ms. Bird wrote more on the topic for The Japan Times:
Winifred Bird. "Tohoku Coast Faces Man-Made Perils in Wake of Tsunami." The Japan Times, March 17, 2013.
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