Costa Rica, Eye on Climate, Plants 5 Million Trees
COSTA RICA: December 7, 2007
SAN JOSE - Costa Rica, a leader in eco-tourism and home to some of the
world's rarest species, planted its 5 millionth tree of 2007 on Wednesday as
it tries to put a brake on global warming.
President Oscar Arias shoveled dirt onto the roots of an oak tree planted in
the grounds of his offices, reaching the milestone in the Central American
nation's efforts to ward off what some experts say are the first signs of
climate change.
By the end of the year, Costa Rica will have planted nearly 6.5 million
trees, which should absorb 111,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide a year,
Environment Minister Roberto Dobles said.
The country aims to plant 7 million trees in 2008 as part of the newly
launched program.
Along with other green-minded nations like Norway and New Zealand, Costa
Rica is aiming to reduce its net carbon emissions to zero, and has set a
target date of 2021.
"I don't know if we will end up being carbon neutral in 2021 as we have
proposed, but the important thing is the audacity of the goal and the work
we have to do," Arias said.
Costa Rica is a magnet for ecology-minded tourists who come to visit the
lush national parks and reserves that cover more than a quarter of the
country and are home to almost 5 percent of the world's plant and animal
species including exotic birds and frogs.
Over the last 20 years forest cover in Costa Rica has grown from 26 percent
of the national territory to 51 percent, though environmentalists complain
that loggers continue to cut down old trees and that the national park
system is underfunded.
Costa Rican authorities have blamed the loss of more than a dozen amphibian
species, including the shiny yellow "golden toad", on higher temperatures
caused by global warming.
Experts also say climate change is behind a spike in mosquito-borne diseases
such as malaria and dengue fever at high elevations where they were once
rare.
The number of dengue fever cases so far this year in Costa Rica's
high-altitude central valley stands at 3,487 -- 86 percent higher than in
the whole of 2006.
(Editing by Eric Walsh)
Story by John McPhaul
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
|