Catt-Trax 2 - Ecuador: Introduction - Comments http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2/south_america/ecuador Comments for "Ecuador: Introduction" en Ecuador: Introduction http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2/south_america/ecuador <table border="0" cellspacing="6" align="right"> <tbody><tr><td><img class="image preview" src="/catttrax2/sites/blogs.bcit.ca.catttrax2/files/images/flag_ecuador.gif" width="141" height="79" /></td></tr> <tr align="center"><td><img class="image thumbnail" src="/catttrax2/sites/blogs.bcit.ca.catttrax2/files/images/ecuador.gif" alt="Ecuador Map" title="Ecuador Map" width="63" height="53" /><span style="width: 61px" class="caption"></span></td></tr> </tbody></table><p><em>Report prepared by Elliot Knudson and Courtenay White, students in BCIT’s Fish, Wildlife and Recreation Program.</em></p><h3>Geography</h3> <p>Ecuador is located in western South America, bordering the Pacific Ocean at the Equator, between Colombia and Peru. The capital city is Quito, which was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO in 1978.</p><h3>People</h3> <p>In July 2006, Ecuador’s population was estimated to be 13,547,510. Approximately forty-eight percent of the population lives on the coast, and about forty-six percent in the highlands. The remaining percentage lives in the Oriente. </p> <p>Ecuador’s ethnic mix is as follows: <br /> </p><ul><li><em>mestizo</em> (mixed Amerindian and white) sixty-five percent</li><li>Amerindian twenty-five percent</li><li>Spanish and others seven percent</li><li>black three percent</li></ul> <h3>Economy</h3> <p>Ecuador has substantial petroleum resources, which have been the source of forty percent of the country&#39;s export earnings and one-third of the central government budget revenues in recent years. Consequently, fluctuations in world market prices can have a substantial domestic impact. In the late 1990s, Ecuador suffered its worst economic crisis, with natural disasters and sharp declines in world petroleum prices driving Ecuador&#39;s economy into free fall. It was this crisis that led the Ecuadorian government to adopt the U.S. dollar as the national currency.</p> <p>Exports: $9.224 billion (2005 est.)<br /> Commodities: Petroleum, bananas, cut flowers, shrimp<br /> Exports: US 51.1%, Peru 8%, Germany 4.4%, Colombia 4.3% (2005)<br /> Imports: $8.436 billion (2005 est.)<br /> Imports: Vehicles, medicinal products, telecommunications equipment, electricity<br /> Imports: US 22.3%, Colombia 14.9%, Venezuela 7.8%, Brazil 6%, China 5.3% (2005) </p> http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2/south_america/ecuador#comment Mon, 08 Jan 2007 14:46:46 -0800 The Catt-Trax2 Team 181 at http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2