Indonesia starts planting 79 million trees

Reuters 28 Nov 07;

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia, which has been losing its forests at a rapid pace in recent years, launched a campaign on Wednesday to plant 79 million trees ahead of next month's U.N. climate change conference in Bali.

"We have been negligent in the past, now we have to get our act together," President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was quoted by state news agency Antara as saying as he planted saplings on the outskirts of Jakarta.

The drive is part of a global campaign to plant one billion trees launched at U.N. climate change talks in Nairobi last year.

Forestry ministry officials said 79 million saplings were collected from local governments around the archipelago and they planned to complete the planting in one day.

According to Greenpeace, Indonesia had the fastest pace of deforestation in the world between 2000-2005, with an area of forest equivalent to 300 soccer pitches destroyed every hour.

Yudhoyono said that illegal loggers and their financers were "common enemies" and must be brought to justice.

Southeast Asia's biggest economy is also among the world's top three greenhouse gas emitters because of deforestation, peatland degradation, and forest fires, according to a recent report sponsored by the World Bank and Britain's development arm.

Environmental groups are concerned that rapidly expanding palm oil plantations, partly driven by ambitious plans for biofuels, are damaging the country's rainforests.

Participants from 189 countries are expected to gather in Bali in next month to discuss a new deal to fight global warming. The existing pact, the Kyoto Protocol, runs out in 2012.

(Reporting by Ahmad Pathoni; Editing by Sugita Katyal and Sanjeev Miglani)

RELATED ARTICLES

More than 1 billion trees planted in 2007: U.N.
Alister Doyle, Reuters 27 Nov 07;


Read more!

Climate change deals another blow to orangutans

Reuters 28 Nov 07;

"A longer dry season will reduce the abundance of fruits and will negatively impact orangutan populations because females are more likely to conceive during periods when food resources are not limited," the WWF report said.

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Climate change will hurt Indonesia's orangutan population, already under threat from the rapid rate of deforestation, by reducing their food stock, a leading conservation group said on Wednesday.

Dubbed as the last of Asia's great apes, orangutans once ranged the region but a recent UN environment program estimate said only between 45,000 and 69,000 orangutans remained in Borneo and 7,300 in Sumatra. The WWF said climate change would add to the pressure already caused by human-induced activities such as rampant illegal logging and massive conversion of forests into plantations.

"A longer dry season will reduce the abundance of fruits and will negatively impact orangutan populations because females are more likely to conceive during periods when food resources are not limited," the WWF report said.

"Climate-change induced fire will also negatively impact orangutan populations by fragmenting their habitat and reducing the number of fruit bearing trees, which can take many years to mature and fruit." Environmentalists say rampant illegal logging, lethal annual forest fires and the massive conversion of forests into plantations for palm oil and pulp wood have helped place orangutans on the world's list of endangered species.

"We have seen an example in East Kalimantan, where there was once an abundance of fruits at the beginning of the year followed by a long period of massive shortage," WWF conservationist Chairul Saleh told Reuters at the launch of the report.

"This affected migration patterns and reproduction," he said, "It has hurt the population of orangutans there."

A United Nations report in 2002, which raised alarm about the plight of the apes, had projected that most of the habitat suitable for orangutans would be lost by 2032. In February, UNEP had put the date at 2022.

Saleh warned that a combination of rising temperature and deforestation would drive thousands of orangutans out of the forests into villages and plantations to look for food.

"It's happening. Already orangutans are invading plantations to eat palm oil seedlings and get killed for it," Saleh said.

"But what should they do? Their living space is shrinking and there is simply no food."

(Reporting by Adhityani Arga; editing by Sanjeev Miglani)


Read more!

Asia, Mideast should work more closely in energy field: SM Goh

Channel NewsAsia 28 Nov 07;

SINGAPORE: Asia and the Middle East depend on each other, according to Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong.

Speaking at the Middle East and Asia Energy Summit on Wednesday, he said the two regions should work more closely together and suggested four ways to do so.

Asia's economic boom is being fuelled in a large part by one key ingredient – oil, which is supplied mainly by countries in the Gulf.

That is why the destinies of the Middle East and Asia are increasingly intertwined – economically, socially and politically.

Mr Goh said: "What happens in the Middle East will affect Asia. What is less obvious is that the Middle East too has a strategic stake in Asia's stability and prosperity. It has been estimated that between 2000 and 2006, Asia accounted for 60 percent of the increase in exports of Middle East oil.

"Therefore, just as Middle East stability ensures an uninterrupted flow of oil and gas to Asia, Asia's stability and economic growth also ensure that demand for, and hence price of, oil remains high. If Asia catches a cold, it will quickly spread to the Middle East through reductions in oil revenue."

Mr Goh said Asia can continue to grow only if it is not overwhelmed by rising oil prices and inflation. He said rising oil prices have economic and political ramifications for governments that subsidise energy use.

In Singapore's case, it does not have fuel subsidies. But it has been estimated that every US$10 increase in oil prices would shave 0.4 percentage points off Singapore's annual GDP growth.

Mr Goh suggested four ways for the two regions to work together on energy cooperation.

Firstly, there could be co-investment by the Middle East and Asia in energy infrastructure.

Secondly, they could join forces in energy research and development on renewable energy sources, energy efficiency and green technology to mitigate global warming.

And thirdly, the two regions can work together to ensure security in energy transit routes.

Mr Goh said the Straits of Malacca and Singapore are especially important energy sea lanes for Asia.

About 60 percent of China's imported oil – as well as 90 percent of Japan's and 80 percent of Korea's – passes through the Straits from the Middle East, so any disruption would have far-reaching consequences for the global economy.

To improve navigational safety and environmental protection in the Straits, a co-operative mechanism between the littoral states and user states was launched in September this year.

Mr Goh noted that some Middle Eastern countries, such as the UAE, have committed to contributing to the mechanism and he hoped this would spur others to follow suit.

Lastly, the senior minister also called for the two regions to encourage inter-regional energy dialogue through conferences such as the Middle East and Asia Energy Summit.

Deepening ties between the Middle East and Asia was also a theme for Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister, Ali Al-Naimi.

He said his country supplies Asia with more than 4.5 million barrels of oil per day. This is equivalent to approximately half of all the oil Saudi Arabia produces and about 25 percent of total Asian imports.

Saudi's non-oil trade with Asia is expanding rapidly. Last year, this was estimated to be more than US$50 billion, compared to just a few billion dollars in the early 1980s.

Mr Ali Al-Naimi said Saudi Arabia is committed to being a reliable oil supplier for Asia's economic growth.- CNA/so


Read more!

More than 1 billion trees planted in 2007: U.N.

Alister Doyle, Reuters 27 Nov 07;

OSLO (Reuters) - The world has surpassed a U.N. goal of planting 1 billion trees in 2007 to help slow climate change, led by huge forestry projects in Ethiopia and Mexico, the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP) said on Wednesday.

The global tree-planting drive, inspired by Kenyan environmentalist and 2004 Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai, is meant to counter deforestation from logging and the burning of forests to create farmland.

"An initiative to catalyze the pledging and the planting of one billion trees has achieved and indeed surpassed its mark," UNEP head Achim Steiner said in a statement on plantings by governments, companies and individuals.

"It is a further sign of the breathtaking momentum witnessed this year on the challenge for this generation -- climate change." Trees soak up carbon dioxide, the main gas blamed for stoking global warming, as they grow.

UNEP said Ethiopia appeared to be the runaway leader with 700 million trees planted in a national reforestation drive. Only 3 percent of Ethiopia is now forested, down from 40 percent centuries ago.

Other top planters were Mexico with 217 million trees, Turkey 150 million, Kenya 100 million, Cuba 96.5 million, Rwanda 50 million, South Korea 43 million, Tunisia 21 million, Morocco 20 million, Myanmar 20 million and Brazil 16 million, it said.

The billion-tree target was set in Nairobi in November despite criticism that it would be impossible to verify. It was declared passed less than a week before the start of a Dec 3-14 meeting of the world's environment ministers in Bali, Indonesia.

"You responded beyond our dreams," said Maathai. "Now we must keep the pressure on and continue the good work for the planet. Plant another tree today in celebration."

China, Guatemala and Spain were expected soon to announce new plantings of millions of trees, UNEP said.

Indonesia plans to plant 80 million trees in one day before the Bali conference, which is meant to launch two years of talks to work out a new international deal to fight global warming.

UNEP says it checks planting pledges, which now cover 1.5 billion trees, to see if they sound credible but does not ensure all are planted. It said the totals were still being collated.

More than a billion trees planted in 2007: UN
Bogonko Bosire Yahoo News 28 Nov 07

More than one billion trees were planted around the world in 2007, with Ethiopia and Mexico leading in the drive to combat climate change through new lush forest projects, a UN report said Wednesday.

The Nairobi-based UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said the mass tree planting, inspired by Nobel Peace laureate Wangari Maathai, will help mitigate effects of pollution and environmental deterioration.

"An initiative to catalyze the pledging and the planting of one billion trees has achieved and indeed surpassed its mark. It is a further sign of the breathtaking momentum witnessed this year on the challenge for this generation -- climate change," UNEP chief Achim Steiner said in a statement.

"Millions if not billions of people around this world want an end to pollution and environmental deterioration and have rolled up their sleeves and got their hands dirty to prove the point," he added.

UNEP said the total number of trees planted is still being collated, but developing countries top the list with more than 700 million and 217 million planted in Ethiopia and Mexico respectively.

Ethiopia's high demand for fuel wood and land for cropping and grazing has slashed its forest cover from about 35 percent of its landmass in the early 20th century to just 4.2 percent by 2000, environmentalist say.

Others planters include: Turkey 150 million, Kenya 100 million, Cuba 96.5 million, Rwanda 50 million, South Korea 43 million, Tunisia 21 million, Morocco 20 million, Myanmar 20 million and Brazil 16 million.

Maathai's Green Belt Movement planted 4.7 million trees, double the number it had initially pledged, according to UNEP. The army has participated in re-afforestation drives in Kenya and Mexico.

Indonesia, which will next month host the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), is expected to plant almost 80 million trees in one day alone in the run up to the Bali climate meeting.

UNEP said China, Guatemala and Spain are expected soon to announce new plantings of millions of trees.

Experts says that trees help absorb carbon contained in the heat-trapping gases blamed for climate change, which are largely generated by human activity and are one of the most perilous environmental challenges in the modern world.

The UNEP report sends a powerful message ahead of the December 3-14 meeting in Bali of the UNFCCC, a panel charting the path for negotiating pollution cuts to be implemented after 2012 when the Kyoto Protocol pledges run out.

"We called you to action almost exactly a year ago and you responded beyond our dreams," said Maathai, who won the 2004 Nobel Peace prize for her campaign to plant tens of millions of trees to counter tree-loss and desertification in Africa.

"Now we must keep the pressure on and continue the good work for the planet," Maathai said in the statement.

The Nairobi-based World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), which co-organised the campaign, said the success indicated that environment can be rescued by afforestation.

"This milestone shows clearly that the global community has the spirit and the substance to unite in achieving ambitious targets to create a better environment for all," said ICRAF Director General Dennis Garrity.

The UNEP, citing its credible tracking system, said 1.56 billion trees have been planted around the world, but had so far received pledges of 2.24 billion trees.

The mass planting, carried by governments, communities, corporations and individuals, will continue despite surpassing the one billion mark, the agency said.

UNEP spokesman Nick Nuttall was asked why the most enthusiasm for the worldwide initiative seemed to have occurred in developing countries.

"There is no clear answer, however it may be that communities in Africa, Asia and Latin America recognise more clearly the impact of climate change already on the way," he told AFP.

"Perhaps also they more intimately understand the wider benefit of the forests from stabilising water supplies and soils up to their importance as natural pharmatives as well as the importance of trees in combatting global warming."


Read more!

Best of our wild blogs: 28 Nov 07

Tuas after two years
more about the recent trip on the tidechaser blog

Yellow Glassy Tiger

its life cycle on the butterflies of singapore blog

Too close for colugo's comfort
after another taxi adventure on the budak blog

Nothing to see in the woods?
Dispelling yet another myth on the budak blog

Opilionids on the prowl
Long-legged horrors? on the budak blog

Heron Chick not so harmless?
on the bird ecology blog

Discovery at the National Orchid Garden
Wonderful blooms on the discovery blog


Read more!

Japanese company offers whale curry in bento boxes

Today Online 28 Nov 07;

TOKYO — A Japanese company said yesterday it would start offering whale curry in its takeaway business lunches, as the country pursues its controversial whale hunt in the Antarctic.

Asian Lunch, which says it sells 1,000 to 1,500 lunch boxes daily in Tokyo's business districts, will offer the meat once a week, starting tomorrow with a South Asian-style keema, a curry.

"I hope many young women will want to have it as it's healthy with high protein and low fat. It's also rich in iron," a company spokesman said.

The firm is also hoping to attract young men who have never tasted the meat before, she said, adding that 600 servings had been prepared for its debut at a cost of 650 to 700 yen ($8.70 to $9.30).

This month, Japan infuriated its Western allies, particularly Australia and New Zealand, when it launched its annual whale hunt — which for the first time will also kill humpbacked whales.

Critics argue that the hunt is unnecessary, as most Japanese do not eat a lot of whale.

However, the government is trying to promote the meat, which is now served mostly in specialist restaurants.

The whale hunts are permitted via a loophole in the 1986 global moratorium that allows "lethal research" on the giant mammals. Environmentalists charge it is simply commercial whaling in disguise. — afp

Whale curry, anyone?
Straits Times 30 Nov 07;

A vendor packing whale meat curry in a lunch box to customers from a van in Tokyo yesterday. Whale meat curry made its debut at a takeaway business in Tokyo, attracting curious customers who seldom have the meat amid an international row over hunting the giant mammals.

Asian Lunch, which says it sells up to 1,500 lunch boxes daily in Tokyo's business districts, offered South Asian-style keema curry with ground whale meat in its first trial. Dozens of customers ordered the curry sold from a van at a cost of up to 700 yen (S$9).

Few Japanese have eaten whale since an international moratorium on hunting the mammals was imposed in 1986. But Japan still hunts the whales using a loophole that allows 'lethal research' on the animals.

This month, Japan angered its Western allies by launching its biggest whale hunt that will target humpbacks for the first time.


Read more!

US Wildlife refuges generate some $1.7B

Ben Evans, Associated Press, Yahoo News 28 Nov 07;

National wildlife refuges more than make up for their cost to taxpayers by returning about $4 in economic activity for every $1 the government spends, according to a federal study released Tuesday.

Overall, the refuges drew some 35 million hunters, anglers, birders and other visitors in 2006, supporting about 27,000 jobs, the study found.

Advocates of the system pounced on the results as evidence that budget cuts under President Bush have been ill-advised.

"Refuges are economic engines in local communities. There's no doubt about it," said Desiree Sorenson-Groves, vice president for government affairs at the National Wildlife Refuge Association. "The budget cuts have an impact .... You have people who are going to refuges and there's no staff, or a wildlife drive is closed because it can't be maintained."

Under an ongoing restructuring, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is planning to cut 565 jobs from refuges by 2009 — a 20 percent reduction. The plan would leave more than 200 refuges unstaffed.

Tuesday's report, issued by Fish and Wildlife economists, said the areas created some $1.7 billion in economic activity and $185 million in tax revenues.

Fishing and hunting accounted for almost 20 percent of the economic activity. The Southeast region drew the most visitors — 9.4 million.

The more popular refuges boasted far greater economic returns, the report said. The Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia created about $155 in economic activity for every $1 in federal spending. The Don Edwards San Francisco refuge returned almost $44, while the Bombay Hook refuge in Delaware returned $23.

The national system encompasses 548 refuges and more than 96 million acres in all 50 states.

The refuge budget grew rapidly after Congress passed a landmark improvement bill in 1997. With new land acquisitions and a clearer mandate, the system's funding jumped from $178 million in 1997 to $391 million in 2004.

Recent years have seen stagnant or declining budgets, even as refuge officials say they need $15 million increases just to keep pace with inflation, and a much larger amount to chip away at an estimated $2.5 billion backlog for maintenance and operations.

Fish and Wildlife Director Dale Hall said the budget challenges are "fairly significant" and that "we'd be naive to think that we wouldn't lose some visitation" as a result of eliminating staff and restricting access in some areas.

He said the agency would do its best to explain to decision-makers "that we get a tremendous return on the taxpayer's dollar."

National Wildlife Refuge System: http://www.fws.gov/refuges/


Read more!

Indonesia's corals threatened by climate change

Sugita Katyal and Adhityani Arga, Reuters 27 Nov 07;

JAKARTA (Reuters) - It is a country with some of the world's richest coral reefs.

But scientists fear many of Indonesia's psychedelic reefs, already significantly damaged by blast fishing and pollution, now face an even graver threat: global warming.

Over the years, rising sea temperatures have led to severe coral bleaching in some of the most spectacular reefs off the palm-fringed islands of Sulawesi and Bali that are home to exotic fish like the brightly colored clown fish and scorpion fish.

And environmentalists say if quick steps are not taken to stop the destruction, many reefs across the sprawling archipelago of about 17,000 islands could disappear in the next few decades.

The state of coral around the world will be part of the discussions at next month's U.N. climate talks on the Indonesian resort island Bali where about 190 countries will gather to try to hammer out a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol, a global pact aimed at fighting global warming.

"Even the lower end of temperature change, even 1-2 degrees, will lead to significant coral die-off for a variety of reasons such as bleaching and submersion," Glenn Prickett, an official from Conservation International, told Reuters.

"You already have the impact of the assault on coral from destructive fishing practices and pollution. It will become worse with global warming."

Indonesia, with a coastline of some 57,000 km (35,420 miles), has at least 2.6 million hectares (6.425 million acres) of coral reefs, or about 25 percent of coral reefs in the region and 8 percent of the world's coral reefs, according to the World Bank.

DELICATE ECOSYSTEM

Millions of people make a living from Indonesia's coastal and marine sector, and in particular the small-scale fisheries supported by coral reef ecosystems.

"Indonesia is at the centre of the coral triangle. The possibility of coral bleaching is so big. If you have (an increase of) 5 degrees up, corals will be gone," said Jatna Supriatna, director of Conservation International Indonesia.

"And that will impact the economy."

The Coral Triangle -- known as the Amazon of the sea -- stretches from the central part of Indonesia to the Solomon Islands, and up from the Indian Ocean across the Philippines to the Pacific Ocean.

Coral reefs around the world are in peril with people damaging the delicate marine ecosystems and endangering some 1 million species of animals and plants that call the coral home.

Scientists estimate over 27 percent of the world's coral has been permanently lost. They estimate that another 30 percent will disappear over the next three decades.

Experts say 16 percent of the world's coral was wiped out in 1998 when global warming and the "El Nino" weather phenomenon combined to cause the highest sea temperatures ever recorded.

Reefs depend on algae called zooxanthellae to give them nutrients and brilliant color. The coral can recover by taking up new algae from surrounding water but if temperatures stay high and the coral stays "stressed," it can become vulnerable to disease and die.

Indonesia's corals -- some of them described as "species factories" -- were hit by the El Nino phenomenon and the higher sea temperatures which caused severe bleaching and coral death.

About 75 percent of the West Bali National Park, home to some 110 coral species, has been affected with many soft corals disintegrating altogether.

Several areas around a small island off the northern coast of Java, where colorful coral reefs filled with butterfly and angel fish used to leave divers in awe, never recovered from the massive bleaching caused by El Nino.

CORAL TRIANGLE

The Coral Triangle Center -- set up by the U.S.-based Nature Conservancy in Bali to protect Indonesia's coral reefs -- works in many marine areas, including the Raja Ampat Islands in Papua and the Komodo Island in the east of the country.

The islands of Raja Ampat, or Four Kings, have been described as a biodiversity gold mine, and at least for now remain an unspoilt example of the richness of the coral ecosystem.

Located off the northwest tip of Bird's Head Peninsula near the remote island of Papua, the area's pristine reefs consist of mile after mile of vivid red, pink, yellow and purple coral.

Named after the four sultans who presided there, it is home to more than 1,000 fish species such as wobbegong sharks and giant clams.

Faced with the rapid degeneration of coral, in the late 1990s some North Sulawesi villagers set aside six hectares of degraded coral reefs and mangroves as the first community-run marine sanctuary in the country.

As part of efforts to protect the region's fragile corals, Indonesia proposed a Coral Triangle Initiative (CTI) under which six Asia-Pacific countries -- Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and East Timor -- will work jointly to preserve marine resources in the area.

The sprawling area is the global centre of marine biodiversity with more than 3,000 fish species and 600 coral species, which makes up 75 percent of the world's coral species.

"The current condition of Indonesia's coral reefs is in a worrying state," Abdul Halim, policy manager of Nature Conservancy's Coral Triangle Center in Bali, told Reuters.

"Only 10-20 percent of the total reefs are in excellent condition, the majority has been damaged, degraded or completely destroyed."

(Editing by Ed Davies and Megan Goldin)


Read more!

Indonesia Losing Crops, Fish Stocks to Global Warming

PlanetArk 28 Nov 07;

The report quoted a study by a local research institute which said that Indonesia had lost 300,000 tonnes of crop production every year between 1992-2000, three times the annual loss in the previous decade.

JAKARTA - Indonesia is losing tonnes of crop production each year and its fish stock is dwindling as a result of global warming, a UN report said on Tuesday, putting the greatest pressure on the nation's poor.

Millions of poor Indonesians will suffer loss of livelihoods, undermining the government's efforts to fight poverty, the report by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) said.

The report was launched ahead of the UN climate change talks next week on the tourist island of Bali, where delegates from 189 countries will hammer out a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol, a pact against global warming which runs out in 2012.

Shifting weather patterns have made it increasingly difficult for Indonesian farmers to decide when to plant their crops, and erratic droughts and rainfall have led to crop failures, the report said.

The report quoted a study by a local research institute which said that Indonesia had lost 300,000 tonnes of crop production every year between 1992-2000, three times the annual loss in the previous decade.

Millions of fishermen are facing harsher weather conditions, while dwindling fish stocks affect their income.

Indonesia's 40 million poor, including farmers and fishermen, will be the worst affected due to threats including rising sea levels, prolonged droughts and tropical cyclones, the report said.

"No one can escape from climate change. But the effects will be felt more acutely by the poorest people, who are living in the most marginal areas that are vulnerable to drought, for example, or to floods and landslide," the report said.

"Already one of the world's most disaster-prone countries, Indonesia faces increased exposure to droughts, floods and storms as well as disruption in agricultural production," the UNDP said in a press statement.

Developed countries are responsible for the majority of greenhouse gas emissions which cause global warming, said UNDP's Country Director Hakan Bjorkman at the launch of the report.

"The poor walk the earth with very light carbon footprint," Bjorkman said, but "they are set to suffer the most from the actions of a few." (Reporting by Adhityani Arga; editing by Sara Webb and Sanjeev Miglani)


Read more!

Honey price to rise after low yields in Argentina

Harry Wallop, Telegraph 27 Nov 07;

The price of honey is set to soar as a result of a global shortage caused by bad weather.

Industry experts say it will mean an increase of 25 per cent, which will push a 100g pot of honey from about £1.79 to £2.24. The price rise is expected to come into force early next year.

Argentina, the biggest exporter of honey to Britain, suffered a drought earlier this year which has prevented the flowers from which bees collect pollen from blooming. The situation has been exacerbated by an unusually cold summer.

Bees would normally be gathering nectar throughout daylight hours at this time of year, which is summer in Argentina, but low temperatures in its honey-producing regions mean they are only working for three hours before returning to the hive.

This means Argentina has produced only half its usual honey yield, according to the Grocer magazine.


Read more!

Temperature peaks killing off flying foxes in Australia

Charles Clover, Telegraph 27 Nov 07;

Scientists say that mass die-offs of Australian flying foxes, among the most dramatic recorded, show how the survival of whole species could be affected by climate change.

On Jan 12 2002, when temperatures exceeded 108ºF (42.9ºC) in New South Wales, 3,500 flying foxes or fruitbats in nine colonies were found dead. Most of these were the tropical black flying fox.

Since 1994 some 30,000 flying foxes have been killed by 19 similar events, with most of these being the temperate grey-headed flying fox, according to Dr Justin Welbergen of Cambridge University.

There was little evidence for die-offs before 1994, the scientists found. Temperatures have risen on average by 0.74ºC on average over the past 100 years.

The higher susceptibility of females and young to higher temperatures can have a serious effect on breeding populations, according to the paper published in the journal, Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Stefan Klose, co-author of the paper, said: "In a very dramatic way we see the outcome of extreme climate events that are predicted to increase as a result of climate change by the Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change.

"These animals are simply not able to cope with higher temperatures and so they die. They are the seed dispersers for Australia's rainforest so the ecosystem effects could be very considerable."

Climate change makes bats drop dead: study
Yahoo News 28 Nov 07;

Scorching heatwaves linked to climate change have caused thousands of Australian bats to drop dead after flapping their wings in a desperate bid to cool off, according to a study published Wednesday.

On one day alone in 2002, up to six percent of the flying foxes in a nine colonies in New South Wales died when temperatures hit 42 degrees Celsius (107.5 degrees Fahrenheit), according to the study.

Most alarming, said the biologists, was the mortality rate among young bats, as high as 50 percent.

"The effects of temperature extremes on flying foxes highlight complex implications of climate change for behaviour, demography and species survival," says the study, published by the Royal Society, Britain's de-facto academy of sciences.

The fruit-eating, winged mammals play a critical role in local ecosystems, helping to pollinate wild and cultivated crops and disperse seeds, the researchers point out.

Besides an increase in extreme weather, flying foxes, are also threatened by human encroachment of their habitat. They are often killed outright as pests.

The two species most affected by heatwaves, Pteropus alecto and Pteropus poliocephalus, are listed as "vulnerable" on the New South Wales Threatened Species Conservation Act, adopted in 1995.

The UN's climate change panel said in an authoritative report on global warming this year that rising average temperatures have already begun to provoke more intense and more frequent heatwaves.

Humans are subject to the effects of such extremes as well: 15,000 deaths were attributed to a month-long hot spell in 2003 in France alone, the panel said.

Exploring the impact of high temperatures on flying foxes, a team of British and Australian researchers led by Justin Welbergen of Cambridge University staked out several mixed-species colonies in Dallis park, in southeast Australia.

On January 12, 2002, in the middle of the Australian summer, the scientists observed how the bats -- hanging from exposed canopy trees -- reacted to the heat.

First the animals sought shade and began "wing fanning" to cool themselves, they reported. Within a couple of hours the flying foxes were panting, and soon they were drooling saliva.

Finally, "individuals began falling from the trees ... and died within 10-20 minutes," the study found.

The researchers estimate that over 30,000 flying foxes have died due to heatwaves since 1994 during 19 similar events.


Read more!

EU Agrees Quota Cuts to Save Bluefin Tuna

Jeremy Smith, PlanetArk 28 Nov 07;

BRUSSELS - EU governments agreed a 15-year plan on Tuesday that set strict curbs on fishing for bluefin tuna to stop the species heading for extinction.

Bluefin tuna is prized by sushi and sashimi lovers, and numbers have fallen sharply in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean.

The EU plan cuts catch quotas progressively each year for these waters, raises minimum fish sizes for landing, extends several "closed" fishing seasons and sets out paperwork requirements to trace tuna catches through the processing chain.

"The difference now is that it (plan) is permanent, not temporary, and nobody is arguing any more about quotas. We now have complete clarity and are set up for 15 years from 2007," one official at the European Commission told reporters.

EU governments will now have to draw up annual fishing plans detailing how they intend to allocate fishing rights and notify the EU Commission of each plan by the end of January.

"Next year, 2008, will be a crucial year if we are to save the bluefin tuna," EU Fisheries Commissioner Joe Borg said in a statement. It was vital to make the plan work from the start "to prevent the collapse of the fishery".

"The Commission considers the annual fishing plans ... to be both a necessary and an effective instrument to avoid overfishing, in view of overcapacity in the EU fleet," he said.


OVERFISHING

Minimum landing sizes were increased from 10 kg to 30 kg to help curb catches of juvenile or immature fish. In Japan, the major market for the species, a single fish can command prices of up to US$100,000.

Unlike most tunas, bluefin grow slowly and mature late, making them vulnerable to intensive trawling. Among the ocean's top predators and fastest swimmers, a bluefin tuna can live as long as 30 years.

The EU's overall bluefin tuna catch is administered by the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), the global body that oversees the rules for tuna fishing, and is now set for the next five years.

Late last year, ICCAT members reached an agreement to reduce their annual bluefin fishing quota gradually to 25,500 tonnes in 2010 from the current 32,000 tonnes.

Within that, the EU's 2007 quota was set at 16,780 tonnes and falls to 16,210 for 2008. But this year, the EU overshot its quota by more than 4,000 tonnes due to overfishing by France and Italy, which now face extra national quota reductions for 2008.

The overfishing forced the European Commission to ban bluefin tuna fishing in the Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic for the rest of this year. (Editing by Sarah Marsh and Robert Woodward)


Read more!

Brazil Urges Nations to Pay to Curb Climate Change

PlanetArk 28 Nov 07;

BRASILIA - Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva urged rich countries on Tuesday to pay to help curb climate change by protecting tropical forests and reiterated criticism of the United States for its import duties on biofuels.

Lula's message came ahead of next week's United Nations climate change conference in Bali, Indonesia, which the world body hopes will lead to negotiations on a new global pact to reduce carbon emissions blamed for global warming.

"The rich countries need to know that in Bali we will discuss in depth the price they must pay so the poorest countries can protect their forests," Lula said during the launch of the United Nations Report on Human Development in the capital Brasilia.

"You are not going to convince the poor anywhere in the world not to cut a tree without the right to a job and food in exchange," the former union leader added.

Brazil, a major developing world trading power with an increasing influence on environmental issues, is a pioneer in producing and using low-emissions ethanol derived from sugar cane and 85 percent of its power generation comes from renewable energy sources.

But its is one of the world's largest carbon gas emitters, due largely to the destruction of the Amazon rain forest. Tropical forests like the Amazon release stored carbon dioxide when trees are burnt or decompose.

Brazil has proposed "positive incentives" financed by rich countries to help protect forests in developing nations. It also wants an international convention to force pharmaceutical companies to pay for drugs derived from plants found in rainforests.

"We are not prepared to be treated as second-class citizens in this debate," Lula said.

Lula also criticized the United States for subsidizing less efficient ethanol derived from corn, while charging duties on imported ethanol made from sugarcane.

"Where is the trade equality, where is the will to clean the planet? ... They could start taxing oil," Lula said.

The former factory workers also ridiculed gas-guzzling vehicles used in developed countries.

"There are cars in parts of the world that are so big they can't turn a corner, with one of those you could make three common cars here in Brazil."

(Reporting by Raymond Colitt; Editing by Stuart Grudgings)

RELATED POSTS

Ecuador backs Indonesia bid for forest compensation
Reuters 26 Nov 07

REDD: Indonesia's forests, a precious resource in climate change fight?
by Aubrey Belford, Yahoo News 23 Nov 07


Read more!

Energy efficiency fails to cut consumption: study

Reuters 27 Nov 07;

TORONTO (Reuters) - American consumers are driving bigger gas-guzzling cars and buying more air conditioners and refrigerators as the overall energy efficiency of such products improves, a report released on Tuesday found.

In what the study calls "the efficiency paradox," consumers have taken money saved from greater energy efficiency and spent it on more and bigger appliances and vehicles, consuming even more energy in the process.

This irony isn't just restricted to the United States, though. "The paradox is true for every developed country," said Benjamin Tal, senior economist at CIBC World Markets, which conducted the study.

The study concludes that stricter energy efficiency regulations aren't the answer to concerns over climate change and the depletion of oil supplies because consumers treat greater energy efficiencies as a tax cut. "Because you get a 'tax cut,' you drive more," Tal said.

The study found that energy use increased by 40 percent from 1975 to 2005 while energy efficiency improved in the same period. The sectors with the greatest increases in energy use -- transportation and residential -- are also the areas where the U.S. government is promoting energy efficiency the most.

The average mileage per gallon of gasoline has increased since 1980, but Americans have responded by driving larger vehicles and putting more mileage on their vehicles. The average American drove 9,500 miles annually in 1970. These days drivers do more than 12,000 miles a year.

The energy used to heat and cool homes is also rising as homes become larger. The study says the area of the average home has increased from 1,000 square feet in the 1950s to the current 2,500 square feet. More households are also buying air conditioners.

Tal believes one solution is to attach a price to emissions through a carbon-trading system.

(Reporting by Sharon Ho; editing by Frank McGurty)


Read more!

Cruise ships threaten Antarctic's environment

Business Times 28 Nov 07;

(PUNTA ARENAS, Chile) A cruise ship takes on water in the Antarctic and three more go quickly to the rescue - a blessing for the survivors, to be sure. But it is also an indication of a regional tourism boom that critics say threatens Antarctica's delicate environment and puts passengers at grave risk.

The 154 passengers and crew of the Explorer were all plucked safely from life rafts this weekend by a Norwegian cruise ship as their own vessel slid into the icy seas.

Tourism in the world's southernmost continent has spiked in popularity, but there is little regulation of the lucrative industry. Now, giant cruise ships have begun to arrive and some experts fear catastrophic accidents and environmental damage.

'Under the environmental protocol of the Antarctic Treaty Secretariat, the whole of Antarctica is supposed to be a reserve,' said Jim Barnes, executive director of the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition. 'It's supposed to be dedicated to science and to protect the wilderness and the environment.'

In the 1992-93 season, about 6,700 tourists visited the Antarctic, according to the International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators. Last season, that had quadrupled to 29,530.

Seven countries have made territorial claims in Antarctica but nobody recognises them. In some cases, countries claim the same piece of the continent so it is rarely clear what authority is in charge.

The Antarctic Treaty was signed in 1959 with the aim of preventing military incursions in Antarctica. Its members meet each year and adopt recommendations, but there is no single authority to enforce them.

This has left the Antarctic tourism industry largely self-regulated. The International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators was founded by seven companies with the goal of promoting 'safe and environmentally responsible' travel. The group now has 99 members, but there are tour groups working outside the association which may not follow its safety and environmental guidelines.

'Because of management principles that (the association) has put in place, we've managed environmental impact,' said Denise Landau, the association's executive director. 'The concern is that companies outside the membership are not playing with the rest of the operators.' - AP


Read more!

Singapore to host waste management congress in 2008

Channel NewsAsia 27 Nov 07;

SINGAPORE: Singapore will host Southeast Asia’s first ISWA/WMRAS World Congress in 2008, a key event in the international recycling and waste management sector’s calendar, which will address environmental challenges facing Asia.

Held from 3rd to 6th November 2008, some 1000 industry professionals, government officials and experts from more than 50 countries are expected to attend the Congress, where delegates will share case studies and solutions for challenges facing the international waste management industry.

They will also visit Singapore’s waste management and processing plants to gain insights into the Republic’s waste management efforts.

Mr Niels Jorn Hahn, President of ISWA, said: "Singapore, with its strategic location, excellent supporting infrastructure and its experience in environmental management, is an attractive venue for the ISWA/WMRAS 2008 Congress."

Michael Ho, Chairman of WMRAS, said: "Countries are increasingly recognising the importance of environmental protection and Singapore, being centrally located in Asia, in close proximity to the developing countries of South-East Asia as well as China and India, could serve as a training hub for environmental management."

Singapore has undertaken a slew of initiatives to promote a recycling culture among its community.

The most recent project was the launch of the 3R Programme for Preschools, aimed at inculcating the habit of recycling, reusing and reducing at a young age. The programme, which was launched last Friday on Recycling Day, will be rolled out to 258 kindergartens under the PAP Community Foundation (PCF) and ten childcare centres under Presbyterian Community Services (PCS) in 2008.

The pilot programme made use of flashcards, worksheets and activities to explain the 3Rs and engages young children in active and fun learning of the 3Rs, using colourful pictures and illustrations.

The National Environment Agency has also embarked on other green initiatives such as working closely with Public Waste Collectors and Town Councils to introduce centralised recycling depositories for the convenience of the public.

As at August 2007, 1,600 sets of centralised recycling depositories have been provided, and most residents can now find a recycling bin within 150 metres from their flats.

The National Environment Agency and the Waste Management and Recycling Association of Singapore will be jointly co-hosting the Congress with the International Solid Waste Association.

Singapore has just hosted the International Solid Waste Association Board Meeting, which traditionally meets in the host country a year ahead of the Congress. The board meeting was held from 24-26 November. - CNA/vm


Read more!

SEAS embarks on S$1.8m plan to boost clean energy industry in Singapore

Channel NewsAsia 27 Nov 07;

SINGAPORE: The Sustainable Energy Association of Singapore (SEAS) is embarking on a S$1.8 million programme to enhance the capabilities of the sustainable energy industry in Singapore.

The SEAS Local Enterprise and Association Development (LEAD) programme is expected to generate S$39 million in value-add, S$130 million in revenue and 245 new jobs over the next three years.

SEAS aims to strengthen the clean energy industry by providing key players with financial support, technological expertise and business consultancy.

The new LEAD programme, which is supported by SPRING Singapore and International Enterprise Singapore, will help develop this industry.

Edwin Khew, Chairman of SEAS, said: "We will provide a platform to facilitate companies that are getting involved. What we want to do is to provide a forum where they can all sit, talk, develop business and form partnerships to do these projects."

Industry players said funding opportunities for renewable projects are overwhelming and Singapore is in a good position to take advantage of this.

Erik Thorsen, President and CEO of Renewable Energy Corporation, said: "Singapore offers a great mix of competence, availability, stability in the infrastructure. It has a good climate for investments and is also a centre point in the Asian territory. We look at this as a combination of factors."

Singapore is seeking alternative and more environmentally friendly sources of fuel, and the government is calling on the private sector to support the drive for environmental sustainability and energy efficiency.

Some of the new plans under the SEAS LEAD programme include incubating and nurturing start-ups, establishing Singapore as the Asia-Pacific Clean Energy Hub, and generating new jobs and training.


Read more!

Subsidies to fuel solar power's future in Singapore

Expert wants these in Singapore but Govt says market forces better in the long run
Lin Yanqin, Today Online 28 Nov 07;

ALTHOUGH Singapore will soon be home to a solar manufacturing complex that would make enough products to power millions of households, it could take some time for these solar panels to find their way to buildings here.

The higher cost of solar energy relative to power generated from traditional sources, is one key reason, said Mr Erik Thorsen (picture), president and chief executive officer of Renewable Energy Corporation (REC), which is building the $6.3-billion plant.

Another factor, in his view: The lack of subsidies and incentives from the Government for businesses and households to switch to solar power, unlike the case in Germany or the United States.

"Price is everything," Mr Thorsen told Today. "People won't buy expensive power just because it's more environmentally friendly. The long-term strategy is to make solar energy cost-competitive."

At the Energex 2007 conference earlier, Mr Thorsen had said that fossil fuel reliance could not continue over the next few decades, in light of climate change and growing global energy demand.

"The (solar) industry will have to take responsibility by lowering prices, with governments supporting with incentives."

He added: "Singapore has a philosophy of not subsidising or subsidising very little. So, it's very hard to make use of technologies and programmes that need more incentives to happen."

Were all countries to share Singapore's attitude of waiting for technology to become cost-competitive before adopting it, such technology could not have been accomplished, he argued.

In reply, Dr Amy Khor told Today the adoption of green energy would be more sustainable in the long run if left to market forces.

"The Government isn't against subsidies, but we take a cautious stance," said the senior parliamentary secretary for environment and water resources.

A Trade and Industry Ministry spokesperson also said in reply, "Even as we want to promote the use of renewable energy, we have to consider the impact on business costs and costs of living.

She said consumers "will have less motivation to conserve energy" if energy prices are "artificially" low. "Furthermore, subsidies, if applied unevenly or only to certain energy technologies, will distort the level playing field in the electricity market. We may also need to raise taxes to fund these subsidies," she said.

Added Dr Khor: "Our priority is in R&D and education, which could eventually help to bring prices down and bring up demand."

The National Research Foundation has set aside $170 million for R&D in clean energy. There are also schemes to support domestic adoption of new technologies, such as the $17 million Clean Energy Research and Test-bedding programme, and investment in energy efficiency technologies, such as the Building and Construction Authority's Zero Energy Building.

Mr Thorsen said a "good and stable" infrastructure was what drew REC to invest in Singapore. He does not foresee a problem in finding skilled manpower; in the early stages, employees would be flown to Norway for training.

Singapore, he said, also had a "liberal attitude toward importing competence", which could meet the plant's needs, which would be in high-level engineering, such as metallurgical skills, mechanics, and microelectronics — the last of which Singapore has expertise in.

If all goes well, the plant could be up and running by late 2009 or early 2010, he said.

Solar firm to train 1,500 staff next year
Renewable Energy will send first batch of new workers to Norway for extensive training
Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 28 Nov 07

NORWEGIAN solar firm Renewable Energy Corporation (REC) aims to train up to 1,500 Singaporeans for solar industry jobs next year, in the first phase of its recruitment drive.

Last month, Singapore trumped more than 200 locations to emerge as REC's choice to build the world's largest integrated solar manufacturing plant - at a cost of $6.3 billion. When fully operational, the plant expects to hire up to 3,000 staff.

Now, the Singapore workforce is set to get a boost in solar manufacturing know-how, as REC intends to send workers it hires to Norway for extensive training lasting up to a year.

This follows a $25 million scholarship programme unveiled recently by Singapore's Economic Development Board (EDB) to groom technology leaders for the fast-emerging clean energy sector.

Speaking in detail for the first time since REC announced the project, its president and and chief executive, Mr Erik Thorsen, said yesterday he recognised that training was crucial to support Singapore's fledgling solar industry.

Mr Thorsen said REC would look for people with the right background, from post-doctorate students to engineers and factory operators.

'Singapore is not the cheapest market for manufacturing, but it does have a high level of competency in its workforce,' added Mr Thorsen. It helps that the country already has a strong chip industry, which is similar to solar manufacturing.

This, coupled with a strong commitment from the Government to develop the clean energy sector, made Singapore 'a fairly safe choice'.

What is currently lacking in Singapore, he said, is domestic demand to stimulate a local industry in the Republic, as it enables a 'good feedback process and learning curve'.

This can be done through research and development (R&D) programmes and government incentives for adopting the technology, he said.

Already, $50 million has been dedicated to an R&D fund for the next five years, under the EDB's direction, to kick off clean energy production. But there remains no indication that the Government will provide incentives for individuals to adopt solar energy in Singapore.

Mr Thorsen estimates that grid parity will be reached by countries in the sun belt - near the equator - by 2010 to 2012, and REC will be positioned to tap the exploding growth.

Grid parity is when it will be as cost-efficient to get electricity from the sun as it is from the conventional way of burning fossil fuels.

'Already, in some parts of countries like America and Japan, it is already competitive to use solar,' he said.

The real challenge lies in the world's manufacturing capacity to keep up with demand.

Still, for the next three to five years, current capacity can support an industry growth of 40 per cent, he said. With oil prices reaching US$100 a barrel and the upcoming revision of the Kyoto Protocol, Mr Thorsen said the cost of solar energy would only become more attractive in comparison to fossil fuels.
Additional reporting by Shobana Kesava

Building of solar cell plant to start next year
Matthew Phan, Business Times 28 Nov 07;

CONSTRUCTION of a major $6.3 billion solar cell plant here by Norway's Renewable Energy Corp (REC) is expected to start by the first quarter next year, company president and CEO Erik Thorsen said yesterday.

Announced late last month, REC's plant will eventually produce 1.5 gigawatts of solar generating capacity a year and will be the largest of its kind so far.

REC is going through the 'final engineering' and expects ground-breaking to take place next year, said Mr Thorsen, who gave the keynote speech at the opening of the energy conference Energex 2007 here.

The first phase - 'major hiring' of up to 1,500 workers - will happen in the second half of 2008, he said in an interview later.

Construction will generate substantial demand for services from Singapore- based engineering and building companies, and the plant will need specialised sub-suppliers when it is up and running, according to Mr Thorsen.

A key component in the manufacture of solar cells is 'slurry', a liquid mix that contains silicon carbide. Wires used to cut silicon into wafers for solar cells are coated with the tough silicon carbide particles, which do the actual cutting.

At REC's plants in Norway, large volumes of slurry are used and recycled, with pipes containing the mix running in and out of the factories, said Mr Thorsen.

Other needs are for glass - 'making so many solar modules would require a significant volume of glass' - chemicals, gases, water and electricity to be used in the plant, he said.

REC hopes to halve the cost of making solar cells by 2010, in a bid to make solar energy cost-competitive with electricity bought off the grid.

So-called grid parity could be achieved by 2015 across most countries in the sunbelt, and by 2010 in countries where energy prices are high, such as Singapore, said Mr Thorsen.

REC's plant in Singapore will use 'fluid-bed reactor' technology for producing silicon.

Acquired and developed by REC, this process reduces the energy used to make polysilicon, a raw material, by 70 per cent and brings material cost down by almost a third.

The plant will also make thinner wafers and solar modules that extract more of the sun's energy - in excess of 17 per cent - than the current industry standard.

Mr Thorsen rejected criticism that the energy used to manufacture solar panels is worth more than the energy the panels save.

The energy payback period has improved to under two years with today's production methods and will halve to one year with REC's new technologies, he said.


Read more!

It's time for SMEs to act on the environment

Six of the 10 most polluted locations in the world are in the rapidly growing emerging market economies of China, India and Russia
Dipinder S Randhawa, Business Times 28 Nov 07;

Of the 75 million enterprises in the world, an overwhelming number, about 90 per cent, are small- and medium-sized enterprises. They make a large contribution to output, employment, and adding value and are harbingers of innovation and dynamism in the economy. However, SMEs also contribute substantially to environmental problems.


THE award of the Nobel Peace Prize to former vice-president Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change will undoubtedly bring to the forefront the debate on carbon emissions, general environmental degradation and climate change.

Last month, the Asian Corporate Governance Association-CLSA released its report on Corporate Governance Watch 2007 and for the first time highlighted the need for adherence to environmental safeguards by corporations.

At the World Economic Forum summit meetings at Davos, the threat of climate change and environmental protection loomed large at the meetings of CEOs - surely a sign if any more are needed that the problem merits serious consideration.

A report released by the Environment and Sustainable Development Division of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) further highlighted the grave risks to sustainable growth in South-east Asia if the environment continued to be neglected.

Of the 75 million enterprises in the world, an overwhelming number, about 90 per cent, are small- and medium-sized enterprises. They make a large contribution to output, employment, and adding value and are harbingers of innovation and dynamism in the economy. However, SMEs also contribute substantially to environmental problems.

A great deal of public scrutiny, activism by green groups and other NGOs concentrates on large corporations, as indeed it should. However research has shown that even in the developed OECD economies, SMEs fall below the regulatory radar and contribute significantly to water pollution, solid waste, often producing toxic waste.

A recent study showed that SMEs were responsible for more than 60 per cent of waste generated in the UK.

Six of the 10 most polluted locations in the world are in the rapidly growing emerging market economies of China, India and Russia, and another two in the former Soviet republics.

As the push for faster growth gains momentum and comparative advantage shifts rapidly across national boundaries, the pressures to relocate production and cut corners in the search for profits and economic efficiency are only likely to intensify.

In South-east Asia, while pollution problems are isolated now, the toxicity of the Meyacauayan River near Manila from lead and other metal waste dumped by a cluster of SMEs, the pollution in Jakarta, Manila and Bangkok are pointers towards the future.

The effects of the forest fires in Indonesia are well documented. At risk is the Mekong with increased damming upstream and growth of industry downstream. Deforestation of the hill sides and in the Mekong Basin is contributing to floods downstream. Cross border deforestation, the exploitation and degradation of coastal and marine resources is reshaping the landscape in ways that may not be immediately obvious, but become visible only when it reaches serious proportions and catches the public eye.

A casual conversation with anyone indulging in scuba diving since the 1990s will testify to this. Coastal degradation compounded the devastating effects of the 2004 tsunami.

There are concerns about the poorer countries in the region being used as dumping grounds for toxic waste produced in developed economies. The tendency to relocate 'dirty' polluting industries to low cost locations is likely to exacerbate the problem in the future.

With globalisation and continuous easing of the movement of capital across national boundaries, cross-border investment is growing rapidly. SMEs are an integral part of this process in South-east Asia. If the region is not to repeat the experiences of China and India in their quest for growth without regard for the impact on the environment the time to act is now.

While it may not be a concern in Singapore, the problem is serious in the region as a whole. Pollution and environmental degradation do not respect national boundaries. Studies on ecological footprinting at the UN show that the Asia-Pacific region is already living beyond its 'environmental means'.

There are clear signs that the damage to the environment cannot be sustained. It is a serious problem in the rest of South- east Asia, to be ignored at our own peril.

SMEs are a highly diverse group, ranging from family run neighbourhood stores to firms engaged in cutting edge research in bio-technology with a global market. Their small size and large numbers makes monitoring challenging, cumbersome and expensive.

As matters stand neither SMEs nor most of the regional economies possess the knowledge and wherewithal to implement or conform to or to monitor environmental safeguards. SMEs have neither the financial resources nor the expertise, and as often as not, awareness of environmental regulation.

SMEs lack the knowledge base required for compliance and reporting. It is essential for governments and industry associations to step in via education programmes, guidelines and direct help in bridging the knowledge gap. Even in the UK, fewer than 3 per cent of all businesses have an in-house accredited Environmental Management System (EMS). This is largely due to ignorance of the existing regulations.

As Asean seeks to integrate, policymakers' attention needs to shift to sustainable growth. Asean has an array of policy statements and legal instruments to tackle cross border pollution problems, however rendering these instruments effective is a challenge.

Policymakers in most of the regional economies, especially those outside the Asean 4 are yet to develop the capacity to assess and monitor adherence to environmental safeguards. The cross border nature of the problem demands a pan-national, regional, solution.

Environmental safeguards need to be monitored by a regional agency with a clear and effective mandate. Asean needs to develop a regional framework that will include cross border regulation and monitoring. Regulation and monitoring is by no means enough. The challenges are manifold. SMEs require explicit assistance, financial as well as technical to help them deal with the regulation.

Herein lies a substantial role for industry associations, environmental groups, government agencies as well as NGOs with technical expertise.

There are silver linings - Bangkok has effectively managed to reduce air pollution - policymakers and NGOs are becoming proactive as global warming and climate change become politically charged issues.

There is a greater awareness of environmental issues amongst the younger generation. A large constituency is building up to enforce adherence to environmental safeguards, customers vote with their feet, a number of stakeholders can exert direct pressure on firm's management. However serious problems do persist.

As the UNESCAP's Division of Environmental Sustainability and Development has pointed out, South-east Asia is experiencing immense pressure brought about by rapidly changing production and growing consumption fuelled by high rates of economic growth.

The challenge is maintaining these high growth rates without compromising on the one resource that is vital to our future - the environment.

The rationale for conforming to environmental safeguards will become compelling when SMEs begin to view environmental safeguards not as a financial and regulatory burden, but an opportunity for redesigning their business model to make the enterprise sustainable and profitable in the long run.

Dipinder S Randhawa is a Fellow with the Saw Centre for Financial Studies at the National University of Singapore Business School. This piece is an offshoot of ongoing research at the Saw Centre on the SME sector


Read more!

Google plans renewable energy push

Eric Auchard, Reuters 28 Nov 07;

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Google Inc. said on Tuesday the Web services and online advertising group plans to spend hundreds of millions of dollars in coming years to promote a new push to encourage cheap renewable electricity.

The project, known as Renewable Energy Cheaper Than Coal, is hiring engineers and targeted investment financing at advanced solar thermal power, wind power technologies, enhanced geothermal systems and other new technologies, Google said.

Google is, in effect, taking advantage of its growing mountain of cash, global brand recognition and mushrooming market capitalization as a pulpit to campaign for alternative energy. The company's leaders argue that the time is ripe for investments in innovative research to cut energy costs.

"Our goal is to produce one gigawatt of renewable energy capacity that is cheaper than coal. We are optimistic this can be done in years, not decades," Larry Page, Google's co-founder and president of products, said in a statement.

One gigawatt can power a city the size of San Francisco.

Google is seeking to capitalize on the recent excitement among Silicon Valley entrepreneurs to apply the risk taking that computer, biotech and Internet businesses are famous for to the field of alternative energy production.

Google's latest moves come as the price of a barrel of oil nears $100 and coal, which produces 40 percent of the world's electricity, faces regulatory and environmental pressures that could drive up prices.

Working with its philanthropic arm Google.org, the company said it plans to spend tens of millions of dollars in 2008 on research and development and related efforts in renewable energy.

Eventually, the Mountain View, California-based company said it will spend hundreds of millions of dollars in "breakthrough renewable energy projects which generate positive returns."

"Renewable Energy Cheaper Than Coal" is hiring engineers and energy experts to lead its research and development work. It said it will begin on solar thermal technology and will also investigate enhanced geothermal systems and other areas.

Page said Google gained experience in designing large-scale energy projects through its investments in energy-efficient computer data centers. The roofs of Google's headquarters buildings also boasts one of the biggest solar energy installations of any U.S. company.

"We want to apply the same creativity and innovation to the challenge of generating renewable electricity at globally significant scale and produce it cheaper than from coal," Page said in the statement.

(Reporting by Eric Auchard in San Francisco; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Andre Grenon)

Google's cheaper-than-coal target
BBC News 27 Nov 07;

Search giant Google is investing hundreds of millions of dollars in renewable energy technologies.

The Californian firm wants to make green energy sources of electricity cheaper than that produced from coal.

Its new initiative is known as RE < C, and will focus initially on solar thermal power, wind power and enhanced geothermal systems.

The support, to be channelled through philanthropic arm Google.org, will go to firms, R&D labs and universities.

Google also plans to do research itself, and will be hiring its own engineers and energy experts. It says renewables have to be taken to the next level if fossil fuel burning's impact on the climate is to be tackled effectively.

Need for speed

"With talented technologists, great partners and significant investments, we hope to rapidly push forward," said Larry Page, Google co-founder.

"Our goal is to produce one gigawatt of renewable energy capacity that is cheaper than coal. We are optimistic this can be done in years, not decades."

One gigawatt can power a city the size of San Francisco, one of California's biggest cities.

Google is already backing fuel-efficient cars. Google.org is giving out grants to help commercialise plug-in hybrids and fully electric vehicles.

The company itself has a 1.6-megawatt solar panel system installed at its headquarters in Mountain View, California.

Google said it expected to focus its early efforts on solar thermal technology, and would be spending "tens of millions" of dollars in 2008 on the RE < C initiative. In the future, however, this support should grow considerably.

Positive feedback

The firm has already begun working with what it regards as promising approaches in the state of California itself.

These include Makani Power Inc, which is developing ways to generate electricity by harnessing high-altitude winds.

Google thinks it has to get renewables producing electricity for a price of 1-3 cents per kilowatt-hour.

"Solar is currently substantially more expensive than coal, depending on the type that you have; but we see a lot of evidence from all the people working hard on this that the costs can come down quite a bit," said Larry Page.

"It's an ambitious goal to get it cheaper than coal but it seems obtainable; and certainly if we can, it will have a huge impact."


Read more!

World must act now on emission cuts, warns UN agency

It calls on countries to set clear targets at key meetings in Bali next month
By Nirmal Ghosh, Straits Times 28 Nov 07;

BANGKOK - THE United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) yesterday made a strong pitch for targeted cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, saying the world could not afford inertia.

Action must be taken now if the world is to avoid a worst-case global warming scenario, the agency said in its annual Human Development Report. It called for clear targets to be set at key meetings in Bali next month, saying developed countries should cut emissions by 20 to 30 per cent by 2020, and 80 per cent by 2050.

Developing countries could allow emissions to grow until 2020, and then cut them by 20 per cent from the levels they were at in 1990, by 2050.

Current global emissions are running at 29 gigatonnes per year. That needs to be halved to 14.5 gigatonnes per year - a sustainable level - for the rest of the 21st century, the report said.

Expecting developing countries like China, India and Brazil to start cutting emissions now would be unrealistic, the UNDP said - so they should be allowed to increase them until 2020 before capping and cutting them.

Two meetings in Bali next month - one of parties to the Kyoto Protocol, and another of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change - will set the agenda on combating global warming for years to come.

The historic meetings will see hard bargaining as governments come to terms with the necessity for cuts in greenhouse gases - especially carbon dioxide (CO2), the main driver of global warming.

Noting that global warming threatens sharp reversals in human development accompanied by abrupt and chaotic disruptions to ecosystems and agriculture, Mr Martin Krause, a climate change adviser to the UNDP, told journalists that 'seven out of 10 tonnes of CO2 (in the atmosphere) has been put there by OECD countries, so they have primary responsibility for reduction'.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) consists of the world's 30 most developed countries.

While calling for financing and technology transfer to help developing countries as they transition to a low-carbon economy, UNDP experts also pointed out that more developed countries in Asia could themselves become technology hubs.

Tackling climate change to cost 1.6% of global GDP: UN
Report calls on richer countries to cut greenhouse gas emissions
Business Times 28 Nov 07

(BRASILIA) Climate change could have apocalyptic consequences for the world's poor and tackling it will require cuts in greenhouse gases costing 1.6 per cent of global annual GDP, the UN Development Program said in a report yesterday.

Entitled 'The Struggle Against Climate Change' the UNDP report paints an alarming picture of the climate change problem and urges richer countries to cut greenhouse gas emissions by at least 80 per cent by 2050, with cuts of 30 per cent by 2020.

The proposed reductions in emissions are 'stringent but affordable', the report said.

The report comes a week before delegates to a UN-sponsored conference on Bali try to convince the US to join a new emissions-limiting treaty to succeed the Kyoto Protocol that ends in 2012.

Between now and 2030, the average annual cost would amount to 1.6 per cent of gross domestic product of the world, said the report which was to be presented yesterday at a ceremony attended by UNDP chief Kemal Dervis and Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

'This is not an insignificant investment. But it represents less than two-thirds of global military spending. The costs of inaction could be much higher,' the report said.

On its first page, the document states that 'climate change is now a scientifically established fact. We know enough to recognise that there are large risks, potentially catastrophic ones'.

In the study commissioned by the UNDP, a panel of experts examined how climate change could play out, considered how to tackle the crisis and asserted the cost of fixing the problem will not be the same for every country.

'Those who have largely caused the problem - the rich countries - are not going to ... suffer the most in the short term,' the report said.

'It is the poorest who did not, and still are not, contributing significantly to greenhouse gas emissions that are the most vulnerable.'

Addressing the disparity in costs represents the most difficult challenge for policy makers and the authors warned: 'We should not allow distributional disagreements to block the way forward.'

An eventual rise of three degrees Celsius in global temperatures will bring drought, tropical storms and a rise in sea levels that will hit the economies of developing countries hardest.

'In terms of aggregate world GDP, these short term effects may not be large. But for some of the world's poorest people, the consequences could be apocalyptic,' it said.

In analysing possible steps to alleviate climate change, the report argues that the effort must include drastic cuts to greenhouse gas emissions along with adapting to the effects of global warming.

'Adaptation is ultimately about building the resilience of the world's poor to a problem largely created by the world's richest nations,' it said.

For poor countries, climate change will bring a deterioration in agricultural production, declining access to health and education services, and less access to markets - generating yet more poverty, it said.

The aim of the UN report was to encourage countries to confront the problem, said Ken Watkins, a member of the expert team that prepared the document.

'We are issuing a call to action, not providing a counsel of despair.

Working together with resolve, we can win the battle against climate change,' Mr Watkins said.

Meanwhile, Britain's leading employers' body, the CBI, yesterday urged the business sector to tackle climate change.

The Confederation of British Industry, staging the final day of its annual conference, has placed global warming at the top of the agenda with a flagship study on green technologies and working practices.

The conference kicked off on Monday with a report from its climate change task force, which called for concerted action from British businesses, consumers and the government to slash carbon dioxide emissions.

'We will do what it takes' to combat climate change, task force chair and BT chief executive Ben Verwaayen yesterday told delegates gathered for the CBI conference in London.

The CBI's task force comprises 18 chairmen and chief executives from well-known companies that together employ two million people.

The CBI's report contained pledges to develop green products and services, as well as a vow to save an extra one million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions among the employees of task force members within the next three years.

The study, based on data from consultants McKinsey, found that Britain's carbon reduction targets for 2020 were likely to be missed, but other goals could be achieved if urgent action were taken to adopt green measures\. \-- AFP

World Must Fix Climate in Less Than 10 Years - UNDP
Raymond Colitt PlanetArk 28 Nov 07;

BRASILIA - Unless the international community agrees to cut carbon emissions by half over the next generation, climate change is likely to cause large-scale human and economic setbacks and irreversible ecological catastrophes, a United Nations report says on Tuesday.

The UN Human Development Report issues one of the strongest warnings yet of the lasting impact of climate change on living standards and a strong call for urgent collective action.

"We could be on the verge of seeing human development reverse for the first time in 30 years," Kevin Watkins, lead author of the report, told Reuters.

The report, to be presented in Brasilia on Tuesday, sets targets and a road map to reduce carbon emissions before a UN climate summit next month in Bali, Indonesia.

Emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere help trap heat and lead to global warming.

"The message for Bali is the world cannot afford to wait, it has less than a decade to change course," said Watkins, a senior research fellow at Britain's Oxford University.

Dangerous climate change will be unavoidable if in the next 15 years emissions follow the same trend as the past 15 years, the report says.

To avoid catastrophic impact, the rise in global temperature must be limited to 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius). But carbon emissions from cars, power plants and deforestation in Brazil, Indonesia and elsewhere, are twice the level needed to meet that target, the UN authors say.

Climate change threatens to condemn millions of people to poverty, the UNDP says. Climate disasters between 2000 and 2004 affected 262 million people, 98 percent of them in the developing world. The poor are often forced to sell productive assets or save on food, health, and education, creating "life-long cycles of disadvantage."

A temperature rise of between 5.4 and 7.2 degrees Fahrenheit (3 and 4 degrees Celsius) would displace 340 million people through flooding, droughts would diminish farm output, and retreating glaciers would cut off drinking water from as many as 1.8 billion people, the report says.

In Kenya, children 5 or younger are 50 percent more likely to be malnourished if they were born during a drought year, affecting their life-long health and productivity.

Countries have the technical ability and financial resources but lack the political will to act, the report says. It singles out the United States and Australia as the only major Western economies not to sign the Kyoto Protocol, an agreement signed by 172 countries to reduce emissions. It expires in 2012.

Ethiopia emits 0.1 tonnes of carbon dioxide per capita, compared to 20 tonnes in Canada. US per capita emissions are over 15 times those of India's.

PROPOSED ROAD MAP

The world needs to spend 1.6 percent of global economic output annually through 2030 to stabilize the carbon stock and meet the 3.6-degree Fahrenheit temperature target. Rich countries, the biggest carbon emitters, should lead the way and cut emissions at least 30 percent by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050. Developing nations should cut emissions 20 percent by 2050, the UNDP says.

"When people in an American city turn on their air-conditioning or people in Europe drive their cars, their actions have consequences ... linking them to rural communities in Bangladesh, farmers in Ethiopia and slum dwellers in Haiti," the report says.

The UNDP recommends a series of measures including improved energy efficiency for appliances and cars, taxes or caps on emissions, and the ability to trade allowances to emit more. It said an experimental technology to store carbon emissions underground was promising for the coal industry, and suggested technology transfer to coal-dependent developing countries like China.

An international fund should invest between US$25 billion and US$50 billion annually in low-carbon energy in developing countries.

Asked whether the report was alarmist, Watkins said it was based on science and evidence: "I defy anybody to speak to the victims of droughts and floods, like we did, and challenge our conclusions on the long-term impact of climate disasters." (Editing by Mohammad Zargham)


Read more!

UN: Poor need $86 billion in climate aid

John Heilprin, Associated Press, Yahoo News 28 Nov 07;

Helping the world's poor adapt to more floods, droughts and other changes from a warming planet will cost the richest nations at least $86 billion a year by 2015, an expert panel warned Tuesday.

"They must have help from the rich world," said Claes Johnasson, a co-author of the report commissioned by the U.N. Development Program. "Climate is forcing people into human development traps."

Half the cost, $44 billion, would go for "climate-proofing" developing nations' infrastructure while $40 billion would help the poor adapt how the live to cope with climate-related risks, says the panel's report. The other $2 billion would go to strengthening responses to natural disasters.

The report recommends the biggest share be paid by the United States and other rich nations, based on aid targets and financing calculations by the World Bank and Group of Eight major industrialized nations.

The Bush administration said in a statement that one of its top priorities is "to alleviate poverty and spur economic growth in the developing world by modernizing energy services."

The Human Development Report each year compares nations by life expectancy, literacy and other data. This year, it focuses on climate change, coming just a week before the world's nations convene in Indonesia to negotiate a new climate treaty.

It adds a dire economic perspective to previous U.N. scientific findings that carbon and other heat-trapping "greenhouse gas" emissions must stabilize by 2015 and then decline. Without the money, the panel found, a warmer world "could stall and then reverse human development" in the countries where 2.6 billion people live on $2 a day or less.

Scientists have reported that temperatures rose an average 1.3 degrees in the past 100 years, bringing the prospect of a century of extreme weather, rising seas, widening drought and disease and harm to fisheries, forests and farmland.

According to development officials, the consequences include women and young girls having to walk farther to collect water in the Horn of Africa, and people erecting bamboo flood shelters on stilts in the Ganges River delta.

"These impacts ... go unnoticed in financial markets and in the measurement of world gross domestic product (GDP)," the report said. "But increased exposure to drought, to more intense storms, to floods and environmental stress is holding back the efforts of the world's poor to build a better life for themselves and their children."

Olav Kjorven, head of the U.N. Development Program's bureau for development policy, called the financial aid a sort of "climate-proofing" for the poor that is only natural "when we know that the frequency of droughts and floods is going up."

Because of global warming, he said, 600 million more people in sub-Saharan Africa will go hungry from collapsing agriculture, an extra 400 million people will be exposed to malaria and other diseases, and an added 200 million will be flooded out of their homes.

The development panel says the greatest financial responsibility lies with the U.S. and other rich nations most responsible for the accumulating carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere, mainly from man's burning of coal, oil and other fossil fuels.

"We're suggesting 1.6 percent of (global) GDP — still very affordable," Kjorven said. "The countries of the world that are the principal culprits, if you wish, for creating this problem in the first place need to act strongly to safeguard the future of those that have done nothing to cause this problem but are the most vulnerable."

Developed countries, meanwhile, are failing to meet their targets under the current climate treaty, the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, for cutting greenhouse gases by 2012, the report said. France, Germany, Japan and Britain have reduced their emissions somewhat, it said, but the European Union is falling short of its goal of a 20 percent cut by 2020.

"To say that the industrialized countries aren't meeting their Kyoto targets — that remains to be seen," said Annie Petsonk, a lawyer for the advocacy group Environmental Defense. "The targets only take effect for the years 2008 to 2012. The countries are getting ready for them."

Petsonk said developing nations' carbon-trading markets have the potential to generate large flows of private capital that could help provide much of the development money the U.N. recommends to help the poor adapt to global warming.

Rich and Poor Gird for Climate Change - UN Report

Raymond Colitt PlanetArk 28 Nov 07

BRASILIA - People around the world are preparing for floods, droughts and other natural disasters in ways largely dictated by wealth and poverty as evidence of climate change mounts, a UN report said on Tuesday.


Even if countries immediately took steps to cut greenhouse gases, global temperatures would continue to rise through 2050 due to accumulated carbon emissions, the UN Development Program said in its report. As a result climate disasters will be more frequent.

"All countries will have to adapt to climate change," said the report scheduled to be released in Brasilia on Tuesday.

Like many low-lying areas in the Netherlands, the town of Maasbommel is vulnerable to flooding from rising river and sea levels. Despite a sophisticated system of dikes, residents have built 38 homes able to float on water due to their hollow foundations propped up by steel stilts.

In Vietnam's Mekong Delta, one of the world's most vulnerable areas to climate change, people also are trying to cope with prospects of increased flooding from storms in the South China Sea during typhoon season.

They are being given life jackets and taught how to swim as part of a program sponsored by aid groups, the UNDP said.

The contrast between their bamboo stilts and earth dikes with the flood defense systems in Maasbommel illustrates how climate change "reinforces wider global inequalities," Kevin Watkins, the report's lead author, told Reuters.

'MORALLY WRONG'

While people in rich countries can rely on public investment, those in poor countries must largely help themselves, the report said.

"Leaving the world's poor to sink or swim with their own meager resources in the face of the threat posed by climate change is morally wrong," Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu of South Africa wrote in the report.

Britain spends US$1.2 billion annually on flood defense and is mulling an US$8 billion investment for the Thames Barrier. California, meanwhile, is investing in water recycling and efficiency.

The US state expects a reduction of snow in the Sierra Nevada mountain range, an important water source, by 37 percent in 2035-64, and 79 percent in 2070-90, the report said.

While the Netherlands has 14 weather stations per 10,000 square km (3,860 sq miles) to monitor climate and Britain has seven, African countries have less than one on average.

Still, some pilot projects in developing countries show that low-cost measures can make a difference. A simple monitoring scheme that informs farmers of rain, for example, increased productivity in Mali, the report said.

The UNDP urged rich countries to honor their pledges for climate change aid to developing countries. Otherwise they could face higher costs down the road.

"In the long run, the problems of the poor will arrive at the doorstep of the wealthy, as the climate crisis gives way to despair, anger and collective security threats," Tutu wrote. (Editing by Xavier Briand)


Read more!

Poor States Adapt to Disasters, Face Rising Threat

Peter Apps, PlanetArk 28 Nov 07;

LONDON - As aid workers clear up after Bangladesh's cyclone, they say developing countries are getting better at handling disasters -- but it may not be enough in the face of climate change.

Bangladesh's worst cyclone since 1991 killed about 3,500 people, left thousands missing or injured and displaced 2 million.

The Bangladeshi air force has been unable to cope with the scale of the disaster, officials say, with many survivors still desperately needing aid despite supplies brought with the help of helicopters from nearby US warships.

But aid experts say a few years ago the death toll would have been much higher, pointing out that while too many died this time the progress compared to earlier disasters was marked.

They say that if Cyclone Sidr had hit the impoverished, low-lying South Asian country in the 1990s some 100,000 would have died.

"We are definitely getting better at it," said Care International UK emergency planning specialist Kate Akhtar, pointing to improvements in advance warning and the provision of cyclone shelters. "Disaster preparedness was much better."

Bangladesh is not the only country seen as having drastically improved its management of disasters.

When floods hit Mozambique this year, aid workers say the government was swift to broadcast radio warnings and evacuate people from vulnerable areas. Some 45 people died, compared to 700 in 2000-2001 -- when many remained with their property until it was too late. In both, there were fewer deaths from disease.

When a quake hit off the Indonesian island of Sumatra in September, it sparked tsunami warnings. In the 2004 tsunami, tens of thousands died having been unaware of the giant wave heading towards them for hours across hundreds of miles of sea.

This time, although there was no tsunami, warning systems kicked in and people headed to higher ground.

Aid agencies say disaster preparedness has become a new hot topic in the developing world.

But not everyone is as well prepared.


HAPPENING NOW

Aid workers say when disasters strike countries and communities unaccustomed to them, much more goes wrong.

In recent floods in Ethiopia, the Red Cross says regions that had experienced similar events before adapted well. Those being hit for the first time saw more outbreaks of disease, psychological problems and avoidable deaths.

Unfortunately, aid agencies say that with climate change there seems to be a rapidly increasing number of disasters in areas that have not seen them before. The trend is global. This year, communities from rural England to Ghana to Pakistan have been struck by unexpected floods.

It seems to be getting worse. The Red Cross says it has seen an increase from 200 to 500 disasters a year in three years.

"What we are seeing with climate change is a huge increase in small disasters," IFRC head of operations support Peter Rees told Reuters. "Tackling climate change is not just about dealing with emissions. It is about increasing disaster preparedness. This is happening now."

The chaotic and confused response to 2005's Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans showed even developed countries could struggle in the face of such threats.

IFRC's Rees said communities in rich countries were much less likely to make plans beyond simply waiting for the emergency services. But if the trend for increasing disasters continued, he warned they would have to learn.

While local Red Cross or Red Crescent societies in almost every country from China to the United States could respond with local volunteers, Rees said, the rise in small disasters made old models in which Western aid groups flew in unworkable.

And if, as some predict, climate change causes refugee numbers to soar and sparks new wars, coping will be harder..

"Are we getting better?" he said. "Definitely yes. Are we ready for the challenge of climate change? That is another matter." (Editing by Charles Dick)

RELATED ARTICLES

Natural disasters have quadrupled in two decades: study
Yahoo News 25 Nov 07;


Read more!