No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveBill Seeks Change in Status for Las Baulas Park

Bill Seeks Change in Status for Las Baulas Park

A bill that would remap the Las Baulas National Marine Park in Playa Grande, in the northwestern province of Guanacaste, was recently re-introduced in the Legislative Assembly, and it has environmentalists on guard and legislators thinking hard.

The bill would reduce the status of the park to “wildlife refuge,” a designation that would allow for development within its boundaries.

Legislators rejected the effort in December of 2008 when it was initially presented as three separate bills. The new bill entered discussion in the legislature’s Environment Commission on Friday morning.

Maureen Ballestero, a National Liberation Party (PLN) legislator and president of the commission, said she had not read the new bill as of Wednesday, but she said she is familiar with the project.

“I do not agree with the change in category of a national park, or reducing a national park,” Ballestero told The Tico Times. “But, it’s clear that there are many national parks that have people (living) inside and there is an economic problem with this.”

The “economic problem” is the cost of expropriation to allow for development. Landowners inside Las Baulas National Marine Park have insisted that the land is worth approximately $1,200 per square meter, which would bring the total expropriation cost to around $800 million, a price too high for the government to pay (TT, Dec. 2008).

Ballestero said she agrees with a law that would find a way to obtain the land from private owners without having to use state money, what she called a “positive aspect” of the bill.

“We need to resolve the problem so the state doesn’t have to pay for the land, but I believe there are more adequate mechanisms for us to be able to make this step – to have people inside a national park.” she said on Wednesday.

Ballestero would not say whether she will support the bill until after the commission examines the details.

Meanwhile, nongovernmental groups are stepping up efforts to convince legislators that the bill should be rejected.

Randall Arauz, of the Marine Turtle Restoration Program (PRETOMA), said his group is working with various other organizations in a campaign against the bill. Negative effects on nesting habits of sea turtles are among the environmentalists’ major concerns.

The leatherback turtle population has declined by 95 percent during the past two decades. Playa Grande, which was of the nesting site for more than 1,000 leatherbacks per year in the late 1980’s, now hosts only some 40 to70 of the nesting sea turtles annually.

Researchers attribute the numbers loss, in part, to changes in nesting habitats and to destructive fishing practices.

Arauz said these are all reasons to leave the area alone.

“There are more leatherback turtles that nest at this beach than at any other in America, and they want to ruin that,” Arauz said.

“Once you start to develop a beach, there are all kinds of physical and chemical changes that can drive these turtles away.”

Arauz noted that lights from developments and solid waste from housing projects and construction processes can deter the sensitive leatherback turtle from nesting at a particular beach.

PRETOMA also cites a study by the National Subterranean Water and Irrigation Service (SENARA) that indicates the water table near Playa Grande is too shallow to sustain development.

The study, dated February 13, 2009, states that “the zone from Playa Grande to the mouth of the Estero Tamarindo sits at the base of the Huacas-Tamarindo aquifer, which is considered to be extremely vulnerable.”

The study concludes that the aquifer’s vulnerability to contamination “doesn’t permit any activity, with the exception of conservation and preservation.”

Nelson Marín, regional director of the Tempisque Conservation Area of the Ministry of the Environment, Energy and Telecommunications (MINAET) and a strong proponent of the bill, said the idea of the refuge is to have “intelligent, mixed development,” with “environmental restrictions that will protect sea turtles and prevent contamination.”

Marín noted that the restrictions have not yet been written, but the National Technical Secretariat of the Environment Ministry (SETENA) is working with independent organizations to develop the plans. The World Wide Fund for Nature and the Marine Turtle Specialist Group are two of the groups mentioned.

Marin said he was “not familiar with SENARA’s study.”

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Risks Losing Earthquake and Volcano Monitoring Network

Costa Rica could gradually lose part of its ability to monitor earthquakes, track volcanic activity, and issue early warnings if the country does not...

Costa Rica’s Northern Neighbors Are Quietly Rewriting Central America Tourism

Tourism between El Salvador and Guatemala is consolidating as one of Central America's strongest growth stories, with millions of cross-border travelers fueling a regional...

Costa Rica Soccer Team Rocked by Off-Field Problems Before England Match

Costa Rica’s men’s national team is facing another setback at the start of Fernando “Bocha” Batista’s rebuild, after three players were removed from camp...

Former Costa Rican President Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Acquitted After 25 Years

A Costa Rican court on Friday acquitted former President Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Echeverría of embezzlement in the long-running "Reaseguros" case, closing one of the...

US and Panama announce plan to clear migrant waste from Darién jungle

The United States and Panama announced a $3 million project Wednesday to remove tons of solid waste abandoned in the Darién jungle by migrants...

Costa Rica Route 27 Sinkhole Forces Major Traffic Detours

Traffic on Costa Rica’s Route 27 remains heavily disrupted after a large sinkhole opened near Coyolar in Orotina, forcing the full closure of the...

Fonseca Rallies, Sierra Stuns as Latin America Roars at Roland-Garros

Brazilian teenager João Fonseca staged a stunning comeback from two sets down to reach the third round of Roland-Garros on Wednesday, setting up a...

Costa Rica Public Health System Faces Growing Surgery Waitlist Crisis

Costa Rica’s public health system is facing another increase in surgical delays, with 204,622 insured patients waiting for an operation through the Caja Costarricense...

Drought Fears Grow as Costa Rica Water Megaproject Falls Behind

Guanacaste is heading into another period of water uncertainty as Costa Rica’s long-promised PAACUME water project remains far behind schedule, four years after the...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador

Live prediction market odds via Kalshi. Updates every 60 seconds.
Kalshi is available to US residents 18+. The Tico Times may earn a commission from new signups.

Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel