FEBRUARY 2005
Around the Region
Buenos Aires needs new
landfill, but lacks a host
The Buenos Aires metropolitan area’s difficulties in finding a new place to dump its daily output of 12,000 tons of garbage have gone from annoying to worrisome.
In January of last year, authorities closed Villa Domínico, which had served for 26 years as the main landfill for the vast metropolitan area’s population of 13 million. The landfill, located 10 minutes south of the federal capital, had drawn increasing opposition from surrounding communities concerned about pollution.
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Brazil helps lead way on
ballast-water convention
Brazil has become the second nation to sign the International Convention for the Control and Management of Ships’ Ballast Water and Sediments, citing the environmental and economic costs caused by the invasion of harmful aquatic organisms.
Joining Spain as a signatory on Jan. 21, Brazil made clear it hopes the treaty will stem the spread of invasive species such as the golden mussel, a fast-reproducing Asian mollusk that can displace native mussels and clog industrial water intakes.
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Rough start for Peru’s
Camisea gas network
Local communities in January boycotted three environmental impact hearings on the second phase of Peru’s Camisea gas system, a month after a pipeline break in the new system sent natural-gas liquids into a stream that feeds the Urubamba River.
The boycott forced officials to suspend the hearings on the planned expansion of Camisea, a major natural-gas extraction, processing and transport network that went on line in July.
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Honduras targeted for
cooking stove project
Hoping to fight indoor air pollution in developing nations by improving cooking practices, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has awarded a $132,000 grant to a U.S. environmental group to introduce clean cooking stoves in Honduras.
The grant to Trees, Water & People, a nonprofit organization based in Fort Collins, Colorado, addresses an often-overlooked problem that takes a serious toll on human health and the environment in Latin America and other developing regions.
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