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  • ATP Strengthens Sustainable Development Programs

    ATP Strengthens Sustainable Development Programs as the United Nations
    Declares 2011 to be International Year of Forests

    hetq
    16:20, May 4, 2011

    An Interview with Executive Director Jeff Masarjian

    Jeff Masarjian has been executive director of Armenia Tree Project
    since 2001, following a long career in clinical social work, family
    treatment, and organizational management in the non-profit sector. He
    founded, and for 13 years directed, a specialized foster care program
    for children at risk. In addition to having a private practice as a
    licensed social worker, he taught a course in community services
    administration at the University of Massachusetts for 10 years. In his
    spare time, Jeff enjoys hiking, camping, skiing, kayaking, and
    traveling.

    Armenia Tree Project (ATP) works in three program areas--environmental
    education, tree planting, and sustainable development. Can you start
    off by telling us about ATP's 2010 achievements in environmental
    education?

    Since 2005, environmental education has been one of ATP's core
    programs in Armenia. Last year we published the second edition of our
    teacher's manual, `Plant an Idea, Plant a Tree,' and added 11 new
    lesson plans written by experts in Armenia. The manual has been
    reviewed and approved by the National Institute of Education in
    Armenia for training public school teachers. It was also translated
    into English for use in diasporan schools, through our new Building
    Bridges project, which seeks to connect Armenian youth in the US and
    around the world with youth in Armenia around environmental themes.

    In 2010, 198 teachers were trained by ATP staff and by
    teacher-trainers on how to use the new ATP manual in their classrooms.
    Additionally, 617 schoolchildren and university students participated
    in environmental lessons and practical training at the Michael and
    Virginia Ohanian Environmental Education Center at ATP's Karin
    Nursery.

    Next, can you report on ATP's 2010 results in Community Tree Planting?

    Our CTP program continues to be a flagship for success in Armenia.
    After 16 years, our average survival rate is over 80 percent for trees
    which are three years or older. We continued with a robust program in
    2010, and planted more than 66,000 trees at 177 sites throughout
    Armenia. The success of CTP is largely due to stakeholder involvement
    and commitment. Our staff works closely with residents of local
    communities to plant these trees and maintain them in later years.

    Of particular note, ATP was invited to plant trees as part of the
    Tatev Monastery Revival Project in collaboration with the National
    Competitiveness Foundation of Armenia. The grand re-opening of the
    restored complex at Tatev took place in October, with an event that
    included rides on the world's longest aerial tramway over a
    spectacular gorge between Tatev and Halidzor stations, where we
    planted 1,900 trees and have plans to plant another 2,400 in 2011. It
    is anticipated that this project will provide the impetus for economic
    development in local communities by attracting tourists who might be
    traveling to Syunik or Artsakh, and who will spend money on local
    food, lodging, and crafts.

    Finally, can you give us a status update on ATP's sustainable
    development programs?

    In 2010, ATP held a series of strategic planning meetings with our
    Executive Committee and staff in the US and Armenia. After reviewing
    our successes and the challenges, we arrived at a number of
    conclusions that will guide our programming in the coming years.

    Of particular note was our realization that we cannot simply plant our
    way out of the negative effects of deforestation in Armenia. We need
    to first engage local stakeholders in a process to evaluate and
    determine what their forest values are. These might include, for
    example, recreation, biodiversity, protection of topsoil, lumber, and
    fuelwood, to name a few. Communities need to reach a consensus on
    defining their own priorities, so that they can learn techniques to
    manage forests in a sustainable way that will meet their objectives.
    Planting trees and managing natural resources for the future is one
    aspect of sustainable development, which must also incorporate social
    and economic initiatives.

    One of the more common issues we encountered in forest development
    projects was conflicts over land use. Communities that had designated
    sites for forest tree planting also had livestock owners that were
    using adjacent sites for grazing, and as a result, some of the newly
    planted trees were damaged. When there are conflicting priorities in
    poverty stricken communities, the options providing the most immediate
    results typically prevail. As such, the long term positive values of
    forest regeneration may lose out to short term priorities without the
    proper incentives in place.

    What is ATP's position on tree cutting incidents reported in Armenia?

    Trees are still used by many rural families as their only source for
    cooking and heating fuel, due to lack of access to alternative fuels
    including natural gas. Our goal is to educate communities about forest
    management so they can continue to use this renewable resource in a
    sustainable way.

    We continue to read reports about commercial logging. One solution
    will come from stronger enforcement of existing environmental laws. It
    is an encouraging sign that the issue is getting more publicity, and
    local residents are registering their outrage. This is the first step
    to more public involvement and reform on this issue, which will
    require a steadfast commitment from the government. These are clearly
    difficult issues with no easy answers. We hope that our work is a
    small step in the right direction of finding solutions to these
    problems.

    How is ATP beginning to address the underlying drivers of
    deforestation which include widespread poverty, lack of access to
    alternative sources of fuel, lack of environmental management capacity
    in the country?

    Recent reports have shown that poverty is still very widespread in
    Armenia--at least one third of the population is barely hanging on.
    This further convinces us that our work is needed more now than ever,
    since it is usually the most impoverished that rely on natural
    resources to meet their daily needs.

    ATP creates full-time employment for more than 60 people in Armenia,
    and we hire hundreds of seasonal workers for tree planting in the
    spring and fall each year. We have a dynamic new leadership in Armenia
    and they have a positive vision about the future. As a result, we are
    currently building our capacity and developing new strategies to begin
    to engage the public to have a voice in policy issues around
    deforestation, renewable energy, and sustainable development.

    Although there have not been major changes on some of the issues, we
    continue to do what we can on the local level to improve the lives of
    thousands of people who are directly impacted by our work, through
    creating new jobs or enriching their communities with educational
    programs, new parks, forests, and fruit orchards.

    You have been outspoken on this issue in recent years, so what is the
    status of another current environmental concern which is unsustainable
    mining operations in Armenia?

    ATP's position has been to support sustainable development in Armenia.
    There are currently more than 600 mines in Armenia, and to my
    knowledge, none are operating according to standards which place
    public health and environmental protection at a premium. There is
    growing public backlash in communities that are adjacent to operating
    and planned mines, because residents don't see their community or
    family interests being served by mining companies. The profits are
    privatized and often leave the country, while the liabilities become a
    public burden that others are left to deal with. The tax revenues
    collected by the government from mining operations typically do not
    find their way back to the communities that have suffered long term
    damage to their land and health. We're also seeing that these effects
    can spread to neighboring regions and create hazards to ecosystems and
    to public health that will have devastating consequences for Armenia's
    future.

    Can you evaluate or list some of ATP's main successes since the
    founding of the organization in 1994?

    In our recent strategic planning meetings, we have reflected on some
    of our major accomplishments and identified a number of `lessons
    learned' which have informed our planning for the next several years.
    In terms of infrastructure, ATP operates tree nurseries in the
    villages of Karin, Khachpar, and Margahovit. We operate an
    environmental education center near Yerevan in Karin, and another is
    under construction near Vanadzor in Margahovit.

    We have trained more than 1,000 secondary school science teachers on
    how to use ATP's `Plant an Idea, Plant a Tree' manual in their
    classroom and we have published a `Sustainable Forestry Manual for
    Armenia' with stakeholder meetings and trainings planned for 2011. We
    have planted millions of trees at more than 800 urban and rural sites
    throughout Armenia and Artsakh, and the harvest from our fruit trees
    has exceeded two million pounds. Finally, ATP has received the
    National Award of the Energy Globe for Sustainability for our tree
    planting and education programs.

    What are some of ATP's strategic priorities for the coming years and
    how do these fit into your overall vision for the future of Armenia's
    forests?

    In response to some of the challenges outlined above, ATP has made a
    strategic decision to focus our efforts on `quality rather than
    quantity,' by spending more time and resources to develop social
    capital and resources in communities, before making investments in
    future forest development.

    We are planning a new and more comprehensive program to that end,
    which we call S.E.E.D.S. (Social, Economic, and Environmental
    Development for Sustainability). It is widely acknowledged by experts
    that sustainable development that considers the needs of future
    generations must balance all three of its component parts. Promoting
    any one to the exclusion of others is a recipe for failure.

    At our John and Artemis Mirak Nursery in Margahovit Village, we plan
    to postpone large-scale reforestation operations in order to meet the
    objectives of this new programming. Our plans at the Mirak Nursery
    include establishing a seed bank for valuable native forest trees that
    will provide resources into the future.

    Our new program will replace and improve upon what was previously
    known as our Rural and Mountainous Development Program. We are excited
    about the changes in ATP because the United Nations has declared 2011
    to be the International Year of Forests. We plan to share our
    experiences in sustainable forestry and community development with
    colleagues globally as part of the UN's initiative.

    Going forward, our plan is to engage with communities that have a
    demonstrated record of success with our Community Tree Planting
    program. We intend to bring robust environmental education to these
    communities, and collaborate with other organizations who can deliver
    a wide range of economic and social development services. We also plan
    to initiate trainings with local stakeholders in sustainable forest
    management and help establish forests that will meet the needs of the
    local community.

    Photo by Jeff Masarjian




    From: A. Papazian
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