GRID product detail

Port-au-Prince: urbanisation, deforestation and water shortage


TypePoster

Duration: May 2005 - on-going

Port-au-Prince, capital of Haiti and the country's chief seaport, is located on a bay of the Gulf of Gonaïves. It was founded in 1749 by French sugar planters. The city is laid out like an amphitheatre: within a short distance of the port, the topography climbs rapidly toward a mountain range with peaks in the 2,000-2,500 meter range. Extensive and densely developed urban environments have been carved into the hillsides. The urban growth of Port-au-Prince has led to the proliferation of shantytowns and deterioration of people's living conditions.

Data credit(s): Saman Salari Sharif (UNEP/DEWA/GRID-Geneva)

GRID unit: Global and regonal reporting (GEO)

UNEP region: North America

UNEP priorities:  Ecosystems Management, Resource Efficiency

 
english version (2005, Size:0.43Mb)
 english version (2005, Size:0.43Mb)