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Armenia Replants Trees Burnt In Wartime Blockade

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  • Armenia Replants Trees Burnt In Wartime Blockade

    ARMENIA REPLANTS TREES BURNT IN WARTIME BLOCKADE

    Deutsche Welle
    Nov 14 2012
    Germany

    War and an energy crisis in the early 1990s compelled Armenians to
    cut down thousands of trees for firewood. The Armenia Tree Project
    is working to reforest Armenia, but illegal logging poses a major
    obstacle.

    Mashtots is a typical neighborhood on the outskirts of Armenia's
    capital Yerevan. On a recent Sunday night, children played in the
    asphalt streets as families gathered for the weekly khorovats, or
    barbecue. Serob Badalyan's family didn't think twice about using
    a pile of logs and some twigs to make their fire. But Badalyan,
    a 34-year-old engineer, remembered a period in the early 1990s when
    that would have been out of the question.

    "The problem was, we didn't have energy," he told DW in an interview.

    "That's why we were going out cutting trees. Sometimes we brought
    them home. Sometimes police arrested us and took away our saws. But
    then the next day we would go with our friends to bring wood home
    and have fire."

    The energy shortage was caused by war. Armenia and neighboring
    Azerbaijan fought from 1988 to 1994 over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave
    that Azerbaijan claimed as its own while the territory's Armenian
    population wanted independence. Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey
    blockaded Armenia. Later on, the collapse of the Soviet Union ended
    energy subsidies to Armenia. The result was years of power shortages.

    Freezing to death

    Yerevan saw below-freezing winter days with just one to two hours of
    power, and things were often worse outside the capital. Armenians were
    desperate and they took to the country's forests for firewood. They
    burnt everything they found, including their own flooring and
    furniture.

    Badalyan and his friends returned again and again to an apricot orchard
    in the Yerevan neighborhood of Daviteshan. "We were going in groups
    of five or six," he said. "Each time, we would get wood for one of us,
    in order to have wood for a week-long period."

    Eventually, the Armenian government turned on a previously deactivated
    nuclear power plant in 1995. The move was controversial in its own
    right, but brought electricity back to the country.

    Desertification threat

    Thousands of Armenia's trees had been cut down. Illegal logging
    companies, which continue to operate, also sprang up. As a result,
    up to 30 percent of Armenian forests have been lost, according to
    a June report by the forest governance program ENPI FLEG, which is
    funded by the European Union and other organizations.

    "Armenia could become a desert," said Armine Tokhmakhyan of the Armenia
    Tree Project (ATP), an NGO dedicated to reforesting the country.

    The organization has been trying to fight deforestation since 1994.

    Community outreach programs deliver trees to parks, schools, hospitals
    and other organizations that want to spruce up their premises. ATP is
    also trying to reforest wide swathes of land in provinces including
    northern Lori. The organization reports 80 percent survival rates
    for its plants - and says loggers have stayed away from their forests
    to date.

    ATP grows their trees in three nurseries. DW visited their site in
    the town of Karin. Clusters of Soviet-era houses dot long stretches
    of dusty terrain leading out of the capital Yerevan. But the town of
    Karin is surprisingly lush.

    "Most of our visitors write this is an oasis in the desert,"
    Tokhmakhyan said. "During our 16 years of hard work, we managed to
    give a green look to the village."

    Forest oasis

    The village's main street is lined with robust trees, and ATP's
    nursery fills about a hectare in the center of town. More than 50
    species of plants flourish there, including evergreens, fruit trees,
    maples, poplars, oaks and many kinds of shrubs. Most of the plants
    growing at the facility are native to Armenia, with nine of them in
    danger of going extinct, according to government scientists.

    The government forestry agency, Hyantar, claims Armenia's forests are
    as big as they were in 1988. The agency reported just 2,425 trees were
    illegally logged last year. But environmental activist Luba Balyan
    told DW that those figures are way off. In research for EPI FLEG,
    she found at least 240 thousand cubic meters of forest had been
    illegally logged last year. If her figures are correct, thousands
    more trees were lost than the government has registered.

    Call for oversight

    "It's quite a lot for Armenia, being the size of Maryland or Belgium,"
    she said. "The environmental implications have been really harsh. And
    number one is desertification. You're losing the forest cover. You're
    losing water. And that is a big problem."

    Balyan said most of the logging doesn't come from villagers scraping
    for wood, but large companies that harvest wood en masse while the
    government turns a blind eye. Balyan added that those firms sell
    the wood to construction companies and furniture makers or import
    it abroad.

    She has proposed several ways Armenia can reverse the trend, including
    strengthening Hyantar's monitoring programs and updating the forest
    code to modern standards. For now, the energy crisis that sparked
    the deforestation is a distant memory to most Armenians.

    As for the apricot orchard where Badalyan and his friends used to
    cut wood, the trees were never replaced.

    http://www.dw.de/armenia-replants-trees-burnt-in-wartime-blockade/a-16378733

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