No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsEnvironment and WildlifeCosta Rica proposes legislation to put a price tag on nature

Costa Rica proposes legislation to put a price tag on nature

A Costa Rican lawmaker introduced a bill Friday that could change the way development projects are evaluated from an environmental standpoint.

A proposed change to the country’s Environmental Law, known as the “Valuation of natural capital and integration of green accounting in development planning bill,” would require developers to assess the value of environmental capital that would be destroyed during a project. This information would be included in the environmental impact evaluation, a requirement for all development plans in Costa Rica.

The bill, presented by Alfonso Pérez of the National Liberation Party, is designed to weigh the costs of development before a project begins in order to mitigate possible cleanup costs in the future.

“The world today functions on two misguided premises,” Pérez said during the bill’s presentation, “that we will always have petroleum and that nature will always respond to the abuses we commit against her.”

The regulations would apply to both the public and private sectors, and would require developers to provide an analysis of the project’s environmental costs against Costa Rica’s gross domestic product. Developers would be required to assume all costs associated with the evaluation.

“Not all the logistics have been figured out yet,” Bernardo Aguilar, executive director of Fundación Neotrópica, the bill’s sponsor, told The Tico Times, “But an example would be taking into account increased health costs due to pollution from air contamination.”

Damage to soil, water, forests and minerals would all need to be included in the assessment. However the bill does not outline the specific details. According to Aguilar, drafters of the bill are exploring using either the state or an independent investigative board for analysis. The bill’s details will be further developed before it goes to debate.

The legislation is part of Costa Rica’s participation in the World Bank’s Wealth Accounting and the Valuation of Ecosystem Services (WAVES) program. WAVES rejects the use of GDP as the sole indicator of a country’s wealth, and promotes the inclusion of natural capital and other capital into a more accurate marker of assets. These programs focus on creating long-term economic development plans by eliminating short-sighted projects that deplete natural resources.

Costa Rica is one of eight countries participating in WAVES, and is in the process of valuing the nation’s water and forest resources.

“This law would mean that in the near future Costa Rica could make better decisions about the environment,” Pérez said.

Trending Now

Inside Venezuela’s Bull Tailing Culture in the Llanos

When the bull bolts out into the ring, a mad scramble begins as the riders vie to grab its tail and knock it to...

Cuba Charges Six in Deadly Boat Clash With Terrorism Offenses

Cuban prosecutors have formally charged six survivors from a U.S.-registered boat intercepted in territorial waters with terrorism offenses, the Attorney General's Office announced. The...

US Israel Iran War Spreads as Hezbollah Enters Fighting and UK Base in Cyprus Hit

The war launched by the United States and Israel against Iran spread across the Middle East and beyond on Monday with Lebanon's Hezbollah entering...

Thousands Stranded at Sea as Strait of Hormuz Shutdown

In a deepening humanitarian crisis amid escalating Middle East tensions, approximately 20,000 seafarers and 15,000 cruise ship passengers find themselves stranded in the turbulent...

Syrian Smuggler Extradited from Costa Rica to Face U.S. Charges

Costa Rica authorities handed over a Syrian national to the United States after his arrest last year on charges of running a human smuggling...

Women march in Venezuela for freedom of female political prisoners on Women’s Day

Under the slogan They Count, hundreds of activists and relatives of female political prisoners marched this Sunday in Caracas as part of International Women’s...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica