The KT&G Welfare Foundation (Board Chairman Gwak
Young-gyun) conducted activities for the “Ecological Restoration of Bukhansan
National Park Byways and Damaged Lands,” with 300 university students,
including KT&G’s undergraduate volunteer group “Sangsang Volunteers,”
participating on last April 20.
These volunteer participants planted 900 trees native to Mt. Bukhansan,
including sargent cherry and Korean mountain ash, while cleaning up
the area of the scenic trails in the park, such as restoring some trail sections
damaged by many mountain climbers and installing byway control facilities.
The KT&G Welfare Foundation continued the project of “Planting
Trees at Naksansa Temple” from 2006 to the previous year, and planted a total
of 38,000 trees to revive the Naksansa forest, which was destroyed by a forest
fire. As the Naksansa forest was restored to its original state, the Foundation
set out this year to undertake the ecological restoration of Bukhansan National
Park with the aim of preserving the municipal natural park.
An official from the management office of Bukhansan National Park asked
that “the visitors use the designated scenic
trails so that the surrounding forest, which undergraduate volunteers worked
very hard to restore to its original state, may be well preserved,” saying that
“we will take these volunteer activities as an
opportunity to expand the project of ecological restoration of the Bukhansan
byways and damaged lands with the cooperation of various companies and organizations.”
Meanwhile, KT&G has developed
eco-friendly paper foil for use instead of unrecyclable aluminum foil, and also
minimized the use of vinyl for carton packaging in order to strive for
eco-friendly management.