Cuba goes eco-friendly, despite increasing push for tourists
By Nicole Winfield. The Associated Press.
Daily Southtown. Tuesday, November
21, 2000
CAYO COCO, Cuba Well into the evenings and even on weekends, cement
mixers and jackhammers hum and thump along a stretch of pristine white-sand
beaches that represent ground zero for Cuba's tourism boom.
Five-star hotels are springing up in clusters on the King's Garden, the
archipelago off Cuba's northern coast, and more are planned on untouched islets
bordering the world's longest coral reef after Australia's.
What else is new, though, is a dawning consciousness of the environment in a
society conditioned by 40 years of communist rule to farm and manufacture with
little regard for nature.
So while Cuba is turning the archipelago into a top draw for cash-toting
foreign visitors whose numbers reached 1.6 million last year, it also hopes to
protect the virgin sands from tourism's damaging footprint.
And it's much more than simply minding the manatees.
A biodiversity protection program, financed with $15 million from the
government and $4 million from the United Nations and other donors, aims to
promote growth while preserving the unusual and varied ecosystems on Cayo Coco
and the archipelago's 2,516 other islands.
The islands northeast of Havana are home to several hundred animal and plant
species native to Cuba and to one of the Caribbean's largest populations of pink
flamingos. Turtles and manatees mingle in shallow inland waters while migratory
birds from the United States and Canada winter in mangrove forests and sand
dunes.
Like much of eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, Cuba used to put a
low premium on the environment as it strove for rapid development.
"Unless we conquer nature, nature will conquer us," President
Fidel Castro is quoted as saying during a 1970 speech in a new book on Cuba's
environment,
"Conquering
Nature, the Environmental Legacy of Socialism in Cuba."
The results range from waterways contaminated by sugar production waste to
farm soil salinated by overzealous irrigation projects, said Sergio
Diaz-Briquets, who co-wrote the book with another Cuban exile, Jorge
Perez-Lopez.
Today, tourism brings $1.3 billion a year into the cash-strapped country,
surpassing sugar as the biggest source of hard currency, and is likely to get
much bigger if the U.S. government lifts the ban on Americans spending money in
Cuba.
The Cubans believe their late start has turned out to be a boon because they
can learn from the mistakes made by other Caribbean tourism destinations.
In Cayo Coco, the main resort hub on the Sabana-Camaguey archipelago, hotels
are set far back from the coast to prevent beach erosion. No new hotel can be
over four stories tall, and the government studies each one's environmental
impact before approving construction, said the biodiversity project's director,
Nelson Espinosa Pena.
It's a placid contrast to crowded Varadero Beach on a peninsula off the
mainland, where most beachgoers stay. Unlike Cayo Coco, Varadero, with its
hotels, restaurants and souvenir stores, is open to the Cuban public.
A few yards from the main group of resorts on Cayo Coco sits the project's
monitoring station, where scientists chart water salinity and track some of the
542 types of terrestrial insects on the archipelago.
Cuba can control tourist development because "in this country, private
enterprises cannot do whatever they want like in other places," said
Alberto Perez of the U.N. Development Program, which provides money and
technical support for the project.
Launched by Cuba in 1993, the project aims to establish eight protected
areas within the South Carolina-sized ecosystem.
Some environmentalists worry that tourism development, even under
safeguards, could threaten several species, including the queen conch, the
Antilles crocodile, dolphins and manatees, which are already listed as
endangered.
Boat operators at resort hotels encourage snorkelers to feed bread to the
barracudas and other tropical fish darting about the purple fan coral an
environmental no-no.
Also, the government built up stone berms to connect the islands and the
disrupted water flow changed the salinity in lagoons separating the archipelago
from the mainland, said Georgina Bustamente of the nonprofit
Nature Conservancy, based in Arlington, Va.
She said environmentalists abroad as well as in Cuba tried to make the berm
project more environmentally friendly, "But unfortunately they decided to
do the short, bad track."
© 2000 Associated Press
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