Yahoo – AFP,
7 Nov 2015
Lima (AFP) - Peru is creating a national park to protect a vast territory in the Amazon basin that is vulnerable to drug trafficking and illegal logging and mining, the country's environment minister said Saturday.
Lima (AFP) - Peru is creating a national park to protect a vast territory in the Amazon basin that is vulnerable to drug trafficking and illegal logging and mining, the country's environment minister said Saturday.
Called the
Sierra del Divisor National Park, it covers an area of about 14,170 square
kilometers (5,470 square miles) in a region inhabited by a variety of
indigenous communities living in self-imposed isolation.
Peru's
President Ollanta Humala will travel to the region Sunday to sign a decree
creating the park, Environment Minister Manuel Pulgar Vidal said on his Twitter
account.
The park
has an estimated 3,000 species of plants and animals, many of them found
nowhere else in the world, according to the government.
The
announcement comes just three weeks ahead of a UN summit aimed at sealing a
global pact on climate change.
Advocates
of the new park have said it will enable the capture of 150,000 tonnes of CO2,
the equivalent of nearly 40 percent of Peru's daily carbon output.
Sierra del
Divisor has been a protected zone since April 2006. Since then, the communities
living there have lobbied for its designation as a national park to stiffen
legal protections against encroachment by loggers, miners and drug traffickers.
Sierra del
Divisor is the second national park created since Humala took office in 2011,
after the Gueppi National Park, a 6,260 square kilometer expanse centered on
the Gueppi River in southeastern Peru.
Related Article:
No comments:
Post a Comment