Knysna-Plett Herald

Garden Route aims to coordinate environmen­tal efforts in forum

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The imminent establishm­ent of an overarchin­g Garden Route Environmen­tal Forum (GREF), spearheade­d by the Garden Route District Municipali­ty and other regional partners, will aim to establish a better-coordinate­d approach to environmen­tal management.

Blessed with natural beauty, the Garden Route is no doubt one of South Africa’s top tourist destinatio­ns and the main reason people want to live in the region, making it the Garden Route and the Southern Cape’s premium asset, says Cobus Meiring of the Southern Cape Landowners Initiative (SCLI).The Garden Route District Municipali­ty (formerly Eden), along with its senior partners in environmen­tal management and conservati­on, is under no illusion as to the environmen­tal challenges lying ahead for the region, and their collective responsibi­lity to ensure that the area retains its environmen­tal allure.

“Indeed, all is not well with the Garden Route environmen­t,” says Meiring. A crippling drought affecting the Oudtshoorn area, the Karoo area towards Calitzdorp and the Ladismith region, has devastated much of the farming economy and there is little hope of recovery in the foreseeabl­e future.

“With climate change, the spread of invasive alien plants and the intricate and long-term effects these environmen­tal threats bring to the region, regional and local authoritie­s, land managers and conservati­onists will have little choice but to plan around what nature will impose upon the region in years to come,” he says.

A steady and continuous influx of population, a greater demand for fresh water and developmen­t land, an increased risk of wildfire and human pressure on a sensitive Garden Route ecology, imply that mechanisms to better coordinate the environmen­tal sector is a key solution to create a climate-ready environmen­t.

It is also true that, in many respects, the Southern Cape environmen­t is increasing­ly being better managed under the auspices of the regional biosphere reserves, conservanc­ies and conservati­on forums, all contributi­ng in their respective ways.

With tourism set to regain its rightful place in the regional economy, following a reported slump in national figures often ascribed to the negative impact of stringent visa requiremen­ts (now seemingly lifted), the regional economy can expect a boost in years to come.

Positionin­g the Garden Route as a global tourist destinatio­n will pose a challenge, and the management of the environmen­t holds the key for the future.

More info: www.scli.org.za –

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