Since 2017, we have been undertaking actions to support the threatened indigenous communities of the Salinas Grandes and Laguna de Guayatayoc. What you are referring to is “Aerocene Pacha,” a hot air balloon we raised in Jujuy in January 2020.
The concept “Aerocene” means an amalgamation of the atmosphere and the Earth’s surface, an ever-expanding practice for impractical and practical purposes. It represents an environmental and ethical collaboration, an interdisciplinary and unconventional community, an eco-social movement that brings together artists, activists, philosophers, balloonists, dreamers, birds and spiders. The Aerocene community operates across the airspace of 126 cities, 43 countries and six continents.
“Aerocene Pacha” used only air and sunlight to rise, completely free of fossil fuels, batteries, lithium, helium or hydrogen. This marked the most sustainable flight in human history, setting 32 world records, recognized by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI), flown by Aerocene pilot Leticia Noemi Marques. But more important than the world records was the accompanying message “water and life are worth more than lithium,” written by the affected communities, rising above the Salinas Grandes. It criticizes the lithium extraction in the region known as the “lithium triangle,” situated between Bolivia, Chile and Argentina, where 58 percent of the world’s lithium is found.
Actually, balloon flight is one of the more unsustainable modes of mobility. When we discuss mobility – because we have envisioned planetary mobility, how the Earth rotates, how planes fly, and how cars move – we must acknowledge the distinct levels of energy dependency. Balloons typically remain airborne through burning gas that heats the air within the envelope. Other modes also use hydrogen or helium, often by-products of fossil fuel extraction. Hydrogen production is very complex and dangerous. In the 1970s, a few thinkers started considering whether suspension in the atmosphere could be achieved solely through harnessing solar energy. There have been a couple of attempts, such as those by Dominique Micheli and other predecessors who have shown the way to the Aerocene community.
This is where our conversation started: the dream of flying turned into a nightmare for so many. Through our aerosolar flight, we also tried to demonstrate a sense of hope – hope that we can find new ways of flying on planet Earth together, without fossil fuels, propellers, runways or hydrocarbons, and without colonialist dreams of leaving the planet.
This year, in January 2023, we gathered once again, together with a group of allies, collectives and supporting groups,* as national and international geopolitical and commercial interests continued to put pressure on the basin. Facing the escalating climate crisis and the urgency of the energy transition, the message from the communities is clear: we refuse to be a sacrifice zone. The energy transition cannot reproduce the same extractivist, neocolonial policies imposed on the Global South, amplifying social, ethnic and environmental inequalities. We must listen to the voices from the territories, in defense of water, salt flats and the commons, for an eco-social energy transition for all of us.
This rights of nature movement strives for legal recognition of rivers, lakes and mountains, akin to human beings. During the gathering and the following workshops, the communities decided to declare the Salinas Grandes and Laguna de Guayatayoc as subjects of rights.