A controversial new bill seeking to ease logging restrictions along the shores of Lake Baikal could deal irreversible damage to the Siberian lakeโ€™s unique ecosystem, experts and activists have told The Moscow Times. Baikal was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1996 and recognized as the planetโ€™s most outstanding example of a freshwater ecosystem. The worldโ€™s largest freshwater lake by volume, Baikal is both sacred to the indigenous populations living around it and a popular eco-tourism destination โ€” but its ecosystem has faced rising threats in recent years. Russiaโ€™s lower house of parliament last month approved amendments to the countryโ€™s law on the protection of Lake Baikal in their first reading, which lawmakers say are aimed at developing basic infrastructure in the many remote towns and villages on the lake. But ecologists who spoke with The Moscow Times believe the amendments would pave the way for mass commercial wood harvesting and the building of

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