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HONDURAS: Energy from
Palm Trees
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TEGUCIGALPA - A group of Honduran
investors built the first "clean energy" plant run
on waste pulp from the African palm. Constructed in
northern Honduras, it can generate 600 kilowatts per
hour.
''It's a pilot project that we hope to expand to the
rest of the country and throughout Central America,''
Carlos Menjívar, head of Palmas Centroamericanas (PALCASA),
one of the project's promoters, told Tierramérica.
The energy plant, in the northern city of Guaymitas
in Yoro department, was built with a five-million-dollar
contribution from the Central American Economic Integration
Bank, BCIE.
Its palm oil extraction capacity reaches 2,500 tons
per month, and the plant is expected to supply up
to 60 percent of Guaymitas energy demand.
PALCASA is the first Honduran company of its type
involving small and medium farmers, and has more than
400 investors.
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ARGENTINA: Ecuadorian
Indians Fight Oil Company
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BUENOS AIRES - A delegation from
Ecuador's Kichwa indigenous community, which is embroiled
in a dispute with the Argentine oil company CGC in
the Ecuadorian Amazon, will head to Buenos Aires this
month to meet with civil society groups and officials
to seek support for their cause.
A thousand Indians from the Amazon town of Sarayacu
since 1996 have been fighting oil drilling by the
CGC in what is known as Block 23, located on indigenous
ancestral lands. The Kichwa are demanding their right
to maintain the virgin forest free from exploitation.
Headed by indigenous leader Marlon Santi, the delegation
will try to meet with Argentine officials from the
Foreign Ministry, with representatives of CGC itself
and others.
The Sarayacu case has already won the support of the
Inter-American Court on Human Rights (an independent
body of the Organization of American States) and the
United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights.
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PERU: Demand for Disaster-Prevention
Measures
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LIMA - Peru lacks an effect system
for preventing extreme impacts from natural disasters,
despite being one of the world's most seismically
unstable countries and bearing the brunt of El Niño
climate phenomena, including floods, drought and mudslides,
says president of Red Cross - Peru, Edgardo Calderón.
''It is not enough to hold talks at schools and disseminate
information through the press. We must renew preventative
strategies throughout the country,'' said Calderón,
whose organization revealed that from 1994 to 2003,
445 people died and some four million were left homeless
as a result of natural disasters, including earthquakes.
The Civil Defense Institute is drawing up an initiative
to be presented to Parliament for setting up a disaster
prevention plan and conducting studies of the city
of Lima's vulnerability to earthquakes, he added.
Health Minister Pilar Mazzetti told Tierramérica that,
among other things, it is essential to increase resources
to deal with unseasonable freezes in the mountainous
Andes region, ''where geographic vulnerability is
aggravated by extreme levels of poverty.''
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MEXICO: No Funds for Measuring
Pollution
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MEXICO CITY - Many types of air
pollution in the Mexican capital, including many that
cause cancer, cannot be monitored due to the lack
of financial support from the government, which ''appears
to be uninterested in research,'' complain scientists.
''There are many carcinogens in the city's air, such
as benzene, mercury and others, whose levels, origin
and health impacts are not known because there is
no money to pay for studies,'' Violeta Múgica, a scientist
working with the Metropolitan Autonomous University,
told Tierramérica.
In the Mexican capital -- also an air pollution capital
of the world -- there are state funds for monitoring
contaminants like ozone at ground level, nitrogen
oxide, lead and suspended particulate. ''There is
follow-up for the principal substances, but many other
contaminants are excluded,'' said Múgica.
In Mexico, less than 0.5 percent of the gross domestic
product is spent on scientific research in general.
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