Rejection of Cement Plant in Los Haitises Will Benefit Critically Endangered Ridgway's Hawk
United Nations Development Program (UNDP) representative in the DR,
Valerie Julliand, described the Los Haitises case as "a historic moment
of growth for the national society." She stressed that it showed how
civil society, the private sector and the general public could work
together to resolve an environmental conflict. "A country will develop
when all its actors come together and contribute," she said. "This is a
historic moment for the country, for society and for the strengthening
of Dominican institutions."
The announcement, which was made at the UN Office in Santo Domingo on
November 26, was received with hugs, loud applause and cheers, with the
feeling being that it represented a victory for civic action. The
Presidency called in the UN to deliver an opinion after widespread
public rejection of the proposal, as reflected in a Gallup Poll showing
that 85% of Dominicans were opposed to construction on the site.
Ministry of Environment specialists originally rejected the project,
but President Leonel Fernandez overruled their decision.
Speaking on behalf of the UNDP commission, environmental impact
consultant Eduardo Vadillo Sanchez said that their analysis concluded
that there was not sufficient information from the environmental impact
study to allow construction of the cement plant to proceed. During the
press conference, Julliand said that the announcement clarified that
the project would not be viable in any other areas near the karst
region of Los Haitises. The group concluded that the benefits and
opportunities for the area did not justify the risks and high costs to
society, and decided on these grounds that the project is not
pertinent. Vadillo said their conclusions were backed by scientific
facts. Domingo Abreu, an environmentalist who championed the group of
young people who led the campaigns against the project, said that the
decision is an endorsement of Dominican environmental specialists who
early on had reached the same conclusion. He urged the government to
listen to Dominican experts in the future.
The decision is a welcome one for bird conservationists. Ongoing
studies of the ecology and breeding status of Ridgway's Hawk, whose
tenuous populations were at risk from the proposed plant, are being
conducted by the Sociedad Ornitologica
de la Hispaniola and the
Peregrine Fund. Conservation efforts by these two groups include
releases of wild-hatched nestlings into two other areas of the country,
in hopes that self-sustaining populations will become established.
