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Costa Rica is asking travelers to offset their carbon footprint

Nov 12, 2020

2 MIN READ

High angle view of crater emitting smoke at sunset

Volcán Poás is an active volcano with a crater lake. Matteo Colombo/Getty Images

Lauren Keith

Writer

Kansas City, MO

I'm a US/UK-based freelance travel writer and guidebook author specializing in off-the-beaten-track and underloved places from the Midwest to the Middle East. For several years, I worked as Lonely Planet’s editor for Middle East and North Africa, and I continue to travel the region widely, from scouting out traces of the Islamic empire on the southernmost tip of Spain to walking alongside nomads in the remote mountains of Iran. Originally from Kansas, I also lived in Germany for a year and …

Costa Rica is encouraging tourists to offset the carbon footprint they generate from flights and overland travel in its bid to promote sustainable tourism and become one of the world’s only carbon-neutral countries.

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The initiative, called the Pura Vida Pledge, seeks a voluntary donation from travelers, and contributions will go towards environmental projects throughout the country, such as planting forests, regenerating natural spaces and implementing agroforestry systems on local farms, which allows trees to grow on the same land as crops.

Catarata Del Toro waterfall on the edge of Juan Castro Blanco National Park, Valverde Vega, in Costa Rica. ©Francesco Riccardo Iacomino/500px
Catarata Del Toro waterfall on the edge of Juan Castro Blanco National Park, Valverde Vega, in Costa Rica. ©Francesco Riccardo Iacomino/500px
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The amount that travellers are requested to offset is determined by using an online calculator created by the National Forestry Financing Fund. Based on visitor data from 2018, it’s estimated that the country would raise more than $3. 5 million for environmental projects, even if only 10% of the emissions were offset.

“This agreement invites our tourists to mitigate their trips and thus contribute to the protection of forests and the recovery of forest cover,” Gustavo Segura, Costa Rica’s minister of tourism, said. “It is a step forward in responsible tourism.”

Costa Rica is seen as a world leader in the environmental movement, and it was awarded the Champion of the Earth by the United Nations Environmental Programme in 2019, the UN’s highest environmental honor. The country’s ambition is to become carbon neutral by 2050, and it’s well on the way: national parks make up about 25% of Costa Rica’s landscape, nearly 30% of the country’s energy sources are renewable and about 50% of the land is forested.

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Costa Rica wants to preserve its biodiversity ©Andy Boyce/500px
Costa Rica wants to preserve its biodiversity ©Andy Boyce/500px

From late October, visitors to Costa Rica no longer have to present a negative COVID-19 test result to enter the country, which had previously been required of travelers since it began to gradually open its borders in August. As of November 1, all international travelers are now allowed to visit Costa Rica.

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