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University Director's Project Earns ENERGY GLOBE Award

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  • University Director's Project Earns ENERGY GLOBE Award

    University Director's Project Earns ENERGY GLOBE Award

    An Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) administrator's
    novel scheme for replenishing forests in the Republic of Armenia while
    simultaneously fighting poverty in the former Soviet Union, is one of the
    world's best environmental projects.

    Newswise Science News (Source: Indiana University-Purdue University
    Indianapolis, May 29, 2008)-An IUPUI administrator's novel scheme for
    replenishing forests in the Republic of Armenia while simultaneously
    fighting poverty in the former Soviet Union, is one of the world's best
    environmental projects.

    The Backyard Nursery Project, designed and initiated in Armenia by Ian
    McIntosh, Ph.D., is the recipient of a national ENERGY GLOBE Award for
    Sustainability. The award-winning project involves the creation of
    micro-businesses - backyard tree nurseries - to meet reforestation needs,
    combat deforestation by reducing reliance on trees for fuel, and boost
    income among some of Armenia's poorest citizens.

    >From 2002-2004, McIntosh, now IUPUI's director of international
    partnerships, served in Armenia as deputy country director of the
    Yerevan-based Armenia Tree Project. There - along with forester George
    Nercessian - McIntosh, an applied anthropologist, spearheaded the Backyard
    Nursery Project.

    ENERGY GLOBE Awards recognize extraordinary environmental projects that
    conserve and protect resources or use renewable energy. An international
    winner is chosen in each of five categories: water, earth, fire, air and
    youth. National award winners are the best in their respective countries. A
    gala ceremony honoring all ENERGY GLOBE winners took place Monday (May 26,
    2008) at the Plenary Hall of the European Parliament in Brussels.

    McIntosh's project, a collaboration with villagers in Aygut in northern
    Armenia's Getik River valley, has involved the creation of more than 400
    backyard tree nurseries and the planting of more than one million trees in
    Armenia's denuded forests.

    Following the fall of the Soviet Union and the outbreak of war with
    Azerbaijan, Armenia's oil and natural gas supplies were slashed. The
    country's forests took a major blow as citizens turned to trees as a source
    for heating and cooking fuel.

    "So rapid was the loss of tree cover when the oil and gas supplies from
    Azerbaijan were cut that Armenia was facing desertification within 20
    years," McIntosh said. "And with the loss of trees came the loss of top
    soil, the spoiling of rivers and other fresh water supplies, and erosion on
    a massive scale, threatening to destroy the infrastructure - roads, train
    lines, even whole towns - of the young Armenian nation."

    The Aygut villagers, victims of ethnic cleansing during the war with
    Azerbaijan over the contested province of Nagorno Karabakh, were contracted
    to grow trees in the tiny fertile spaces they had available in their
    backyards. The families involved, some of the nation's poorest, have doubled
    their annual income through the program.

    "It was no easy decision for them," McIntosh said. "How much land could they
    spare to grow trees for monetary reward, and how much land was essential for
    the growing of precious food to last them through the long Armenian winter?"

    Although many households initially were not prepared to take the risk, the
    model has proven to be very successful. A number of other Getik River valley
    villages as well as villages elsewhere in the Caucasus have adopted the
    project.

    Officials of Armenian Tree Project accepted the ENERGY GLOBE award during
    Monday's gala which was broadcast around the world.

    For additional details on the awards, visit
    http://www.energyglobe.com/en/energy-globe-a ward

    C 2008 Newswise. All Rights Reserved.

    http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/5 41284/
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