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| Daily Edition: San José, Costa Rica, August 02, 2006
South African Expert
Advises
U.S. Embassy and
Guitar Concert Club de Libros
Edited By Amanda Roberson
By Amanda Roberson South African water-management expert Jacqueline King shared some of her knowledge yesterday during a water-management seminar sponsored by the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE), the state-run electricity and telecommunications monopoly, and Universidad Nacional (UNA), in Heredia, north of San José. During a presentation entitled “A Holistic Approach to Integrated Flow Management,” King explained a cost-benefit analysis of dam projects. “We always want the most benefits we can get from development, but we must also consider costs, which include water shortages in the wetlands, ecotourism and the life of reservoirs,” King said. “We can manage change with development or we can just let it happen – this would be closing our eyes and ears to knowledge.” King used examples of dams built in Losotho and Mozambique to illustrate poor planning and failure to consider ecological and sociological impacts. King's visit provided “a very important reflection,” said Gilberto de la Cruz, ICE National Electricity Planning Center Director. The institution is conducting studies of several rivers' water flows and ecologies to evaluate potential water-management projects. UNA Rector Olman Segura said taking all costs and benefits of these projects into consideration is important considering the “crisis of resources” Costa Rica has experienced in recent years. “In the past five decades, water has gone from being a rich resource to a scarcity,” Segura said, citing the statistic that from 1990 to 2001, demand for water in the metropolitan area increased by 12%. Adopting laws to manage water responsibly is key to preventing this crisis from worsening, and the Legislative Assembly should pass legislature to promote responsible water management, Segura said.
Costa Rica tops the list of countries where the most U.S. passports are stolen -- from January to June this year, 783 U.S. tourists had their passports stolen here, according to a U.S. Embassy spokesman. Authorities indicated that San José and the country's beaches are areas where the most passports are stolen. In 2005, 1,558 passports were stolen in Costa Rica, more than were stolen in Rome and Mexico City. Many victims of passport theft also have money and other personal belongings stolen, according to the embassy. The U.S. Embassy has posted theft-prevention tips for its citizens traveling to Costa Rica on its Web site. Immigration director Mario Zamora told the daily La Nación that groups of organized international criminals are partly responsible for passport theft. Many stolen passports are transported to Belize, where they are sold for as much as $20,000, mostly to Cubans and Colombians, he said. -ACAN-EFE
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