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The News
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Dairy Funds Internal University |
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Written by Rod Hughes
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Monday, 09 August 2010 23:16 |
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The Costa Rica dairy giant, Dos Pinos, is a corporation that believes in internal education to better its operation and promote employees from within. It has established a "corporate university" using the Internet institution, Learn.com.
Conserving its talent within the company by developing it seems to have worked well for the cooperative. Its dairy products are not only number one is local sales but are exported throughout Central America. The company currently has only one creditable competitor for the national market.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 12 August 2010 21:53 |
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Osa Peninsula: Raped Paradise? |
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Written by Rod Hughes
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Thursday, 05 August 2010 22:20 |
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Osa Peninsula on Costa Rica's southern Pacific shore has long been recognized as a treasure trove of exotic, rare wildlife. But a recent report by Costa Rica's Environmental Tribunal says that illegal tourism construction, invasion of protected public land, illegal logging and runaway residential development is causing severe damage.
The good news is that the Tribunal has been inspecting the area frequently since 2008. For decades, the national and municipal governments have turned a blind eye to rampant illegal logging, not even spurred to action by press reports in papers such as La Nación and The Tico Times, plus exposés by national TV journalists.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 12 August 2010 21:52 |
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Parks, Reserves Earn $1.5 billion |
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Written by Rod Hughes
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Thursday, 05 August 2010 21:36 |
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A National University-based Center for Economic Policy for Sustainable Development study says that in 2009, national parks and biological reserves earned $1.5 billion for the country's economy, thanks to ecologically-minded tourists eager to see this country's abundant flora and fauna.
The study refutes critics who think that eco-tourism benefits only foreigners and overseas travel agencies. Researchers estimated that 70% of that revenue landed in the hands of local tourism business such as restaurants, hotels, transport firms and travel agencies. It exonerates the government's longtime setting aside of land for nature preserves and investment for park improvement over many decades since the administration of Daniel Oduber.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 12 August 2010 21:51 |
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Written by Rod Hughes
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Thursday, 05 August 2010 08:59 |
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The Supreme Court's Constitutional Chamber (Sala IV) has given the country's former telecommunication monopoly, ICE, 90 days to loosen its strangle hold on the cell phone market. This sector of communications has been (theoretically) open to competition since January, 2009, when the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) took effect.
But ICE, a national autonomous company, has been dragging its feet since then until both the government and, now, the court lost patience. ICE has not only delayed opening its cell phone market to other cell phone providers but the Internet information highway as well.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 05 August 2010 21:07 |
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President Pushes Aerospace Plan |
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Written by Adam Williams - Tico Times
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Tuesday, 03 August 2010 20:53 |
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By Adam Williams | Tico Times Staff
What the city of Houston, Texas is to space travel in the United States, the city of Liberia may soon be to Costa Rica.
Last month, President Laura Chinchilla announced that Liberia, located in the northwestern province of Guanacaste, will be the location for an initiative entitled "National Aerospace Development and Integration for the Central American Region in the Generation of New Technologies". The presentation also included the unveiling of the Central American Aerospace Industry Chamber (CACIA), which will consist of numerous aerospace experts and companies in Central America. Chinchilla had mentioned further development of the national aerospace program as one of her priorities since her inauguration in May.
Liberia was selected as the site for the program's launch because of its proximity to the headquarters of the Ad Astra Rocket Company, which was formed in 2005 by Costa Rican astronaut and rocket scientist Franklin Chang. Chang, a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), spent many years working as a scientist and astronaut with the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Ad Astra is based in Houston, Texas.
The Costa Rican branch of the company, located 10 kilometers west of Liberia on the campus of EARTH University, focuses its research on the creation of the plasma rocket, known as the Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR). Ad Astra in Costa Rica hopes to test one of their first plasma rockets in space by 2014.
"We want recognition for Costa Rica, so the country can enter this special industry," Chinchilla said in May. "We hope that Costa Rica will be the first Latin American country (to enter the space industry)." (TT, May 14)
Of the various experts in attendance, several spoke on their ideas for the development of Central American aerospace, their plans to finance the projects, and explanations of how they will advance the use of plasma energy. According to Costa Rica's foreign minister, René Castro, over 80 Central American companies have expressed interest in participating in the development of CACIA and the aerospace program.
- reprinted by permission from The Tico Times -- http://www.ticotimes.net
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 04 August 2010 17:38 |
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