C O N S E R VAT I O N
The city of Niteroi has an ambitious plan to protect most of the forested mountain tops and steep slopes within the city boundaries as parks and conservation areas.
Brazil’s Park Challenge NRPA’s VP of conservation and parks shares insight gathered on park issues experienced in other countries during a recent trip to Brazil By Richard J. Dolesh
T
he eyes of the world are suddenly on Brazil. With the World Cup tournament coming to Brazil in 2014, followed by the Summer Olympics in 2016, there is intense interest from around the globe in this mysterious, alluring country best known for samba and soccer. Everyone has heard about Brazil’s amazing natural resources, natural beauty and wildlife. The world’s largest river by volume — the Amazon — flows through the northern heart of the country. One of the world’s largest wetlands, the Pantanal, spreads across tens of thousands of square miles in the southern interior of Brazil. The coastal cities of Rio de Janeiro, Recife and Salvador are noted for their incredibly beautiful beaches and laidback lifestyles. Naturally and culturally rich, Brazil continues to intrigue. Newly discovered energy reserves and creative uses of sustainable energy sources such as sugarcane have made Brazil completely energy self-sufficient, a feat achieved by very few nations in the world. Brazil’s democracy, emerged from a mili-
36
Parks & Recreation
tary dictatorship, is praised throughout South America. Yet the media is also filled with reports of civil unrest and protest in crowded metropolitan areas, and poverty is endemic in cities with huge shanty-towns or favelas that pose enormous social, economic and environmental challenges.
| F E B R UA R Y 2 0 1 4 | W W W. N R PA . O R G
So what is the state of parks in this up-and-coming nation? It’s a fitting question as the world’s attention turns to Brazil. The answer, as you might expect from this very unusual country, is a bit more complex than first meets the eye. Early in my parks career when I was managing the Patuxent River Park of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, I welcomed several Brazilians from Rio de Janeiro who came to the park for a tour. They were hosted by the University of Maryland’s Office of International Programs, which assisted visitors from Brazilian universities through an international cooperation group called the Partners of the