Cuba acts to
protect environment
•
National event for World
Environment Day in Sancti Spíritus
Juan Antonio Borrego
SANCTI SPIRITUS.—Cuba’s efforts to
protect the environment and promote sustainable
development were highlighted in this province in the
context of a national event celebrating World
Environment Day, June 5. Sancti Spíritus was
selected to host the event for its comprehensive
work in the 2012 period.
Elba Rosa Pérez Montoya, Minister of
Science, Technology and the Environment (CITMA)
stated that in conjunction with the investment
process and environmental projects running into the
millions, fruit of an unquestionable political will,
the period assessed is notable for the strengthening
of institutionality, with the introduction of new
legislation and regulatory bodies.
The Minister noted that, in spite of
advances in this field, an increase of contamination
has been recorded in various provinces, with planned
investments to prevent poorly implemented and scant
monitoring of waste produced.
During the event, also attended by
José Ramón Monteagudo Ruiz, first secretary of the
Communist Party in Sancti Spíritus, and Teresita
Romero Rodríguez, president of the provincial
Assembly of People's Power, Pérez Montoya praised
the work of the province, selected to host the World
Environmental Day event for the second time.
She mentioned the reduction of
contaminants, the strengthening of the protected
areas system, the increase of forested areas, and
important studies on dangers, vulnerabilities and
risks in distinct parts of the territory.
In a special address marking the
celebration, Bárbara Pesce, UN resident coordinator
and UNDP representative in Cuba, recalled than while
one in every seven inhabitants of the planet go to
bed hungry, 1.3 billion tons of food are wasted
every year.
The UNDP representative referred to
successful cooperation experiences spanning more
than 20 years in Cuba, particularly in Sancti
Spíritus, in what she defined as "a varied spectrum
of projects promoting the incorporation of the
environmental dimension into productive sectors."