Environmental protection in Puerto Rico
Environmental protection is a challenging issue for all the countries around the world. Would you say this issue is deemed of significance in Puerto Rico?
Is the country going green through initiatives like waste management and selective sorting programs, renewable energies, public transport, green awareness campaigns and so forth?
How do you personally commit to improve the environment in your daily life?
We would greatly appreciate if you could tell us more about the various local initiatives for sustainable development in Puerto Rico.
Many thanks in advance!
Kenjee
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Can we please get back on topic now. Thanks.
Check out the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) site for Puerto Rico:
There is much info there about specific environment issues and activity to address them.
Check out Fundaci贸n Surfrider Rinc贸n at:
They have been in the vanguard of protecting the beaches and ocean in western Puerto Rico. They are responsible to creating the Tres Palmas Marine Preserve in Rincon:
They are responsible for stopping the insane proposal to build a bike path in Rincon from Domes Beach to the La Cambia restaurant last year - by threatening to bring Rincon to Federal court based defects in their plans. They are on top of any wrong-footed development ideas that will potential destroy the beaches. They take water samples from numerous beaches, analyze them, and post the results so people can see which beaches have high bateria counts. Etc., etc., etc.
There are many environmental issues in PR, including the fact that 90% of septic systems do not meet current standards and requirements. However I think things are better here than in Bejing.
Added as an after thought.
There could be a GLOBAL thread for topics that are GLOBAL, e.g. environmental protection (versus how can i get a Puerto Rico driver's license). A global thread would facilitate the discussion of and sharing information about important topics that are important to the global expat community.
I have removed a few off topic posts from this thread. Let's please concentrate on environmental matters now. We can't say the subject isn't important to everyone.
Thanks
Julien
I think education is what needs to happen here, but getting anyone to listen would be an uphill battle. Just the other day a neighbor kid threw a plastic water bottle over the fence into my yard. I was like, really?
I'm wondering if garbage pickup exists in other communities and if it does is it gratis.
The past couple of years has seen some infrastructure improvements for bike paths around Old San Juan and Condado.聽 There is a dedicated bike path around Paseo Caribe that is exclusive to bikes.聽 It's short, but it's a start.聽 There's a master plan in the works called Paseo de Puerta de Tierra which will ultimately traverse the northern side of Old San Juan.
I have a Brompton folding bike, which is perfect in city environments like the SJ Metro area.聽 It'll be interesting to see the progress of the improvements.


SpecialKev wrote:Trash is the big one for me. It kills me to see the roads and beaches littered with trash, often right next to signs asking not to litter and/or trash cans. Driving to Guajataca forest, you're deep in nature and surrounded by trash for part of the drive. It kills me.
I think education is what needs to happen here, but getting anyone to listen would be an uphill battle. Just the other day a neighbor kid threw a plastic water bottle over the fence into my yard. I was like, really?
I guess the parents don't like you much, in my time my parents would have left me with a sore butt for being disrespectful.
The problem is not education, the problem is not caring and lack of respect for nature and others. They know what they should do but don't care.

I just moved here last October, and among many problems I think is that there are not clear laws, enforcement and punishments for disobeying them.
Let me just give you one example. It is heart breaking to walk on the beach and see so many dangerous sharp pieces of broken bottles in the sand (which I always take and trow it away). People and mainly kids can get seriously hut by it. In Florida, Destin to be specific, there are laws forbidding you to bring glass bottles on the beach. Well my defiant 21 years older decided she could get away with it. She wasn't though the first third of her beer, when a police officer approached her and gave her a long speech about the law, along with a ticket. I don't even want to start on people walking their dogs on the sand and not picking up after them. Every time I see a baby, a child, any person for this matter, sitting on the sand I feel bad.
I think that a gradual increase in public sensitivity to to the environment is inevitable and hopefully we will see an impact of social awareness.
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