Wednesday, March 29, 2023

 Hamilton

Students end hunger strike at McMaster University citing concerns over health

By Don Mitchell ,
Global News, Posted March 28, 2023 




A group of students at McMaster University during a hunger strike at the learning facility on Mar. 24, 2023. The demonstration stopped on Mar.28 after eight days. Global News


A group of students on a hunger strike aimed at getting McMaster University to divest from fossil fuels is over after eight days.


In a release on Tuesday morning, the group cited “deteriorating effects on organs, muscle, cognitive abilities, and immune systems” as the primary reasons to discontinue the action.

The McMaster Divestment Project, also called MacDivest, says its campaign was in protest over new generators believed to increase the university’s carbon emissions by 415 tonnes for every 60 hours of operation.

The end of the demonstration comes not long after the university shared concerns over the students’ health and supported a decision to take on meals and other supplements to minimize risk.

Executives at McMaster reiterated in a statement they are “actively pursuing” ways to reduce the facility’s environmental footprint and are on track to cut total carbon emissions on campus by more than 40 per cent by the end of 2024.

Prior to the installation of the generators, McMaster executives said the project was necessary to pay for future clean energy initiatives via its Net Zero Carbon Roadmap, an initiative to reduce campus carbon emissions in a plan for reaching net zero carbon by 2050.

READ MORE: Students hit day 5 of hunger strike seeking McMaster University move away from fossil fuels

McMaster estimates the gas project will need at least 13 years to pay itself off, resulting in what MacDivest says will be 8,900 tonnes of carbon emissions (the equivalent of driving 22 million miles) during that period.

University spokesperson Michelle Donovan insisted the institution is committed to addressing climate change and shares the same objectives, but needs the generators as a stop-gap along the way to reach its targets.

“We share the same goal with MacDivest of a net-zero carbon campus and divesting from investments in fossil fuels, but we recognize we have different timelines and ideas of how to get there,” Donavan explained in an email.

Fossil fuel companies make up about 2.7 per cent of McMaster’s investment portfolio, with an estimated $30.4 million in fossil fuel holdings.

In Tuesday’s release, MacDivest said it will continue its campaign and is expected to enact future campaigns against the university’s connections to fossil fuels.

“During the strike, we were able to engage with many students, faculty, staff, and community members to mobilize the community to fight for climate justice,” the group said in a statement.


McMaster University students end hunger strike after 8 days, citing health and safety concerns

‘I am scared to do this, but I am more scared not to,’ one

 student says

Hunger strikers at McMaster University.
Six students began a hunger strike on March 20 to protest McMaster University's decision to install four natural gas-powered generators on Cootes Drive, and four were maintaining the strike on March 27. After eight days, it's now over. (Submitted by Navin Garg)

A group of McMaster University students have ended an eight-day hunger strike, but have vowed to intensify their efforts to get the university in Hamilton to reverse its decision to install four natural gas-powered generators on Cootes Drive. 

The McMaster Divestment Project, which organized the strike, said in a news release on Tuesday morning that it called off the "gruelling eight-day hunger strike" due to health and safety concerns.

"I am scared to do this, but I am more scared not to," said Mila Py, one of the hunger strikers.

"Hunger striking for eight days has numerous negative impacts on health, including deteriorating effects on organs, muscles, cognitive abilities and immune systems," the McMaster Divestment Project said in the release.

"With end-of-term activities ramping up on campus and a continued lack of protective measures at the university, the circulation of COVID-19 is likely to increase. This has already impacted the immediate MacDivest community, and COVID-19 infection for any of the hunger strikers would likely lead to severe consequences."

A construction zone, with four generator structures.
The four natural gas-powered generators are being built near the alumni building. (Michael To/CBC)

Six students began the hunger strike on March 20. Two bowed out for health reasons and another dropped out to observe Ramadan. There were four students still on the hunger strike up to March 27 — three of them since March 20 and another who joined on March 23. 

Navin Garg, one of the protesting students, told CBC Hamilton on Monday they hoped McMaster would meet their demand and commit to removing the generators, which are still under construction, and to divest from the fossil fuel industry by 2025.

Generators important in university's infrastructure: McMaster 

In a statement on Monday, McMaster University said its emissions reductions and targets are aggressive and are aligned with or surpass those of other Canadian universities.

"We are continuing to look at ways to reduce the carbon footprint of the generators, which are our best solution for providing energy to campus on the hottest days of summer when the provincial electrical system is nearing its peak capacity," the statement reads.

"While the generators will run no more than 100 hours a year, they are an important part of the university's infrastructure, including making sure that laboratories are able to maintain operations and research programs are not put at risk."

McMaster public relations manager Wade Hemsworth told CBC Hamilton late last week that the university has had discussions with the students throughout the hunger strike.

"The university has made a lot of progress in divestment and our net carbon zero goals, and the hunger strike does not change the due diligence that we have to undertake as we make critical investment and other decisions," Hemsworth said.



Long-term effects of hunger strike on

young people unclear, says nutrition prof

as McMaster protest continues

UPDATE:  The students have ended their eight-day hunger strike, but have vowed to intensify their efforts to get the university to reverse its decision to install four natural gas-powered generators on Cootes Drive.

Hunger strikers at McMaster University.
There are four students still on hunger strike — three of them since March 20 and another who joined on Thursday. (Submitted by Navin Garg)
McMaster University should negotiate with the group of students on hunger strike before any long-term effects from the strike are felt, a Toronto-based nutritional sciences professor says.

The students, members of the McMaster Divestment Project, began their hunger strike a week ago, demanding that McMaster University reverse its decision to install four natural gas-powered generators on Cootes Drive. 

"It seems essential that the university open negotiations now so that the hunger strikers can desist," David Jenkins, a nutritional sciences professor at the University of Toronto, told CBC Hamilton.

"The climate change issue is not going away."

Jenkins said hunger strike data is difficult to come by, but pointed to a 1981 hunger strike in Northern Ireland as an example of just how far some people will take it. That hunger strike, in support of Irish Republican Army political prisoners, lasted 53 days.

"After 50 days, one may see deaths. One month may be tolerated but with these young people, one does not know what the long-term ill effects will be," Jenkins said.

Six students began the hunger strike on March 20, but two had to bow out for health reasons, while another had to drop out to observe Ramadan. There are four students still on hunger strike — three of them since March 20 and another who joined on March 23. 

"As the hunger strike drags on, I think I'm getting much, much more tired … it feels like my body is breaking down," said 21-year-old Navin Garg, one of the protesting students, on Monday.

"We are still monitoring our own vitals, but I think we're going to try to schedule an appointment [with a doctor] for today or tomorrow because now we're starting to get into the territory where it could be a big problem," they told CBC Hamilton.

McMaster public relations manager Wade Hemsworth told CBC Hamilton late last week that the university has had discussions with the students throughout the hunger strike and continued to ask them to stop putting their health at risk.

"The university has made a lot of progress in divestment and our net carbon zero goals and the hunger strike does not change the due diligence that we have to undertake as we make critical investment and other decisions," Hemsworth said.

Garg said before embarking on the hunger strike, they researched what could happen to their bodies, referring to "a lot of documents, mostly from correctional services because prisons are the main place where hunger strikes generally happen." 

"I think the second week is kind of the point at which you're entering higher risk of physical harm, which is something that we're definitely taking into consideration. It's when your muscles are starting to break down more and you're becoming more and more cognitively impaired, and your immune system becomes weaker, so it does escalate once you reach that time," Garg said.

Remove generators now, students say

Garg still hopes McMaster will meet their demand and commit to removing the generators, which are still under construction, and to divest from the fossil fuel industry by 2025. 

"We're concerned that they think that if they cede to our demands that there will be more hunger strikes. And we just want to make clear to them and we need them to understand, as soon as possible, that if they were accountable and transparent with us this never would have happened," Garg said. 

"And they'll never need to worry about this in the future if they listen to student voices, because no one would do this for anything less than a existential cause."

A construction zone, with four generator structures.
The four natural gas-powered generators are being built on Cootes Drive near the alumni building. (Michael To/CBC)

"We appreciate that McMaster is trying and it is something, but there is an important distinction between something and something that is good enough," Garg added.

Follow precautions 'many activists have set out before them'

Hamiltonian Akira Ourique was among scores of young people who, in 2020, embarked on a hunger strike against a proposed oilsands mine in Alberta.

Ourique, 21, said the group started preparing a month in advance for that strike, gradually tapering their caloric intake, and getting mentally and physically ready.

In the end, their fast lasted only for a few hours, as Teck Resources announced it was withdrawing its application to build the Frontier oilsands mine.

A banner on display at a Mc Divest rally on Friday, March 24, 2023.
The students are demanding that McMaster University reverse its decision to install four natural gas-powered generators on Cootes Drive in Hamilton. (Submitted by Cordelia McConnell)

Ourique says some of the McMaster hunger strikers are his friends and, now in the second week of the strike, he's a bit worried for them.

"I find what they're doing incredibly inspiring. Just listen to your body but do what you think is right," Ourique said. 

"Try to keep your body temperature as regulated as possible... If they are following the precautions that many, many activists have set out before them, and pay attention to their bodies' vitals, I believe that they will be alright."

McMaster Divestment Project spokesperson Cordelia McConnell said a solidarity rally held on Friday "had quite a big turnout," with more than 150 people taking part, including Hamilton Centre MPP Sarah Jama and city councillor Alex Wilson.

New solidarity letter sent to university

On Monday, a letter signed by an honorary degree recipient, faculty member, emeritus faculty, and former faculty of McMaster University was sent to the university's president and board of governors.

In the letter, the group called the students "courageous," and said the university board of governors and administrators have ignored and downplayed their call for the university to make evidence-based decisions.

People gathered at the Mc Divest rally on Friday.
A solidarity rally held on Friday 'had quite a big turnout,' with more than 150 people taking part, the group said. (Submitted by Cordelia McConnell)

"The university is taking the easiest path to increasing its incomes, without making the significant adverse health consequences it is creating a determinant in its decisions," they wrote in the letter.

Hemsworth previously told CBC Hamilton the generators would reduce demand on Ontario's electricity grid at peak times and help the school save money in the long run. 

The student group meanwhile argued that in the 13 years before the project pays itself off, it will produce at least 8,900 tonnes of carbon.

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