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GREEN Manifesto
Trinidad and Tobago
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Somebody in the GOTT is listening...
New solid waste plan coming
Courtesy the Trinidad Guardian
Jan 28th 2009
Dick-Forde was speaking on Tuesday during the presentation of results of the 2008 national coastal clean-up and data collection exercise held at the Eric Williams Finance Complex in Port-of-Spain. “The project would include scooping and assessing the current waste landscape,” Dick-Forde said. She said this would include a series of consultations with private sector and government stakeholders to develop, among other things, local plans which could be incorporated into the new solid waste resource management legislation.
Regarding the results of the clean-up exercise, Dick-Forde said 69,469 items were recovered during 2008. In 2007, 32,628 items were collected from the various beaches of T&T, Dick-Ford added. “These numbers revealed an increase in awareness through the increased volunteers, but an increased problem of littering as seen through the collections made,” the minister said. Among the items collected were straws, plastic bottles, condoms, cigarettes, deodorant bottles, razors, toothbrushes, candles and pieces of chairs.
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One-hundred and twenty bids were received for the competitive bid rounds of seven quarry blocks that closed yesterday, said Minister of Energy Conrad Enill.
The proposed quarries are expected to add an additional five million cubic yards to the aggregate industry.
The tendering process received so much attention from prospective quarriers that the closing date had to be extended from December 8 last year to January 12 to accommodate all interested persons.
The seven parcels of land up for the bidding process totals approximately 670 acres and is broken up into the seven parcels-two blocks in Matura and five in Valencia.
Enill said it is important to have "an adequate supply of aggregate at affordable prices that supports the construction industry and the Governments Vision 2020".
In receiving the bids, Enill spoke of some of the key challenges that quarriers face, including the question of damage to the environment and illegal quarrying.
With regard to the environmental issues about the destructive effects of open pit mining, Enill said he recently attended the opening of the National Quarries Ltd new limestone quarry, "and it dawned on me that they have done it successfully". He is sure their methods could be used on other quarry sites as well.
Enill also spoke of rehabilitation and recovery of the quarry sites as well as training for quarry operators, including a recently completed course in quarrying offered by the University of Trinidad and Tobago (UTT). He also hopes to implement a proper environmental management plan for the industry.
The other issue plaguing the industry is illegal quarrying.
To effect positive change, Enill hopes to revise the legislation regarding illegal quarrying.
He said current legislation impounds the offenders' assets, but only for one night. They are then returned to the owners, who continue their illegal quarrying.
He also hopes to involve the security sector to assist with ridding the country of illegal quarry operators. Enill added that performance standards with respect to product quality control and environmental protection will be implemented.
"The quarries will do its part to be Vision 2020 compliant."
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| OAS and ACS seek to move cooperation to new level | |||
| Published on Saturday, October 25, 2008 | |||
WASHINGTON, USA: The Organization of American States (OAS) and the Association of Caribbean States (ACS) on Friday reaffirmed that they will intensify their cooperation in key areas of mutual interest, notably climate change and disaster mitigation. “We are very much committed to that,” said OAS Assistant Secretary General Albert Ramdin of the latest effort of the Washington-based organization to strengthen its relationship with another sub-regional institution. Ramdin made the comments as he chaired a joint briefing session where ACS Secretary General Luis Fernando Andrade Falla also addressed OAS Member State ambassadors, who in turn engaged the visiting ACS leader in discussions on key issues of interest to the member states of both groupings.
A concrete OAS-ACS collaboration program will be developed, Ramdin said. He reported that technical discussions have already begun between the two secretariats, and that Friday's meeting at OAS headquarters sought to explore, at the political level, mechanisms and areas in which both institutions could pursue meaningful collaboration. He noted that many ACS mandates are very relevant to the OAS Member States themselves and to the OAS as an institution, and hence the importance of the proposed stepped-up cooperation. As well, the Assistant Secretary General stressed the importance of fostering more people-to-people relationships in the region, and he offered that the hemispheric body “can play a role” given its strong relationships with SICA and CARICOM, sub-regions represented in both the OAS and in the ACS. Briefing the OAS diplomats, the ACS Secretary General touched on the centrality of the Caribbean Sea as “what unites us as members of the ACS.” Andrade explained that “sustainable development depends on the viability of the Caribbean Sea, which is also affected by natural disaster and climate change issues. “The very viability of our countries rests on our capacity to mitigate disasters,” he asserted, warning of alarming environmental deterioration that he said is supported by scientific evidence. Andrade further noted his organization’s potential to bring countries together in serving “millions of people whose wellbeing and development depend on the marine ecosystem and tourism that are now at serious risk.” He said Caribbean and Central American countries have felt the hardest impact of natural disasters in recent times, their gross domestic product (GDP) taking a huge loss. “We therefore have something that is of interest to all of us,” the ACS Secretary General told the hemispheric diplomats at the OAS headquarters, stressing the need for closer cooperation between the institutions. | |||
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Canvas Bags in stores already
Look for them:
Reduce. Reuse. Recycle.
- Alafair's Gulf City Mall, La Romaine
- New Grant Medical Centre, New Grant Junction
- LionTech Electrical Supplies, Cocoyea
- Ms. Ellis, Port-of-Spain: send email to thegreenmanifesto@gmail.com
- Pasea Office, 12, Pasea Main Road, Tunapuna
Interested in becoming a Distribution Centre for Canvas bags?
send us an email or call 662-1067
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Canvas Bag Project
A major initiative announced by Dr. Navi Muradali, is the use of canvas bags instead of plastic bags at supermarkets, markets, and stores nationwide.
Dr. Muradali declared “that the members of the green manifesto team would be approaching the supermarket’s association, and other bodies, to request that customers who were interested in using canvas bags to shop could do so, and reduce a potential of 30 million plastic bags annually.”
He contended that “most bags end up in rivers or were burnt causing toxic chemicals to be released into the ground and air.”
Canvas bags, he added, would be sold nationwide to customers who were concerned about the negative effects of plastic bags on our environment.
Go Green!



ph: 868-662-1067
thegreen