MEXICO CITY (AP) — Environmentalists say the only
living hard coral reef in the Gulf of California is once again under threat,
just two years after activists persuaded the government to block construction
of a huge 30,000-room resort nearby.
Once an over fished area, marine life around the Cabo
Pulmo reef just outside Los Cabos exploded following a decision nearly two
decades ago by local residents to stop commercial fishing and instead develop
ecotourism activities on the Baja California peninsula.
But environmentalists are alarmed by renewed plans
for a 22,000-room resort, this time led by Chinese investors. Jeering and
arguments erupted at a public comment session this week on the proposal, which
is at the earliest stage in the approval process.
The developers, in one of their few public
statements about the Cabo Dorado resort, say they have eliminated about
one-third of the hotel and condo rooms proposed in the earlier project, and
abandoned plans for a marina and a desalinization plant that caused
controversy. They offer to treat and re-use water from existing aquifers.
But opponents say there isn't enough fresh water
available on the bone-dry peninsula to support even the reduced plan, and that
the project gives little consideration to how the reef could be affected by
resort wastes and runoff from golf courses.
Critics of Cabo Dorado say just as worrisome is what
they don't know about their deep-pocketed opponents: Chinese companies whose
relationship with that country's government is unclear.
China's Foreign Ministry did not respond to an email
requesting comment on whether the firms active in Mexico are Chinese state
enterprises and the company's websites or statements are unclear.
An ad placed in Mexican newspapers by one investor,
Beijing Sansong International Trade Group, suggests the project is backed by
the Chinese government, and says it has $3.6 billion to spend on the proposed
resort.
"In accordance with the agreements signed in
recent months between Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and the President of
the People's Republic of China, Xi Jinping ... we announce that the La Rivera
Desarollos BCS company, in which we are investors, will carry out a new project
on the Cabo del Este," it said.
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