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Green Concerns: Expert Says Massive Construction Threatens Yerevan's

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  • Green Concerns: Expert Says Massive Construction Threatens Yerevan's

    GREEN CONCERNS: EXPERT SAYS MASSIVE CONSTRUCTION THREATENS YEREVAN'S ECOLOGY
    Siranuysh Gevorgyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter
    13.07.10

    Environmentalist Karine Danielyan says Yerevan is an example of how
    not to implement urban construction

    Environmentalist Karine Danielyan, who heads the "For Sustainable
    Human Development" NGO, thinks that on the example of Yerevan one can
    learn how not to implement urban construction. According to Danielyan,
    "Armenian oligarchs build where they want, without considering any
    environmental norm."

    The environmentalist remembers the Yerevan master plan of the Soviet
    times "when the environmental science was not so much developed",
    but all master plans had ecological directions.

    "Yerevan used to have a green network that one could go from one
    place to another using only green space," says Danielyan.

    In recent years Armenian environmentalists have constantly warned
    authorities in charge of the sphere about the risk of desertification
    faced by Yerevan, as sweeping construction has been implemented in the
    city at the expense of green zones. (According to environmentalists,
    desertification threatens 80 percent of Armenia's territory; forests
    now make only eight percent of the country's territory. It is estimated
    that if desertification continues for another 20 years, Armenia will
    lose almost all of its forests and woods.)

    Danielyan believes that first the population of Armenia did not
    need such large-scale construction, as most complete elite housing
    remains unlived-in.

    "Even if there were that need, this construction could have been
    carried out in areas adjacent to Yerevan," says Danielyan.

    In recent years the average air temperature in Yerevan has risen
    by 0.7 degrees. Danielyan links it to the logging of trees on the
    hillsides surrounding Yerevan, which used to give some coolness to
    the capital city during hot summers.

    "Now the city doesn't have enough time to cool down overnight,"
    says Danielyan.

    She brings the examples of the cities of Edinburgh and Bordeaux,
    in Scotland and France respectively, where the centers once, too,
    lost their green areas due to unsparing construction.

    "Edinburgh had to blow up the city center, then plant trees and
    other greenery, because people were running away from there. The same
    situation was also Bordeaux," says the environmentalist, warning that
    the same situation threatens Yerevan as well.




    From: A. Papazian
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