Environmental News from Africa

EarthWire Africa provides a daily overview of the environment in Africa as reported in the media. The web site is updated every day by a team of editors that reviews media sources for environmental news stories.

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Tourism and Biodiversity

Uganda: Scandal in Tourism
AllAfrica.com | 12 Apr 2011
A probe committee instituted by the minister of Tourism, Trade and Industry Maj Gen Kahinda Otafiire, discovered several discrepancies in the amount of money used in the construction of a community lodge in the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park - Cloud Lodge in Nkuringo.
 Rwanda | Economics and the Environment | Tourism and Biodiversity
AFRICA: Responsible Travel Means Not "Haggling Over Wooden Beads"
Inter Press Service | 15 Mar 2011
Tourism as a concern found its way onto the agenda of the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro because of its potential for development but also due to its adverse effects on some populations and natural resources, particularly in Africa.
 Biodiversity | Economics and the Environment | Tourism and Biodiversity
World Bank proposes road to save Serengeti migration
Reuters | 01 Mar 2011
The World Bank has offered Tanzania an alternative to stop a major road project across the Serengeti national park that conservationists say threatens one of Africa's biggest wildlife spectacles.
 Tanzania | United Republic of | Governance | Road Building | Threatened Species | Tourism and Biodiversity
African lions under threat from a growing predator: the American hunter
Guardian Unlimited | 01 Mar 2011
United States now biggest market for lion hunting trophies, wildlife coalition warns. American hunters are emerging as a strong and growing threat to the survival of African lions, with demand for trophy rugs and necklaces driving the animals towards extinction, a coalition of wildlife...
 Biotechnology | Tourism and Biodiversity | Trade and Environment
Bright new start: how the Masai are finally profiting from tourism
Guardian Unlimited | 29 Jan 2011
After decades of exploitation, Kenya's Masai people have developed a conservation scheme that gives them an income and protects the wildlife. When I step down from the plane, the first thing I see is three gazelles sprinting off down the gravel airstrip. The second, more significant for what's to come, is a man dressed in scarlet robes waving to me from beside a Toyota Land Cruiser. In his hand is a mobile phone. This is not, I tell myself, going to be a standard safari.
 Kenya | Biodiversity | Economics and the Environment | Poverty Reduction | Tourism and Biodiversity
Sustainable Tourism Gets Boost With Launch of Global Partnership
UNEP | 28 Jan 2011
The Partnership will be an up-to-date, dynamic forum where countries that are interested in tourism which is truly sustainable will be able to learn from the successful efforts of the other members and obtain technical assistance, and which will promote constant dialogue, the exchange of experiences, and seek solutions to the problems that are common to the tourism sector.
 Economics and the Environment | Tourism and Biodiversity
South Sudan seeks millions for war-hit wildlife
Reuters | 18 Jan 2011
South Sudan appealed for investors to plough $140 million into its war-hit wildlife parks, seeking to kick-start a tourism industry and wean itself off oil months ahead of its expected independence.
 Sudan | Biodiversity | Impacts on Ecosystems | Protected Areas | Tourism and Biodiversity
Eco-tourism in Sierra Leone
BBC World Service | 18 Jan 2011
Sierra Leone, long plagued by war, is blessed with arable land, beautiful mountains and fabulous beaches, the stuff of tourists' dreams. A group of European and American back-packers are working on a eco-tourist venture at John Obey village.
 Sierra Leone | Economics and the Environment | Tourism and Biodiversity
EGYPT: Shark Attacks Bite Tourism
Inter Press Service | 06 Jan 2011
The beaches of Egypt's Red Sea resort city of Sharm al-Sheikh are tentatively back to normal after having recently been the site of five separate shark attacks, one of which proved fatal. While the phenomenon's precise cause remains undetermined, local experts fear that the spate of attacks could have dire consequences for Egypt's vital tourism industry - especially in the event of another incident.
 Egypt | Economics and the Environment | Tourism and Biodiversity
Wildlife groups condemn Ugandan golf course plan
Reuters | 23 Nov 2010
Environment groups have condemned President Yoweri Museveni's order to allow an investor to build a golf course in Uganda's biggest national park, saying it would disturb wildlife and hit tourism. Museveni earlier this month told the state-run Uganda Wildlife Authority to allow the Madhvani Group to build the golf course and a swimming pool in Murchison Falls National Park, which straddles the River Nile.
 Uganda | Economics and the Environment | Environmental Impacts | Protected Areas | Public Policy | Tourism and Biodiversity
Elders to sue UK government for injustices
Daily Nation | 23 Nov 2010
The Taita Council of Elders is pondering filing a case in The Hague over historical injustices against the community. The council, also known as Waghosi wa Isanga, has called Taita lawyers for a brainstorming meeting on the matter. The councils treasurer Gabriel Nyambu said on Tuesday that they would discuss the possibility of suing the British government for taking away more than 17,000 square kilometres of their land to establish a national park.
 Kenya | Land Tenure Issues | Protected Areas | Public Policy | Tourism and Biodiversity
Road threatens Serengeti migration
Guardian Unlimited | 20 Sep 2010
Plans for a new road that would cause the Serengeti ecosystem to 'collapse' is attracting international concern • In pictures: Wildebeest migration under threatThe world's greatest migration spectacle - the annual charge of nearly 2 million wildebeest, zebra and other mammals across the Serengeti...
 Kenya | Tanzania | United Republic of | Encroachment on Ecosystems | Tourism and Biodiversity | Transport
Factoring the planet's multi-trillion dollar ecosystem services into policy-making can save lives an...
UNEP | 09 Sep 2010
Incorporating ecosystem services in local and regional policies can help save cities and regional authorities money while boosting the local economy, enhancing quality of life and securing livelihoods.
 South Africa | Impacts on Ecosystems | Tourism and Biodiversity
Sierra Leone: Communities Laud Gola Forest Project
AllAfrica.com | 10 Jun 2010
Communities surrounding the Gola Forest reserve have commended the effort of government and other partners in transforming the jungle into a national park for ecotourism and other economic activities for the benefit of local communities. The forests provide very important ecological services...
 Sustainable Forest Management | Tourism and Biodiversity
Solar Power for Schoolchildren and US$85,000 for Gorilla Conservation Among Lasting Legacy of World ...
UNEP | 05 Jun 2010
Schoolchildren and villagers across Rwanda will receive solar power and more than $85,000 will go to gorilla conservation as part of the lasting legacy of World Environment Day 2010.Mr. Steiner: "We are especially pleased by this year's WED celebrations. Not only is Rwanda a pioneer in Green...
 Rwanda | Renewable Energy | Tourism and Biodiversity
East Africa: Future of Mountain Gorilla Trips in Danger
AllAfrica.com | 31 May 2010
A stark choice faces Uganda and Rwanda over the future of ecotourist trips to visit the rare mountain gorillas, following a new report which warns that close encounters with humans are having an alarming effect on their behaviour.The mountain gorilla is on the verge of extinction, with less than 700 of these species found in the wild. Their very last redoubt is in the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park of southwest Uganda, and in the mists of the Virunga Mountains of the Great Lakes.
 Threatened Species | Tourism and Biodiversity
Nigeria: Don Urges Action On Desertification
AllAfrica.com | 10 May 2010
AUniversity teacher, Prof. Joshua Kayode has advised Nigerians to embrace tree planting as a way of curbing the impending desert encroachment that is ravaging some parts of the country. The University of Ado Ekiti(UNAD) Professor of Botany, said it was better the country realized the importance of forest and tree planting in time to prevent the country from being devastated by high rising deforestation
 Nigeria | Deforestation | Food Security | Tourism and Biodiversity
Ethiopia: Sustainable Tourism Could Benefit Community
AllAfrica.com | 06 Apr 2010
If anyone doubts whether or not the real Ark of the Covenant lies in Axum, they should visit Lake Ziway 163km south of Addis Abeba on the road to Hawassa and about 1,200km south of Axum, long the sacred resting place of the Ark in Ethiopia.
 Ethiopia | Tourism and Biodiversity
Ghana: Achimota Eco-Park Project
AllAfrica.com | 06 Apr 2010
In 1888, the colonial government of the Gold Coast sent sample wood from the colony to England for tests on their working properties as industrial and construction timber. Following the favourable results from the tests, the government exported 3,360 cubic metres of Mahogany in 1881 and 84,900 cubic metres in 1913.
 Ghana | Forests and Woodlands | Tourism and Biodiversity
Ethiopia: Seeing Green - The Economic Potential of Ecotourism
AllAfrica.com | 30 Mar 2010
The little-known lush Lepis woodland has the potential to transform the lives of the 2,000 community members in its midst - if they can successfully develop a sustainable community tourism business, as other communities have done in Ethiopia. Without any facilities as of yet, the site is one of the Rift Valley's best kept secrets.
 Ethiopia | Economics and the Environment | Tourism and Biodiversity

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