Over US$35 million invested
Ottawa, Canada, Oct. 30, 2009 -- A complaint filed by the Canadian owner
of Graeme Hall Nature Sanctuary, an eco-tourist facility in Barbados, alleges
that the Government of Barbados has violated its international obligations by
refusing to enforce its environmental laws, thereby allowing increased
pollution and land development to damage the Sanctuary.
Notice of the dispute was given to Barbados in accordance with the Agreement
For The Promotion and Reciprocal Protection of Investments between Canada and
Barbados.
The complaint alleges that Barbados has consistently refused to enforce its
domestic environmental laws and to abide by its international obligations
under the Convention on Wetlands and Convention on Biological Diversity. This
has led to a radical escalation of polluted runoff into the Graeme Hall
wetland that serves as a Caribbean flyway stop for migratory birds between
North and South America.
The Sanctuary is located entirely within the wetland,
is home to some of the heaviest concentrations of biodiversity on the island,
and has been a major environmental education center for children, adults and
visitors.
Increasing fish and crab kills have been observed in recent years in the
wetland along with unpredictable water levels and toxic algae blooms allegedly
caused by years of government-run sluice gate and pollution mismanagement,
dumping of raw sewage by the South Coast Sewage Treatment Plant, and other
factors.
According to Peter Allard, chairman and shareholder of the Graeme Hall Nature
Sanctuary, over $35 million (US) has been invested in the 35-acre Sanctuary to
preserve the last significant mangrove woodland and wetland on the island. The
Sanctuary is within the last 240-acre green space on the island's South Coast
between the Airport and the capital of Bridgetown, and is also part of the
Ramsar wetland recognized by the Convention on Wetlands of International
Importance.
In 2008 Barbados formally reversed the original protective land use policies
embodied in the 1988 National Physical Development Plan that showed
environmental buffers and low-impact recreational lands around the Sanctuary
investment and the wetland.
New zoning for the area calls for commercial and residential development for
the majority of the 240-acre green space at Graeme Hall, despite a 6,000
signature petition by citizens of Barbados to create a national park.
A copy of the complaint can be viewed at:
www.graemehall.com/legal/papers/BIT-Complaint.pdf
Bridgetown, Barbados
Complaint copy: www.graemehall.com/legal/papers/BIT-Complaint.pdf
Archives and Art: www.graemehall.com/reference.htm
www.graemehall.com/press
Additional Information: www.graemehallnationalpark.org
SOURCE Graeme Hall Nature Sanctuary, Inc.
Stuart Heaslet, ghns@heaslet.co