
ArmInfo.Kristine Vardanyan, a member of the Yerevan Council of Elders and associate professor of the Department of Hygiene and Ecology at Yerevan State Medical University, has issued an open letter to Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan urging an immediate intervention to stop the mass felling of mature and healthy trees in Yerevan.
Vardanyan's letter, published on Facebook, highlights a three-year trend in which Yerevan has been stripped of thousands of "sanitarily valuable" mature trees. These are being replaced with decorative species-such as Albizia and Catalpa-which she argues are ill-suited for the city's harsh climate and fail to provide the necessary shade and air filtration required for urban health.
"Considering the seriousness of the issue in terms of public health, the environment, and biodiversity, I consider it necessary to address you with the aim of protecting Armenian residents from numerous risks. Since Soviet times, these plants have been planted in Yerevan exclusively in gardens and vegetable plots. Landscape design is a branch of public hygiene. Around the world, in the face of climate change, emphasis is placed on the importance and preservation of mature trees and native species, while in Yerevan, the exact opposite is being done: mass logging, deep pruning that disfigures trees, and alien, in many cases street plantings created from plants with dwarf foliage," Vardanyan noted.
In this regard, as a member of the Yerevan Council of Elders, a physician, scientist, and landscaping specialist who has spent decades engaged in scientific and applied work on the greening of populated areas, she called on Pashinyan to intervene and request the results of a comprehensive scientific analysis of the mature tree replacement program, which has grave consequences for public health.
"After the Velvet Revolution, as an opposition member of the Council of Elders from 2019 to 2022, I worked with the My Step faction on Yerevan's environmental program. Later, with the Greening and Environmental Protection NGO of the Yerevan Municipality, where we fought for every tree, launched mass tree treatments, and banned deep pruning. The methodology being used today is, to put it mildly, flawed. Scientific evidence indicates that this process will lead to a decline in quality of life, morbidity, and mortality. This is not a matter of political speculation, given that lives, especially those of newborns, are at stake," Vardanyan noted.
In her letter, the Council of Elders member recalled which specific streets in Yerevan are currently devoid of mature trees: Moskovyan, Sayat-Nova, Amiryan (partially), Tumanyan, Melik-Adamyan, Alek Manukyan, Paronyan, Proshyan, Ulnetsi, and Bagratunyats. "Such a massive tree replacement in a hot climate should be carried out in stages, strictly adhering to international scientific experience and standards, and involving a team of independent experts and scientists. Meanwhile, Yerevan doesn't even have a chief dendrologist," the expert noted.
Vardanyan also expressed dissatisfaction with the amendments made to RA Law No. 110 on "Environmental Impact Assessment" (EIA) on May 3, 2023, making the felling of trees on streets a process that does not require an EIA expert review. "It turns out that the felling of thousands of trees on the streets has no impact on the environment. This contradicts the Aarhus Convention of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters," the Council of Elders member noted. In conclusion, Vardanyan presented the assessments of international experts. Thus, according to her, in one of the response letters, experts from France, Great Britain, Russia, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan unanimously stated: "Don't strip the streets of mature trees; restoring the damaged ecological framework of the city will be terribly difficult; it will take decades to restore what was lost." "For his part, Michel Pena, former president of the French Federation of Landscape Architects and a member of the UNESCO Scientific Council, wrote: 'Save mature trees, learn from our mistakes,'" Vardanyan concluded. It should be noted that, starting in 2023, Yerevan City Hall has been implementing a so-called tree replacement program, particularly in the city center. Authorities explain this initiative by "the need to renew trees that are losing their viability with more valuable species." However, experts believe that the city hall is actually committing an ecocide. Despite persistent warnings from environmentalists about the illegality of such actions, authorities continue to cut down the city's elms, which provide shade on the streets during hot weather, replacing them with trees unsuited to Yerevan's climate.