Renewables investments seen over $100 bln in 2007

Reuters 8 Dec 07;

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) - World annual investments in renewable energy will top $100 billion for the first time in 2007, led by wind power, according to a report issued at United Nations climate talks on Saturday.

"Policies to promote renewable energy have mushroomed over the past few years," the Renewable Energy Policy Network, which links governments, industries and other groups, said in its study.

"In 2007, global annual investment in renewable energy will exceed $100 billion," it said of growth for wind, solar, hydro and other renewable energy sources.

"Wind power now receives the largest share of investment annually of any renewable technology, even more than large hydropower," it said.

Renewable power capacity totaled about 240 gigawatts (GW) in 2007, excluding large hydropower projects, and represented about six percent of total global power capacity.

"The share is increasing," according to the preliminary 2007 report by the Network, presented on the sidelines of the U.N. climate conference in Bali.

The report did not give an overall comparison for 2006 but said that investment in new renewable electricity generating capacity rose to $66 billion in 2007 from $55 billion in 2006 and $39 billion in 2005.

And for 2007, it also said that there was $15 billion to $20 billion of investment in large hydropower, $10 billion to $12 billion in new manufacturing plants for solar photovoltaics and biofuels, and $16 billion in public and private research and development.

For wind power, growth has been about 25-30 percent a year since 2000, with 93 GW in place in 2007 against just 7.5 GW in 1997.

"We keep saying it can't keep growing at this rate but it continues," Steve Sawyer, head of the Global Wind Energy Council, told a news conference. -- For Reuters latest environment blogs click on:

blogs.reuters.com/environment/

(Editing by Anthony Barker)


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Call for research after mass bird deaths in the UK

Brian Unwin, Telegraph 7 Dec 07;

Thousands of British seabirds have washed up dead on shorelines sparking calls for more international research into problems that could lead to future population crashes.

The discovery of thousands of dead and dying auks, mainly razorbills, around the coasts of Denmark, southern Norway and Sweden, in September and October, didn't arouse widespread UK attention because there was comparatively little evidence of problems on this side of the North Sea.

But alarm bells rang after the latest British Trust for Ornithology BirdTrack Update referred to "a large wreck of auks seen along the north and east coasts, and as far afield as the Oslo fjord … All of these appear to have starved - and most were adults."

This disaster was of UK significance because, after the breeding season's end, Scotland's razorbills head for Scandinavian waters. This was underlined by numbered rings on several corpses: one started life on the Shiant isles off Lewis in the Outer Hebrides in 1982; another on the Isle of May off Fife on the mainland's east coast in 2000.

What caused particular concern, however, was that the birds were in an emaciated state - indicating failure to catch sufficient small fish to fuel their life on the open sea - and almost all were adults.
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Normally such disasters are associated with protracted severe weather in deep mid-winter; to have happened in the autumn suggested most exceptional circumstances.

Kjell Isaksen, the Oslo municipality's biologist and wildlife manager, said "massive" number of dead and dying razorbills were washed ashore in his area. "Razorbills and guillemots were also seen on lakes far inland or found grounded on fields."

He had examined externally 60 per cent of 500 dead razorbills picked up locally and noted they were "only skin and bone", so emaciated he was surprised that birds originating in Scotland had been able to reach Norway. The conclusion in every case was "death by starvation."

"It seems clear that the massive movement must have been initiated by large scale food shortage in the area were these birds stayed - probably the North Sea or West Skagerrak.

"The fact that they turned up along our coasts was probably more or less a coincidence due to the prevailing wind direction."

Dr Tycho Anker-Nilssen, a Norwegian Institute for Nature Research senior research scientist, who will examine 400 of the corpses, said establishing their origin would be a top priority.

An unknown number - possibly thousands - may have died at sea and vanished without trace.

RSPB Orkney officer Eric Meek commented: "There is absolutely nothing here to indicate that this is anything other than a food shortage-related incident. All the birds we have handled have been very thin and they are dying in the classic way in starvation incidents."

A few weeks after razorbills washed ashore at Orkney, dead puffins started appearing also. "This was interesting because puffins usually disperse out to sea and head in a generally southerly direction."

As with the razorbills in Norway, measurements of 50 puffin corpses found at Scapa Flow produced surprises. "Many of the adults were in complete moult - and therefore flightless - which was about three months out of sync with what is known of puffin moult. It seems to suggest these birds were under some particular form of stress."

Martin Heubeck, an Aberdeen University seabird specialist was alerted to the razorbill "wreck" in southern Scandinavia by a contact in Sweden who told of "extraordinary numbers" arriving there.

He stressed this disaster showed the need for the organisation of co-ordinated surveys of coastlines on both British and European sides of the North Sea each autumn to monitor what happens to auks dispersing from their breeding colonies - "something I've been recommending for 20 years."

However, the RSPB, which organises a national beached birds survey every February, is reluctant to expand this. Spokesman Grahame Madge said: "Finding enough volunteers to turn out in February is hard enough - organising such an operation at other times of year as well would be even more difficult.

"A better policy would be increased research into why certain seabird species are failing to find food."

Norway's Dr Anker-Nilssen commented: "A lot of work remains before we understand in more detail the mechanisms behind these worrying problems for seabirds in the North Sea and west Nordic waters in general."

"So the challenge for marine scientists in general, including seabird ecologists, is huge. I am, however, much more optimistic these days than only a few years ago that we will get there eventually - hopefully in time to avoid that we contribute to 'irreversible' processes that reduce the great value and importance of these environments."


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Deforestation: reasons different for Indonesia than Brazil

Deforestation needs local answers

Paul Eccleston, Telegraph 7 Dec 07;

Forests around the world are being destroyed because of a complex mix of political and economic factors that will require different and often local solutions, according to a new report.

The reasons for destruction of the rainforests in Indonesia were completely different from those in Brazil, according to researchers at the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR).

The push to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) was threatened by a failure to grasp the basic causes of deforestation, the report warns.

About 13m hectares of forest were being lost each year resulting in 1.6 billion tons of carbon emissions which amounted to one-fifth of global carbon emissions - more than the combined total contributed by the world's energy-intensive transport sectors.

CIFOR's director general, Frances Seymour, said: "After being left out of the Kyoto agreement, it's promising that deforestation is commanding centre-stage at the Bali climate talks.

"But the danger is that policy-makers will fail to appreciate that forest destruction is caused by an incredibly wide variety of political, economic, and other factors that originate outside the forestry sector, and require different solutions."

He said stopping deforestation in Indonesia caused by overcapacity in the wood processing industry was a completely different challenge from dealing with deforestation stemming from a road project in the Amazon or forest degradation caused by charcoal production in sub-Saharan Africa.

The report, based on 10 years of analysis of the forces behind deforestation, claimed indirect forces were often more important than the logging and slash and burn activities usually understood to be the main causes.

Fluctuations in international commodity prices, agricultural and, more recently, biofuel subsidies and roads and other infrastructure projects also encouraged forest clearing. Deeply ingrained and routinely corrupt government practices often favoured large corporate interests over community rights to forest resources.

CIFOR said it wanted to ensure that any initiatives to stem deforestation in future climate change agreements were firmly grounded in reality.

It advised decision makers to learn from the past and to look beyond the confines of the forestry sector to the array of market and governance failures that sparked a chain of events culminating in deforestation.

Indonesia, which was losing an estimated 1.9 million hectares of forest each year, had emerged as one of the world's leading sources of carbon emissions in part due to a global spike in prices for palm oil and a surge in China's demand for wood pulp.

Together, these forces had pushed deforestation into carbon-rich peatlands that were being cleared and drained to make way for oil palm and pulpwood plantations. Limiting deforestation in Indonesia's peatlands needed to be a high priority because the carbon losses per hectare were substantial.

Meanwhile, in South America, the loss of 4.3 million hectares a year was driven in part by meat consumption that encouraged conversion of forests to pasture lands throughout the region.

In Ecuador, road building had been a major cause of deforestation while in sub-Saharan Africa, fuelwood extraction and charcoal production were factors behind the continent's loss of 4 million hectares a year.

Markku Kanninen, one of the authors of the report, said that "Policies that seek to halt deforestation will need to be crafted to address diverse local situations and target activities in areas such as agriculture, transportation and finance that lie well beyond the boundaries of the forest sector."

"The perverse subsidies that provide incentives for clearing forest must be removed and efforts to secure property rights for local forest communities should be encouraged."

The report offered support for financial compensation schemes for landowners for protecting the forests and said the carbon credit schemes could become a multi-billion dollar global market.

Payments to individual land-users had the potential to "flip" financial incentives from favouring forest destruction, to favouring conservation but there was a question over whether REDD incentives would be sufficient to flip political and economic decisions at the national level that drove deforestation.

As forest property rights were often unclear, payment for carbon services could end up providing the incentive for corrupt officials to steal land from local people.

Any scheme had to ensure that the REDD process was fair to local communities who had a legitimate right to the potential income from their forests which might mean a trade-off between reducing carbon emissions and reducing poverty.

New report on deforestation reveals problems of forest carbon payment schemes
Eureka Alert 7 Dec 07;

New report outlines underlying causes of deforestation based on 10-year analysis

BALI, INDONESIA (7 December 2007)—A new study by one of the world’s leading forestry research institutes warns that the new push to “reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation,” known by the acronym REDD, is imperiled by a routine failure to grasp the root causes of deforestation. The study sought to link what is known about the underlying causes of the loss of 13 million hectares of forest each year to the promise—and potential pitfalls—of REDD schemes.

Based on more than a decade of in-depth research on the forces driving deforestation worldwide, the report by researchers at the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) found that there is ample opportunity to reduce carbon emissions if financial incentives will be sufficient enough to flip political and economic realities that cause deforestation.

The report was released today at the United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP-13) in Bali, where environment ministers from 190 countries are meeting to plot a long-term strategy for combating global warming. High on the agenda is reducing the 1.6 billion tons of carbon emissions caused each year by deforestation, which amounts to one-fifth of global carbon emissions and more than the combined total contributed by the world’s energy-intensive transport sectors.

“After being left out of the Kyoto agreement, it’s promising that deforestation is commanding center-stage at the Bali climate talks,” said CIFOR’s Director General, Frances Seymour. “But the danger is that policy-makers will fail to appreciate that forest destruction is caused by an incredibly wide variety of political, economic, and other factors that originate outside the forestry sector, and require different solutions.”

In other words, Seymour said, stopping deforestation in Indonesia caused by overcapacity in the wood processing industry is a completely different challenge from dealing with deforestation stemming from a road project in the Amazon or forest degradation caused by charcoal production in sub-Saharan Africa.

According to CIFOR, careful examination reveals that complex, indirect forces are often more important than the logging and slash and burn activities popularly understood as the main causes of deforestation. Forces such as fluctuations in international commodity prices; agricultural and, more recently, biofuel subsidies; and roads and other infrastructure projects can encourage forest clearing. Deeply ingrained and routinely corrupt government practices often favor large corporate interests over community rights to forest resources.

Seymour said the CIFOR analysis, which draws on a range of studies of the economic, social and political conditions affecting the world’s most vulnerable forests, seeks to ensure that any initiatives to stem deforestation that might emerge in future climate change agreements are firmly grounded in reality.

Most importantly, CIFOR advises decision makers to learn from the past and look beyond the confines of the forestry sector to the array of market failures and governance failures that spark a chain of events culminating in deforestation.

For example, according to the study, Indonesia, which is estimated to lose 1.9 million hectares of forest each year, has emerged as one of the world’s leading sources of carbon emissions in part due to a global spike in prices for palm oil and a surge in China’s demand for wood pulp. Together, these forces have pushed deforestation into carbon-rich peatlands that are being cleared and drained to make way for oil palm and pulpwood plantations. Limiting deforestation in Indonesia’s peatlands should be a high priority because the carbon losses per hectare are substantial.

Meanwhile, CIFOR notes that in South America, the loss of 4.3 million hectares a year is driven in part by meat consumption that encourages conversion of forests to pasture lands throughout the region. In Ecuador, road building has been a major cause of deforestation. In sub-Saharan Africa, fuelwood extraction and charcoal production are factors behind the continent’s loss of 4 million hectares a year.

Markku Kanninen, one of the authors of the report, said that “Policies that seek to halt deforestation will need to be crafted to address diverse local situations and target activities in areas such as agriculture, transportation and finance that lie well beyond the boundaries of the forest sector.”

“The perverse subsidies that provide incentives for clearing forest must be removed and efforts to secure property rights for local forest communities should be encouraged,” Kanninen said.

The report also sees promise in the increasingly popular notion that deforestation can be addressed with financial incentives that compensate landowners for “environmental services.” Seymour said discussions in Bali to fight deforestation by compensating forest stewards for protecting the carbon-storage capacity of forests through what is now a multi-billion dollar global market for carbon credit are potentially powerful.

“Such payments to individual land-users have the potential to “flip” financial incentives from favoring forest destruction, as they now do, to favoring conservation,” Seymour said. “But the key question is whether or not REDD incentives will be sufficient to flip political and economic decisions at the national level that drive deforestation.”

Appealing as they are, Seymour said it’s critical to understand that, due to decades of inattention to the rights of forest dwellers, new payment streams tied to conservation could intensify the severe poverty that now afflicts the majority of rural forest communities in the developing world.

“Since forest property rights are often very unclear, payment for carbon services could end up providing incentives for corrupt officials or local elites to appropriate this new forest value from local communities,” she said. “We’ve seen this happen before in similar situations, and there’s every reason to believe, given the kind of money now being paid for carbon credits, that it could happen again.”

Seymour said such problems can be avoided if policy makers enter the process of designing REDD strategies with a clear understanding of potential pitfalls and what can be done to avoid them. The report advises that reducing carbon emissions from forests will require strengthening the weak governance mechanisms that have long proven unable to enforce many existing prohibitions on forest clearing.

Finally, the report calls for ensuring that the REDD process is fair to poor forest communities.

“We need to temper the desire for maximum reduction in forest-based carbon emissions with regard for the legitimate rights of forest communities to realize the income potential of their forestlands,” Seymour said. “At times there will be trade-offs between reducing carbon emissions and reducing poverty.”


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High waves: Surf's up as waves hit 80 feet

Leonard Doyle, Independent 8 Dec 07;

Low-pressure weather systems moving off south-east Greenland and spiralling into the Atlantic brought 40ft (12m) waves, some of the highest ever recorded, to the west of Ireland and northern Spain this week. That is the equivalent of three double-decker buses on top of each other.

Unusually, similar systems were also occurring in the Pacific, bringing huge waves to Hawaii and California. Bill Sharp, of Billabong, a company which sponsors surfing equipment, said: "To have the biggest days ever in Ireland, one of the biggest days ever in Spain, and then the next day a big old day in Hawaii and then a huge day in California, back-to-back-to-back-to-back. I can't remember anything even close to that ever happening."

In California, the biggest ocean swell in two years hit the coast and a surfer died when he became separated from his board in waves up to 70ft high. Peter Davi, 45, was found floating face-down off the Monterey peninsula. His drowning, days before a major surf contest, shocked the tight-knit surfing community.

Film-makers for Waveriders – about the Irish-Hawaiian George Freeth and his role in reviving the "sport of kings" in Hawaii in the 19th century – found themselves out in County Sligo's biggest ever waves while filming off Mullaghmore.

Surfers talked of unique conditions in Hawaii where wave faces reached 80 feet this week. "They were the biggest waves any of us have seen," said an extreme-surfer in Maui, Buzzy Kerbox.


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Demonstrations across the globe mark Bali summit

Jerome Taylor, Independent 8 Dec 07;

Hundreds of thousands of people around the world are expected to take part in a global protest today to highlight the effects of climate change.

Demonstrations have been called for in 86 countries to coincide with the international UN Climate Talks in Bali. Protesters will be demanding urgent action from world leaders to do more to prevent the destabilisation of the Earth's climate.

In Britain, mass demonstrations will take place in London and Glasgow and a number of direct action environmental groups are also expected to stage their own form of protests.

Organisers in London are expecting tens of thousands of people to join the march which will converge on the US embassy in Grosvenor Square in protest at the Bush administration's reluctance to sign up to key climate treaties.

With all eyes fixed on the international climate summit in Bali, environmental activists will be hoping for a high global turnout to pile pressure on the leaders of developed nations to embrace tougher reductions of carbon emissions and to do more to alleviate those countries most vulnerable to the effects of climate change.

The mass demonstration in London will begin at 12pm on Millbank, following a route via 10 Downing Street and the Houses of Parliament before heading towards Trafalgar Square and the US embassy. A separate "cycle protest" will assemble at Lincoln's Inn Fields at 10am.

Speakers at the protest will include the Liberal Democrat leadership contender Chris Huhne, Caroline Lucas from the Green Party and the environmental campaigner George Monbiot.

The march in Glasgow will begin at 12.30pm at West Street Subway. There will also be workshops and debates designed to empower people into undertaking positive programmes for change and sustainable living solutions.

The protest organisers said they hoped "ten of thousands" of demonstrators would turn out for the march in London although there were concerns poor weather may stop people from coming on to the streets. Last year 20,000 protesters turned up to a similar march, but many campaigners have since expressed disappointment that attendance still remains in the low tens of thousands for a global issue while the anti-war marches in 2003 led to the largest protests Britain has seen.

Phil Thornhill from the Campaign against Climate Change said: "As the Arctic shrinks before our eyes and warnings from the scientists reach a deafening crescendo, still world leaders fail to take any effective action to head off looming catastrophe. As Greece and California burn, as Bangladeshis drown and Britain floods, alarm and anger around the world are beginning to mount, above all against the Bush administration ... and its calculating obstructionism at the international climate talks."

Yesterday, a group of female environmental activists demonstrated outside the Department of Transport, by attaching themselves to the ministry's doors using super-glue and bicycle locks.

Jane Fairbrook, a cycle store owner, who glued herself to the door, said: "We're doing this in solidarity with the women around the world who are already suffering the effects of climate chaos."

The Metropolitan Police last night said they had arrested seven women for either, or both, aggravated trespass and "staging an unauthorised demonstration in a designated SOCPA [Serious Organised Crime and Police Act] area".

Mass rallies focus on Bali talks

BBC News 8 Dec 07;

Mass demonstrations are taking place across the UK and worldwide to coincide with UN climate change talks in Bali.

Parallel eco-marches are planned in 50 cities globally, including London, Cardiff, Glasgow and Belfast.

A march in London will deliver a letter to Prime Minister Gordon Brown calling for strong UK climate change law.

The rallies come midway through the summit which is considering how to cut greenhouse gas emissions after current Kyoto Protocol targets expire in 2012.

Thousands of delegates from almost 200 nations are attending the two-week UN Framework Convention on Climate Change on the Indonesian island of Bali.

They are seeking progress towards a "Kyoto II" deal - a new global climate treaty. Talks will also focus on how to help poor nations cope in a warming world.

UK campaigners are urging ministers to agree a "clear roadmap" for a global low carbon economy.

Friends of the Earth director Tony Juniper said: "It is essential our politicians show the leadership required and ensure that the climate talks in Bali speed the world towards a low-carbon future and ensure the long-term security of generations to come."

He called for a strong climate change law that cuts UK emissions by 3% a year and includes emissions from international aviation and shipping, as well as annual milestones.

Milestones

Indonesian environment minister, Rachmat Witoelar, who is president of the conference, said he hoped the United States, which did not sign the 1997 Kyoto accord, would be brought on board.

Australia's trade minister, Simon Crean, has warned that both rich and poor nations must commit to slashing greenhouse gas emissions.

He said Australia would not sign any binding commitments until it has the results next year of a climate change report commissioned by new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

Mr Rudd signed papers leading to the ratification of the Kyoto Protocol as soon as he took office, reversing the policy of the previous conservative government.

The US opposes Kyoto because it does not include major polluters like China and India.

It is expected to resist pressure to agree binding emission targets, despite hopes among developing countries that emission cuts of 25-40% by 2020 for industrialised countries would be included in a final agreement when the conference ends.

The figures were agreed upon earlier this year by industrialised nations that signed the Kyoto Protocol.

It commits three dozen industrialized countries to cut their greenhouse gases an average of 5% below 1990 levels between next year and 2012, when it expires.


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KL wants fishy subject tackled: cross-border trade in fish

The Star 8 Dec 07;

BALI: Malaysia wants the issue of cross-border imports and exports of fish, particularly to the Philippines and Indonesia, to be tackled at a project to protect reefs in the Sulawesi and Sulu seas.

Sabah Fisheries director Rayner Stuel Galid said the Coral Triangle Initiative- comprising a coalition of six countries including Malaysia - would discuss the conservation and protection of coral reefs as well as fisheries within the region.

“Malaysia is particularly interested in the issue of border control over fish imports and exports,” he said when attending the stakeholders’ meeting here Saturday.

The two-day meeting, held at the sidelines of the United Nations Climate Change Conference, was expected to lead towards a set of guiding principles and a plan of action for the future development of the initiative.

The other countries are Indonesia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste.

The initiative will encompass some 75,000sq km of total reef area, home to 600 species of coral and over 3,000 species of fish.

This area is also believed to be the richest source for tuna fishing, an industry worth billion of dollars annually.

It also has some 120 million people living along the coasts.

However, there is also growing concern that global warming and the subsequent rise in water temperature has contributed to the degradation and bleaching of coral reefs.

For Malaysia, the project is believed to include protection of the eastern coast of Sabah where tourist dive-spots Sipadan and Litigan islands are located, as well as the mangrove forests along the seashore.

Indonesia’s Marine and Fisheries Research Agency chairman Indroyono Susilo said this initiative was already endorsed by leaders of the participating countries at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in Sydney as well as the Asean Summit in Singapore last month.

“Now comes the hard part in implementing the initiative. This area is also the spawning and nesting ground of the world’s largest tuna fishery,” he said.

It is believed that the project would be supported through the Asian Development Bank.

Director of the Malaysia-based Global Environment Centre Faizal Parish said he believed the project would also involve local communities along the coasts and non-governmental organisations.

“There have been problems of over-fishing and unsustainable fishing techniques in these parts,” he said.


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Group touts seaweed as warming weapon

Joseph Coleman, Associated Press Yahoo News 8 Dec 07;

The concept, however, has problems. Skeptics, for instance, say that trees are effective for carbon storage because they can last for many years, while seaweed is cultivated and harvested in cycles of only months, meaning the storage will be hard to measure or control.


Slimy, green and unsightly, seaweed and algae are among the humblest plants on earth. A group of scientists at a climate conference in Bali say they could also be a potent weapon against global warming, capable of sucking damaging carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere at rates comparable to the mightiest rain forests.

"The ocean's role is neglected because we can't see the vegetation," said Chung Ik-kyo, a South Korean environmental scientist. "But under the sea, there is a lot of seaweed and sea grass that can take up carbon dioxide."

The seaweed research, backed by scientists in 12 countries, is part of a broad effort to calculate how much carbon is being absorbed from the atmosphere by plants, and figure out ways to increase that through reforestation and other steps.

Such so-called "carbon sinks" are considered essential to controlling greenhouse gases, which trap heat in the atmosphere and are blamed for global warming.

The conference in Bali is aimed at launching two-year negotiations for a new global warming pact to replace the Kyoto Protocol when it expires in 2012, and using the earth's natural resources to remove carbon from the air is a major topic of discussion.

While the lion's share of attention to carbon sinks has been on forests, the seaweed scientists say the world should look to the sea, where nearly 8 million tons of seaweed and algae are cultivated every year.

That solution is a largely Asian one and it's not without complications.

China is by far the world's largest producer of seaweed, followed by South Korea and Japan. The Asia-Pacific — where seaweed is used in soups, sushi and salads — accounts for 80 percent of global production.

Proponents say seaweed and algae's rapid rate of photosynthesis, the process of turning carbon dioxide and sunlight into energy and oxygen, is a top factor in its effectiveness in carbon absorption.

Some types of seaweed can grow three or four meters (yards) long in only three months. Lee Jae-young, with South Korea's fisheries ministry, said some seaweeds can absorb five times more carbon dioxide than terrestrial plants.

"These are very productive ecosystems, they're drawing down a lot of carbon," said John Beardall, with Australia's Monash University.

South Korea and Japan are leaders in the research. Last year, Seoul approved a US$1.5 million (euro1 million) a year project to investigate the possibilities. The Japanese government and a group of companies are also looking into setting up a huge cultivation area in the waters off the country's western coast.

In a presentation on the sidelines of the Bali conference on Friday, Beardall argued that more efficient cultivation methods could greatly boost production in nations with long coastlines, such as the Philippines.

In addition to storing carbon, seaweed can be used to produce clean-burning biofuels, thereby making sure that the carbon isn't simply recycled back into the air.

"Feeding algae to people will only release the CO2 back into the atmosphere again," said Beardall. "It's not carbon sequestration."

The concept, however, has problems. Skeptics, for instance, say that trees are effective for carbon storage because they can last for many years, while seaweed is cultivated and harvested in cycles of only months, meaning the storage will be hard to measure or control.

"It depends on how long you keep the materials," said I Nyoman Suryadiputra of Wetlands International. "Because if it is decomposed in a month, the carbon dioxide will go back into the atmosphere."

Other obstacles remain. Some critics wonder if removing sea water from the seaweed as it's converted to fuel would require a large amount of energy that reduces its environmental benefits, though supporters say sun-drying could be used.

The environmental impact of rapid expansion of seaweed farms has also not been thought out, scientists concede. Huge floating farms could complicate fishing, shipping and other maritime activities.

Chung acknowledged the idea was in its infancy.

"In terms of ball games, we are just in the bullpen," he said, "not the main game yet."


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Trade ministers seek to aid climate talks

Adhityani Arga, Reuters 8 Dec 07;

JIMBARAN, Indonesia (Reuters) - Trade ministers opened a new front in combating global warming on the fringe of U.N. climate talks on Saturday despite splits over import barriers to clean energy technologies.

About a dozen trade ministers, including from the United States, Australia, Brazil and Portugal, which holds the European Union presidency, started two days of meetings in Bali to discuss whether more trade will harm or help the environment.

"The meeting...emphasizes the point that it's not just the environmental imperative we are dealing with, but the economic opportunities that come from solving climate change," Australian Trade Minister Simon Crean said.

"Climate change solutions open up important opportunities for jobs and trade," he told reporters.

"The intention is to start a dialogue. This is the first time that trade ministers are meeting to discuss these (climate) issues," Indonesian Trade Minister Mari Pangestu said.

The meeting, on the fringe of 190-nation climate talks involving about 10,000 delegates in a nearby resort on the Indonesian island, is the first time that annual U.N. climate talks have widened from environment ministers.

In a sign of mounting worries about the economic impacts of more droughts, floods, and rising seas, a group of finance minister will also meet in Bali on Monday and Tuesday.

The trade talks began around midday (0400 GMT), to discuss how trade policies can promote economic growth and shield the environment after U.N. reports this year warning of ever more droughts, heatwaves, disruptions to farming and rising seas.

On November 30, the United States and the EU made a proposal to eliminate barriers to trade in clean energy technologies, such as wind turbines or solar panels, as part of the long-running Doha round of world trade talks.

PROTECTIONISM

But India and Brazil criticized the measures as disguised protectionism to boost exports from rich nations. Brazil, a big producer of biofuels from sugar cane, noted the proposals did not include biofuels nor biofuels technologies.

Australia's Crean said the U.S.-EU proposal was encouraging if it helped eliminate trade barriers for environmental goods and services.

The December 3-14 U.N. climate change meeting in Bali is trying to launch two years of formal talks on a new pact to widen the U.N.'s Kyoto Protocol to all nations beyond 2012, including more participation by the United States, China and India.

Kyoto now binds 36 developed nations to cut emissions of greenhouse gases, mainly from burning fossil fuels, by 5 percent below 1990 levels by 2008-12 in a step to slow global warming.

At the climate talks, an alliance of 43 small island states urged much tougher action to fight climate change, saying they otherwise risked being washed off the map by rising seas and more powerful storms.

"We want to see drastic action," said Angus Friday, of Grenada and chairman of the group in Bali. He said a protective barrier for one island in the Maldives alone cost $100 million.

Saturday's trade talks were focused on the links between trade, investment and climate policies for the development of climate friendly technologies and clean energy systems.

On Sunday, World Trade Organization chief Pascal Lamy will look at "what kind of tools and instruments can be applied to maximize linkages between trade and climate policies".

A U.N. report in August projected that net annual investments of $200-$210 billion by 2030 were needed to curb emissions, in cleaner areas such as renewable energies.

(Editing by Bill Tarrant)

Nations bicker in Bali over "green" goods trade
Gerard Wynn and Adhityani Arga, Reuters 9 Dec 07;

JIMBARAN, Indonesia (Reuters) - Rich and poor differed on Sunday over how to open up trade in green goods, with Brazil fearing a major U.S.-EU proposal raised on the fringes of climate talks in Bali was a protectionist ruse.

Officials from 32 nations, including 12 trade ministers, are meeting for the first time on the sidelines of an annual U.N. climate conference, opening a new front in the global warming battle.

About 20 finance ministers will also meet on Indonesia's resort island of Bali on Monday and Tuesday.

Pakistan and Brazil voiced reservations on Sunday over a move to cut tariffs on clean technologies, such as wind power and solar panels, meant to help reduce the cost of curbing greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming.

They suspect the measure's real intention is to boost exports from rich nations. Brazil, a big producer of biofuels from sugar cane, has said the proposal did not include biofuels nor biofuels technologies.

"The protectionism is like the serpent's head. The serpent will always try put its head up," Brazil's Minister of External Relations, Celso Luiz Nunes Amorim, said in Bali.

"What are we here for? Are we here to make three things mutually supportive, development, trade and climate change, or are we here to discuss about protectionist ways to slow down the process?"

Pakistan objected to the U.S.-EU proposal because most developing nations don't have the money or know-how to build competitive green goods.

"This is obviously against us, because we have not the capacity to produce goods in the environmental friendly way," said Pakistan's Ambassador to Indonesia, Ali Baz.

About 190 countries are meeting at a luxury Indonesian beach resort in December 3-14 talks to try to launch negotiations on a broader climate change pact to succeed or replace the Kyoto Protocol from 2013. Kyoto only binds 36 industrialized countries to emissions curbs between 2008-2012.

World Trade Organization chief Pascal Lamy said developing countries, such as Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, were leaders in some clean technologies and would benefit from free trade in environmental goods.

CARBON TAXES

He also said trade rules could be tweaked to help curb the output of greenhouse gases, for example taking into account carbon taxes and subsidies, or minimum environmental standards.

But that would have to be under the framework of an international climate change pact, he said.

"The relationship between international trade and indeed the WTO and climate change would be best defined by a consensual, international agreement on climate change that successfully embraces all major polluters," Lamy said.

The Bali climate talks aim to find ways to include outsiders such as top carbon emitters the United States and China in the fight against rising greenhouse emissions scientists say will lead to more droughts, floods, heatwaves and rising seas.

Developing nations say rich countries need to do more to cut their own emissions, blaming Europe, the United States, Japan and other industrialized nations for much of the man-made greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to date.

On Saturday, a draft proposal at the U.N.-led talks said all nations must do more to fight climate change, and rich countries must make deep cuts in emissions to avoid the worst impacts.

The four-page draft, written by delegates from Indonesia, Australia and South Africa as an unofficial guide for delegates, said developing nations should at least brake rising emissions as part of a new pact.

In Europe, several thousand protesters demanding urgent action on global warming held street marches on Saturday.

German authorities turned off the lights for five minutes at 8 p.m. (1900 GMT) at tourist sites including Berlin's Brandenburg Gate as part of a government-backed campaign to raise awareness of environmental issues.

In London, posters carried a picture of U.S. President George W. Bush and the words "Wanted for crimes against the planet."

(Writing by David Fogarty; Editing by Jerry Norton)

RELATED ARTICLES

"Green jobs" to outweigh losses from climate change

Alister Doyle, Reuters 6 Dec 07;

Brazil slams EU-US 'green' WTO proposals as protectionist
Yahoo News 4 Dec 07;

US, EU aim to free up trade in 'green' goods
Yahoo News 30 Nov 07;


Read more!

Oil spill reaches South Korea shoreline

Jae-Soon Chang, Associated Press 8 Dec 07;

The stretch of coast is one of Asia's largest wetland areas, providing important habitat for immigrating birds.


Residents and emergency workers used buckets to remove dense crude oil from South Korea's western shore as the Coast Guard struggled in high waves and strong winds to contain the country's largest oil spill Saturday.

The oil was reaching scenic and ecologically sensitive areas. At Mallipo — one of South Korea's best-known beaches — tides of dark sea water crashed ashore, while the odor could be smelled a half-mile away. Hundreds of troops, police and residents were engaged in cleanup efforts there.

Oil was still trickling out of the tanker hit Friday, but Kim Woon-tae, a Coast Guard official, said the last of three holes would soon be sealed completely. The Coast Guard headquarters had said Friday that all three punctured containers on the tanker were plugged.

The region is popular for its scenic beaches and is also the site of fish farms, a national maritime park and is an important rest stop for migrating birds.

Mallipo, about 95 miles southwest of Seoul, is one of the hardest-hit areas in the oil spill, which occurred Friday when a barge carrying a crane slammed into the supertanker, causing it to release 2.7 million gallons of oil into the ocean.

The spill involved about twice as much oil as the country's previous largest in 1995.

The oil reached shore Saturday morning, contaminating about 4 miles of coastline, said Jung Se-hi, a spokesman at the Coast Guard headquarters in Incheon. Strong winds and prevailing currents spread the oil slick overnight to an area about 1 mile wide and 10 miles in length, he said.

Environmental activists expressed anguish over the situation.

"It's helpless," said Lee Pyong-gook, an activist with the Korean Federation for Environmental Movement. "It's a sea of oil."

Lee said the region is a major stopover for migratory snipe. "It was fortunate that those birds have yet to arrive," he said, adding however, that some seagulls had been tarred by oil.

The Coast Guard sent 67 vessels and six helicopters to the site Saturday in an effort to clean up the spill, said Kim Woon-tae, a Coast Guard official who is stationed in the region.

"We're doing our best to remove the contamination as quickly as possible, but it will take some time to clean up the shore because it needs to be done by hand," said Kim, who is stationed in the region. Kim also said it was difficult to predict how long it will take to remove oil from the sea.

The size of the leak reported by the authorities would be about one-fourth that of the 260,000 barrels, or 11 million gallons, of oil spilled into Alaska's Prince William Sound by the Exxon Valdez in 1989.

The tanker, the Hebei Spirit, and the other vessel, owned by South Korea's Samsung Corp., were in no danger of sinking, the Coast Guard said. There were no casualties in the accident.

The tanker was at anchor, around 7 miles from Mallipo, and carrying about 260,000 tons of crude oil — about 1.8 million barrels — to be loaded into boats from a nearby port when it was hit by the South Korean barge, said Kim Tae-ho, another Coast Guard official.

The barge, which was being towed from a construction site by a small tug boat, lost control after a wire linking it to the tug was cut due to high winds, waves and currents, he said.

Kim said the Coast Guard planned to question the barge's captain as to why he was sailing through the area despite the stormy weather.

Associated Press writer Jae-Soon Chang in Seoul contributed to this report.

South Korea's worst oil spill hits near preserve
Lee Jin-joo, Reuters 8 Dec 07;

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean workers using skimmers and containment fences battled on Saturday to clean up the worst oil spill in the country's history, as part of the slick hit shore near a nature preserve on the west coast.

A Hong Kong-registered tanker began leaking an estimated 10,500 metric tons of crude oil on Friday after a barge carrying a crane slammed into it while the tanker was anchored off Daesan port about 110 km (70 miles) southwest of Seoul.

"A part of the slick reached the shores of Taean and onto the beaches. There are about 1,200 residents helping in the clean-up," said Cheon Myeong-cheol, a Taean coast guard official.

The region is popular for its beaches and home to a national park. It is also an important rest stop for migratory birds.

There has been no major impact yet on marine life where the first oil reached shore, according to the coast guard but that batch was only a small part of the entire spill.

The largest slick was about 13 kms (8 miles) long and spreading in Mallipo Bay, about 90 km southwest of Seoul, a maritime ministry official said.

"We're installing oil-containment fences to prevent further inflow," said Song Myeong-dal, head of the maritime ministry's Information and Policy Monitoring team.

The main slick was about a day or so away from hitting a west coast area that has marine farms and oyster beds, Song said. "We are taking all measures to prevent that from happening."

Heavy winds and high waves hurt oil containment efforts on Friday but seas were calmer on Saturday.

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 from that disaster cost around $2.5 billion while the total costs, including fines and settlement of claims, were an estimated $9.5 billion.

South Korea has dispatched 23 naval vessels, 34 oil skimmers, six helicopters and 67 patrol ships to help contain the slick. The Defense Ministry also mobilized hundreds of troops to help.

The very large crude carrier (VLCC) Hebei Spirit was about 5 miles outside the port, waiting to unload its cargo of some 260,000 tons of crude oil from the Middle East, when it was struck by the barge.

Technical managers of the MT Hebei Spirit said in a statement on Friday the crane aboard the barge punched holes in three of the tanker's tanks.

(Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Bill Tarrant)

South Koreans help clean up oil spill
Jin-Man Lee, Associated Press Yahoo News 8 Dec 07;

Residents and emergency workers used buckets to remove dense crude oil from South Korea's western shore as the Coast Guard struggled in high waves and strong winds to contain the country's largest oil spill Saturday.

The oil was reaching scenic and ecologically sensitive areas. At Mallipo — one of South Korea's best-known beaches — tides of dark sea water crashed ashore, while the odor could be smelled a half-mile away. Hundreds of troops, police and residents were engaged in cleanup efforts there.

Oil was still trickling out of the tanker hit Friday, but Kim Woon-tae, a Coast Guard official, said the last of three holes would soon be sealed completely. The Coast Guard headquarters had said Friday that all three punctured containers on the tanker were plugged.

The region is popular for its scenic beaches and is also the site of fish farms, a national maritime park and is an important rest stop for migrating birds.

Mallipo, about 95 miles southwest of Seoul, is one of the hardest-hit areas in the oil spill, which occurred Friday when a barge carrying a crane slammed into the supertanker, causing it to release 2.7 million gallons of oil into the ocean.

The spill involved about twice as much oil as the country's previous largest in 1995.

The oil reached shore Saturday morning, contaminating about 4 miles of coastline, said Jung Se-hi, a spokesman at the Coast Guard headquarters in Incheon. Strong winds and prevailing currents spread the oil slick overnight to an area about 1 mile wide and 10 miles in length, he said.

Environmental activists expressed anguish over the situation.

"It's helpless," said Lee Pyong-gook, an activist with the Korean Federation for Environmental Movement. "It's a sea of oil."

Lee said the region is a major stopover for migratory snipe. "It was fortunate that those birds have yet to arrive," he said, adding however, that some seagulls had been tarred by oil.

The Coast Guard sent 67 vessels and six helicopters to the site Saturday in an effort to clean up the spill, said Kim Woon-tae, a Coast Guard official who is stationed in the region.

"We're doing our best to remove the contamination as quickly as possible, but it will take some time to clean up the shore because it needs to be done by hand," said Kim, who is stationed in the region. Kim also said it was difficult to predict how long it will take to remove oil from the sea.

The size of the leak reported by the authorities would be about one-fourth that of the 260,000 barrels, or 11 million gallons, of oil spilled into Alaska's Prince William Sound by the Exxon Valdez in 1989.

The tanker, the Hebei Spirit, and the other vessel, owned by South Korea's Samsung Corp., were in no danger of sinking, the Coast Guard said. There were no casualties in the accident.

The tanker was at anchor, around 7 miles from Mallipo, and carrying about 260,000 tons of crude oil — about 1.8 million barrels — to be loaded into boats from a nearby port when it was hit by the South Korean barge, said Kim Tae-ho, another Coast Guard official.

The barge, which was being towed from a construction site by a small tug boat, lost control after a wire linking it to the tug was cut due to high winds, waves and currents, he said.

Kim said the Coast Guard planned to question the barge's captain as to why he was sailing through the area despite the stormy weather.

Associated Press writer Jae-Soon Chang in Seoul contributed to this report.

South Korean oil spill washes onto coast: witnesses
Park Chan-Kyong, Yahoo News 8 Dec 07;

South Korea's worst-ever oil spill reached the country's southwest coastline on Saturday, polluting beaches and threatening valuable sea farms, witnesses and officials said.

More than 10,000 tonnes of crude oil gushed into the Yellow Sea after a Hong Kong-registered tanker was struck by a barge in high waves on Friday.

"This is not the sea we used to have. It's all dark brown. The sea waves are dark brown, the beach is scattered with greasy clumps of sand," a witness told AFP by phone from Euihangri beach, 120 kilometres (75 miles) southwest of Seoul.

"Because of the pungent oily smell, it's even hard to breathe," said local resident Lee Choong-Kyung.

He said hundreds of people including volunteers were struggling to clean up but the operation was being delayed because of a lack of pressure washers and portable tanks.

At Mallipo beach, next to Euihangri, an oil slick stretching 15 kilometres (nine and a half miles) was washing up on the shoreline.

The single-hulled tanker, the 147,000-tonne Hebei Spirit, was berthed five miles (eight kilometres) off Mallipo, part of Taean County, when it was pierced in three places by the barge.

The barge, heavily loaded with a large crane, was being towed when a wire linking it to a tugboat broke in rough seas. The barge floated free and slammed into the port side of the tanker, tearing three holes in the hull.

"I woke up to a dark brown beach. The sand is crusted with brown slicks of oil," said Guk Jung-Ho, a village leader of Mallipo.

"Raw fish merchants stopped pumping sea water into their fish tanks. All the sea food may go bad now," he told AFP.

He said about 1,000 people, including 250 military troops, 150 policemen and 600 volunteers, were mobilised to mop up the oil.

"But we don't have even enough buckets to carry oil," he said.

"Our life is totally dependent on this beach and tourists. Almost all the 140 families here are living off seafood farms and who knows what will happen to the farms?"

A Taean County official said there was no immediate report of damage to the sea farms.

"We have to wait about a week before the picture may become clear," he said.

The ministry of maritime affairs and fisheries said six aircraft and a fleet of 67 ships, including fishing boats and vessels from coast guards and the navy, were engaged in the clean-up effort.

"A total of 2,000 people are struggling to clean up along the 17-kilometre (11 mile)-long coastline from Mohang in the south to Taean power station in the North," said Chun Myung-Chul, an official of the disaster control centre in Taean.

Most of oil bands have made it to the shoreline after the wind pushed them southeast, he said.

"We are scooping from pools of oil on the beach and putting them into cans or scraping the surface of the sand and putting the black crumps of sand mixed with oil into sacks," he said.

Booms were also set up for corralling oil as skimmers were collecting and removing the slicks from shore and on the water surface, he said.

Kwon Dong-Ok, head of the maritime police in Taean, called for the government to declare a disaster area and provide financial assistance.

"We are setting up booms to protect fishing farms," an official from the ministry said, adding that Taean County has 445 sea farms raising oyster, abalone and other seafood.

Authorities have been battling to contain the oil inside booms, as well as scattering chemicals on the slick and trying to suck up the spillage.

The tanker was anchored near waters designated as a national park before it was to sail into Daesan port to discharge its cargo.

The stretch of coast is one of Asia's largest wetland areas, providing important habitat for immigrating birds.


Read more!

Corals could resist climate change: study

ABC News 8 Dec 07;

Research scientists are looking at whether coral reefs may be able to develop mechanisms to better cope with the effects of climate change.

The joint study has been carried out by scientists from Queen's University in Canada and the Australian Institute of Marine Science.

Principal research scientist with the institute, Julian Caley, says they have developed a new theoretical model that suggests there is nothing to prevent corals evolving greater resistance to warm water bleaching.

He says the research does not indicate corals are safe from climate change but it does open up new lines of inquiry.

"I would think that this model, if it's developed further will get to a point where we can start to make quantitative predictions about how fast corals can evolve and there will certainly be some management implications of that," he said.


Read more!

Tanker Spills Oil Off South Korea

By CHOE SANG-HUN, New York Times; Dec 8, 2007

SEOUL, South Korea, Dec. 7 — A Hong Kong-registered oil tanker leaked 10,810 tons, or 66,000 barrels, of crude oil off South Korea’s stormy west coast today, officials said, in what was estimated to be the nation’s largest maritime oil spill.

A band of oil about three miles long was snaking slowly toward the coast, which is dotted with scenic beaches, wildlife habitats and oyster and other fishing beds.

“So far, we have no reports of damage,” said Kim Jong-seok, an official at the Maritime and Fisheries Ministry. “Much will depend on how the sea currents move in coming hours. We have 40 vessels out there fighting the oil spill.”

The spill occurred when a vessel carrying a crane crashed into the 147,000-ton tanker Hebei Spirit this morning about five nautical miles off the coast near Taean, 90 miles southwest of Seoul.
The collision caused three gashes in the tanker’s hull. Photographs released by the maritime ministry showed crude oil spurting from the holes. There were no casualties.

The tanker was carrying 1.8 million barrels of crude oil. In the previous largest offshore oil spill in South Korea, an oil tanker spilled 30,740 barrels of crude and fuel off the south coast in 1995, costing 96 billion won, or $101 million, in cleanup operations and damages to fishermen.

In 1989, the Exxon Valdez supertanker released about 240,000 barrels of oil into Alaska’s Prince William Sound, causing a major environmental disaster.


Read more!

Best of our wild blogs: 8 Dec 07

Bat Rescue
rained out bat on the budak blog

Dive King
fantastic photos of a diving kingfisher on the bird ecology blog

Kids at the Raffles Museum
fabulous outing on the flying fish friends blog

The Story of Stuff
explores our materials economy and looks at the social and environmental costs of consumerism on the AsiaIsGreen blog

Daily Green Actions: 6 Dec
e-cards and a bra that turns into a shopping bag (eew!)
on the leafmonkey blog


Read more!

Straighten rivers in Johor to prevent floods: Abdullah

Today Online 8 Dec 07;

JOHOR — Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi wants the meandering rivers in Johor to be straightened to facilitate water flow into the sea to prevent floods, reported Bernama news agency.

Mr Abdullah, who inspected the area from a helicopter while on his way to Johor on Friday, said he noticed many rivers in the state meandered like a slithering snake. "The meanders slow down the flow of water to the sea and could cause floods," he said.

Seeing how the river water had overflowed into low-lying areas after several days of rain, the Prime Minister expressed concerns about its impact: "Hopefully, the water will not rise further or the people will suffer."

Meanwhile, the Malaysian authorities confirmed that the floods have extended beyond Johor. The floods in three states could get worse as torrential rains pound the nation, said officials. Floods in Johor, Pahang and Kelantan have forced at least 4,585 people to evacuate. Johor has been worst hit with at least 3,738 people staying at 42 flood relief centres, reports said.

"People's lives in these areas will be affected. So, our advice to them is to monitor the weather warnings and act early when there is a warning," said Deputy Science Minister Kong Cho Ha.

Last December, large parts of Johor were flooded after days of heavy rain that left more than 110,000 people displaced — causing at least RM1.5 billion ($650 million) in damage, according to government estimates. — AFP

Thousands flee floods in Malaysia
Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

Johor, Kelantan and Pahang hit hard; Malaysian officials warn of more rain ahead
KUALA LUMPUR - FLOODS in three states forced thousands to evacuate yesterday, said the Malaysian authorities, who maintained a close watch on the situation despite improvement in some areas.

'There is now a heavy rain warning out for the northern parts of Johor and Pahang state, and the situation may worsen,' Deputy Science Minister Kong Cho Ha said in the early evening.

'People's lives in these areas will be affected, and so our advice to them is to monitor the weather warnings and act early when there is a warning.'

Following an aerial inspection, Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi said the meandering rivers of Johor should be straightened to mitigate future flooding.

'The meanders slowed down the flow of water to the sea and could cause floods,' Datuk Seri Abdullah said at a meet-the-people session in 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 spokesman said from the flood operations room that this brought the total number of flood victims in Johor down from 4,491 at 8am to 3,705.

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

In Pahang, 662 people were evacuated to flood relief centres, two landslides were reported and two stretches of road were under up to a metre of water.

In Kelantan, floods overwhelmed several villages in the Gua Musang, Kuala Krai and Jeli districts, and 185 people in Jeli were evacuated.

Johor and Pahang have been experiencing moderate to heavy rain since Wednesday, while Kelantan, Terengganu, Malacca and Negeri Sembilan have had downpours since Thursday.

Flood warnings were issued for all six states.

The Meteorological Department warned that Johor, Pahang, Terengganu and Kelantan could experience widespread and continuous rain for two to four more days.

In December last year, large parts of Johor were flooded after days of heavy rain. More than 110,000 people were also displaced. The floods caused at least RM1.5 billion (S$649 million) in damage, according to government estimates, and were some of the country's worst.

THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, BERNAMA

PM: Realign rivers to beat floods
The Star 8 Dec 07;

SEGAMAT: Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi wants Johor to alleviate flooding by aligning rivers.

The Prime Minister said he had an aerial view of the flood situation here and directed Mentri Besar Datuk Abdul Ghani Othman to get the state Drainage and Irrigation Department (DID) to consider re-aligning Sungai Muar.

“When I saw the floods from the helicopter enroute to Segamat I feared it could be serious.

“The curves slowed down the flow of the water, causing floods,” he said at a meet-the-people session at Dataran Segamat yesterday.

Abdullah pointed out that there would be benefits in aligning rivers. A river bend could be turned into a lake, which could be utilised for aquaculture, fish breeding, boating and fishing.

He said he had asked Abdul Ghani to submit a proposal for the Government to include the river project under next year’s review of the Ninth Malaysia Plan.

He also announced that the Tangkak-Segamat road would be upgraded and widened to shorten travelling time and boost economic growth in northern Johor.

Later at a press conference, Abdullah said all the necessary preparations were in place to handle any flooding.

He pointed out that the Johor Government had gained valuable experience from the unexpected floods last year.

“We are ready to get the machinery moving at any time to overcome the problem.

However, we pray that Johor and the east coast will not be inundated by massive flooding,” he said.

Abdullah also presented land titles to 173 Felda Redong Satu settlers, and agricultural plots and housing lots to 121 Chinese and Indian folk.


Read more!

42km Eastern Coastal Park Connector Network launched

Channel NewsAsia 8 Dec 07;

SINGAPORE : For those who fancy taking a stroll, there is now a new 42-kilometre route that will take them from Changi beach, to East Coast Park and Bedok Reservoir.

That is now possible thanks to the Eastern Coastal Park Connector Network. It is a series of pedestrian and cycling paths that link up the parks in the east.

The 8-kilometre stretch between Changi Beach Park and East Coast Park is touted as one of the most scenic part of the network.

Twelve cyclists from the National Development Ministry were the first to try out the new route on Friday.

This same group is heading for a cycling expedition in New Zealand for charity.

The eastern loop is the first of seven to be built over the years.

By 2015, NParks hopes to construct 200km of park connectors - to date, half of that has been built.

More will be added beyond 2015.

NParks' eventual goal is to create a connector network linking up the whole of Singapore.

NParks said it has taken special care to preserve the natural environment.

Kalthom Abdul Latiff, Assistant Director, Park Connectors and Special Projects, NParks, said, "We try to preserve the rustic nature as much as possible. We do not want to change the ambience, (we want to) keep it rustic, so that people will get a different experience." - CNA/ms

Scenic network in the east
Parks linked by new 7.9km connector
Lin Yanqin, Today Online 8 Dec 07;

NO NEED to limit yourself to visiting just one park over the weekend — the newly-completed Eastern Coastal Park Connector Network will allow lovers of the outdoors to visit at least three.

The 42-km network, built at a cost of $22 million, links up the popular East Coast Park, Changi Beach Park and Pasir Ris Park, and other parks in the east, such as Bedok Reservoir Park.

Officially launched by the Minister for National Development Mah Bow Tan, the network is the first to be completed out of the planned total of seven throughout the island.

Eventually, major recreational spaces and housing estates will be connected.

The link also provides shortcuts to housing estates, Mass Rapid Transit stations and schools.

The latest stretch of the eastern network to be completed — a scenic 7.9-km route that links Changi Beach Park to East Coast Park — brings the total length of completed park connectors to 100km.

A western park network is in the works. And upcoming inter-park connectors include the Central Catchment Area, Punggol Park and Sungei Pangsua in the west.

Said Mr Mah: "The park connector network is an important part of our plans to transform Singapore into a 'City in a Garden' ... with green lungs set among buildings and built-up facilities.

With the completion of the Eastern Coastal Park Connector Network, Singaporeans can use it to get from their homes to the parks."

For instance, Tampines residents can jog, walk or cycle their way to the popular Pasir Ris Park through the connector.

Taking a spin through the new park connector was a team of 12 cyclists from the Ministry of National Development, who were symbolically flagged off for their 25-day cycling expedition in New Zealand to raise at least $100,000 for charity.

Six parks in east now fully linked
Lin Xinyi, Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

THE final puzzle piece in a $22 million trail network snapped into place yesterday near the Changi Airport.

With the completion of an 8km stretch of bike paths and greenery, the Eastern Coastal Park Connector, officially opened. The 42km network, which took a decade to complete, links six parks in the east.

Outdoor enthusiasts have been eagerly awaiting the connector, which is part of an ambitious island-wide lattice of parks and trails.

'The Park Connector Network is an important part of our plans to transform Singapore into a City-in-a-Garden,' said Minister for National Development Mah Bow Tan yesterday.

'Our vision of Singapore is one where our city is nestled within lush greenery, with green lungs set among buildings and built-up facilities.'

The newest stretch forms part of a loop that links East Coast Park, Changi Beach Park, Pasir Ris Park, Bedok Reservoir Park, Sun Plaza and Bedok Town Park.

The other connectors within the loop are at Siglap, Tampines, Pasir Ris, Loyang, Changi and Bedok.

The Eastern coastal grid is part of the National Parks Board's (NParks) Park Connector Network - an islandwide network of open spaces that link major parks, nature sites and housing estates in Singapore.

Park connectors are usually found alongside the many rivers and canals that flow through the island. They are sometimes used as convenient shortcuts to MRT stations and schools.

The Eastern section is the first of seven loops to be completed, with the Western Park Connector Network expected to be next in line.

Other loops are Kallang- Serangoon, Northern, North Eastern, Southern Ridges and Siglap-Kallang Basin Loops.

So far, 100km of park connectors have been completed, with another 100km set to be built by 2015.

It is uncertain how long the entire network will be and when it will be completed.

The NParks plans to set up a bike rental system in the eastern section where people can rent a two-wheeler at one park and return it at another.

The four proposed drop-off points are in Telok Kurau Park, Bedok Town Park, Pasir Ris Town Park and Changi Beach Park.

The Eastern network has no shortage of scenic spots. Pasir Ris Park boasts a 6ha mangrove forest, while the coastline at Changi Beach Park offers view of the sunset.

A connector near Changi Airport provides glimpses of planes taking off.

Mr Nick Rienstra, 56, who cycles six days a week, welcomed the Eastern link.

Said the retiree: 'Riding on the park connectors is far superior to riding on roads. Not only is it safer, and faster, but the the route is more picturesque.'

'Now, I'm just hoping to spot the A380 airplane the next time round.'

LINKS

List of Park Connectors
on the NParks website

RELATED ARTICLE

Connecting with the great outdoors

Tan Hui Yee, Straits Times 2 May 07



Read more!

Kayak tragedy at Lower Seletar: Death was accidental

Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

A COUPLE on a Sunday morning outing at Lower Seletar Reservoir last May got into difficulties when their kayak went beyond the safety boundary and capsized.

Mr Khoka Mohammed Burhan, 32, drowned after helping his wife, Madam Norliza Yahya, 27, get back into the boat safely.

A coroner's court heard yesterday that the couple's kayak had strayed into an area of the reservoir off the Orchid Country Club golf course meant only for certified canoeists.

Yesterday's inquiry into Mr Khoka's death was told that, before the couple set off in their kayak, a People's Association staff had briefed them on how to stay within the safety area.

They were also given life vests to wear.

When the couple realised that they hadgone beyond the boundary, they tried to turn back but their kayak overturned.

Although Mr Khoka managed to turn the canoe over and help his wife back on board, he had trouble getting in himself.

Then, when his wife had difficulty paddling and moving the kayak back to shore, he started pushing

it from the rear while still in the water himself.

The court was told that Madam Norliza, a laboratory technician, had heard her husband call out for her.

When she turned around, she saw him lagging behind, gesturing and struggling in the water.

While trying desperately to turn the kayak back towards her husband, Madam Norliza noticed his floating life vest, but he was missing.

Divers found her husband's body the next day. In recording a verdict of misadventure, State Coroner Ronald Gwee said the drowning was accidental.

Misadventure, says court of canoeist's death
Zul Othman, Today Online 8 Dec 07;

What started out as a leisurely paddle on the scenic Lower Seletar Reservoir quickly turned into tragedy for Mr Khoka Muhammed Burhan. The 32-year-old quality assurance engineer drowned in the presence of his wife after their canoe capsized.

The Coroner's Court heard that on May 27, at about 11am, Mr Khoka, who was an Indian citizen and Singapore permanent resident, had hired a double-seater canoe from the People's Association (PA) Water-Venture facility at the reservoir. He was with his wife Mdm Noorliza Yahya, 27, a lab technician at the United World College.

It was believed to be their second visit to the facility. The novice canoeists strayed out of the beginners' zone and into an area off the Orchid Country Club golf course, which was meant for experienced canoeists. The couple then lost control of the canoe and it capsized.

Mr Khoka managed to turn it upright and helped his wife to climb back into it. But he himself was unable to get back into it as the vessel kept tilting at each attempt. Mdm Noorliza then tried to paddle the canoe to shore, with her husband pushing the craft from behind.

But after a while, he was believed to have grown tired and began to lag. When Mdm Noorliza turned around to save him, she found only his life vest floating in the water.

At 12.20pm, the PA was alerted and launched a safety boat to search for the couple.

Mdm Noorliza was spotted on the bank about 10 minutes later. The Singapore Civil Defence Force's Disaster Assistance Rescue Team was activated and it deployed two amphibious vehicles to search for Mr Khoka in the waters off the Orchid Country Club, while police officers combed the banks on foot.

Mr Khoka's body was found the next morning about 10m from shore, floating in a standing position with face submerged and fists clenched.

On Friday, State Coroner Ronald Gwee accepted the contents of the investigation and recorded a verdict of misadventure, saying Mr Khoka's death was "unintentional and accidental".

While investigators were unable to ascertain if Mr Khoka was a competent swimmer, the evidence suggested Mr Khoka made every effort to save his wife. While Mr Khoka's wife had not seen him unfasten his life vest, the Court heard that he could have removed it himself or it could have come off while he was struggling. Investigators said the life jacket could not have come off by itself.

Mr Khoka's death occurred two weeks after the PA outlet opened on May 13. It was the first fatality at a reservoir since water sports were introduced at such locations in 2004. New safety precautions — including red out-of-bound zone markers, prominent signs explaining safety procedures, and regular powerboat patrols — have been implemented at all seven PA Water-Venture outlets.


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Small city can dream big with careful planning; Singapore Land Use policy-making unwrapped

Chua Mui Hoong, Straits Times 8 Dec 07

Marina Bay IR project, for example, can take off smoothly as the basic infrastructure is already in place

WHEN the Marina Bay Sands integrated resort opens in 2009, pundits around the world may gasp at the speed with which a mega development rose on empty tracts of land in record time.

From winning the tender on May 26 last year to its planned opening some time in 2009, it will be a sprint of a mere two-plus years from blueprint to reality.

But National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan says the reason that the Marina Bay IR site can progress so fast and so smoothly is thanks to planning that began well over 30 years ago.

Without that careful planning of land use, plans for the IR would have had to be delayed, he says in an interview on land use and the trade-offs the Ministry of National Development (MND) considers in its plans.

Such careful, thought-through proposals help tiny Singapore achieve 'big dreams', he says.

Plans for a bigger downtown area began back in the 70s, as Shenton Way developed. One obvious solution that would extend the city into the bayfront area: reclaimed land.

'We reclaimed Marina Bay about 30 years ago. We started putting in the infrastructure in Marina Bay about 10 years ago: all services, power, telecommunications, gas, water, then planning for the roads.'

Development plans for the area began around 2000. Options such as residential, commercial, office or mixed uses were considered. To test the market, one site was put up for tender as a 'white' site, which means developers are free to choose whether they want to put up a residential or commercial building.

It was later developed into a residential building - The Sail.

By 2004 and 2005, when debate on the proposed IR intensified, Marina Bay stood ready as a prime location with infrastructure ready for development.

Planners had initially suggested the Southern Islands as the site for an IR, but Marina Bay beckoned.

'We were able to make this offer because we actually had all this ready and waiting to go.'

Mr Mah reckons that the IR bids created more buzz because of the attractiveness of the Marina Bay site.

To Mr Mah, long-term planning is critical for small Singapore, which has to balance myriad land uses.

Apart from the usual needs of a city, such as having land for housing, commercial and office uses, as a nation it also needs land for a port, airports, energy plants, waste disposal and recreational needs.

'If we plan ahead and by being flexible in our planning, by being able to take into account changes in our economy and our social needs, we are able to make best use of what we have.

'In the process, I think we are quite pleasantly surprised at how much land we actually have for all these things.'

Tiny Singapore has gone through several phases in land-use planning. In the 60s and 70s, the emphasis was on rapid physical development, with reclamation to expand the land mass.

In the 80s, a rising wave of conservationist sentiments caused a rethink. Former MND minister S. Dhanabalan noted in a recent interview that young officers in MND and Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) pushed to conserve culturally rich neighbourhoods like Chinatown and Little India.

Heritage conservation was written into the 1991 Concept Plan and remains an article of faith in urban planning.

In the 90s, as a growing population put pressure on demand for land and with limits in land reclamation, the focus shifted to ways to intensify land use, with sweeping increases in plot ratios that allowed for taller buildings.

Mr Mah says the suggestion to raise plot ratios came from a series of focus group discussions, making the point that consultation with stakeholders does result in better policy options.

Another breakthrough in land-use planning came in the decision to dig deeper, with plans for a deep tunnel system to house sewer and infrastructure systems.

For Mr Mah, land-use planning does not exist in a vacuum, but is all about balancing conflicting needs and interests.

He gives examples to illustrate his point.

A granite stockpile in Kranji raised the ire of farmers there. But to the minister, strategic interest comes first in this case. In fact, he says unapologetically, there are plans for more granite stockpiles in Singapore. But the ministry will consider carefully the pros and cons of suitable locations.

Another example of conflicting interests: a group of conservationists wanted to preserve a historic building in Amber Road slated for private development.

Mr Mah discloses that actually, the URA had considered whether to conserve the building, but realised the cost was too high. But when conservationists protested, the ministry helped bring together the activists and developer.

In the end, a 'hybrid' solution emerged, with the developer agreeing to retain the historic facade and changing its design to incorporate this.

This is an example of 'how the interest of a very vocal group can be taken into account', together with the interest of the more silent party - in this case, the developer, he says.

Mr Mah considers the outcome 'win-win', although he acknowledges that 'hybrid' solutions are not perfect and do not please either party 100 per cent.

But then, he shrugs, that's the nature of balancing different interests.

Asked if he considers lobbying by interest groups positive or negative, he replies: 'I would be neutral about it but I also want to make this point that their interests are not the only interests on the floor.

'We have to come in to talk about other interests who may not be so articulate, who may not be so vocal, but whose interests are no less important.'


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Butterfly House soars to new heights

Yeo Ghim Lay, Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

With its imposing facade and jutting driveway, this soon-to-be-built condominium looks set to stand out in Amber Road. In fact, the porch over the driveway facing the road protrudes beyond the legal limit.

The unusual design is deliberate, however.

It is the result of a compromised solution made to preserve the facade. And the instigators behind it are a group of heritage enthusiasts.

Calling themselves the Historic Architecture Rescue Plan (Harp), they started an intense public campaign late last year when they heard that a 95-year-old house at 23 Amber Road was to be demolished and a high-rise built in its place.

Fliers were distributed to nearby residents, online petitions started and e-mails lobbed at the authorities.

Harp argued that the neo-renaissance architectural features of the two-storey house made it special.

Also, its architect was Regent Alfred John Bidwell, the man behind such iconic buildings as the Raffles Hotel and Victoria Memorial Hall.

Their unrelenting efforts resulted in the state stepping in, concessions made by government agencies and developer AG Capital agreeing to keep the facade and front porch of the house.

But the journey was long. The developer, the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) and Harp, among others, negotiated for six months to reach the 'hybrid' solution.

Though architects and conservationists have mockingly called it the 'Frankenstein' building, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan sees it as a win-win solution.

He admits that like most hybrid solutions, it did not please everybody. But, he adds, 'it was a solution which both the developer and ultimately the conservationists could live with'.

The resolution is also an example of how a compromise can be reached between opposing interest groups. In this case, a more vocal one versus a quieter one that is no less significant or valid, he says in an interview.

Harp, Mr Mah adds, had produced many options. 'We looked at each and found them not workable.'

But getting them to accept the final solution - 'I won't say agreement but acceptance' - involved a very extended series of dialogues with the conservationists individually and as a group, he adds.

For decades, the Amber Road house was known by its moniker Butterfly House because of its crescent shape. With the new design, its 'wings' will go. They are going to make way for an 18-storey condominium targeted for completion in 2009.

The house could not be conserved fully because there was very little remaining land in the compound around it, says Mrs Teh Lai Yip, the URA's deputy director of conservation and development services. Insisting on it would have resulted in a loss for the developer, who paid $8.9 million for the 1,095 sq m site.

To preserve parts of the house, the URA went knocking on the door of several government agencies.

As the porch over the driveway facing the road was going to jut out beyond the legal limit, the Land Transport Authority had to give its okay. The National Parks Board also had to agree to relent on its rule requiring a 2m strip of plants around the site.

Mrs Teh says AG Capital, which declined to be interviewed, was very understanding in working with the URA. The builder could have ignored the protests and gone ahead with its plans as the house was legally theirs.

She believes the Amber Road saga shows that 'balancing our love for old buildings with our heads is a tough job. But it's a meaningful challenge.'

But Harp's members feel that with more time, they could have saved the entire house. Says public relations officer Terrence Hong, one of its 40 members: 'But given the circumstances, we felt it was a victory for us.'

While Harp pines for more to be done, Mr Mah feels the saga was an enriching experience, with 'everyone coming out of it understanding much better how strongly some people feel about conservation, and how we can accommodate those (interests).'

Adds Dr James Khoo, chairman of the Conservation Advisory Panel: 'I think Harp has made the Government more sensitive to these things. With our ageing population...it's important for people to have good social memories, as it contributes to being patriotic Singaporeans.'


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8,000 needy get used textbooks

Sumathi V. Selvaretnam, Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

MR NG Cheng Huat, 49, waited patiently in line at Downtown East last Saturday.

The driver for a catering company had been standing in line for two hours since

7am, just to make sure that he could get his hands on some used textbooks for his two sons, aged 13 and 11.

'Prices of everything are up. In addition to school books, I need to buy them uniforms, school bags and spectacles. The total cost is over $1,000.'

But with the NTUC Used Textbooks Project, he saves about $600 a year as he gets their books free.

Now into its 25th year, the project has re-distributed 1.43 million books and helped more than 100,000 needy students save over $7 million in textbook expenses.

This year, some 120,000 books were snapped up by 8,000 beneficiaries.

Mr Tan Kian Chew, group CEO of NTUC FairPrice, said that the scheme not only helped families, it was also a move that helped the environment.

FairPrice's efforts in promoting the green message were also recognised last year by Global Compact, a United Nations organisation that promotes corporate social responsibility.

With the project, the public donates books at NTUC FairPrice supermarkets islandwide.

These are then sorted at distribution centres by student volunteers before the books are given away to families who need and want them.


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Singapore investing in the next big discoveries

Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

Six research teams here have each won up to $10 million for work which could make waves in electronics, medicine and environmental technology.

SHOBANA KESAVA speaks to the recipients of the National Research Foundation's Competitive Research Programme

Cheap fuels from gas
Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

TACKLING high fuel costs drives the feverish research at Professor Neal Chung's laboratory at the National University of Singapore's chemical and biomolecular engineering department.

His team is developing new membrane materials: fine filters that will better purify the gases that can be cheap alternatives to fossil fuels.

These gases - hydrogen, synthesis gas (a combination of carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, hydrogen and oxygen) and natural gas (methane) - are all available now.

Polymers that go into making cellophane and ceramics that mould teacups are the same basic materials the team is using to make the membranes.

'The challenge is to develop fine-enough materials that do not warp or change their properties when these gases pass through them,' said Prof Chung, 56.

The polymer membrane expert, who has provided consultancy services for water treatment company Hyflux and other multinational companies, has been in the industry for 13 years, working in the United States.

Clean fresh water? Just follow the sun
Straits Times 8 Dec 07;

PRODUCING fresh water without harming the environment is the goal of Professor Choo Fook Hoong, from Nanyang Technological University (NTU).

Prof Choo, 53, is from the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering at NTU.

His team wants to tap into solar energy to purify contaminated water or sea water.

It hopes to do this by developing a system that will harness the sun's rays consistently enough to do away with the traditional fuel sources current purification plants rely on.

Water vapour produced by this heat will be cooled as it passes through membranes to produce pure water.

No system in the world has been able to do this yet, said Prof Choo.

'We want to develop a water production plant that imitates nature as much as possible,' he said.

Plants, for example, use organic membranes and the sun to recycle clean water, without polluting the environment.

'The challenge for us is to have this commercialised in five years,' said Prof Choo.


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Science Centre, Singapore to widen reach with new displays

Straits Times 8 Dec 07;
Name change and exhibits that deal with hot-button issues part of plans

IN A bid to dust off its sometimes stodgy image, the Singapore Science Centre unveiled plans yesterday to tackle hot-button issues like climate change, viral pandemics and euthanasia.

As part of what officials called a 'rebranding', the 30-year-old centre has taken on a new name - Science Centre, Singapore - and broadened its focus beyond its stalwart base of students and families.

Its chief executive, Dr Chew Tuan Chiong, said the centre wants to attract a wider demographic, including those in the 18 to 25 age bracket.

'(We hope) those who love science grow to love it more, and those who don't will find something special in it,' he said.

The difficulty in reaching out to those in their late teens and early 20s is a worldwide phenomenon, he said. 'This is the age they start to have a very wide range of interests and they see the science centre as a place of intellectual enrichment.'

To reach out to increasingly savvy visitors, the centre will promote science that is relevant to today's world, he said.

It hopes to use science to educate and inspire, without resorting to pure entertainment.

To make good on its promise, it will have new displays that deal with real-world issues, beginning next month with an exhibition on viruses.

Features on climate change and water scarcity are scheduled to follow.

And the centre is even considering tackling divisive social issues such as euthanasia.

The objective, Dr Chew said, will be to add a human element to science, increase interaction and provoke an emotional reaction - all while people learn.

Education Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said the Science Centre faces the challenge today of reaching out to a more sophisticated audience.

'That requires finding ways of exciting children,' he said.

'The quality of the exhibitions is no longer about touching a fake crocodile. The new generation of exhibitions are both entertaining and provoking.'

Mr K. Mano, a 24-year-old a civil servant, said he visits the Science Centre with friends.

'I'd like to see a whole month on aerodynamics and physics, or even neuroscience would be good,' he said.

Science Centre officials are not yet sure how much the changes will cost.

Close to one million people visit the Science Centre annually.


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Meet plants that 'eat' insects at GardenTech 2007

Cara van Miriah, The Electric New Paper 8 Dec 07;

[wildnews comment: Singapore's native pitcher plants suffer from over-collection in the wild. Let's hope there was some emphasis during this event on leaving our wild pitcher plants where they are.]

Don't worry, they won't bite

THEY resemble the odd-looking carnivorous plants from the Little Shop of Horrors, with long, hanging tendrils and tube-like traps.

No, they won't bite although they will absorb nutrients from the remains of insects, anthropods, rats and frogs caught in their sticky traps.

Now you can buy this 'pest control' plant for your garden at the GardenTech 2007, which opens today at the HortPark at Hyderabad Road.

The fifth bi-yearly landscaping and horticulture event is organised by the National Parks Board (NParks).

With more than 100 exhibitors, it expects to draw at least 50,000 visitors to the five-day event.

The star attraction is the newly-named Nepenthes GardenTech insectivorous plant, which is making its debut at the free exhibition.

The plant, a hybrid between a Nepenthes Ampullaria and Nepenthes Ventricosa, was cultivated last year by Borneo Exotics, a Sri Lankan-based nursery.

An NParks spokesman told The New Paper: 'The Nepenthes GardenTech is interesting because it is a hybrid between a cool-growing highland species (Nepenthes Ventricosa) and warm-growing lowland species (Nepenthes Ampullaria). This means that it can grow in a wide range of temperatures.

'It is also unique because the pitchers are uniformly red. The colours of the Nepenthes Ampullaria range from green to some speckled with red.'

Supply is limited, with only three small pots of Nepenthes GardenTech on sale each day. Each plant, between 8cm and 15cm in diameter, is priced from $8 to $25.

Borneo Exotics said more will be available at the Singapore Garden Festival next July.

At GardenTech, 11 other varieties of Nepenthes will be on sale by other exhibitors.

You can grow them in HDB flats. The hardy plants thrive in humid conditions and damp soil.

It takes about three years before it matures. By then, it can produce hundreds of traps and stems reaching up to 10m high.

In the wild, a large Nepenthes can grow to as big as 45cm in diameter.

So don't place them near the walls or anything that they can attach themselves to if you don't want them to creep into your neighbour's house.

Despite their venomous-looking exteriors, these plants aren't poisonous or dangerous.

Explained an NParks spokesman: 'Even if you touch the Venus Fly, which is the most 'active' insectivorous plant, its mouth will close on your finger but it will not be painful or dangerous.'

Among the highlights at GardenTech 2007 is the dancing plant, which responds to sounds, and the insectivorous plants from North America.

Those who want to learn more about these unusual plants can attend a free one-hour workshop on 10 Dec.


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