No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveFor Costa Ricans, Environment Matters

For Costa Ricans, Environment Matters

Eight out of 10 Costa Ricans think that the government should spend more money on protection of the country’s natural environment, according to a poll released this week by CID-Gallup and The Nature Conservancy.

The areas survey participants considered most important were air and water improvements, increased controls for the protection of flora and fauna, and protection of rich ecological zones.

More than 80 percent of the respondents named these three areas as their highest priorities.

Of those who said they would vote in the upcoming February elections, 85 percent said that each candidate’s environmental platform would be an important part in their decision, the survey found.

In more specific terms, 80 percent of interviewees said they consider presidential candidate positions about development in the Maritime Zone very important, 77 percent said it is very important for the candidates to clearly define their position about oil exploration and 72 percent said they want to know each presidential aspirant’s point of view about the open-pit gold mine in Las Crucitas, near the Nicaraguan border with Costa Rica.

Nine of 10 respondents said they oppose the open-pit gold mine and 77 percent said they are against oil exploration.

The survey also asked what each participant considered the most urgent problems facing Costa Rica’s natural environment. Of those who responded to the question, 27 percent said trash is the most pressing problem, 17 percent said aquifer and river contamination is serious and 15 percent said the most immediate threat is air pollution.

When asked if they were willing to pay more for water and electricity and make economic sacrifices to protect the environment by contributing to environmental education, instituting stricter air and water quality standards and guarding against excessive development in ecologically delicate areas, six out of 10 participants answered in the affirmative.

The analysis also revealed that 36 percent of respondents participated in recycling projects during 2009. That’s up from 6 percent in 2005.

The poll surveyed 1,008 adult Costa Ricans, randomly selected, between Nov. 9 and 24 in all areas of the country. Interviews were conducted in person ateach participant’s home.

–Mike McDonald

Trending Now

Chile Launches Latam GPT to Build a Less Biased AI for Latin America

Move over ChatGPT -- Chile will launch Latam-GPT, an open-source artificial intelligence model designed to combat biases built by the primarily US-centric industry. Developped...

Costa Rica Restarts Fees for Lost or Damaged Cédulas

The Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) has started charging again for replacement national identity cards, known as cédulas, following a two-month halt tied to the...

Venezuelan Opposition Leader Freed After Months in Detention

Venezuelan opposition politician Juan Pablo Guanipa walked free from a Caracas prison on Sunday, marking a key moment in the ongoing release of political...

Harvard’s Robert Waldinger Brings the World’s Longest Happiness Study to Costa Rica

One of the world’s leading experts on happiness and wellbeing is coming to Costa Rica, and time is running out to be part of...

Costa Rica’s Dry Forest Pit Viper and Why It Shows Up in Yards

I’m leaning into being a grumpy old man here, but when I was a kid and I got in trouble my punishment was that...

Nicaragua reinstates travel visa for Cubans, official says

Nicaragua has reinstated the visa requirement for Cuban citizens, one of its few allies in Latin America, the Nicaraguan government co-led by spouses Daniel...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica