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I. IdentificationOver the last decade, Chocó, the Pacific Coast region of Colombia, has been the target of ambitious state plans--known collectively as the Plan Pacifico--to tap its resources more systematically and to use it as a platform for increased trade with the outside world. This current plan puts the lush tropical rainforest and its inhabitants, vast amounts of plant and animal life and indigenous and black Colombians, in great danger. There are severe threats to the biodiversity of the Chocó region due to infrastructure development, deforestation, and mining. The conservation of the extraordinary diversity of living forms in the Chocó Biogeographic Region should be one of the highest priorities of the coming years.
The tropical lowlands are considered to harbour one of the 5 richest assemblages of plants and
animals with exceptional endemism in a wide range of taxa. Due to these lowlands and mid-elevation
forests, large tracts of intact forests are conserved which permits natural altitudinal migrations
of many birds, mammals, and invertebrate species; a phenomenon that's rare today due to forest
destruction.
Anywhere from a fifth to a half of all plants and animals living in the Chocó are not found anywhere else in the world
resulting in a fantastic variety of flora and fauna.(1) Numerous species have limited distribution in the area creating extraordinary 'beta' diversity,
or significant variations in species from one locality to another. In fact, most of the plants and
animal species of Chocó are yet to be discovered; approximately 3,500 species of plants are known
to exist here and scientists predict as many as 6,500 await identification- a quarter of which are
unique to the area.(2)
Chocó contains one of the last prestine stretches of coastline in tropical America. This
coastline The Colombian Pacific is a site of vast mineral and natural resources. At present, the
area is the country's main producer of platinum and the second producer of gold. The Pacific Coast
also contains considerable deposits of bauxite, manganese, tin, zinc, nickel, tungsten, copper,
and chromium, as well as possible reserves of oil. The region accounts for around 60% of Colombia's
wood and paper pulp production. Regional fish production, although representing 45% of the national
total, is believed by state officials to be as little as 1/7 its estimated potential. In addition,
due to its biodiversity, biotechnology, if developed in the region, could rival mining and forestry
activities. Finally, the region, with a complex of vast river basins, has also been seen as
offering huge potential for the generation of hydroelectricity. It is no wonder why Former
President Carlos Lleras Restrepo called this area of Colombia, 'our country's piggy bank'.(3)
After years of systematic indifference from the Colombian state, the Pacific Coast has recently
become the subject of ambitious development plans supported and encouraged by international bodies,
planners and politicians. The government of Colombia sees the region as the answer to over $20 billion
in debt, low export/import ratio, and a way to link with the North American and Asian Markets.
The idea of development in the Chocó began in 1974 with President Alfonso Lopez Michelsen who
wished to turn Colombia into the 'Japan of South America'. Development of the Pacific would
match existing access to the Caribbean and Atlantic and enable Colombia to take full advantage of
its potential for trade, given its strategic location at the crossroads of North, Central, and
South America.
In 1984, a development plan financially supported by UNICEF, entitled Integral Development Plan
for the Pacific Coast, was approved. The aim was to remove the 'structural bottlenecks
hindering regional development and holding back rapid growth.'(4) Ambitious infrastructure
projects included the building of roads, hydroelectric and energy plants, telecommunications networks,
as well as plans to boost forestry, fishing, agriculture and mining. The Bahia Malaga naval base
50km north of Buenaventura, which related to defense and security, was the first project begun by
the state. An access road to the base now brings traffic, pollution, and new settlers to the area
and has increased the likelihood that a second major port will be established in this pristine bay
surrounded by mangroves.
Under President Barco Virgilio Barco (1986-1990), development projects were unveiled involving
$4.5 billion in investments. The centerpiece of the plan was the construction of the Puente Terrestre
Inter-oceanico (PTI), a land bridge between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans near Panama, comprising
a railway, road, canal, and oil pipeline. PTI was to be the means by which Colombia would rival
the Panama Canal. Other road-building plans throughtout Chocó were to increase connections with
centers of economic prodution in Colombia. The importance of Barco's plan was 'to stimulate and
expand the economies of the north, the center, the east and the west of the country, allowing
them to exploit their potential and resources to the maximum.'(5) Local people feared
the mega-projects proposed by Plan Pacifico would increase damage already being caused to the region's environment and social fabric.
As early as 1984, 20.8% of the Pacific Coast's nearly 7.3 million hectares of forest had been
destroyed by indiscriminate logging to satisfy domestic demand for wood and paper production.
Mahogany reserves were being exhausted; substantial forest areas had been decimated to make way
for the agro-industrial production of African palm; and, Clearing and disrupting the forests through logging, mining, and excessive use of motorized
equipment affects the watershed areas and prompts the erosion and silting of stream beds. In
turn, the region's lush coastal wetlands and bays are at risk of pollution from silt and unsound
agricultural practices. More damaging still, is that the penetration of alien forms of
economic production, and the cultural values accompanying them, have begun to erode traditional
social and economic structures based on collective organization, mutual support,
environmentally sustainable methods and a harmonious relationship with nature. Further
development would simply cause greater environmental damage and cripple the region's biodiversity.
The region discussed in this case study is known as a whole to conservation experts as the Chocó
Biogeographic Region. It is a tropical rainforest larger than Costa Rica (second only to the
Amazon in size, 71,000 km2), extending from the state of Darien in Panama to Esmeraldas in
Ecuador along the entire Pacific coast of Colombia, flanked between the western slopes of the
Andes and the Pacific Ocean. The area is virtually sealed off from the dominant state. This
isolation, combined with the institutional weakness of the Colombian government, discouraged
development strategies towards the sea. The tendency was to penetrate the region merely to secure
necessary roads to the sea.
is a stopping point for migratory
humpback whales and the shoreline is a critical feeding,wintering and stopover site for millions of migratory shorebirds.
Mangrove forests protect the coast from erosion while providing nursery for young fish that feed in and depend on nutrient rich waters around mangroves.
The region's marine area is home to an abundance of fish species and marine mammal populations.
particularly in the south, the installation
of industrial shrimp production facilities has led to a serious drop in mangrove coverage.
Uncontrolled gold mining alone is responsible for the destruction of 80.000 hectares of forest
per year, which also threatens aquatic ecosystems with sedimentation and dangerous levels of
mercury.
The Dave Matthews Band
Brazilian Gold Mining and the Environment
II. Legal
ClustersOne of the disagreements between the Indegenous and black peoples and the Colombian government is the compilation and intellectual ownership of biological and botanical knowledge. "First it was timber and gold...now it is our biological wealth," says Alberto Achita, and Embera Indian and leader of the OREWA regional Indian organization. "This could be the second great looting of our resources and knowledge. We want to define with our communities what resources exist in order to lay the basis for a sustainable development plan. We want to do it our way-respecting our cultures-and we have been working on this for years and years. But there is a clause in the contract awarding intellectual property of all this information to the state. We wouldn't even have the right to use it!"(6) The Biopacific Region is unique and it must be treated as such by linking local and state leaders to provide the best way to develop the area while protecting the evironment and local culture.
III. Geographic
Clustersa. Geographic Domain: South America
b. Geographic Site: Western South American
c. Geographic Impact: Colombia
IV. Trade
Clustersa. Directly Related to Product: Yes-Many
b. Indirectly Related to Product: No
c. Not Related to Product: No
d. Related to Process: Yes-Deforestation, Erosion
As previously stated, the Pacific Coast of Colombia has the ability to provide desperately needed funds and pay part of the increasing federal debt. Its vast natural resources and potential for financial success is very attractive to foreign and local investors which can greatly affect the overall economic status of the country.
Colombia would like to increase trade with Asia and North America and would probably export many of the products made from materials from the Chocó region to them.
V. Environment
ClustersThe environmental problems throughout the Chocó Biogeographic Region are extensive. There is a threat towards species loss of all kinds (land, air, sea), deforestation, and the general loss of bio-diversity.
Due to the increase in development in the region, air, land, and sea pollution has increased dramatically. Timber extraction, mining, and expanding agriculture and cattle ranching are the leading causes in the destruction of the region and its ecosystem.
