North Macedonia set to create vast new national park

A vast cross-border area of natural beauty and diverse and unique wildlife in the Balkans is close to becoming a national park, one of the largest in Europe.

Politicians in North Macedonia are set to pass a Bill to protect an area of more than 240,000 hectares, centred on Shar Mountain, that ranges through Albania, North Macedonia and Kosovo.

Shar Mountain has 37 glacial lakes, 25 of them in North Macedonia and the rest in Kosovo.

The snow-covered Ceripasina peak
The snow-covered Ceripasina peak on Shar Mountain (Boris Grdanoski/AP)

But the natural treasure on the Balkan’s Green Belt has been endangered for years, with decades of illegal logging in the forests leaving landscapes scarred.

This is a particular problem in the more densely populated lower slopes of Shar Mountain, which locals have used for free farming, hunting, fuel and timber.

Sheep graze on a pasture on Shar Mountain
Sheep graze on pastureland on the mountain (Boris Grdanoski/AP)

Anela Stavrevska-Panajotova, an International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) expert, said the country was witnessing “a historic opportunity, after 60 years, to have a new national park, which is the missing piece for protected areas in the Balkans”.

“Together with other protected areas in other neighbouring countries, we will have the largest trans-boundary protected area in all of Europe. And we are very proud about it,” she said.

Shepherd dogs guard a flock on a Shar Mountain pasture
Shepherd dogs guard a Shar Mountain flock (Boris Grdanoski/AP)

Some support has come from the UN Environment Programme.

Meanwhile, North Macedonia is also trying to meet the European Union’s target for joining the bloc, which stipulates that nations must protect at least 12% of their territory.

Horses being prepared for mountain riding tours over a ridge on Shar Mountain
Horses being prepared for mountain riding tours (Boris Grdanoski/AP)

Naser Xhemaili, the 32-year-old owner of a company offering mountain tourism programmes and horseback rides, expects many benefits from the national park designation, including improved infrastructure such as roads.

“We await a lot from the national park: tourist arrivals into our cabins, sales of dairy products, which I believe will be much better and at a higher price,” he said.

Anela Stavrevska-Panajotova, from IUCN, presents the new national park on a map during a media briefing on Shar Mountain
Anela Stavrevska-Panajotova, from IUCN, presents the new national park during a media briefing on Shar Mountain (Boris Grdanoski/AP)

“We are creating one of the largest protected areas in Europe, together with the national parks Sharri in Kosovo and Mavrovo in Albania,” he said.

“This is going to have huge potential for future generations, for the current generation as well, because now we can use a national resource in a sustainable way.”

“We are talking about skiing in the winter, hiking and biking in the summer, tourism from across the world,” he added.

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