Publication: Restoring the Coastal Environment in Cartagena, Colombia

Thumbnail Image
Files in English
English PDF (3.8 MB)
1,337 downloads

English Text (54.63 KB)
155 downloads

English PDF (4.73 MB)
814 downloads

English Text (70.91 KB)
24 downloads
Date
2014
ISSN
Published
2014
Author(s)
World Bank
Abstract
Cartagena, the historic city where the '1983 Cartagena convention for the Protection of the Caribbean' was signed, is meeting its responsibilities to protect the public health of its citizens as well as the costal marine environment through improved wastewater management. Cartagena's experience can serve as an inspiration to the wider Caribbean region and provide a model for other developing coastal cities. Water pollution control is a key issue for the world's coastal cities. Pollution emanating from domestic and industrial wastewater can not only contaminate the ocean environment but also damage highly productive estuaries and bays that provide a critical ecological connection to the marine environment. Inadequate wastewater management can also pollute urban beaches, potentially threatening public health and undermining tourism. This technical note summarizes Cartagena's experience in wastewater management for international dissemination and was jointly prepared by the World Bank, the Colombian Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, the Cartagena water utility (ACUACAR), and the Global Partnership for the Oceans (GPO).
Citation
World Bank. 2014. Restoring the Coastal Environment in Cartagena, Colombia. Latin America and Caribbean Region Environment and Water Resources occasional paper series;. © Washington, DC. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17827 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.
Report Series
Other publications in this report series
Journal
Journal Volume
Journal Issue
Associated URLs
Associated content
Citations