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Diana de La Vega

Positive Shifts During the Pandemic: Humanitarian Aid and Environmental Change in Punta Arena

Updated: Sep 25, 2020

By Diana de la Vega – Director Fundación Bahía




Punta Arena is a potential paradise beach town 6 minutes from Cartagena on the island of Tierra Bomba. With the only white beaches within the bay of Cartagena, the town of roughly 1,000 to 1,200 inhabitants has been hit hard economically during the pandemic. What historically used to be a town of fishermen has morphed into a tourist haven, its beachfront dotted with restaurants and swanky hotels. People in Punta Arena, as in the other 3 towns of the island, relied heavily on tourism for their means of subsistence. Before Covid-19 nearly 76% of island dwellers already suffered from poverty and hunger, and 95% of them depended on fishing and tourism for their livelihoods. Not to mention the island´s lack of running water, sewage or health systems due to longstanding neglect from local and national governments.


In order to help combat hunger and enable island dwellers to remain safely at home during the lockdown, which started in March 2020, the Fundación Bahía reached more than 5,750 homes in the islands of Tierra Bomba, Isla Fuerte and San Bernardo with 4,250 kilos of fish, 1,500 basic food provisions, Covid-19 prevention instructions and more than 1,000 face masks donated, thanks to the generosity of our supporters. In July, we revised our humanitarian aid approach and decided to combine it with volunteer work, bringing environmental purpose and sense of self-worth to beneficiaries in the communities of Tierra Bomba, as well as preparing them for when tourism reopens.


We have successfully implemented an innovative approach to humanitarian aid delivery by combining it with environmental actions at the core of our mission. Thanks to a powerful alliance with SOS Cartagena, which in turn supports restaurants and staff from losing jobs, we are able to provide food for these vulnerable communities. Solidarity and circular economy paired with environmental action. SOS Cartagena delivers 250 lunch boxes daily which feed families in our volunteer program, who in turn benefit the environment and their entire community by cleaning up.


A clean and thriving environment means better health for all. If the pandemic has shown us anything, it is the inherent and unavoidable link between the environment and human health. In Punta Arena, working with local recyclers, young environmental guards and displaced Venezuelans, we jointly constructed an environmental action plan to help: recover and protect the vital mangrove ecosystem of the Ciénaga la Salina; reinforce environmental education and awareness through improved separation at the source and recycling practices; and, clean-up of informal dump sites, streets, trails, fronts, backyards and lots.



After only a month of the project implementation in Punta Arena the following has been accomplished:

  • 99 well-nourished families thanks to the SOS Cartagena lunch boxes, coming together in a motivated and novel environmental volunteer program

  • 3 informal dump sites around Ciénaga la Salina cleared

  • 12.8 tons of solid residue removed from the community and the island, which included:

    • 1.6 tons of recycled material from which local recyclers profited

    • 5 tons of glass residue removed with the help of Veolia given to CORECA recyclers

  • Increased environmental and community awareness

  • Recovering ecosystems, cleaner streets, beachfront and town with help from the entire community

  • Empowered recyclers and guard youths whose efforts are appreciated by all

  • Education by example with clean-up efforts and an artistic fish sculpture donated by Fundación Bahía to encourage recycling in children

  • Overall improved community well-being and health.


In view of the changes in Punta Arena, the community of Caño del Oro in Tierra Bomba asked for our support. We began the environmental volunteer program there on August 21st, with the aid of SOS Cartagena and another daily 250 well-prepared, balanced lunch rations to benefit vulnerable families. Apart from supporting continuous cleaning and educational efforts in both communities, we are simultaneously preparing to build and paint signs made from recycled materials for marking recovered dump spots and to encourage inhabitants to protect their environment and biodiversity. We want to support urban agriculture – productive patio efforts on the island to improve food security and sustainability, as well as compost production for improving soils and reducing waste output. This model and approach empower not only members of the volunteer programs but the entire community, setting forth peer to peer controls for the sustainability of the actions and positive results in time. “Now that we have all put forth the effort to clean up our community, there is no way we will allow any more garbage to pollute our town!” says Ms. Coneo, community leader in Punta Arena.


There is still a long way to go! We definitely need your support to pursue our social and environmental work so please contribute to our cause and help us continue to supply vital technical assistance, clean up implements and educational workshops to these island communities. When possible, please visit and enjoy Punta Arena´s beaches, mangroves, bird watching tours led by local environmental guards and follow the trail of the biggest clean-up during the pandemic!


Follow us on Instagram: @fundacion_bahia

Facebook: @fundacionbahiadecartagena Visit www.fundacionbahia.org





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