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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Unesco. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Unesco. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 17 de octubre de 2014

Sewell, an abandonend mining in The Andes, it is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Located on the slopes of the Andes in the commune of Machalí in Chile, at an altitude of 2,000 metres, lies the abandoned mining town of Sewell built by the Braden Copper company in 1905 to house workers of the world’s largest underground copper mine, El Teniente. It was the first copper company town in Chile, the largest producer of this metal in the world, and an outstanding example of the global phenomenon where company towns were established in remote parts of the world to extract and process natural resources. Sewell Mining Town is particularly notable for its contribution to the global spread of large-scale mining technology.
The town was built on the slope of the Andes with no flat roads, just a giant central staircase rising from the railway station. Along its route formal squares of irregular shape with ornamental trees and plants constituted the main public spaces or squares of the town. The buildings lining the streets are made of timber, often painted in vivid green, yellow, red and blue.



At its inception, Swell was nothing more than a small camp in the area closest to the mine with a hydroelectric plant, and lifts to transport copper and iron. From 1915, when the town was named Sewell in honor of Barton Sewell, partner of Braden, that it began to grow in infrastructure and architecture, taking on the characteristics of a city. This was further strengthened with the construction of a railroad that linked the mine to Rancagua, just in time to meet the increased demand for copper because of the First World War.


Soon, more than a hundred multi-coloured buildings arose that housed the miners. Hospitals, church, technical schools, social clubs, theatres, a bowling alley and a heated pool also went up. At its peak, Swell had 15,000 inhabitants. The narrow-gauge railroad brought all necessary supplies to the town, while the ore went out in huge buckets over a tramway system that snaked down the hill to the smelter in Caletones.

By the end of the 1960s, the copper industry was nationalized and became the property of the State. At this time, most people were moved out of the town to Rancagua in order to provide better facilities. The town was abandoned as a mining settlement in 1980, remaining in partial use as a dormitory for contractors' personnel, and this led to the modification of some of the buildings and further demolition of others. Demolition was finally halted at the end of the 1980s and in 1998 the town was declared a national monument. In 2006, it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The mine however still functions and El Teniente now produces 3% of the worlds' copper.

viernes, 11 de abril de 2014

Is your biosphere reserve using or considering to use renewable energy? Share your experience with us!

The United Nations launched yesterday the Decade of Sustainable Energy for All (2014-2024) to promote sustainable energy for all.  Is your biosphere reserve using or considering to use renewable energy? Share your experience with us!




Check the Renforus Initiative on Renewable Energy Futures for UNESCO Sites http://www.renforus.net/

viernes, 20 de septiembre de 2013

BiosphereSmart has been updated to HTML5

Continuing our commitment with the innovation and continuous improvement, BiosphereSmart viewer has been updated to HTML5 technology. The main advantages are focused on not depend on the installation of plugins for the viewfinder display, and the support for mobile devices (smartphones and tablets)

The change in technology has also accompanied by an improvement in usability and navigability: intuitive access to the most common options, adaptation to levels experienced user or a beginner ... the goal: to improve the user experience.
New HTML5 Viewer.
In the coming days we will increase the functionalities and  we will make the finishing touches on the viewer, you can send your feedback, comments ... through this blog. 

Access to the new Viewer  http://biospheresmart.org/

viernes, 19 de julio de 2013

Urmia Biosphere Reserve: Largest Lake in Middle East May Dry Up

Urmia, the Middle East’s largest lake, is in danger of drying up as Iran’s Energy Ministry and local officials failed to ensure critical water transfers, Aftab News said, citing a lawmaker.

Lake Urmia Satellite image

The energy ministry is not standing by its commitment regarding Urmia Lake, Nader Ghazipour, who represents the city of the same name in the Iranian parliament, was quoted as saying on Aftab’s website. No funds have been allocated for the lake and “efforts to remedy its critical condition are leading nowhere,” he said.
Stranded ship evidencing recent desiccation of
Lake Urmia. Source: Harrijet News
Urmia in northwestern Iran, one of the largest hyper-saline lakes in the world, is a UNESCO biosphere reserve, according to a United Nations report. The lake’s surface area has declined since the mid-1990s due to drought, increased water diversion for agriculture and mismanagement, it said.

Urmia lake is now only a third full of water, Ghazipour said. Thousands of protesters took to the streets in Tabriz and Urmia in 2011, critcizing authorities for mininal actions to save the lake, the UN said. A plan to transfer water from nearby Aras River wasnt´t followed through on,  Ghazipour said.


Source: Bloomberg Businesswek

Learn more about Urmia and another Biosphere Reserves in  http://biospheresmart.org/

miércoles, 10 de julio de 2013

BiosphereSmart: New layer with information about Geoparks

We have added a new layer with information about Geoparks. You can check it in http://biospheresmart.org/ 

Geopark is a unified area with geological heritage of international significance. Geoparks use that heritage to promote awareness of key issues facing society in the context of the dynamic planet we all live on. Many Geoparks promote awareness of geological hazards, including volcanoes, earthquakes and tsunamis and many help prepare disaster mitigation strategies among local communities. Geoparks hold records of past climate change and are educators on current climate change as well as adopting a best practise approach to utilising renewable energy and employing the best standards of “green tourism.”Tourism industry promotion in Geopark, as a geographically sustainable and applicable tourism model, aims to sustains, or even enhances, the geographical character of a place.
New layer with information about geoparks

The Global Geoparks idea is being adopted by increasing numbers of Member States. The Geoparks are becoming very popular due to their combination of conservation, sustainable development and community involvement. UNESCO started to be active in this area in 1999 when Geoparks were proposed as a UNESCO programme. However, in 2001, at the 161st session of UNESCO's Executive Board, the majority of Delegates decided 'not to pursue the development of a UNESCO geoparks programme, but instead to support ad hoc efforts within individual Member States as appropriate'.

If you are a geopark, please contact with us in info@interra.es to add your geopark to the platform.

viernes, 14 de junio de 2013

Unesco’s World Heritage Committee Considers 34 New Sites For Its Growing List

Next week, members of the prestigious World Heritage Committee will gather in Cambodia to consider 34 new sites for inclusion on Unesco’s World Heritage List. The occasion marks the 35th year the Committee will meet to add man-made and natural wonders considered to be of “outstanding universal value,” a quality that is said to transcends borders, politics and economics.

Mount Etna
The idea to create an international movement to protect the world's cultural and natural wonders emerged after World War I and was further inspired by the rescue of the 13th-century B.C. Egyptian temples of Abu Simbel in 1954. After Cairo announced plans to build a dam that would flood them, Unesco launched a campaign to relocate the temples, brick by brick.

his year, the Committee will meet in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap (Angkor Wat) between June 16 and June 27 to examine recommendations from the International Council of Monuments and Sites, or Icomos, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature, or IUCN, to select new additions to the World Heritage List. Up for consideration are nine natural properties, 21 cultural sites and four mixed (nature and culture).
Xinjiang Tianshan National Park
Highlights include Mount Etna in Italy, India’s Great Himalayan National Park and the historic city of Alanya, Turkey. Five of the sites up for consideration -- Hill Forts of Rajasthan in India, Al Zubarah Archaeological Site of Qatar, Historic Monuments and Sites in Kaesong of DPRK, Bolgar Historical and Archaeological Complex of Russia and Tajik National Park of Tajikistan -- will be given a second chance after having failed for a variety of reasons the first time around.

viernes, 22 de marzo de 2013

22 de marzo: día mundial del agua.

Hoy es el día mundial del agua para la UNESCO; la edición de 2013 está dedicada a la temática de cooperación en materia de agua ¿el objetivo? recordarnos que el agua es un bien escaso al que más de 800 millones de personas no tienen acceso y esto condiciona su desarrollo económico y social.

Logo UNESCO año internacional del agua

Y es que mientras que en el primer mundo el agua potable que no valoramos e incluso derrochamos (una familia puede gastar más de 1000 litros de agua en un solo día) en el tercer mundo es un bien preciado y en muchas ocasiones una sola persona emplea diariamente la cantidad que nosotros usamos para lavarnos los dientes: 2 litros de agua.

Consumo por países (Persona/Semana)
Algunos datos para reflexionar:
  • 50% – Proporción de la población del mundo en desarrollo que carece de acceso a instalaciones básicas de saneamiento – un total de 2,600 millones de personas.
  • 1.100 millones- El número de personas en todo el mundo que carece de acceso a fuentes mejoradas de agua.
  • 4.000 - El número de menores de cinco años que mueren todos los días solamente a causa de las enfermedades diarreicas.
  • 4 veces - La quinta parte más rica de la población en los países en desarrollo tiene cuatro veces más posibilidades de utilizar instalaciones mejoradas de saneamiento que la quinta parte más pobre de la población (y el doble de posibilidades de utilizar fuentes de agua mejoradas).
  • 44% – Porcentaje de mujeres en las zonas rurales de África que emplean 30 minutos o más para recolectar un solo cubo de agua con el fin de satisfacer las necesidades de sus familias.
  • 400 millones – El número de escolares que sufren una disminución de su capacidad de aprendizaje debido a infecciones de parásitos intestinales.
  • Cientos de millones – El número de personas con fuentes de agua para beber contaminadas debido a contaminantes microbiológicos o químicos.



viernes, 7 de septiembre de 2012

Exposición Itinerante Red Española de Reservas de la Biosfera


¿Qué son las reservas de la biosfera? ¿Quiénes gestionan estos espacios?  ¿Tienen todas las reservas las mismas características? Todos estos interrogantes se resuelven en la exposición itinerante Red reservas de la Biosfera, que desde comienzos de 2011 lleva recorriendo las localidades que acogen las reservas de nuestro país.

El objetivo es ofrecer al visitante una visión global pero exacta de lo que es una Reserva de la Biosfera. Para ello, a través de una serie de paneles dobles y otros materiales el visitante puede aprender cómo se gestionan, donde están situadas, similitudes entre ellas... y hacerse una idea de estos lugares donde la naturaleza y la sociedad van de la mano.
Ejemplo panel informativo relativo a reservas de alta montaña.

La exposición se enmarca en el 40 aniversario de la creación del Programa Mab de la Unesco, cuyo objetivo es conservar especies y ecosistemas a través de la convivencia respetuosa entre el ser humano y su medio, diferenciándose de otras figuras de protección. Una idea ya aceptada actualmente, pero que en 1971 supuso una innovación en la concepción de la relación entre la sociedad y la naturaleza y que sentó las bases de lo que actualmente se denomina desarrollo sostenible.

Este tipo de actividades (exposiciones, visitas guiadas…) se convierten en la mejor herramienta para difundir, especialmente entre el público infantil y juvenil, que son las Reservas de la Biosfera, la sosteniblidad…  La exposición está a disposición de cualquier asociación gestora de las reservas de la Biosfera, en esta URL se recoge el proceso de solicitud al igual que todo el material que se muestra en la exposición (paneles, trípticos…).