The Mooresville Tribune

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Two NC sites among top 10 on endangered list

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Published: January 5, 2009

Two North Carolina sites are among 10 in the South that the Southern Environmental Law Center regards as most endangered.

The list released Monday is the first by the SELC, but deputy director Jeff Gleason said the center plans to take an annual accounting of places it deems at risk in its six-state region.

"We increasingly see a number of special areas in our region that are at risk," he said, adding, "People are not aware of what's at stake."

Included is the Globe Forest area near Blowing Rock, where the U.S. Forest Service plans to log more than 210 acres of forestland. According to SELC, the forest includes trees more than 300 years old, and threatens to destroy scenic views.

The Pamlico River in eastern North Carolina was also among the top 10 most endangered places.

"It will be the single largest destruction of wetlands in North Carolina's history — should a phosphate mining company get permission to expand its operations on the banks of the Pamlico River," according to the SELC Web site.

Gleason said the South is a testing ground for the nation's most compelling environmental issues, including global warming, energy, land conservation, drought and biological diversity.

If the South were a country its carbon dioxide output would rank seventh in the world, he said. Its emissions are exceeded only by the U.S., China, Russia, Japan, India and Germany.

The most pressing threats in the region, Gleason said, come from proposals for development in the Georgia Salt Marshes, timber cutting in the old-growth Globe Forest in North Carolina and construction of a coal-fired power plant on the Great Pee Dee River in South Carolina.

Other endangered areas, according to the SELC, are Johns Island in South Carolina, Weeks Bay in Alabama and the Cherokee National Forest in northeast Tennessee.

Decisions affecting the sites in the next 12 months will be critical, he said.

"Our region will either protect — or lose — areas of our native forest, coastline and rural countryside," Gleason said.

On the Web:
www.southernenvironment.org/about/top_10_2009

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