The final frontier for solar energy, in space

Judith Burns, BBC News 7 Dec 07;

Scientists are assessing the possibility of embarking on a space engineering project that would eclipse the effort to construct the International Space Station.

Researchers from Europe, Japan and the US are considering the viability of building giant solar panels in a low earth orbit that would supply cheap, inexhaustible energy to industry and homes.

Building a huge array outside the Earth's atmosphere would have the advantage of having no clouds to interrupt the flow of solar energy to the arrays. Yet the sizeable downside would be the technical challenges of construction and of getting the power down to the ground.

It's an undertaking that has been likened to the building of the Pyramids.

It would require an armada of rockets carrying tonnes of material into space on a regular basis, says Lieutenant Colonel Paul Damphousse of the Pentagon's National Security Space Office.

"That's going to require repeated sorties; not one sortie every other week or every other month," he explains.

"We're talking hundreds of sorties every week and every month."

A new dawn?

A recent study by the Pentagon concluded that a solar array in space was close to being technologically feasible, and robotics should soon make the building of large structures in space safer and quicker.



Nasa has already begun work on a successor to the shuttle, which should bring the costs of space transport down; currently, each launch costs nearly half a billion dollars.

Leopold Summerer of the European Space Agency believes the generation of solar power from space may be only 20 years away.

But he adds that the cost of the undertaking will mean it will have to be another international effort along the lines of the Space Station.

Robert Lainway from EADS Astrium, the Anglo-French space company, says private sector involvement could help reduce costs but governments would have to take the first steps.

"Sometime in the future it will be reality," he predicts.

"It's a matter of developing the technology to make the solar panels cheaper, to send them into the sky and have the energy conversion to microwaves or optical lasers which then beam the energy down to Earth.

"All of that is demonstrated to be technically feasible. Again it's a matter of economics".

For Lt Col Damphousse, despite the technical and economic challenges, the advantages are clear.

"It opens up all the other things that we are trying to do in space; our exploration strategy, our planetary defence, commercialism in space, space tourism.

"If we're able to do this as an international effort this helps to relieve some of those pressures on resource shortages, overpopulation. This is something that's in the interest of the entire planet.

"Once we open up the medium, there's a whole new world waiting for us out there."


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Inaction on greener buildings puzzle experts

David Fogarty, Reuters 7 Dec 07;

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) - Building greener homes and office towers and installing energy-efficient lighting could slash planet-warming carbon emissions, U.N. and industry officials said at climate talks in Bali on Friday.

They said the technology already existed to dramatically cut electricity use for very little cost, and yet it was puzzling that governments, industries and home-owners weren't cashing in on the energy-saving ideas.

"About 40 percent of all energy is consumed in buildings and in construction. This is the incredible fact most people don't realize," said Kaarin Taipale, of the U.N.'s Marrakesh Task Force on Sustainable Buildings and Construction.

The trick was to install greener lighting, ventilation, heating and cooling systems, said Sylvie Lemmet, director of the United Nations Environment Program's Division of Technology, Industry and Economics.

She said it was also possible to cut power consumption by using better insulating materials in walls, windows, flooring and doors, and changing people's behavior, such as switching off the lights as office-workers leave for the day.

"The entire current emission reductions commitment under the Kyoto Protocol can be achieved in the building sector alone. And the costs of achieving these reductions are low, very low."

Advanced technology was not needed, she told a news conference on the sidelines of the talks in Bali, where 190 nations are trying to shape a broader climate pact to expand or replace the Kyoto Protocol. The pact binds 36 industrial nations to meet emissions curbs between 2008-2012.

"You'd believe everyone would be rushing towards reducing emissions from the building and construction sectors and that governments are actively supporting the sector to realize this potential."

"This is not really happening and in most countries nothing is happening."

MARKET FAILURE

This was because there was little knowledge of materials, little awareness about by business about sustainable buildings, and economic disincentives, she said.

"All our studies have found it will not happen if governments are not active to help overcome the market failure that is very blatant here."

The developing world was taking a growing share of emissions.

"In China, two billion square meters (21 billion sq ft) of new building space is added every year, making China the largest consumer of cement, steel, brick and many other building materials."

Lack of coordination between building professionals and lack of knowledge about how to construct greener buildings was another impediment, said Christian Kornevall of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development.

He said there was often a failure of basic communication during the design phase, with architects, structural, mechanical and electrical engineers not working closely enough.

The same applied during construction, Kornevall, the council's project director of energy efficiency in buildings, told the same news conference.

He blamed "decision-making islands" for poor overall communication that led to energy-inefficient designs.

A senior executive of Dutch electronics giant Philips told a separate news conference in Bali that installing energy-efficient lighting could save 1.5 billion barrels of oil a year, or the annual output of 530 medium-sized power stations.
(Editing by Alister Doyle)


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Johor floods recede, except in Segamat

The Star 7 Dec 07;

JOHOR BARU: Despite the intermittent rain throughout the day, the flood situation in the state improved, with the exception of Segamat.

More than half the evacuees in Johor Baru returned home as waters receded. At 8am, there were 1,573 evacuees at 11 relief centres in the district, but by 4pm, only 726 remained at two relief centres.

A spokesperson from the flood operations room said this brought the total number of flood victims in the state down to 3,705, from 4,491 at 8am.

However, the situation worsened in Segamat with 2,697 people seeking shelter at relief centres at 4pm Friday, up from 1,786 at 8am.

In Segamat, three roads - Jalan Jabi-Bukit Tempurung, Jalan Begal-Selumpur and Jalan Tuanku Tiga - were closed to all traffic.

Jalan Kampung Logah-Medoi and Jalan Bangas-Selumpur, Jalan Jabi Sermin-Bukit Tempurung were only accessible to heavy vehicles.

All flood relief centres in Muar were closed by 4pm as evacuees returned home, while the situation in Kluang (457 victims) and Batu Pahat (29) remained unchanged.

In Kluang, Jalan Ladang Selai and Jalan Ladang Enggang Paloh remained close to all traffic from Thursday night.

However, the 17th mile of Jalan Kluang-Mersing was reopened to traffic Friday.

The situation in Kota Tinggi also improved, with only 195 people remaining at relief centres at 4pm compared to 623 at 8am.


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Johor, Pahang on red alert as rivers breach danger levels

Jennifer Gomez, New Straits Times 7 Dec 07;

KUALA LUMPUR: Many areas of Johor Baru and Kota Tinggi are flooded after almost continuous rain since Wednesday. Parts of Segamat are at risk, as Sungai Segamat breached the danger level at 4pm yesterday.

The river has risen to 9.08m, 8cm above the danger level, according to Department of Drainage and Irrigation hydrology and water resources division deputy director Azmi Md Jafri.

And the wet conditions in Johor are expected to continue until tonight according to the Meteorological Department, which has Johor and Pahang under red alert.

Flooded areas include Kampung Sg Plentong and Kampung Sg Tiram near Johor Baru, and Kampung Sg Berangan in Kota Tinggi, said Azmi.

Azmi said Kota Tinggi recorded 114mm of rain on Wednesday night, while Kampung Sg Plentong had received 148mm until 3pm yesterday.

The level of Sungai Plentong rose to 4.44m by 5pm on Wednesday, breaching the 3.7m alert level.

Azmi added that about 200 residents of Kampung Sungai Plentong had moved to Sekolah Kebangsaan Permas for temporary shelter.

About 90 residents of Kampung Sg Tiram also had to vacate their homes.

“Sg Johor, which caused the flooding in Kota Tinggi the last time, was at 1.16m at 3pm yesterday. The alert level is 2.2m,” said Azmi.

In Pahang, moderate and heavy rain are expected until tomorrow night.

Azmi added that Sg Kuantan at Bukit Kenau had reached 2.04m at 4pm yesterday, above the alert level.

Kuantan, Pekan, Jerantut, Bentong, Kuala Lipis and Maran have been experiencing wet weather since Wednesday morning.

Moderate to heavy showers are expected in Kelantan and Terengganu till tomorrow night, while Negri Sembilan and Malacca can expect the same until tonight, according to the Meteorological Department, which has placed these states under orange alert.

Bernama reports that in Kota Baru, people living along the banks of Sungai Golok, especially in Tanah Merah, have been advised to take precautionary measures.

According to the Kelantan Drainage and Irrigation Department, Sungai Golok in Tanah Merah had risen to 21.73m as at 4pm yesterday.

Its normal reading is 19m. The river’s alert level is 21.50m while danger level 23.50m.

Meanwhile, in Pantai Sabak, big waves and strong winds have been pounding the beaches over the past several days. The residents have been advised to be ready for evacuation when ordered to do so.

Fishermen, however, are still going out to sea.


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Hong Kong chokes on pollution

Reuters 7 Dec 07;

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong warned people with heart or lung problems to avoid outdoor activities on Friday as the territory experienced one of its most polluted days of the year, with the hills across the harbor almost invisible.

Pollution monitoring stations registered "very high" readings in several spots around the former British colony, and the Environmental Protection Department said the poor air was expected to continue.

Hong Kong's air has become increasingly clogged with pollutants from cars, ships, power plants and a booming manufacturing sector across the border in China's Guangdong province.

Air Pollution Index (API) readings surpassed 101, entering what the EPD considers "very high," at several sites, including the Central business district, which hit 150 by mid-afternoon, and the Causeway Bay shopping area, which hit 127.

The figures were among the highest this year, a spokesman for the EPD said. Readings are typically worse during winter months.

"We expect that the regional background air pollution will continue to be high and that air dispersion will remain poor tomorrow. The general and roadside API readings are expected to remain at higher than normal levels," the department said in a written statement.

With very high readings, the government recommended "people with heart or respiratory illnesses should reduce physical exertion and outdoor activities, and avoid prolonged stay in roads and streets with heavy traffic."

(Reporting by John Ruwitch; Editing by Nick Macfie and Alex Richardson)

Hong Kong chokes on pollution for second day
Reuters 7 Dec 07;

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong is shrouded in the worst air pollution of the year for the second day running on Saturday, with hills across Victoria harbor invisible despite a sunny dry weather.

Pollution monitoring station registered "very high" readings in several spots around the former British colony since Friday when the Environment Protection Department warned people with heart or lung problems to avoid outdoor activities.

Residents are increasingly worried over the rising number of smog-ridden days caused by the city's coal-fired power stations, cars and trucks, and a booming manufacturing sector across the border in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong.

The Air Pollution Index (API) surpassed 101, reaching what the department considers very high level at several places by mid-day after hitting 151 -- the highest level this year -- in the posh Central business district late on Friday.

The city, which on a rare clear day offers a stunning view of sparkling ocean, green mountains and skyscrapers, is choking on smogs as 190 countries meet in Bali to launch a new international deal to fight global warming.

CLP Holdings Ltd, the larger of Hong Kong's two power utilities often under attack by environmental groups, pledged on Friday it would cut the carbon intensity of its global power generation by 2050.

But Chan Ka-keung, CLP Group's director of renewable energy, told the South China Morning Post that it has yet to enact definite plans to achieve the aggressive goal.

(Reporting by Nao Nakanishi; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)


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Scientists trying to save Coral Triangle

Charles J. Hanley, Associated Press, Yahoo News 7 Dec 07;

For time beyond memory on this remote bay of neon fish and underwater gardens, people have avoided the "masalai," taboo waters, where a monster octopus might lurk or spirits dwell in coral caves. Now it's science that wants no-go zones in Kimbe Bay, and it's because of a new fear.

From the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean to the central Pacific, global warming and the sea's rising temperatures have been "bleaching" and killing the world's coral reefs.

It's here in Kimbe Bay, and in the surrounding triangle of sea stretching from Indonesia up to the Philippines and down to the Solomon Islands, that the strange, beautiful form of life known as coral may someday have to make its last stand.

"The Coral Triangle is going to hold out, and it's tremendously important that it does, because what's holding out is the center of world marine diversity," said marine biologist Charlie Veron, a world-renowned expert on reef-building coral.

The region, epitomized by this gorgeous, volcano-ringed bay on the Pacific's western fringe, shelters more than half of all the world's coral and 75 percent of its hundreds of species, from graceful fan and sprawling table-shaped types, to staghorn, elkhorn and brain coral. Half the world's species of reef fish swim its waters.

Over eons, Veron said, the triangle "has exported this diversity to the rest of the world." In other words, it's coral's homeland.

Veron, Australian author of the three-volume "Corals of the World," spoke with The Associated Press at the U.N. climate conference on the resort island of Bali, where Indonesian and other regional governments this week were announcing a new partnership to protect the Coral Triangle.

The U.S.-based environmental group Nature Conservancy, working with Veron and other foreign and Papua New Guinean scientists, is leading the way here on New Britain island, with an ambitious plan to establish 15 restricted zones in the 3,300-square-mile Kimbe Bay.

It's one of the first plans for "marine protected areas" dealing specifically with climate change.

The Nature Conservancy's Annisah Supal, after escorting a visiting journalist on a morning's underwater tour, said her Papua New Guinean neighbors don't realize what they have.

"We tell them about the uniqueness of the bay, and they say, `Wow!'," the young conservation officer said. "Kimbe Bay is a paradise, and our job is to preserve that paradise."

Beneath the bay's peaceful surface, "paradise" unfolds before goggled eyes in a rainbow of stunning variety — of hard coral in green and red, purple and white, of vividly striped clownfish and starfish of iridescent blue, of brooding groupers and darting flashes of finned indigo. Many depend on the reefs for food and shelter.

The bay, a vast collection of habitats, including isolated seamounts, coastal mangrove forests and seagrass beds, also is home to sperm whales and sea turtles, sharks and dugong. It has quietly become one of the premier scuba diving destinations on Earth.

Divers are increasingly disappointed elsewhere, as coral succumbs to warming and other ills.

Reef-building coral is a fragile organism, a tiny polyp-like animal that builds a calcium-carbonate shell around itself and survives in a symbiotic relationship with types of algae — each providing sustenance to the other.

Even a 1-degree Celsius — 1.7-degree Fahrenheit — rise in normal maximum sea temperatures can disrupt that relationship, leading to bleaching as the colored algae flee. If prolonged, the warming can lead to coral death.

In a series of landmark reports this year, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the U.N. climate-science network, said projected global warming indicates "bleaching will recur more often than reefs can sustain."

That's not necessarily so in Kimbe Bay and the Coral Triangle, Veron said. These arms of the equatorial western Pacific have experienced "pulses" of warm water over millions of years, conditioning coral to climate change, he said.

The key, he said, is to now protect these resources from other damaging pressures — land-erosion runoff, toxic agricultural chemicals, coral harvesting, overfishing and fishing by dynamiting reefs or poisoning reef fish.

For various reasons, chiefly related to New Britain's relatively small, farm-based population, such pressures haven't ruined Kimbe Bay.

"But as land is used up for agriculture, and plots become smaller and smaller, you see people turning their attention to the sea, using the sea," said Ana Ban, head of a local environmental group, Mahonia Na Dari, or Guardians of the Sea.

"Before we get to the point where we can no longer save the marine environment, we should act," she said.

With the aid of an advanced computer program assessing marine resources block by block across Kimbe Bay, the Nature Conservancy over three years developed its plan for 15 protected zones, ranging in size from 2 to 240 square miles, places where fishing, shellfish harvesting and other activities would be banned or restricted.

The political challenge, convincing communities to establish the zones, will be at least as daunting as the scientific one. The island waters of one "area of interest," for example, are shared among nine New Guinean clans, all with a say over its use.

"Working with local communities can be difficult," acknowledged Leo Bualia, the Nature Conservancy project manager here. His group has made progress, however, winning approval for marine management laws from the three local governments around the bay.

But in this poor, tradition-bound nation, only the clans could enforce the laws' prohibitions — their ban on the use of "poison rope," for example, a toxic root traditionally used to kill reef fish. Tradition can be tough to overcome.

"Women harvest giant clams by prying their shells from coral with an iron bar," Supal said. "That damages the coral below. But it's hard to tell them they must change."

The conservationists believe, nonetheless, they'll clear final hurdles to establishing two of the marine protected areas by year's end, and hope next year for six more, out of the 15. In some cases, Supal noted, the new no-go zones incorporate the old — the "masalai" taboo areas.

Ultimately, the Nature Conservancy views Kimbe Bay as a "platform site" for expanding such preserves throughout the Bismarck Sea, a large swath of the Coral Triangle.

In the end, however, even the marine biologists' best efforts may not fend off all the threats, since there's a "gorilla in the cupboard," as Veron put it — the growing acidification of the oceans, from their absorption of excess atmospheric carbon dioxide, the prime global-warming gas.

More acidic waters make it more difficult for coral to produce their calcium carbonate shells. Researchers have yet to fully understand the implications, but the accelerating chemical imbalance in the seas spurred 50 Australian coral reef specialists to appeal urgently for action at the Bali climate conference.

"We call on all societies and governments to immediately and substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions," they wrote in a petition this October. "Without targeted reductions, the ongoing damage to coral reefs from global warming will soon be irreversible."


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Kenya battles voracious locusts in northern dustbowl: ministry

Yahoo News 7 Dec 07;

Kenya is battling swarms of voracious desert locusts that have invaded the country's northeastern arid region for the first time since 1962, the agriculture ministry said Friday.

"These pests cause a great damage to crops, pasture and browse if left uncontrolled," the ministry permanent secretary Romano Kiome said in a statement published in newspapers.

Most troubling is their potential to lay eggs, increasing a possible devastation by reproducing and placing food stocks at risk in the arid region.

Therefore the government has deployed aerial and ground sprayers to deal with the insects, Kiome added.

Huge swarms in 2004 invaded the Sahelian countries from northwest Africa, causing extensive damage in the worst locust upsurge in 15 years, prompting the world to spend more than 200 million dollars in combating it.

Kenya issues alert over desert locust invasion
Yahoo News 7 Dec 07;

Desert locusts have invaded Kenya's arid northeastern region, threatening maize and wheat crops, but the Agriculture Ministry said on Friday it was well prepared to fight the pests.

The desert locust's destructive power stems from its gregarious nature that allows it to move in swarms, eating whatever vegetation it finds in its path.

A ministry statement published in local newspapers said the locusts were not aggressively feeding yet, but were in their last stage of development and laying eggs in the moist sandy soil of the hot region.

"In view of the above and understanding the ecology of the pest, it is important to note that hoppers which are the most destructive stage are expected to appear from around December 10," the statement quoted Romano Kiome, the ministry's permanent secretary, as saying.

"This stage is the focus of control."

He said the government was prepared with pesticides and spraying equipment and that the attack was the first since 1962.

The locust swarms originated in Yemen, flew into Ethiopia's Ogaden region where they laid eggs in October and a few swarms continued south towards Somalia and northeastern Kenya, the statement said.

"A large and dense desert locust swarm first flew over Mandera (bordering Ethiopia and Somalia) on November 18," the statement added.

(Reporting by Helen Nyambura-Mwaura; editing by Andrew Dobbie)


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Ship collision causes major oil spill off South Korea: official

Channel NewsAsia 7 Dec 07;

SEOUL - A tanker collided Friday with a barge off South Korea's west coast and more than 10,000 tons of oil has leaked into the sea, a South Korean government official said.

The Hong Kong-registered tanker Hebei Spirit was carrying a total of about 15,000 tons when it struck the barge, said Kim Jong-Sik, an official with the ministry of maritime affairs and fisheries.

"This is the country's worst oil spill," Kim told AFP. "We worry about an ecological disaster.

"We have set up a boom, trying to stop oil from spreading along the coast."

The accident occurred five miles off Mallipo, some 90 kilometres (54 miles) southwest of Seoul.

It triggered an emergency operation by about 40 coastguard and other ships as well as four helicopters, said ministry officials, who have set up a crisis centre. - AFP/ir

Tanker leaks oil off S.Korea coast
Jack Kim, Reuters 7 Dec 07;

SEOUL (Reuters) - A large oil tanker gushed thousands of tons of oil into the sea near one of South Korea's most scenic coastlines after being hit by a barge, South Korea's maritime ministry said on Friday.

The Hong Kong-registered Hebei Spirit was struck while at anchor off Daesan port in the Taean region on the country's west coast and the ministry said it had already leaked some 10,800 metric tons of crude oil.

"A barge ship being towed ... collided with the oil tanker at anchor, breaching the cargo section and leaking crude oil," ministry official Lee Jang-hoon told reporters.

But he added that because the ship was listing slightly "it's unlikely there will be huge additional spills."

The leak is about a third of the size of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill of crude oil onto Alaskan shores, which was the costliest on record. That clean-up alone cost around $2.5 billion while the total cost, including fines and claims settlement, is estimated at $9.5 billion.

The very large crude carrier (VLCC) Hebei Spirit was about 5 miles outside the port, waiting to unload its cargo of 260,000 tons of crude oil from the Middle East. The port is about 110 km (70 miles) southwest of Seoul.

Wind and waves of up to 4 meters (13 ft) were preventing efforts to contain the spill, which the official said could reach the coast in less than 48 hours.

There was no point in trying to use a floating boom to contain oil already on the sea because the waves were too high.

Lee added that there was also concern for the safety of workers from fumes coming from the oil.

The Taean region's coast is popular for its beaches and is home to a national maritime park. It is also an important refueling stop for migratory birds.

Lee said the oil was unlikely to spread north to the major port of Incheon, which serves the capital.

Workers have been trying to shift the oil to tanks that were not damaged in the collision, he said.

South Korean refiner Hyundai Oilbank said the oil on the tanker had been destined for its Daesan refinery. A company spokesman said the refiner did not have plans to buy additional crude due to the incident because it had sufficient stocks.

Technical managers of the MT Hebei Spirit issued a statement later in the day, confirming the collision with a local crane barge called "Samsung No.1" owned by Samsung Heavy Industries.

The statement said no injuries were reported but the vessel's side shell on tanks No.1, 3 and 5 portside was breached and crude oil had leaked out. It said the exact quantity is not known.

(Additional reporting by Angela Moon, writing by Jonathan Thatcher; Editing by Keiron Henderson and Alex Richardson)


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Two young Singapore environmentalists to participate in Bali conference

Channel NewsAsia 7 Dec 07;

SINGAPORE : Two young environmentalists from Singapore will join 28 others from ASEAN countries to attend the UN Climate Change Conference in Bali.

Singapore is represented by 16-year-old Hu Ching from Raffles Junior College and 24-year-old Nanyang Polytechnic student Choo Pei Ling.

Both have achieved the National Youth Achievement Gold Award.

They are in Bali for the UN Environment Programme's (UNEP) South East Asia Youth Environment Network Conference on Climate Change (SEAYEN).

The four-day event starts on December 9. The youth conference will later present a statement at the main Climate Change Convention.

Singapore's National Youth Achievement Award Council and the UNEP Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific had agreed on the SEAYEN conference in a Memorandum of Understanding dated 7 November 2007. - CNA/ms


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3,200 flee Johor floods

Meera Vijayan and Farik Zolkepli, the Star 7 Dec 07;

JOHOR BARU: Continuous rainfall flooded parts of Johor Baru, Segamat, Batu Pahat, Kota Tinggi and Kluang, forcing the evacuation of more than 3,200 victims last evening.

The district with the highest number of evacuees is Johor Baru with 1,346, followed by Segamat with 1,269, Kota Tinggi (623).

Kluang reported evacuating 429 victims while Batu Pahat had 29 victims. All 10 people who were evacuated in Muar earlier yesterday had returned home later in the day.

A bridge from Labis to Segamat near Sungai Karas has been closed to traffic, with only heavy vehicles allowed to pass.

All roads remain passable, including the Labis-Segamat trunk road near Sungai Karas which was previously accessible only to heavy vehicles.

The Meteorological Services Department has issued an “orange” level flood alert for Kelantan and Terengganu, with moderate and heavy rainfall expected till late tomorrow night. The alert signifies continuous rainfall over several hours.

The department has also issued a first category warning on strong winds and rough seas off Kelantan, Terengganu, Pahang, east Johor, Sarawak and Sabah, expected to last till Tuesday.

Strong north-easterly winds of 40kph to 50kph with waves up to 3.5m are expected.

Johor CPO Deputy Comm Datuk Hussin Ismail said police were monitoring the situation.

“We are prepared for the floods and all our men are on standby,” he said.

Johor Fire and Rescue Department director Amer Yusof said his personnel were also prepared “for the worst.”

“The floods are not too bad yet, so we have not had to use any of our rescue boats so far,” he added.

Amer said the department decided to evacuate residents early for safety reasons.

State Women, Family and Community Development Committee chairman Dr Robia Kosai said the Welfare Department had sent out food and emergency supplies to all districts, including the islands off Mersing and interior areas like Kampung Peta in Endau-Rompin.

For flood-related inquiries, call the police hotline at 07-221 6393 or the Fire and Rescue Department hotline at 07-224 7444.

Residents’ worst fears come true as homes are inundated
The Star 7 Dec 07;

JOHOR BARU: Rubiah Sengari's worst fears came true on Wednesday. He home in Kampung Sentosa Barat was ravaged again by murky floodwaters.

Last year, her house was inundated and she lost all her belongings.

“This time, I only managed to save some important documents, my television set and our clothing.

“It was quite bad with the water reaching above waist level,” said the 33-year-old mother of three who, however, was grateful that her husband and three children were safe.

Rubiah said the water started rising at about 4pm on Wednesday and reached waist level within an hour.

A total of 522 villagers were evacuated since 4.30pm on Wednesday. The water started receding by 3am yesterday morning, and some of the villagers returned home.

“We are not allowed to go home yet because there is a possibility it might flood again. My family and I will remain at the community hall until the flood alert is withdrawn,” Rubiah said.

Another villager, Ismail Ahmad, 53, said his house was totally submerged by 4.30pm on Wednesday.

“It was the same last year but at least the water receded faster this time.”

Norizan Ahmad Kassim, a member of the village security committee, said that firemen, police and other rescuers were deployed to the village to help in the evacuation process.

Among areas involved are Kampung Plentong Baru, Kampung Sentosa Barat, Kampung Sentosa Damai, and Kampung Air Putih, Sungai Serai.

Among the latest critical locations were Kampung Oren, Ulu Tiram, Skudai, and Plentong. Meanwhile, residents in Kangkar Tebrau have also been put on alert to evacuate.


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Saudi Arabia, United States do least for climate: study

Yahoo News 7 Dec 07;

[wildnews note: the study puts Singapore among the 56 countries that are responsible for 90% of energy-related CO2 emissions. And Singapore is ranked 11th from the bottom.]

Saudi Arabia and the United States do the least to protect the climate while Sweden does the most, according to a report by a German environmental group published on Friday.

Germanwatch's Climate Change Performance Index (CCPI) evaluates and compares the climate protection performance of the 56 countries that are responsible for 90 percent of energy-related carbon dioxide emissions.

Saudi Arabia retained its last place finish from last year in the rankings, but the United States fell two places to second bottom.

The report had sharp criticism for Australia, which slid to 54th in the list from 47th last year.

Germanwatch said Australia had "more and more deviated from the necessary reduction targets as stated in the UN Framework for Convention on Climate Change" under former prime minister John Howard's 11 years in charge.

It expressed hope for an improvement under his successor Kevin Rudd, who ratified the Kyoto Protocol on cutting greenhouse gases in one of his first acts in office this week.

As last year, Sweden is the country doing most to protect the climate, followed by Germany which on Wednesday unveiled a package of laws and regulations to help it meet its target of a 40 percent cut in greenhouse gases by 2020.

Germany displaced Britain, which slipped to seventh. Iceland ranked third.

However, Germanwatch said that even high-ranking countries could not sit back and relax.

"The results illustrate that even if all countries engaged in the same manner, current efforts would still be insufficient to prevent dangerous climate change."

The report was published as 190 nations meet on the Indonesian island of Bali to create a framework for a post-2012 treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol.

Indonesia's climate change policies rated among world`s 15 best
Antara 8 Dec 07;

Nusa Dua, Bali (ANTARA News) - Indonesia`s climate-change policies on national scale are rated among the 15 best among the world`s 56 biggest carbon emitters in the Climate Change Performance Index (CCPI), a foreign non-governmental organization (NGO) said.

For its local climate-change policies, Indonesia is ranked one of the six best among 56 countries studied, while for its internnational policies, it is among the 22 best, said Jan Burck of Germanwatch here Friday.

He said the ratings Indonesia had obtained did not necessarily mean that Indonesia`s national and international policies were already very good. "These scores are inidicators that Indonesia`s policies are already better than some other countries` policies but it must still continue to improve its policies in the future," Burck said.

To determine the indice of the 56 countries which produce 90 percent of the world`s volume of carbon emissions, Germanwatch had received reports from NGO-affiliated experts from all over the world.

For information on Indonesia, Germanwatch had relied on the results of studies by two local NGOs the names of which Burck refused to disclose.

"Every year, Germanwatch asks the NGOs for studies and assessments and uses the telephone to communicate with them on things needing clarification," he said.

Burcks said Indonesia was now among the 15 best scorers in the relative CCPI.

"The ranking can rise or drop depending on whether or not other countries have done something better than Indonesia," he said.

Another determinant factor was the fact that Indonesia`s emission potentials are not as big as the developed countries. In addition, the constant improvement in Indonesia`s policies led it to ascend 28 grades above its 43rd place last year. Its CCPI in 2006 was in 36th place.

In 2007, Indonesia`s CCPI score was 57.6 making it one of the developing countries considered to have begun to tackle the climate change phenomenon "seriously." (*)

Links

Climate Change Performance Index 2008

A comparison of the 56 top CO2 emitting nations
on the GermanWatch website


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Star planter Ethiopia to intensify tree planting next year: official

Yahoo News 7 Dec 07;

Star tree-planter Ethiopia will intensify its re-afforestation drive in 2008, which earned the country a pole position in the world for planting 700 million trees this year, an official said Thursday.

The state-run Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) said the mass tree-planting campaign would help reduce land degradation and improve biodiversity in the impoverished African nation.

"At this moment, Ethiopia has a very small percentage of forest-covered land. It continues to suffer from soil erosion, dryness of streams, floods (when it rains), and droughts (when it doesn't)," said EPA chief Tewolde-Berhan Gebre-Egziabher.

Government bodies, schools, private firms and local communities that together drove Ethiopia to the top of this world this year, are expected to get down to a new tree-planting scheme set for June next year.

"By planting more trees and restricting free grazing, we'll improve the existing biodiversity and tackle the environmental challenges," Tewolde-Berhan explained.

Last month, the UN Environment Programme said Ethiopia had planted more than 700 million trees in 2007, besting Mexico which planted 217 million and the rest of the world in a drive to combat climate change through new lush forest projects.

"Our aim is to undertake such projects annually. The country is five times the size of France, so the 700 million planted this year are not sufficient and we need more millions," said Seyoum Bereded, the chief of the re-afforestation committee.

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, environmentalists say.

Home to about 70 million people, Ethiopia has suffered from devastating drought and floods in the recent years, with experts pointing at activities that have altered the climate pattern.

The Addis Ababa pledge comes as the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, a panel of climate gurus and governments, meet in Indonesia to negotiate pollution cuts to be implemented after 2012 when the Kyoto Protocol pledges run out.

Experts say 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.


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Best of our wild blogs: 7 Dec 07

Buy Nothing Christmas
five fabulous romantic monkey cards to give instead
on the leafmonkey blog

What's a climate skeptic doing at the Bali talks?
find out on the reuters environment blog

Imagine

thoughts on conservation on the manta blog

Will Chek Jawa tide through the Johor floods?
on the Chek Jawa project blog

Heron baby puts on feathers
on the bird ecology blog


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Mandai: Nature Society moots two new spots for attraction

Lim Wei Chean, Straits Times 7 Dec 07;


STB studying society's report stressing fragility of proposed site for nature-themed attraction

LEAVE that stretch of Mandai forest alone. Build the nature-themed attraction on one of two alternative sites.

This was the crux of the Nature Society's response to the Singapore Tourism Board's (STB) announcement two weeks ago that it was releasing a 30ha plot of land in the Mandai area for development into a nature-themed attraction.

The main thrust of the 18-page report, submitted to the STB last Saturday, emphasised the fragility of the proposed Mandai site, which does not fall within the boundaries of the nature reserve.

It said the site is too valuable to be damaged for another attraction which may suffer the fate of Tang Dynasty City in the Jurong Lake area.

Dr Ho Hua Chew, who chairs the society's conservation sub-committee, shared key points in the report, which included suggestions of two alternative sites for development, with The Straits Times yesterday.

STB's vision was to develop the Mandai area into a nature attractions cluster - with the existing Singapore Zoo and Night Safari as anchors.

The new site, about three times the size of VivoCity, along with a new attraction by Wildlife Reserves Singapore, hopes to double the current annual visitorship of 2.5 million to the area by 2015.

The Nature Society gave two reasons why it says the proposed area is a bad spot:

Fragmentation: The nature reserve's forest had been divided into seven 'habitat islands' standing in isolation because of the creation of golf courses, roads, pipelines and expansion of the existing reservoirs.

This results in the loss of humidity in the forest, increased temperatures, invasion and predation by alien and non-forest species, as well as introduction of diseases to forest wildlife to which they have no immunity.

Forest degradation: Forest cover within the Central Catchment Reserve had been cleared to make way for projects like the Zoo and Night Safari (89ha), the covered reservoir at Upper Pierce (11ha) and Nee Soon Firing Range (20ha).

Animals at risk include forest frogs, birds like the fish eagle, chestnut-winged babble; mammals like the mouse deer, pangolin and the rare leopard cat, known to exist only in two areas here.

The society proposes allowing the land, which is full of mature fruit trees like durian and rambutan, to revert back to a secondary forest.

It also seeks to have it designated as an official buffer zone for the nature reserve so it can continue to serve as a forest connector for the forest's wildlife to forage for food.

In its place, the Nature Society identified two alternative spots for the nature-themed attraction.

The first is the ecologically less sensitive area between Yio Chu Kang Road and Lower Seletar Reservoir with its scenic woodlands, scrubland and marshes.

If it has to be in the Mandai area, then let it be the military site bounded by Mandai Track 15, the Bukit Timah Expressway, Mandai Lake Road and the firing range.

This will not only provide enough space for development but also leave enough forest to act as a buffer for the reserve to enable animals to move around.

An STB spokesman said that it has received the report and is looking through it.

She added that STB will be setting up a meeting with the Nature Society to discuss in greater depth the concerns raised.

RELATED LINKS

STB reply: Sensitive approach to Mandai revamp

STB-NParks' wildlife studies to feature in plans
Today Online 5 Dec 07;

Leave the beautiful Mandai rainforest alone
Letter from George Pasqual, Straits Times Forum 27 Nov 07;

Mandai at risk?
Straits Times 25 Nov 07

Beware the wildlife tradeoff

If not properly done, plans to turn Mandai into nature retreat could backfire
Letter from Marianne Maes, Today Online 22 Nov 07

Do we need another nature-themed attraction?
NO: Nature Society thinks it will cause greater damage to nature reserve
Lim Wei Chean, Straits Times 22 Nov 07

YES: A nature escape will add to Singapore's attraction as a tourist destination, say travel agents
30ha of greenery in Mandai has been set aside for a new attraction near the Zoo and Night Safari, and the idea is already drawing varied reactions
Lim Wei Chean, Straits Times 22 Nov 07;

Mandai: a repeat of the losses at Bukit Timah Nature Reseve
due to over-development? and more thoughts on the nature scouter blog

Nature Society expresses concerns about plans for Mandai
Lim Wei Chean, Straits Times 21 Nov 07;

Mandai to be turned into Asia's top nature spot

Channel NewsAsia 20 Nov 07


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Singapore honours green warriors

Tania Tan, Straits Times 7 Dec 07;

Tania Tan speaks to the three winners of the 2007 President's Award for the Environment, who will receive their awards today

City Developments (CDL); Tan Gee Paw, Chairman PUB; Professor Leo Tan



Environment a pillar of CDL's business
Recipients of Singapore's most prestigious green honours this year have shaped the country's waterways, gardens and cityscape.

THE building and construction industry has long been fingered as a major culprit for the world's climate change woes, as forests absorbing carbon dioxide are decimated to make way for skyscrapers.

But home-grown property developer City Developments (CDL) hopes to show how the sector can improve its green rating.

For incorporating eco-friendly practices into its business model and promoting green outreach programmes, it has become the first private company to be honoured with the President's Award for the Environment.

While many companies are taking green steps now, CDL made the environment a pillar of its business in the late 1990s, long before it became trendy.

'We embarked on our green journey with the simple intent of conducting our business in a socially responsible manner,' said managing director Kwek Leng Joo.

'So this award is truly an honour.'

Today, green features such as energy saving lights, pneumatic waste disposal systems and multiple recycling corners have become landmarks of CDL's 110 commercial and residential developments in Singapore.

A total of 16 of its buildings have also received the Green Mark Award conferred by the Building and Construction Authority to recognise environmentally friendly buildings - the most for any company here.

To help get the green message out to its stakeholders, CDL has rolled out a slew of programmes over the years, including Project Eco-office with the Singapore Environment Council. The annual campaign promotes green habits at the work place.

The developer has also started another pilot project recently. It is measuring the carbon emissions saved by adjusting air-conditioning temperatures up one degree in five buildings here, including Republic Plaza in Raffles Place.

'We hope to show that small actions, at no cost, can make a big difference,' said a CDL spokesman.

Going down the tubes - to success
Straits Times 7 Dec 07;

PUB's Tan Gee Paw is a visionary who has helped solve S'pore's water woes
A STARRY-EYED young civil engineer at the Environment Ministry in the 1960s, Mr Tan Gee Paw's heart sank when he was 'dumped' into its drainage department.

His dreams of building bridges or shaping housing estates went down the tubes, he said.

'To my horror, the ministry told me I had to go look after longkangs (Malay for drains),' said Mr Tan, now PUB chairman.

But three years into the job, his love affair with water blossomed.

'I began to appreciate the exciting challenges put before us as drainage engineers,' he chuckled. 'We weren't just maintaining drains but trying to manage the forces of nature.'

'It was fun.'

An unexpected twist of fate became a 40-year passion which eventually led him to become master architect of Singapore's world-acclaimed water network.

The 64-year-old won the President's Award for the Environment this year, for his life-long commitment to the water industry, including the integration of water, drainage and sewerage services under the PUB - the foundation for Singapore's long-term water security.

Long-time colleague Yap Kheng Guan called his former supervisor 'a visionary' who helped solve Singapore's severe flooding problems in the 1970s, by establishing a new drainage and flood-prevention system.

He also helped pioneer urban catchment projects like the Kranji and Seletar reservoirs - the precursors of the upcoming Marina Barrage, said Mr Yap, director of PUB's 3P network department.

Mr Tan was also involved in the decade-long clean-up of the Singapore River, for which he was awarded one of 10 commemorative gold medals in 1987.

The former permanent secretary of the Environment Ministry also received the Meritorious Service Medal in 2002 for his contributions to water management.

Under his leadership, the PUB bagged the prestigious Stockholm Industry Water Award - the Nobel equivalent for the water industry - early this year.

His greatest contribution, however, is how he has inspired others to give their all to the water industry, said co-workers.

By solving Singapore's water scarcity problems through the success of Newater, the PUB - under Mr Tan's leadership - now has the expertise to help other countries facing water problems, explained Mr Yap.

'Working in the water sector, he showed us that we have the chance to contribute to society, and perhaps to Mankind,' he said.

'He imbued in people like us that this is a noble cause.'

An early crusader
Straits Times 7 Dec 07;

HE HAS been labelled a fanatic, alarmist and the white man's pawn.

But name-calling never sidetracked Professor Leo Tan in his efforts to save the environment.

The winner of this year's President's Award for the Environment received his fair share of 'knocks on the head' ever since he started to grow a green conscience during his undergraduate days, he said.

As a young marine biologist, and active member of the Nature Society, he was an early, and very vocal, supporter of the need for nature reserves in Singapore.

For his green efforts, he said, he was hauled up by a 'very senior civil servant', and chastised for championing a colonialist cause - because 'being environmentally friendly was a very ang moh (slang for Caucasian) concept', he explained.

Prof Tan stuck to his 'never give up' mantra. But his strategy was not to force his opinions - he chose instead to rely on patience and persuasion.

'If you have a cause you believe in, stick with it,' he said. 'With rationality and knowledge on your side, people will eventually be won over.'

Decades later, the former chairman of the National Parks Board is being recognised for his contributions to nature and marine conservation, most notably for the saving of Labrador Park.

Singapore's only rocky sea cliff, the park was made a protected nature reserve in 2002, after Prof Tan and his colleagues stopped it from being cleared for development.

Prof Tan, 64, recalls spending his childhood climbing trees and catching spiders in his very own backyard jungle next to Mount Faber.

Asked what had given him such passion for the environment, he said: 'I was born this way.'

His dedication has inspired many, including biologist Peter Ng.

Professor Ng, director of the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research, said he was given a much needed leg up when Prof Tan, his former lecturer, loaned him $500 of his own money for an overseas honours research project.

'It was a lot of money back in the 80s, but he didn't even blink,' said Prof Ng. 'I was very grateful.'

Always a 'perfect gentleman', Prof Tan never once asked for his money back, although the loan was repaid three years later, after he started working.

For his contributions to education, Prof Tan received the National Day Awards gold medal for public service this year.

On his numerous awards, Prof Tan said: 'It's always humbling and exciting to receive these accolades, not because of the award itself, but because of the attention it gives to worthy causes.'

PUB supplies 40m gallons of NEWater to industries each day
Channel NewsAsia 8 Dec 07;

SINGAPORE : The PUB now provides about 40 million gallons of NEWater to industries each day.

This is almost half of its target to supply about 90 million gallons a day by 2011.

When it achieves this target, the PUB would be meeting 30 percent of Singapore's water needs.

2011 is the year when Singapore's first water agreement, signed in 1961 with Malaysia, expires.

The update was given by the PUB Chairman on Friday when he received the President's Award for the Environment, which recognises those who have contributed to environmental sustainability.

When Singapore's fourth NEWater plant in Ulu Pandan opened in March, the total capacity for the production of NEWater went up to 55 million gallons a day.

At the moment though, the amount supplied is 40 million gallons.

But the PUB expects this number to go up, as more industrial customers turn on their NEWater supplies.

The PUB said major new industrial customers include Shell, ExxonMobil Chemical, and Changi Airport, as well as new wafer fabrication plants.

The recently-announced fifth NEWater plant to open in a few years in Changi will boost Singapore' capacity further.

When the plant opens, the target is for all five plants to meet 30 percent of Singapore's water needs.

That is significant for a small country, especially when one factors in climate change.

Tan Gee Paw, PUB Chairman, said, "If we just depend on the weather, and we have limited catchments, the day will come when you will be caught by draughts and you will have no other supply. The wonderful thing about NEWater is you use the same drop a few times over and therefore you expand upon your supply. But even then, there is a certain limit to the use of NEWater because finally you need fresh water input."

The PUB chief has received the country's highest accolade in the field of environment for implementing a robust and sustainable water supply system in Singapore.

The other winners include the former Chairman of the National Parks Board, Professor Leo Tan.

Professor Tan is recognised for his outstanding contributions in nature conservation and marine biology education.

Property developer City Developments, which is responsible for properties like City Square Mall, took home the award for incorporating sustainable business practices and promoting green programmes. - CNA/ms


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$7m project to bring 'spring' to Singapore

Six glasshouses here are being used to nurture blooms for Gardens by the Bay project
Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 7 Dec 07;

A $7 MILLION experiment is under way to bring springtime to humid, tropical Singapore.

Six cool glasshouses are being used to test how best to have an 'eternal spring' attraction at the new downtown's Gardens by the Bay.

Horticulturists want to know how to encourage the highest number of flowers to bloom at the lowest possible cost, ahead of the Gardens' opening in 2010.

Flowering plants and rare species only found in areas such as the Mediterranean and sub-tropical regions are being grown in the glasshouses at the National Parks Board's (NParks) new research facility at HortPark, off Alexandra Road.

Temperatures inside the glasshouses are set at 17 to 23 deg C.

Four simulate spring conditions in regions of California, South America and Australia. Among the plants being grown are snapdragons, lavender, olives and grapes.

The other two glasshouses mimic the temperature and humidity of tropical cloud forests in areas such as Papua New Guinea, East Africa and even South-east Asia.

'Instead of having to climb Mount Kinabalu, we hope to allow visitors to see these plants right here in Singapore,' said Mr Kenneth Er, the general manager of Gardens by the Bay.

Some rare plants have also been brought in, to add an educational dimension to the gardens being planned.

The most expensive is the Wollemi Pine, an ancient conifer only discovered in the last 20 years in the Blue Mountains of Sydney.

There are only dozens left in the wild, said the new gardens' assistant director of horticulture, Mr Anton van der Schans. Twelve saplings were cultivated and brought in from Australia at $300 each.

Already, some plants which fare reasonably well in hot and humid Singapore are blossoming continuously in their new environments.

'Marigolds which normally only flower for a few weeks have been blooming since we set up pots of them in the cool, moist conservatory in August,' said Mr Er.

The glasshouses already have over 50 varieties of plants, in a myriad of colours.

'The purpose is to have a visual feast at the Gardens by the Bay, and to do this as energy-efficiently and cost-effectively as possible,' Mr Er said.

So part of the experiments under way includes testing out various methods to save energy.

The design of the glasshouses includes special glass walls and roofing, solar panels and blinds to allow the maximum level of light to enter, while keeping heat out. Combined, the systems will cut 30 per cent of costs.

A small team of engineers, architects and horticulturists is working on the project until it takes off with the actual 54ha new attraction in Marina South.

By 2010, NParks expects to have about another 100 horticulturists on the team.

The HortPark glasshouses will be open to the public from today to next Tuesday only.

There are four 30-minute tours a day, on a first-come first-served basis from 11.30am to 12.30pm and 5pm to 6pm, for up to 15 people each time.


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Rising palm oil prices will affect Singapore's biodiesel plans: analysts

Channel NewsAsia 6 Dec 07;

SINGAPORE : As Singapore seeks to build itself as a biodiesel hub, industry watchers say the next couple of years will be critical.

The emerging industry is facing a lack of feedstock supplies and rising crude palm oil prices.

Analysts say these concerns will need to be effectively addressed before bio-energy industries can grow.

The Finnish oil refiner Neste Oil is investing nearly S$1.2 billion to build the world's largest biodiesel plant in Singapore.

While that is seen as a boost for Singapore, analysts say rising palm oil prices are a real concern. Palm oil is a common feedstock used to produce biodiesel.

David Ernsberger, Editorial Director - Asia, PLATTS, said: "Well, the key swing factor for everybody is the price of palm oil - and (if) the price of palm oil begins to calm down, I think it will become competitive for the producers of biodiesel.

"That's the thing to watch out for. The price of palm oil is being set in Jakarta and in KL so we all need to watch quite nervously what's happening in those two cities to understand where the future of biodiesel in Singapore lies right now."

There is also increasing demand from countries such as India for palm oil. Industry watchers say this was not factored in when discussions for such biodiesel plants began nearly two years ago.

At the moment, palm oil is trading at about US$900 a tonne. That is roughly the equivalent to US$90 a barrel, making it hardly competitive to produce biodiesel.

Analysts see the next two years as being critical for the emerging industry. From an economic point of view, there are benefits to the push towards renewable fuels.

Benjamin Sovacool, Post-Doctoral Fellow, LKY School of Public Policy, said: "One of the biggest benefits to renewables - whether it's renewable fuels or renewable electricity - is the domestic economic benefits - in terms or labour and transfer of wealth.

"Every barrel of oil that we buy in Singapore sends money half way round the world to the Middle East or wherever those barrels of oil came from. If you produce those things domestically or regionally, those dollars stay here in Asia.

"And studies that have been done in the US, that I am familiar with, talk about how every dollar spent on energy efficiency or renewables created seven dollars in the local economy.

"So you can clearly see the benefits to the economy at large because people will have more money they can spend that they aren't spending on oil and they are spending here in Singapore."

Biodiesel producers are also looking for alternative feedstock such as Jatropa and even algae, which may become viable in three to four years from now. - CNA/ch


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Singapore: A viable approach to social enterprise

Dr Ow Chee Chung, Today Online 7 Dec 07;

In 2005, Harvard Business School published an article, "Should non-profits seek profits?" Its findings are similar to those in Singapore: Too much is made of social enterprises by citing success stories, without stating that the majority do not do well.

The key challenge for social enterprises is in finding a clear, intended outcome. Is it to relieve the fundraising efforts of non-profit organisations (NPOs), create employment for the disadvantaged or a purely commercial attempt?

The first notion of helping to relieve the fundraising burden is debatable. If an NPO requires $1 million to operate its social services, it has to generate a turnover of at least $10 million from its enterprises, with a profit margin of at least 10 per cent.

What would this organisation then be — similar to a commercial firm with a significant corporate social responsibility agenda or, in business terms, a social marketing strategy?

The study from Harvard showed that only 39 per cent of small businesses are profitable, and half fail in the first five years. The odds against social enterprises are even higher.

The study also found that many NPOs into social enterprise lost not only money but also the "basis of their existence". They were so busy rescuing the business that they were distracted from their core social services.

Meanwhile, the issue of using donations to fund social enterprises raises a key question. There is currently no social enterprise fund that covers start-up costs fully. How and where to find the balance without compromising donors' contributions?

The other oft-cited outcome — of employing the disadvantaged — is probably a more compelling motivation.

Unfortunately, the issues remain: Can employment be sustainable if the enterprise is failing? It makes more sense to incentivise and encourage successful multinational corporations (MNCs), government bodies and small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to employ the disadvantaged.

These agencies have the machinery to sustain operations and maintain their workforce. From an investment viewpoint and to secure a return of sustainable employment, it is illogical to invest in an untested social enterprise vis-a-vis a well-entrenched commercial or public entity.

Social enterprises also compete directly with SMEs, retailers and food stalls. This may cause tension and lead to undesirable behaviour among the competitors.

At a meeting on employment for the disabled, held by the National Council of Social Service, a representative from a local SME spoke up against NPOs engaging in social enterprise. The SME would rather hire the disadvantaged and make a donation, provided it is "kept afloat with contracts".

The social enterprise concept can, however, be deployed in two ways: By developing an enterprise mindset in social services and by creating supported employment.

By identifying and developing core competencies to the point of optimum operations, an NPO can create a social enterprise model from which services are provided — these could be in counselling, therapy, psychological or even social work, training/consultancy and other specialised services.

The customer could be the Government, other NPOs, private agencies and even private individuals, as long as there is a service fee model.

The key is to have quality service (in a social/community service model) and a replicated business service model.

Now, there will always be a group of disadvantaged people for whom open employment is not possible. This group generally faces productivity and accessibility issues. Regardless of the type of social enterprise, the NPO hardly ever gets the best talent and ideal circumstances in which to operate.

Structural deficit due to productivity and accessibility issues is inevitable. To keep the enterprise viable, an NPO can pay the workers as low as possible. But how low can wages go if the venture is to be worthwhile? The alternative is for the NPO to seek supported funding (to cover the structural deficit).

It is good that the government is pushing the social enterprise agenda, but the reality on the ground is very different. It would be good to know the amount invested so far in the various social enterprises and how many of these are viable, taking full costs into account.

More incentives should be provided to encourage open employment. NPOs who venture into earned income outside their social service charter should be considered and supported by Spring Singapore as it would any entrepreneur and SME.

Funding should focus on supporting NPOs that want to develop social enterprises out of their social services charter. More importantly, more grants should be provided in the area of supported employment.

The writer is the executive director of the Society for the Physically Disabled


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In Singapore: Give green this Christmas

Business Times 7 Dec 07;

More retailers offer eco-friendly wares as concerns about the environment gain ground, report CHEAH UI-HOON and CHRISTOPHER LIM

IN keeping with Olivia Choong's rekindled zeal as an ecologically conscious consumer, some of her closest friends will be receiving Ecover laundry detergent or boxes of Seventh Generation tissue paper from her for Christmas.

The 28-year-old's first brush with concepts like recycling and ecologically-friendly products was in Perth, where she studied. When she first returned to Singapore over three years ago, what struck her was the almost complete lack of eco-consciousness here.

But recently, as concerns about the environment started gaining ground, her interest in things ecological was re-kindled. Ms Choong subsequently started the Singapore chapter of Green Drinks, a UK-initiated environmental concern group that is active in some 300 cities worldwide, on Facebook. This year would be the first time she is giving eco-friendly Christmas presents, though.

'I already use them at home and I feel really good about making a difference,' says the freelance copywriter. The Ecover laundry detergent she gets from Brown Rice Paradise is effective, she says, has minimum impact on aquatic life, biodegrades quickly, doesn't contain optical brighteners, and its ingredients don't have genetically modified organisms either. 'Optical brighteners are used in many conventional laundry detergents but they can also cause an allergic reaction, creating an irreversible chemical bond with our skin.

'As for tissue paper, I like it because it is hypo-allergenic and it hasn't been whitened by chlorine bleach. It is also 100 per cent recycled paper and saves trees!' she declares.

The fact is, with the sudden explosion of interest in organic food and green issues - fuelled no less by the high price of oil - in Singapore just the last couple of years, it's become easier now for people like Ms Choong to find green gifts for friends and family this Christmas.

Clothes made from organic cotton and bamboo fibre, shoes made from seatbelts and recycled tyres, tarpaulin or PVC bags made from leftover event banners and soft toys made from excess fabric, including recycled teakwood furniture and handmade soy candles - all these can be found in stores here now, when they were practically unheard of just two or three years ago. Storeowners like Amanda Tan (www.epitome.sg) and Damien Mah (www.thelawn.com.sg) point out frankly that although designers are pushing the green envelope, as retailers, they're stocking products for their unique designs rather than the green message.

Niche luxury appeal

Ms Tan selected brands like Kultbags, Bird and Harvey Seatbelt Bags for her store in Upper Serangoon, because of their unusual use of material. 'To be honest, it wasn't because these were green products. I got them because they were different and used unique materials,' she says.

About half of the brands retailed at the one-year-old store is now eco-branded. Germany's Kultbag uses recycled materials, while Australia's Bird fashion range falls into the 'eco-luxury' range, with clothes priced from $200 upwards, as prints are dyed with water-based dyes, and all the manufacturing is done with solar power. And then there's the Terra Plana range of shoes which use chrome free leathers, vegetable tanned leathers, recycled materials, pure latex soling materials, recycled rubber soles and recycled foam foot beds.

'I don't necessarily promote a brand because it's environmentally-conscious,' agrees Mr Mah, whose store stocks Spanish Demano bags made from event banners and Japanese-made Kato jeans, for its organic cotton and natural indigo dyes.

'It's hip now to have clothing and accessories which are handmade,' he points out as he sees Singaporeans buying for design rather than environmental reasons.

But this is a tide that can't be turned, he believes, as more manufacturers start to follow ecologically-friendly principles, due to pressure from the global consumer. 'Singapore consumers - who are well-read and sophisticated - will be more ready to embrace green products as the trend takes off,' he believes.

Already, high street fashion lables like Topshop and Topman carry a small range of Basic Tees under the Fair Trade label; Dorothy Perkins has a capsule collection of organic cotton fashion; and Max Studio uses eco-fibres such as bamboo, hemp and soy.

If the patriot in you is decrying the fact that these are foreign brands brought into Singapore, then rest assured that a growing number of designers and manufacturers here are making products that fit the ecological bill.

Retailers like Isan Gallery and Em Gallery, and even hotel chain Banyan Tree, have long been champions of indigenous craft and cottage industries in countries like Thailand and Cambodia, for example.

While the older environmentalist here might have championed traditional craft in Singapore's neighbouring countries, the contemporary one is now leveraging on Singapore's location and growing ecologically-conscious consumer market.

Britons Dean O'Sullivan and Issy Richardson came here specifically to start up their Belle & Dean brand of baby and adultwear using organic cotton just two years ago. Why base the business in Singapore? 'We wanted to bring organic clothing to new markets,' says Ms Richardson, adding that the organic scene is very well-established and popular in the UK. 'Part of what we want to do is to spread awareness about organic cotton clothing,' she says.

Local demand makes up half of their business, and they're happy with how the business is growing here. Belle & Dean's babywear retails online (www.belleanddean.com), and its adult's range is also stocked at Swirl boutique at Stamford House.

CooshBaby (www.cooshlife.com) is another made-in-Singapore ecologically-minded label of children's clothes. 'There is a growing group of consumers who are aware of organic cotton products and many of them are willing to pay a premium for organic product for their children, or their friends' children,' says Joanna Soh, the founder.

There's certainly no shortage of babywear labels which use organic cotton here, with Cut4Cloth, Sckoon and Under the Nile labels imported by Adin M Slette, who started By The Sea Organic (www.bythesea-organic.com) here and stocks these labels at stores like L'Organic and Raffles Hospital.

Even something as perishable as a candle benefits from environmentally-friendly ingredients, and St Michael Gifts Shop (www.stmichaelgifts.com.sg) sells palm wax candles that burn completely with virtually no soot.

'I started making palm wax candles in 2002 and sales for these candles have been good,' shop owner Helen Cheng says. Although she's been making candles for the past 15 years, Ms Cheng only moved it from a home-based business to a commercial retail space in 2005.

Ms Cheng stresses that customer education is key to selling her product, which means the palm wax candles she does sell depend not on a fad, but actual environmental awareness.

'When most customers hear that it's an environmentally friendly wax candle, they are really proud to be included among those who care about what they use, and to contribute in little ways to avoid destroying the environment further,' Ms Cheng says.

Quality matters

For locally-grown brand MakiSquarePatch (www.makisquarepatch.com), sisters Weng Enqi and Pixin started their business making soft toys and bags and other lifestyle accessories from excess fabric donated to them by fashion designers or clothing manufacturers. 'We were thinking about what we could do for the environment,' explains Enqi, about how they started the label a little over a year ago.

Not only do they use excess fabric which would otherwise have been thrown away, they've also trained a group of women in a community home to do the sewing.

While Singapore has a small market of eco-conscious buyers, retailers believe that as social and environmental awareness grows, 'so does the willingness to pay the premium,' says Ms Slette.

'Oh yes, people would be willing to pay a little bit more when they hear its recycled wood ... but then we're not asking them to compromise on aesthetics either,' chips in John Erdos of John Erdos Gallery, who actively seeks out recycled wood when he can. This Christmas, he's fashioned about 15 two-metre and three-metre tall Christmas trees made from leftover wood from his workshops, retailing close to $1,000 each, but which the customer can return in exchange for gift vouchers after Christmas.

That same kind of 'niche luxury' theory could well apply to products like guitars as well, with Gibson's famous Les Paul electric guitar which uses unusual woods (think muirapiranga, muiracatiara and preciosa wood) harvested from sustainable forests.

Local Gibson dealer Swee Lee says that demand for the Les Paul SmartWood Studio (priced at $2,850) has been good, and that each shipment of the special Les Paul model has sold out.

'Some don't mind paying a premium if they know what it's about,' says epitome's Ms Tan, because when she tells them that a Bird tube dress is made in an environmentally-friendly way, they buy it although there are (much) cheaper tube dresses out there.

Of course, the hardcore environmentalist has called for Christmas to be designated a 'Buy Nothing Season'; frowning especially on gift exchange parties. Ms Slette's advice is that if you have to keep up with the season and the tradition, buy less, but go for quality.

And don't wrap it up, unless you use newspapers, adds Green Drinks' Ms Choong.

So, it looks like being green doesn't mean being a Grinch this Christmas. Better still, with the wide variety of quality yet eco-friendly merchandise out there, the giving can continue all year round.


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Divers slam proposed scuba ban on Cape Coast Africa to protect abalone

Caryn Dolley and Sapa, Independent Online 6 Dec 07;

A plan to ban scuba diving and snorkelling along most of the Cape coast is "ridiculous" and "will slowly but surely kill these recreational sports", outraged enthusiasts said on Tuesday.

The ban has been proposed by Environmental Affairs Minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk in a further effort to protect the country's fast-diminishing perlemoen (abalone) stocks.

The envisaged prohibition, subject to a process of public comment, will take effect from February 1, Department of Environmental Affairs spokesperson Mava Scott said.

The suspension of commercial perlemoen fishing will come into effect on the same date.

The only area in which scuba diving and snorkelling will be allowed will be from Olifantsbos to Scarborough.

Jack van der Schyff, owner of Jack's Dive Chest, when told about the ban, said: "Now he's pushing his bans into our areas. Where do we go in the end? He is slowly but surely killing these recreational sports and the tourist diving industry.

"We'll probably end up sitting with our diving gear and nothing to do."

Co-owner of Dive Courses and Charters, Peter Labuschagne, said the proposed ban would be extremely damaging to the industry.

"We've done nothing but promote environmental awareness," he said. "We're one of the few industries that make our clients aware of the underwater environment. I can't see why the government is damaging our industry. It's a ridiculous ban."

He didn't see the point of banning diving in certain areas.

"The poaching problem is probably just going to get bigger. The demand for perlemoen will increase and poachers will find a way to go about their business," he said.

Skender Pedro of Table Bay Diving said a ban "would have a very bad effect on the diving industry" and Paul Hanekom of the Research Dive Unit at the University of Cape Town said he understood Van Schalkwyk banning scuba diving in poaching hotspots but the area around Dyer Island was popular for shark diving.

"This is going to cause a huge outcry. It's going to be a major issue in the shark-diving industry. (Van Schalkwyk) should either stop poachers or recreational divers, not both," he said.

Scott said all comments on the proposed ban would be considered before a decision was taken.

The areas in which diving may be prohibited include:

Bird Island Marine Protected Area; Quoin Point to Danger Point (from the west bank of the Ratel River along the coast to the eastern boundary of Gansbaai Harbour's main breakwater wall and extending two nautical miles seaward from the high-water mark); Dyer Island (extending one nautical mile from the high-water mark); Venus Pool to Olifantsbos (extending two nautical miles seaward from the high-water mark) and Robben Island (extending one nautical mile from the high-water mark).

The legislation will ban the use of certain equipment - including underwater breathing gear, masks, flippers and snorkels - within listed areas.

Scott said interested parties had until 4pm on January 15 to comment on the matter. Comments may be faxed to 021 402-3009 or emailed to Rpersad@deat.gov.za.

The article was originally published in Cape Times on December 05, 2007


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Study: Fish less and make more money?

Jeff Barnard, Associated Press, Yahoo News 7 Dec 07;

At a time when a quarter of the world's fisheries are considered depleted, can commercial fishermen make more money by fishing less? A study published in the Friday edition of the journal Science says they can, with one condition.

They must be in a cooperative fishery, like those operating in New Zealand and Australia, where individual fishermen own a share of the total harvest — known as individual transferable quotas — rather than the competitive fisheries more common in the United States, where it is a race to catch the most fish.

The idea is that when there are more fish and no race to catch them, fishermen spend less on fuel and other costs chasing far and wide to fill their nets, and can concentrate on delivering a high-quality product to the dock, said lead author Quentin Grafton, research director at the Crawford School of Economics and Government at Australian National University.

Leaving more fish in the sea — a fishery management target called maximum economic yield — leads to higher profits than the traditional target known as maximum sustainable yield, the study said.

"We like to say it's a win-win," said co-author Ray Hilborn, professor of fishery sciences at the University of Washington. "You have fishermen making more money. You have ecosystems that are healthier. And you have more fish in the ocean."

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has classified 25 percent of the world's fish stocks as depleted, meaning populations are below a level that produces a maximum sustained yield.

The situation is similar in the U.S., where NOAA Fisheries has assessed 41 of 181 fisheries — 23 percent — as overfished, including the once thriving New England cod fishery and some West Coast groundfish. Both fisheries were managed with an overall harvest, which fishermen competed to get their share of, but saw drastic harvest reductions and economic pain when fish numbers plummeted.

Only a handful of U.S. fisheries are managed so that fishermen own a share of the overall harvest, said Hilborn. Among them are Pacific halibut, Alaskan crab, and East Coast clams.

Since the West Coast groundfish fleet was cut in half by an industry-funded buyback, depleted fisheries are rebuilding, and federal fisheries managers are considering the fleet's proposal to adopt individual transferable quotas for more stocks, but the process takes years, said Pete Leipzig, director of the Fishermen's Marketing Association.

The study looked at big eye tuna and yellow fin tuna fisheries off New Zealand, and northern tiger prawn and orange roughy fisheries off Australia, all of which give fishermen individual shares of the overall harvest.

The authors plotted revenue and profit against models for fish abundance. Maximum revenues generally came at lower fish populations, but maximum profits came at higher fish populations, and the more overfished the fishery, the greater the profit gains from rebuilding. Profits turned to losses long before the last fish was caught.

To overcome opposition from fishermen, loans could be taken out to pay them for not fishing as the stocks rebuild. The loans would be repaid by the fishermen when the fish were abundant, said Grafton.

"We've always known that was good for conservation, and now they are showing it's good for your bottom line," Kate Wing, a senior ocean policy analyst for the Natural Resources Defense Council, a conservation group, said of the study's findings.

Jim Humphreys, U.S. fisheries director for the Marine Stewardship Council, which certifies sustainable fisheries around the world, said there are concerns that some individual transferable quotas are not applied fairly, but several fisheries certified as sustainable include them.

Colin Clark, professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of British Columbia and author of the book, "The Worldwide Crisis in Fisheries," said he has seen similar results to the study's findings among Canadian fisheries managed with individual transferrable quotas.

"The good news is a lot of countries are moving toward these ITQ systems and they seem to be the way to go," he said. "The bad news is there are really problems in deep sea fisheries (such as tuna) that take place outside anybody's coastal waters. It's like the Wild West with no law whatever."

Build Up Fish Stocks Now For Big Money Later – Study
Deborah Zabarenko, PlanetArk 7 Dec 07;

WASHINGTON - Commercial fishers should cut back on their catch and allow fish stocks to grow above the levels most governments currently advise if they want to boost long-term profits, economists reported on Thursday.


Such a strategy would sustain fish populations and save fuel while opening the way to big profits in the future, the researchers reported in the journal Science.

And the more depleted a fishery has become, the better the results when stocks are built up to what the researchers call the biomass maximum economic yield. That might be 10 to 20 percent over what fisheries managers now aim for, which is the level at which fish populations can be sustained.

Co-author Quentin Grafton of the Australian National University condensed the results to five words: bigger stocks mean bigger bucks.

At the same time, the authors suggest that when profits from fishing are maximized, it's more likely that fish populations will be maintained, and fishers will use less fuel seeking out fish, since they won't be that scarce.

"In many fisheries of the world, profitability is close to zero and in some cases it's even negative," said Quentin Grafton of the Australian National University in a telephone interview. "So what we're suggesting here is we can ... turn around the current state of affairs to make them profitable and also increase the number of fish in the sea."

To illustrate how this could work, Grafton gave an extreme example:

Imagine there is only one tuna left in the entire Pacific Ocean, a body of water that covers about one-third of the Earth's surface. The cost of catching that tuna would be hundreds of millions of dollars, because finding it would be nearly impossible.

But if there were hundreds of millions of tuna in the Pacific, the cost of catching them would be much lower, because fishers wouldn't have to travel as far or look as hard. With this lower cost, profits would rise.

This system would counter a persistent cause of over-fishing: industry's opposition to lower catches.

Grafton and his co-authors tested their idea by looking at revenue and profit curves for four different fish: big eye tuna and yellow fin tuna in the western and central Pacific, and northern tiger prawn and orange roughy in Australia.

In all four cases, they found the "stock effect" -- that is, when fish are more plentiful, they're cheaper to harvest. This effect had not been taken into account in previous calculations of the best levels for fish stocks.

To build up the fish populations to the higher level, governments would have to persuade fishers to limit but not eliminate their catch, Grafton said. This could be done by subsidizing fishers during the lean period and taxing them after fish stocks are rebuilt.

To keep fish stocks profitably high, enforceable catch limits would be essential, he said.


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Indian police bust tiger poaching ring

Biswajeet Banerjee, Associated Press, Yahoo News 6 Dec 07;

Police broke up a major tiger poaching ring in northern India, arresting an alleged kingpin and 15 others, police and wildlife officials said Thursday.

In a rare success for India's embattled conservationists, police in the city of Allahabad raided a meeting Tuesday of suspected poachers, traders and couriers who were negotiating over three tiger pelts and skeletons, senior police official Arvind Chaturvedi said.

Conservationists say the killing of tigers for their pelts and body parts to supply the Chinese traditional medicine market is a main factor in the sharp decline in wild tigers in recent years.

There are no more than 1,500 tigers in India's reserves and jungles — down from about 3,600 just five years ago and an estimated 100,000 a century ago, according to the Indian government.

Police said they received a tip-off from conservation groups that Shabbir Hasan Qureshi, an alleged trader in banned animal parts, was taking part in the meeting.

"He was the biggest buyer of tiger parts in India and used to sell them off to the Chinese traditional medicinal market," said Belinda Wright, the director of the Wildlife Protection Society of India.

"The operation is a major breakthrough against wildlife crime," she said, adding that her group and several others had been monitoring Qureshi since he was linked to a police seizure of four tiger skins, 70 leopard pelts and 221 black buck skins in a village near Allahabad in 2000. Allahabad is about 360 miles southeast of New Delhi.

Chaturvedi said Qureshi was ready to pay $4,500 for each pelt and skeleton. That is a small fortune for impoverished villagers who trap the tigers, but almost nothing compared to the estimated $50,000 they would fetch on the Chinese black market.

Trade in endangered species, including tigers, is banned under the U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, or CITES.

But the high premium attached to tiger skins and the use of other tiger body parts in traditional Chinese medicines have created a thriving illegal trade.

Chaturvedi said the gang used women as couriers.

"These women are from a nomadic tribe known for hunting and poaching. They used to transport bones and skins from one place to another," he said.

Ramesh Ahluwalia, a senior forest official, said the tiger skins were fresh, indicating the tigers may have been killed as recently as one week ago.

"We are looking for the location where the tigers were killed or skinned. Once we locate this, it will come handy in prosecuting the poachers," he said.


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Vietnam poised to rival China as world's factory

Andy Mukherjee, Business Times 7 Dec 07;

THE 4 million motorcycles on the streets of Ho Chi Minh City offer a remarkable - if somewhat noisy - testimony to the prosperity that beckons Vietnam.

A US$900 Honda may not be everyone's idea of affluence. However, it has the same pride of place in this rapidly industrialising nation as a bullock cart in an agrarian society.

Young men and women - many of them migrants from rural areas - commute to large, modern factories on the outskirts of the city on bikes they are proud to own and scared to lose.

This mobility is so crucial to the workers' productivity that some employers in the city formerly known as Saigon have even begun buying insurance, at their own expense, against the risk of bikes being stolen from their factory premises.

Investors who take the boom in Vietnam's two-wheeler market as a harbinger of a burgeoning mass market may be disappointed for a few years. Those who see the lust for bike ownership as a sign of Vietnam's young labour force yearning for the tools it needs to plug into a global supply chain will win.

After China, Vietnam is emerging as the world's next factory of choice for labour-intensive goods.

One can see that in the changing composition of the country's exports. Rice and coffee - two of Vietnam's biggest agricultural exports - are now becoming less significant to the US$61 billion economy than textiles. Footwear shipments are gaining prominence over seafood.

The other fast-growing export industry is furniture. Exports of wood-based products have grown 24 per cent from last year to more than US$2 billion.

James Koh, a Singapore businessman, makes dining tables and chairs in Vietnam for customers around the world, including Williams-Sonoma Inc's Pottery Barn stores in the United States.

Koda Ltd, of which Mr Koh is the managing director, also has factories in Malaysia and China. Yet, it's Vietnam's lower costs that are prompting the company to expand capacity here by 25 per cent.

'The labour cost in Vietnam is half that of China, while worker productivity is about the same,' says Mr Koh.

Starting next year, the government will increase the mandated minimum wage for foreign-funded companies in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi, the national capital, by 13 per cent to one million Vietnamese dong (S$90), a level that is still affordable, Mr Koh says.

Chinese-made goods have become increasingly expensive in the US for the past six months. That gives Vietnamese manufacturers an opportunity to win a bigger share in their largest export market.

The ingredients are in place. Vietnam's accession to the World Trade Organization in January has provided its textile industry with quota-free access to the US. Joining the WTO regime has also caused a 37 per cent surge this year in overseas investment commitments to US$13 billion.

The biggest draw of the country is clearly its labour.

The median age in Vietnam is 25 years. The workforce isn't just young, but also literate and healthy: The proportion of people who are undernourished has been cut in half over the past three decades.

The risk for Vietnam is inflation, which accelerated to 10 per cent last month, the fastest pace in three years.

In the short run, Vietnam must stand ready to sacrifice some economic growth to halt the increase in prices, especially of construction material.

If left unchecked, inflation will become a drag on Vietnam's competitiveness even if the central bank doesn't allow the dong's nominal exchange rate to appreciate.

On the whole, though, Vietnam is on the road to prosperity. The swanky Louis Vuitton and Gucci showrooms that have sprung up in Ho Chi Minh City may be a bit premature in a country where the annual per-capita income was US$723 last year.

The time for the Vietnamese consumer will undoubtedly come. With a population of 85 million, and an economy that the International Monetary Fund forecasts to grow more than 8 per cent this year and next, the South-east Asian country will soon represent a sizable domestic market. For now, the Vietnamese producer is the bigger opportunity.

There is, however, no room for complacency. Cheap labour makes it relatively easy for a country to enter the global supply chain, but it has to work hard to stay in.

Like most developing countries, Vietnam is dogged by corruption and red tape. It must strive to improve its record now that it's getting the investments it needs for the workers to graduate from motorcycles today to cars in the future.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.


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