The most compelling case to be made on behalf of retaining Las Baulas de Guanacaste Marine National Park in its present status comes from a report initiated by the same government now choosing to ignore its findings. In 2008, at the request of the Arias government, a group of experts was brought together as the Baulas Commission. Its primary mandate was to address the issue of expropriation. The commission was coordinated by Alfio Piva, General Director of InBio, now running as a Vice President with Laura Chinchilla. Dr. Edgar Fernandez provided technical support from the Peace With Nature initiative.
The “Final Report and Recommendations To Clarify Doubts to the President of the Republic Regarding the Expropriation of Lands in the Las Baulas de Guanacaste Marine National Park” was delivered well in advance of the proposed legislation, Proyecto de Ley 17.383, calling for the downgrading of the park to a wildlife refuge, which is diametrically opposed to the report’s recommendations.
Considering what the Commission referred to as the “global importance” of the park as a Leatherback sea turtle nesting area, they recommended adding 75 meters to the already established 125 meter land strip from the high tide line along the beaches. In addition, they supported technical studies on the environmental fragility of the area, to “conserve absolutely the forest wall behind the beach, not allowing for any constructions on it, as well as urgently re-establishing this forest wall wherein the owners have destroyed it.”
We can now add the government initiated Baulas Commission report to the litany of testimony from scientists, conservationists, NGO’s, trade associations, commissions, legal precedents, and international treaties, all emphatically falling on the side of protecting the Leatherback sea turtle and its habitat, Las Baulas Marine National Park.


Posted by admin on Tue, Dec 29, 2009
Filed Under | Conservation and Biodiversity, Eco Blog