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Ecotourism Project Promotes Conservation In Bulgaria

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  • Ecotourism Project Promotes Conservation In Bulgaria

    ECOTOURISM PROJECT PROMOTES CONSERVATION IN BULGARIA

    US Department of State, DC
    http://usinfo.state.gov
    10 September 2007

    International symposium in Turkey promotes environmental best practices

    Washington -- Adventure seekers, nature lovers and outdoor sports
    enthusiasts are finding a new vacation destination. "Ecotourism:
    Naturally Bulgaria" is the slogan for a sustainable tourism program
    that is promoting Bulgaria as a desirable travel destination and an
    attractive investment opportunity.

    The U.S. Agency for International Development's (USAID) Biodiversity
    Conservation and Economic Growth Project helped Bulgaria capitalize on
    its natural resources -- mountains, beaches and extensive wilderness
    areas -- to increase the number of tourists, the spending per
    tourist and the percentage of tourism-generated revenue that stayed
    in Bulgaria.

    Specific objectives included:

    ~U Regional development and growth of private firms in a competitive
    environment;

    ~U Increased and better-informed citizen participation in policy
    development and decisionmaking;

    ~U Mechanisms to generate and capture revenue for protected areas
    and their buffer communities; and

    ~U Engagement of the public and key target groups near national parks
    in decisions on the management of protected areas.

    "This project did far more than produce management plans, market
    survey and guidebooks. It helped conserve protected areas by helping
    local communities value them due to their contribution to tourism,"
    USAID's Roberta Hilbruner told USINFO. "It was all founded on a
    threats-based approach to biodiversity conservation, and mitigated
    those threats by providing value to the local communities and
    alternative livelihoods. ... It is a model of a tourism/environment
    mix in a project."

    USAID credits the program with helping Bulgarians resolve land-use
    conflicts, develop laws protecting the environment and create
    innovative financing for conservation efforts. The program, which
    involved the Bulgarian government, church leaders and private-sector
    entrepreneurs, resulted in the creation of a national ecotourism
    strategy that served as a model for other nations in the region,
    according to USAID.

    The agency cited the ability to link efforts of local government,
    national government, local businesses and local civil society as
    a key element to creating a common set of objectives that could be
    supported by all interested parties.

    "Sustainable tourism development is about social and political
    engineering, as well as enterprise development," Kamelia Georgieva,
    Bulgarian ecotourism specialist for the project, confirmed.

    BLACK SEA ENVIRONMENTAL SYMPOSIUM

    The U.S.-supported program in Bulgaria is one of several regional
    successes scheduled to be featured at an environmental symposium hosted
    by the Organization for Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) and the
    United States. It will bring together representatives of government
    and the private sector to discuss how environmental protection could
    boost economic development and regional cooperation.

    The meeting, scheduled for September 12 and September 13 in
    Istanbul, Turkey, will be attended by governmental officials
    and business executives and civil-society leaders from BSEC's 12
    members (Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece,
    Moldova, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine), the United
    States and international organizations such as the European Union,
    the U.N. Development Programme and the Black Sea Commission. The
    U.S. delegation will be headed by Deputy Assistant Secretary of
    State Colleen Graffy, an attorney specializing in international
    environmental law.

    The United States, which holds observer status in the BSEC,
    is supporting the symposium "to foster BSEC's crucial efforts to
    discuss, regional issues, develop cooperative practices, find avenues
    of enhancing economic well-being and stability for the people of
    this region of great potential," according to the U.S. Embassy in
    Istanbul. The Black Sea region is home to approximately 350 million
    people.

    The symposium is intended to promote closer links among nations in
    the region and the exchange of information on environmental best
    practices. It seeks to focus attention on ways in which actions to
    protect the environment can stimulate economic growth, such as the
    promotion of ecotourism and improved fishing and aquaculture.

    See also Environment.
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