SOUTH AMERICA
(Sep/Oct 1999)
Kapawi Lodge, Ecuador
Kapawi Lodge, Ecuador This 20-room enclave on the shores
of eastern Ecuador's remote Pastaza River sets a new
standard for both local involvement and environmental
sensitivity in eco-lodge development. Even before Kapawi's
master plan was drawn up, the indigenous Achuar people
provided vital information on the rivers and existing
trails in this largely unmapped Amazonian region, which
is accessible only by airplane. The Achuar's work was
supplemented by extensive scientific research on local
flora and fauna (including pink dolphins, rare river
otters, and more than 300 bird species). Waterside bungalows
contain private bathrooms with composting toilets, solar-heated
showers, and sun-generated electricity. "It's completely
sustainable," says Megan Epler Wood, the president
of the Vermont-based Ecotourism Society who was so impressed
with Kapawi that she wrote a case study about it. The
current owner of the lodge, Ecuador's Canadros tour
company, will eventually transfer its management to
the Achuar. The tribe already derives nearly half its
annual income from the project, and so is better able
to resist corporate offers to develop oil wells or raise
cattle. Nor is it apt to resort to the slash-and-burn
agriculture that has long blighted the region.
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