Piamonte
Piamonte is a town and municipality in the Cauca Department, Colombia. Piamonte was founded in 1959 as a district of the municipality of Santa Rosa. Its inhabitants are settlers from various regions of the interior of Colombia that have been established there in successive migrations attracted initially by the quinine bonanza in the 1930s, displaced by the violence in the 1950s and 1960s and finally attracted by the oil fever. There are also members of the Inga indigenous community. Piamonte was declared as municipality in 1996. The municipality of Piamonte borders to the north with the Huila Department and the municipality of Santa Rosa in the Cauca Department; to the East with the Caquetá Department with the municipalities of Belén de los Andaquíes and San José del Fragua, to the West with the municipality of Santa Rosa and the Río Caquetá and towards the south with the Putumayo department. HistoryThe town of Piamonte was established 1959 by a group of settlers led by Aristides Perez in a site known at the time as La Barbasca. In the year 1966, some leaders of the area, including Bosco Arcos, José Antonio Hurtado, Gustavo Pérez and Arístides Pérez among others, proposed the separation of the Piamonte from the municipality of Santa Rosa; this proposal materialized years later as result of the incursion of several petroleum companies in the regions in the early 1990s. Piamonte was recognized as a municipality under ordinance 024 of November 18, 1996.
GeographyIn geographical terms, the municipality of Piamonte located in an area known as the Baja Bota Caucana, due to the characteristic shape of its map, is located in the Southwest of the Department of Cauca , which is in an region of transition between the Pacific coast, the Andes and the Amazon rainforest. Part of its potential comes from its location since it is a strategic transit area and border between four departments that are located in the Colombian Massif region -an important water source-, biologically it becomes the merging point between the Central Cordillera, the Eastern Cordillera, the Amazon, the Magdalena Valley and the Eastern Slope of the Andes, becoming a jungle corridor natural. In the South American context, it has to be highlighted this region of the Amazon is located at a distance of 335 km from the Pacific Ocean, which makes it the shortest stretch of land between the Pacific ocean and the Amazon in all of South America. Piamonte is part of the Amazon basin characterized by its high biodiversity, water resources, oil and ancestral culture [5] EconomyPiamonte has an economy based on the extraction of natural resources cinchona, rubber, wood, oil and coca, and specialized in agricultural activities for subsistence, with traditional crops such as banana, cassava, corn, chontaduro. Amazonian fruit trees stand out such as arazá, borojó and caimarón grape. The economic impacts have to do with its character as a development hub, since among its goals is enabling regional coordination and the transit of goods. Piamonte as an Amazon region that contains oil deposit under its subsoil covers southern Colombia, part of Ecuador and Peru, which is currently being exploited by Oil Companies. In Piamonte, the multinational Argosy Energy International, a subsidiary of Canadian Gran Tierra Energy, has explored and exploited 5 wells: Mary 1, Mary 2, Mary3, Mary 5 and Miralor 1 from 1993 to 2008. The current oil exploitation activities are being carried out by Gran Tierra Energy Inc. Oil production in 2002 was 2290 barrels/day; the oil reserves discovered to be exploited: approximately three million barrels.[5] Large private companies are the main generators of employment are the Gran Tierra Company with facilities in the village of La Honda, Rosario, El Morro, Florida West; the Betra Company with facilities in the Piamonte, Petronova in vereda La Samaritana and Oilgrass with explorations around Piamonte. [4] According to the Territorial Planning Scheme, the municipality of Piamonte is responsible by law (141 of 1994, article 31) for 12.5% of the 20% of the total royalties, which must be allocated according to article 15, 100% social investment, in priority projects contemplated in the general development plan of the Municipality. At least 80% of the income received must be invested until minimum coverage is reached in the basic social programs of electricity and environmental sanitation. Despite the law, a large percentage of the region lacks these services; only the population centers of Piamonte and Miraflor have very recent electrical interconnection. Having these riches has not translated into better living conditions for the residents, nor are they expressed in social or economic investment by the State; a great contradiction typical of the dynamics of capitalism that privileges some regions at the expense of the misery and exploitation [5] Piamonte is recognized as a place of transit due to the constant population mobility from neighboring departments such as Putumayo, Caquetá and Huila, due to forced displacement, the search for wealth or the arrival of people in search of productive lands, which is why it can be denominated as a multicultural municipality given its social composition. It is commercially linked with neighboring towns in the departments of Caquetá and Putumayo such as: Curillo, San José del Fragua, and Belén de los Andaquíes in the first case and Villagarzón and Mocoa in the second.[4] CommunicationsThe Carretera Marginal de La Selva (Peripheral Road of the Jungle), which crosses the municipality of Piamonte, is part of a series of megaprojects aimed at connecting all of South America with road infrastructure (IIRSA) from Piamonte, to Villagarzón and Puerto Asís towards Ecuador , and from Villagarzón towards Pasto and Tumaco. [5] DemographicsThe municipality of Piamonte is inhabited by settlers from the interior of the country (departments of Caquetá, Putumayo, Nariño and Cauca), also by indigenous peoples – 12.24% of the Inga ethnic group – and a significant percentage of Afro-descendants. [5] Its population, as of 2012, amounted to “7,241 people, of which 8.29% (600) live in the municipal capital and the remaining 91.71% (6,641) in the rural area. There is a total of 69 villages, and the indigenous population is organized into 9 councils recognized by the indigenous authorities: Bajo Chuspizacha, San Gabriel, Alto Suspizacha, Rumiñawi, San Jose del Inchiyaco, Ambiwasi, Musurrunacuna, Caucapapungo and Aukawasi. As well as 6 Reservations legally recognized for the Inga community: Guayuyaco, Inga Wasipanga, La Floresta Española, La Leona, Las Brisas and San Rafael.. [4] Administrative Division of Piamonte
ClimatePiamonte has a tropical rainforest climate (Köppen Af) with hot temperatures, high humidity and heavy to very heavy rainfall year-round.
Places of interestThe Serranía de Los Churumbelos Auka-Wasi National Natural Park located in the mountainous part of the municipality. References
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