Glaciers and Fruit Dying in Peru with no Response from COP20
Glaciers and Fruit Dying in Peru with no Response from COP20
By Milagros Salazar
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Cayetano Huanca, who lives near the Ausangate glacier in the department of Cuzco in Perus Andes mountains. In just
a few years, the snow and ice could be gone, something that has happened on other glaciers in the country.
Credit: Oxfam[/font]
LIMA, Dec 12 2014 (IPS) - Snow-capped mountains may become a thing of the past in Peru, which has 70 percent of the worlds tropical glaciers. And farmers in these ecosystems are having a hard time adapting to the higher temperatures, while the governments of 195 countries are wrapping up the climate change talks in Lima without addressing this situation facing the host country.
Some 100 km from a glacier that refuses to die the Salkantay mountain in the department of Cuzco there is a monument to passion fruit, which hundreds of local farmers depend on for a living, and which they will no longer be able to plant 20 years from now, according to projections.
The monument, which is in the main square in the town of Santa Teresa, near the famous Inca ruins of Machu Picchu, shows a woman picking the fruit and farmers carrying it on their backs, cutting the weeds, and hoeing.
That scene frozen in time reflects real life in Santa Teresa, where passion fruit (Passiflora ligularis) grows between 2,000 and 2,800 metres above sea level. But due to the rising temperatures, farmers will have to move up the slopes. And once they reach 3,000 metres above sea level, they wont be able to plant passion fruit anymore.
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Monument to passion fruit in the town of Santa Teresa a crop that local farmers will no longer be able to grow 20 years
from now because of the rise in temperatures in this mountainous area of Cuzco in Perus Andes.
Credit: Courtesy of Karim Quevedo
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