
"The struggle for the environment is the struggle for our own survival; we cannot afford not to get involved."
Ricardo Navarro
El Salvador
Sustainable Development
Ricardo Navarro founded the Salvadoran Center for Appropriate Technology (CESTA) to address his country's critical environmental and social needs. El Salvador's protracted civil war hurt the environment to such an extent that it is now the most degraded country in the Western Hemisphere after Haiti.
As president of CESTA - El Salvador's largest environmental NGO - Navarro, an engineer by training, has worked in partnership with urban and rural communities to provide technical assistance for an array of appropriate technologies.
One of CESTA's programs trains people to build and repair bicycles, "bici-carts" and wheelchairs. Besides generating skilled labor and jobs, the "Ecobici" project raises consciousness about the environmental benefits of cycling. CESTA's community projects construct dry composting latrines to stop contamination of precious water supplies, promote organic agriculture to cut down on the need for costly chemicals and encourage the use of efficient stoves to lessen dependence on scarce fuel wood. A third branch of CESTA scrutinizes legislation for its environmental implications.
In Guazapa, a region that was bombed heavily with napalm, CESTA is working with young people to create a living monument to peace. The goal is to rejuvenate the barren environment by planting a tree for every person who died during the war. Over 65,000 fruit bearing and medicinal trees have been planted in this "Forest of Reconciliation."
Navarro has been outspoken on a number of national issues including waste trafficking. On national television in 1993, he successfully condemned a proposal to transfer old tires from New Orleans to El Salvador where they were to be burned. Navarro has been leading an initiative to save El Espino, one of the few forested areas left near the capital, San Salvador, and an important source of the city's water. He has asked the legislative assembly to declare the forest, which local politicians want to turn into a housing development, a protected zone. Development in El Espino forest has been put on hold. Navarro has received numerous death threats because of his work.
Visit CESTA's website
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