UN talks set 2009 deadline for new climate pact as US isolated

Shaun Tandon Yahoo News 15 Dec 07;

Environmentalists accused the world of bowing to US pressure, forcing a compromise that left the document lacking the scientific punch needed to address what experts say is one of the gravest problems facing the world today.

A drama-filled 190-nation conference on Saturday set a 2009 deadline for a landmark pact to fight global warming after an isolated United States backed down on last-ditch objections.

After all-night talks and an impassioned intervention by UN chief Ban Ki-moon, the Bali conference agreed to launch a process to negotiate a new treaty that will take effect when the UN Kyoto Protocol's commitments expire in 2012.

The United States, the only major industrial nation to reject Kyoto, reached a compromise with the European Union (EU) to avoid mentioning any figures as a target for slashing greenhouse gas emissions.

The agreement instead only makes an indirect reference to scientists' warnings that the world must sharply cut back emissions to prevent a rise in temperatures that would put millions of people at risk.

But on an unscheduled 13th day of talks, the United States said it would not accept the statement as it wanted developing countries such as fast-growing China to make tougher commitments.

Senior US negotiator Paula Dobriansky said she had heard "many strong statements from many major developing country leaders on a greater role in helping to address urgently this global problem."

It "doesn't seem it's going to be reflected in our outcome here in the declaration," she said, telling the conference that the United States would reject the draft.

Dobriansky was loudly booed by other delegations. A US environmental activist representing Papua New Guinea said on the floor to rousing cheers: "If you're not willing to lead, please get out of the way."

After repeated verbal lashings, Dobriansky again took the microphone and said that Washington would "go forward and join consensus," to the cheers of the conference.

Indian Science Minister Kapil Sibal, who had been vocally critical of the US position, offered his thanks to the United States for not blocking the consensus.

"We believe that they too are as equally committed as the rest of the world to combat climate change. So thank you very much to the delegation of the United States for coming on board," Sibal said.

The agreement came only after the head of the United Nations jetted in, the UN climate chief nearly broke down in tears and chairman Indonesia apologised abjectly for a disastrous procedural mix-up.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon flew in to make an unscheduled last-minute appeal for a deal.

"Seize the moment, this moment, for the good of all humanity," Ban pleaded.

"The world is watching," said Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

"The worst thing that can happen is for our great project, for the human race and our planet Earth to crumble because we cannot find the right wording."

Environmentalists accused the world of bowing to US pressure, forcing a compromise that left the document lacking the scientific punch needed to address what experts say is one of the gravest problems facing the world today.

"What you've got is a situation where the overwhelming majority of countries are progressive, they're pushing for a deal, and the (US) administration was out on a wrecking mission," said Hans Verolme of conservation group WWF.

In a bid to break the deadlock, the proposed document ditched European calls for an "ambition" of the rich world to cut its emissions by 25 to 40 percent by 2020 from 1990 levels.

And there was no mention of a target of halving global levels of greenhouse gases by 2050 -- a goal that scientists say is essential to limiting the warming to around two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

Washington, backed by countries including Japan, Canada and Russia, argued that putting in numbers would prejudge the outcome of upcoming negotiations and supported individual national efforts to battle climate change.

Instead, the document included a footnote which referred to work of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and emphasised "the urgency to address climate change" in this context.

The future negotiations will also address how to step up financial and technical support for poor countries that bear least responsibility for global warming but have most to fear from its impacts.

Climate treaty talks get green light
Emma Graham-Harrison, Reuters 15 Dec 07;

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) - U.N.-led climate talks in Bali agreed on Saturday to launch negotiations on a new global warming pact to succeed the Kyoto Protocol after the United States dropped last-minute opposition.

Indonesian Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar, the host of the talks, banged down his gavel on the deal to rapturous applause from delegates after an impassioned plea by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

"This is the defining moment for me and my mandate as secretary-general," he said over the breakthrough.

"I am deeply grateful to many member states for their spirit of flexibility and compromise," Ban told Reuters, in remarks echoed by the head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, Yvo de Boer.

"I think it was encouraging, That was a real sign of willingness to compromise," he said of the U.S. climbdown.

The deal after two-weeks of talks is a step towards slowing global warming that the U.N. climate panel says is caused by human activities, led by burning fossil fuels.

The meeting approved a "roadmap" for talks to adopt a new treaty to succeed Kyoto at a meeting in Copenhagen in 2009.

After being berated by numerous nations, a wave of relief swept the room filled with weary delegates when the United States relented.

The U.S. delegation dropped it opposition to a proposal by the main developing nation bloc, the G77, for rich nations to do more for the developing world to fight rising greenhouse emissions.

"The United States is very committed to this effort and just wants to make sure that we all act together to really ensure we all act together," said Paula Dobriansky, head of the U.S. delegation.

"With that, Mr Chairman, let me say to you we will go forward and join consensus," she said to cheers and claps from delegates who had tried to break the impasse long after talks ran past their Friday deadline.

ROADMAP

The proposal by the 150-nation developing country bloc dilutes the "mitigation actions", which the Bali "roadmap", asks developing nations to consider.

The new, stronger climate pact would succeed the existing Kyoto Protocol, and embrace the United States and major developing economies, such as China and India, in emissions actions for the first time.

Scientists say rising temperatures could cause seas to rise sharply, glaciers to melt, storms and droughts to become more intense and mass migration of climate refugees.

"We have the Bali roadmap. We are not entirely satisfied but the outcome is good," a senior Chinese delegate told Reuters.

Kyoto binds all industrial countries except the United States to cut emissions of greenhouse gases between 2008 and 2012. Developing nations are exempt and the new negotiations will seek to bind all countries to emission curbs from 2013.

(Reporting by Adhityani Arga, Sugita Katyal, Alister Doyle, Ed Davies, Gde Anugrah Arka and Gerard Wynn; Writing David Fogarty; Editing by XX)


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China says it probes hunting of giant pandas

Reuters 14 Dec 07;

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - The Chinese government is investigating reports that villagers were persuaded to hunt down giant pandas and trade their pelts, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

A spokesman for the State Forestry Administration told Xinhua that local forestry police had detected several cases of such illegal activities around Ya'an City in the southwestern province of Sichuan.

"We have sent a working group to supervise the investigations and we will prosecute anyone involved," Cao Qingyao said, according to the agency despatch late on Friday.

Citing a report carried in China's Nanfang Weekend newspaper on Thursday, Xinhua said mysterious buyers of panda fur had been persuading villagers to hunt and kill the endangered species.

The pelt of a panda could fetch up to 500,000 yuan ($68,000), a massive draw to villagers who earn less than 3,000 yuan a year, Xinhua said, citing the Nanfang report.

The giant panda is one of the world's most endangered species and is found only in China.

There are about 1,590 pandas living in the wild, most in the mountains of southwestern China, Xinhua said. The Ya'an reserve is home to about 300 wild pandas.

(Reporting by Charlie Zhu; editing by Roger Crabb)


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Australians do whale count as Japan hunt nears

Reuters 14 Dec 07;

CANBERRA (Reuters) - Australian researchers have begun an aerial count of whales in the Antarctic ahead of the yearly Japanese hunt as Australia's government mulls a legal challenge to halt the yearly slaughter.

A team from the new Australian Centre for Applied Marine Mammal Science will spend several weeks flying over 150,000 square km (58,000 square miles) of pack ice off eastern Antarctica to count minke whales from the air.

"Ships can't survey through the ice. On a big icebreaker, it's a bit like trying to count birds in the jungle by driving a bulldozer through - they scatter," expedition leader Nick Gales, from the Australian Antarctic Division, told the Age newspaper.

Japan's whaling fleet plans to hunt 935 minke whales, 50 fin whales and, for the first time in 40 years, 50 humpback whales for research over the Antarctic summer. The fleet is already on its way south followed by anti-whaling activists.

Humpbacks were hunted nearly to extinction until protected by the International Whaling Commission in 1966.

Australia is a strong opponent of whaling and the new prime minister, Kevin Rudd, will decide next week whether to send a navy ship and long-range aircraft south to gather evidence for a case against Japan in the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

Rudd's centre-left Labor government has flagged sending warships beyond Australian waters into the country's self-proclaimed Antarctic territory, which is not recognized by other nations and which includes a whale sanctuary.

Japan's fisheries agency, confident its whaling rights will be confirmed, has challenged any country to take it to the court for a binding judgment.

NAVY PATROLS?

Australian international law specialist Don Rothwell warned earlier this year that naval patrols would breach the 1959 Antarctic Treaty, which deemed Antarctica to be a demilitarized zone, and possibly spark an international incident.

The researchers say the aerial count will provide the first accurate measure of the number of whales living in pack ice as debate rages over Japan's research whaling program.

The team of 10 expert surveyors are to take photographs, video footage and infra-red imagery to back the count, eventually using mathematical modeling to provide an estimate of the total minke whale population living near the coast.

The last official count of Antarctic minke whales was completed close to 20 years ago and put the population at 860,000, but Gales said that number could now have been halved.

Japan has long resisted pressure to stop scientific whaling, insisting that whaling is a cherished cultural tradition. Its fleet has killed 7,000 Antarctic minkes over the last 20 years.

The meat, which under commission rules must be sold for consumption, ends up in supermarkets and restaurants, but the appetite for what is now a delicacy is fading.

Gales said past counts had relied on ship-based observation done in open waters and largely clear of the pack ice for safety reasons.

"We know whales like minkes do go into the ice, but we don't know if that is a tiny per cent of the population or a lot," he said.

(Reporting by Rob Taylor, editing by Roger Crabb)


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Energy companies drill with a conscience

John Porretto, Associated Press Yahoo News 15 Dec 07;

Technological advances and Americans' hearty appetite for natural gas have given Anadarko Petroleum Corp. the opportunity to break new ground — literally and figuratively — in this remote, rugged region of the Rocky Mountains.

On a cliff several hundred feet above the White River, Texas-based Anadarko is drilling 17 wells from a single location — a dozen more than it's drilled from a single site in the past.

Rather than spread the wells across the landscape, they'll be concentrated in a relatively small area. The ultimate goal is to snake the drill bit thousands of feet into the earth, tapping natural-gas supplies beneath the river.

"The driving factor is being able to get under the river," said Jordan Hixson, who supervises Anadarko's production operations in northeastern Utah. "We can't get to it drilling conventional, vertical wells."

By using increasingly sophisticated — and more expensive — drilling methods and equipment, Anadarko and others are expanding their presence but reducing their "environmental footprint" throughout the Rockies and elsewhere. They're doing so primarily by consolidating wells to groups of 17, 22 and even larger combinations, then drilling in a variety of directions to reach reservoirs — some previously inaccessible.

In Utah, where Anadarko plans to go from 1,200 to 3,500 wells, the company is targeting 24-well combos next year. Its 17-well site occupies about 7 acres; a single-well pad is typically 2 to 2 1/2 acres.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Williams Cos. and others are expanding their use of the practice in Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico and other states.

Such clusters cost more because they require the latest equipment and techniques in directional drilling. But analysts say the economics make sense because multiple-well operations allow companies to work more efficiently, decrease environmental disturbance and, in some cases, find new sources of fuel in unconventional geologic formations once deemed too costly to tap.

Higher market prices for natural gas in recent years have helped spur activity.

"Setting aside environmental goodness and conscience, brute economics has driven companies to say it's in their best interest to concentrate their footprint and do what they can from a given location," said Richard Ranger, a senior policy adviser for the American Petroleum Institute.

Shell Exploration & Production Co., an arm of Royal Dutch Shell PLC, is a good example.

The company, which began such drilling in Wyoming's natural-gas fields about five years ago, has been moving back to its 60 or so existing work sites, or pads, to produce additional wells rather than creating new pads — and disturbing more landscape.

Shell says it built only two new pads this year but added more than 70 wells.

"This is a major transformation in operating practices in the field," said Pete Stark, vice president of industrial relations at IHS Inc., a provider of technical information and decision-support tools. "It's a big-time change — a change in response to the increasing confrontation between environmental interests and energy-security interests. It started in the Rockies, but it's spreading elsewhere."

Keren Murphy, the Sierra Club's oil and gas expert in Washington, said the environmental group acknowledges that bunching wells together can prevent disturbance, but it's trying to make sure certain areas don't become "throwaway zones."

"It does help protect areas that are deemed pristine, but it also has the potential to create some sacrifice zones," Murphy said.

The move to multiple wells off single pads also is linked to energy companies' expanding production of unconventional sources such as "tight" sands and shale — geographic formations that make it tougher to unlock gas and typically require more wells.

"They're getting more out of the ground, but it's taking more holes to do so," Stark said.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration says 31,587 natural-gas wells were drilled for exploration and production in 2006, up from 16,728 just four years earlier.

Still, natural-gas producers have struggled to keep up with demand. And despite the surge in drilling activity — buoyed by strong market prices — there's no expectation the industry will add significant supplies anytime soon.

Another key factor making it easier for companies to perform multi-well directional drilling is a new generation of rigs.

Drilling contractors Helmerich & Payne Inc. and Nabors Industries Ltd. in the past few years began building rigs with enhanced power that customers report is cutting the time to complete drilling operations by 20 percent to 30 percent.

What's more, in many cases, the rigs slide on rails to their next destination, greatly reducing disturbance to the environment and the time it would take to move a conventional rig from one location to the next.

Williams Cos., which is using the so-called "flex" rigs in Colorado's Piceance Basin, said its practice of drilling 20-plus wells per site could enable it to reduce pad construction by up to 75 percent. The daily rate to use the new rigs is more expensive — roughly $20,000 a day versus about $14,000 for a conventional rig — but the company said the added expense is worth it.

"It takes us less time to drill our wells, which has more than made up for the increase in day rates," said Ralph Hill, president of Williams' exploration and production business.

For now, the Interior Department's Bureau of Land Management will continue to strongly suggest drillers use multi-well pads on public lands, though it may eventually require it, said BLM spokeswoman Jaime Gardner in Colorado.

Public lands managed by BLM produce 18 percent of the nation's natural gas and 5 percent of its oil. BLM manages 258 million acres — about one-eighth of the land in the United States.

"Within the regulatory framework, we try to encourage all the best and new technology out there," Gardner said. "By drilling from multi-well pads, the impacts are very much reduced."


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Electronic garbage mounts in India as consumers snap up goods

Anil Penna1 hour, Yahoo News 15 Dec 07;

India is piling up mountains of electronic rubbish as consumers snap up the latest gizmos and firms upgrade computer systems, raising fears the nation is headed for a toxic-waste crisis.

Manufacturers are introducing new models of mobile phones, televisions and computers to entice cashed-up consumers to upgrade, with no policies or infrastructure in place to recycle often toxic electronic scrap.

By 2011, the world's second-most populous nation will generate 470,000 tonnes of "e-waste", up from 330,000 tonnes this year, the Manufacturers' Association for Information Technology said in a study received here Friday.

"The situation could assume alarming proportions and therefore it is high time we pay serious attention to the issue," said Vinnie Mehta, who heads the association, or MAIT, said.

India needs a policy that "identifies and defines the roles of each stakeholder including the vendors, the users, the recyclers and the regulator for environmentally friendly recycling," Mehta said.

The figure for electronic waste generated this year is more than twice the previous official estimate. India also "imports" an estimated 50,000 tonnes of e-waste such as obsolete television sets and mobile handsets that are refurbished and resold, said the survey.

Environmentalists say the figure could be higher because the survey does not take into account villages where two-thirds of India's 1.1-billion people live and which are attracting companies such as mobile-phone makers.

"The way people are discarding their electronics, toxic garbage is going to be a big crisis," said Ramapati Kumar, a campaigner for the environmental group Greenpeace, in Bangalore.

"The problem is that it releases toxic chemicals -- people burn electronic items to recover valuable materials, impacting health and environment," Kumar said. Many components of electronic equipment are toxic and not bio-degradable.

Slum dwellers who scavenge rubbish for a living burn wires in the open to extract re-saleable copper and soak circuit boards in acid baths to extract copper and other materials next to neighbourhood drains.

India's electronics market will expand to 363-billion dollars by 2015, from about 30-billion dollars now, according to an estimate by the Bangalore-based India Semiconductor Association.

As personal incomes rise in an economy growing by nine percent a year and competition forces prices down, India's 300-million-strong middle class is grabbing the latest, expensive electronic gadgets.

India is the fastest growing market for mobile phones, with handset sales reaching 24.5-million units during the three months ended September, according to market research firm Gartner.

Meanwhile, computer sales are set to reach five-million units this year as businesses upgrade their systems to boost efficiency in an increasingly competitive marketplace, according to MAIT.

"Significant growth in consumption of electronics items in the last few years, accompanied by a very high rate of obsolescence of these products, is leading to generation of electronic waste," said Juergen Bischoff, India head of the German technical cooperation agency GTZ that co-sponsored the survey.

About 94 percent of 200 organisations MAIT surveyed did not have any policy on disposal of obsolete electronic products, and the problem is exacerbated because India has no special law to deal with electronic waste.


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Best of our wild blogs: 15 Dec 07

Youth view on volunteers
and how they make a difference in choosing a leader that makes a difference, on the it's getting hot in here blog

Climate summit stretches deadline
What dogged reporters find out waiting for a decision to the tune of cicadas; among which, that "a lingerie fair had booked the conference centre and needed the UN out so they could put their knickers on show". On the New Scientist Environment Blog

Daily Green Action: 13 Dec
pondering flying, taxis and selective flushing on the leafmonkey blog

How can I recycle vegetable shortening
some useful and icky suggestions on how can I recycle blog


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Plastic trees get the chop this season in Singapore

Real Christmas trees creep back into favour despite cost
Nisha Ramchandani, Business Times - 15 Dec 2007

(SINGAPORE) Singaporeans are going natural this season - real Christmas trees are proving more popular than artificial ones.

Eelin Lee, owner of Blooming Affairs, says that demand for real trees has grown. People prefer the natural appearance, she says. 'And the smell from real trees is nice, fresh and more therapeutic.'

Christine Tan, from Ji Mei Flower, also says that real trees are more popular this season, especially with foreigners who want to recreate a sense of home.

Pan Pacific Singapore, which has a long-standing tradition of using real Christmas trees for its festive decorations, is displaying this year a 30-foot tree imported from the United States.

It was so big that it took three days to decorate and install. The tree demonstrates the hotel's commitment to its corporate philosophy of caring for the environment, says Cheryl Ng, Pan Pacific's public relations manager. With decorations, the price tag came to $25,000.

Generally, Christmas trees are priced according to height - from about $60 for a 1.2-metre specimen to more than $1,100 for one four metres tall.

The owner of Chye Heng Orchid Garden, Shane Teo, says that he has brought in about 500 poinsettias this year to meet the expected demand. The potted plants are usually used for display in offices and homes. The average price of a poinsettia is about $15. While Mr Teo has no plan to raise his prices, he says that some nurseries and florists lift prices to $18 to $22 as Christmas Day approaches.

Edwin Pereira, managing director of Petals and Leaves, says that demand for Christmas plants is growing as Singaporeans become increasingly affluent.

Nurseries and florists say that Christmas tends to boost sales by 20-25 per cent.

But most also point out that costs are going up too. Europe is a popular choice when it comes to importing Christmas trees but the stronger euro and rising transport costs mean higher prices. Also, the market is very competitive, says John Gwee, owner of Far Horizon Nursery and Landscape.

And while the increase in the Goods and Service Tax (GST) from 5 to 7 per cent lifts prices for Christmas trees marginally this year, says Royston Low, managing director of Katong Garden, prices in general remain relatively stable. He expects sales to pick up as Christmas approaches, although he says that poinsettias have been selling well so far.

'Demand has been slightly better than last year, especially with the younger generation who prefer real Christmas trees,' he adds.

Flower Matters, at Millenia Walk, has chosen to absorb the GST increase to cushion the blow to customers. Christmas products usually account for about 10 per cent of revenue for Flower Matters.

This year it projects a 50 per cent increase in sales of Christmas items compared to previous years. Orders started coming in as early as November.

As for Christmas trees, while it is debatable which is the more environmentally friendly option, artificial trees cannot be recycled, although they last longer than real ones.

With climate change hogging headlines these days, Singaporeans may be going green for a reason.

Additional reporting by Yeo Han Liang, Bernice Huang and Tng Wen Quan


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Doing good isn't bad for business

Lynette Khoo, Business Times 15 Dec 07;

CORPORATE social responsibility has become a sexy term nowadays, with more businesses eager to incorporate social responsibility into their practices.

But the next step - businesses becoming social enterprises - still seems remote. Many assume that profit making does not go hand-in-hand with social objectives - a view aired at this year's Social Innovators' Forum. But that perception is a myth.

Instead of sticking to a single bottom-line, social enterprises tend to look at two key performance indicators - profits and social impact.

The Body Shop, for instance, is a global manufacturer and retailer of beauty and cosmetics products founded on five values: protection for the planet, fair trade, defence of human rights, enhancement of self-esteem and aversion to animal testing. It claims that the making of its cosmetic products involves no cruelty to animals, and that the ingredients it uses are obtained fairly. These qualities have actually become a successful branding tool.

Its charity, The Body Shop Foundation, provides financial support to pioneering, frontline organisations that have otherwise no chance of conventional funding. Still, The Body Shop's operating profit has surged 173 per cent from 2002 to £41.5 million in 2006.

Locally, Bizlink Centre was set up to provide employment for people with disabilities. This non-profit organisation, which has been in the black since day one, currently has a surplus of $250,000. It went on to secure a contract to provide corporate gifts made by disabled persons for the International Monetary Authority/World Bank meeting held here last September.

Gateway Entertainment, which performs magic shows and produces drama feature films, also saw its Project Smile break even from the day it started with the help of corporate sponsors and the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports.

An afterthought

But for most outfits, socially responsible practices are often an afterthought rather than an objective that goes hand-in-hand with the goal of profit-making. Many believe, mistakenly, that serving social needs requires financial sacrifices. Companies need to snap out of this mistaken paradigm while consumers must shed the notion that products from social enterprises are of inferior quality.

Singaporeans often expect the government to take the lead. The recent recommendations by the Social Enterprise Committee (SEC) chaired by Philip Yeo to create a culture of social entrepreneurship is certainly a step in that direction.

One way is for businesses to to invest in existing social enterprises to maximise their value or to partner social enterprises or charities and provide them expertise and business mentoring.

The SEC recommendations to set up a Social Enterprise Association and a Social Enterprise Centre provide an institutional base for further action.

To speed up the process, perhaps more incentives could be given to commercial companies that partner with charities or social enterprises.

Another SEC recommendation that proposes profit-sharing for social enterprises funded by the Comcare Enterprise Fund (CEF) after a specified time period is also worth looking at.

Businesses will do well to realise that they can shape this movement without jeopardising their margins.


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Transport in Singapore: feature on Straits Times Insight

Car or Bus?: Ride your way to a liveable city...
Why not cars? Because 'a car takes 30 times more space per travelling person than a bus'
Lee Siew Hua, Straits Times 15 Dec 07;

THE story of Singapore is illuminated by its land transport policy.

That daily bus trip may feel wholly unexceptional.

But the cool, smooth ride is a wondrous world away from the patchwork bus systems and the lurking pirate taxis that once peddled erratic mobility in the 1960s.

Though imperfect, today's road-and-rail network makes it possible for the progress- minded island to run as a fast-paced and efficient country and economy.

For the transport system seeks to heighten mobility, so personal lives and the national economy are not crimped by wasted hours, creeping productivity and health hazards.

Land transport also tracks the nation's road to the developed world.

The country was built road by road, and system by technology-rich system - and very much pushed along by powerful political will too.

Electronic Road Pricing is an example.

Leaders elsewhere have danced around this unpopular congestion control.

Singapore - habitually undeterred by political costs after doing the strategic sums - can lay claim to being the first in the world to establish city-wide road pricing and a few other innovations.

But the desire to be world-class also carries the weight of higher expectations. Singaporeans are now discerning and demanding, and expect the best and the fastest.

The middle class, for instance, would like a choice of premier bus and taxi services, unless public transport can truly deliver a seamless commute with top service.

And what about unclogged expressways, and simply more of them?

And the desire of many to own a car?

Transport policy will always be a political and emotional issue, since it touches the wallet and embodies middle-class hopes.

Transport policy is also exciting, transforming a nation's life and economy. It colours the atmosphere, quickens the pace and changes the scenery.

Roads define a nation. America's open road is a picture of its engineering genius and independent spirit.

Singapore's transport system chronicles the solution-seeking spirit of a country that cuts a methodical path through the tangle of clashing agendas that multiply within a diverse population.

Hopefully, it is both a logical and vibrant path.

In 1996, the White Paper on Land Transport drew the road map for a world-class transport system.

A decade-plus later, the ideas will be updated when the Land Transport Review is released next month.

Ahead of the review, it is clear that some issues are unchanged. For starters, in official eyes, the path to free-flowing traffic is clear:

If only people will cool their passion for cars, and hop onto buses and trains.

But it's also a tricky manoeuvre for planners here.

The reality is that the big push to prioritise public transport - and so decongest roads - is a policy in transformation.

For road blocks are still being dismantled and these include: The delayed Circle Line must start running to add fuller MRT connectivity.

The wait for buses should shorten too. And even that stroll to the bus stop or MRT station can be more pleasant.

Question marks remain over whether the bus, MRT and taxi policies are the best.

This is precisely why the Land Transport Review is so timely. It will address transport challenges of the next 10 to 15 years, taking the nation further along its quest to be liveable and world-class.

Transport Minister Raymond Lim is mindful of all the lingering issues, but he is decisive on his cornerstone policy:

Public transport is the key to a liveable city.

'Public transport is the most space-efficient way to transport large numbers of people in a complex city state,' he says in an interview with Insight on the thinking behind transport policy.

'A car takes 30 times more space per travelling person than a bus,' he points out, ready with numbers.

Public transport must be a choice mode, he concludes.

Where's my bus?

PEOPLE call perennially for direct buses. But to spread the transport web island-wide in the least pricey and most beneficial style, a trunk-and-feeder system was chosen.

So, a Sengkang resident with a Jurong job may jump onto a feeder bus outside his flat to access a long-distance trunk bus or the MRT line - then use a feeder again.

With this, people live with the hassle of transfers. The trade-off: higher frequencies.

The alternative of direct buses trying to link all points of the island is deemed too complex and wasteful. This can result in 'a bus timetable as thick as a telephone directory'', says Mr Lim.

'You can't navigate that.'

The thinking is that the trunk-and-feeder will stay - but must change on three principal fronts: waiting time, travel time and overcrowding, say Mr Lim and commentators.

Mr Michael Palmer, MP for Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC, agrees with the model, with caveats. The MRT is comfortable and fast, he says. The kink is its interface with buses.

On the ground, his Sengkang folk gripe that they wait 10 to 15 minutes for a feeder bus, which then takes 10 to 15 minutes to get to the MRT.

So speedier connections really matter. Punctuality too.

'In Switzerland and Germany, you can actually set your watch by the time the bus comes,' he remembers.

Mr Lim recognises that the trunk-and-feeder is 'not doing as good a job as it should'.

The good news is that commuters are actively surveyed, and policy is indeed forming to uplift the daily commute.

The Land Transport Authority (LTA) is reviewing the integration of buses and rail to minimise transfers. It will quicken frequency of basic buses from 15 to 10 minutes.

Hopes of merger

HERE, the SMRT and SBS Transit each run segments of the rail and bus systems.

Despite the hoped-for benefits of competition, a 2006 Public Transport Council survey showed that bus riders were still 'fairly dissatisfied' with waiting and travel time, and overcrowding.

Corporate competition has also sent very odd signals.

SMRT decided in 2004 to give away a Nissan March car to reward its bus and train commuters.

'What company has marketing where you are promoting your competition?' wonders transport policy expert Paul Barter of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.

'Their competition is not SBS. Their competition is the car,' he asserts.

This irony or anomaly seems to flow from flawed competition and a lack of imaginative links between the big listed transport providers, and this is an unsettled issue.

Introducing contracts for the transport providers may improve service. The threat of a new entrant entering the sector through competitive bidding can keep SMRT and SBS Transit focused on efficiency.

Another idea is merger. Former transport minister Yeo Cheow Tong still hopes the two firms will seek a way to integrate one day, as those in Hong Kong did. Its two major train operators merged, and lowered fares this month despite global fuel increases.

Integration can result in economies of scale. It will end duplication of routes, technical expertise, and more. It can grow the transport pie for all.

Mr Yeo sounded out both players, especially when the North-East Line began running, and all the inefficiencies were starkly clear.

'They all realised that hey, there are benefits, but the devil's in the details, how to value each one, how to balance the benefits,' he says.

'I hope they continue exploring, find a way forward to eventually integrate.'

Circle Line's moment

ONE more road block will be overcome when the Circle Line starts running in 2010. Then, more people will not need to travel to the city interchanges, but can change trains at the periphery of the city.

That will free up capacity and relieve the overcrowding.

The MRT network is now close to two-thirds of its final size, at 138.2 km.

The Circle Line, Downtown Line and Boon Lay Extension will in future push the total rail length to 215.3km.

Earlier, planners had debated the moment to launch the critical Circle Line. 'You launch it too early, it's a $5 billion asset, hardly used, and it's a huge loss,' Mr Yeo says.

'But if you launch it too late, then the current lines will be overcrowded.'

It's a judgment call, with so much public cash involved.

He's still wistful that the 2004 Nicoll Highway collapse set back the Circle Line by possibly two years - but hopeful about the new lines ahead.

Vexing, vibrant taxis

ONE more sector to fix: Cabs.

Both the possibilities and the perennial complaints are greatly fascinating.

First, why the protests?

These run the gamut from touting to cab unavailability, from dour drivers to a surfeit of surcharges.

Just to highlight two issues:

Cabs are treated not as a premier service here, but as a fairly cheap alternative to buses and trains.

Another factor is that the taxi industry is deregulated - fares in 1998, supply in 2003.

A free market lets taxi companies set prices.

One question is whether operators have enough incentive to adjust fares to match inflated demand, given that their revenue flows from vehicle rentals rather than fares.

It is toughest to find a cab in the evening inside the Central Business District (CBD). The new city surcharge plus peak fare - announced by ComfortDelGro - may help normalise this situation.

The LTA thinks this is the right direction. Cabs must be priced at a level matching their 'door-to-door chauffeured services', says Mr Jeremy Yap, LTA's acting group director of vehicle and transit licensing.

He also presents the brighter side of deregulation.

The industry is now 'more vibrant' with seven innovative players - up from two major firms of which ComfortDelGro has been dominant.

'So customers can avail themselves of more options, differentiated services.' Choices include MPV taxis, and soon LPG-powered cabs.

The fleet has ballooned 25 per cent from 2003. This is a rise from 19,000 to 23,800.

'Of course, it's not perfect,' says Mr Yap, but the LTA engages with a spectrum of stakeholders to improve taxis, puts 'mystery customers' in cabs for audits, pores over monthly surveys.

Recent ideas include proliferating CBD cab-stands for safety, which reduces empty cruising cabs as well.

Call-centre standards (See below) will improve. These are exciting days, he indicates.

Perpetual worriers

PUZZLES remain.

How much will the Circle Line change commuting life, or are expectations too high? Will taxi companies tussle between business decisions and the decongestion mandate?

Is integration of the bus-and-rail providers possible, and rational?

One conundrum is not going away. Says Mr Palmer, the MP: 'Trying to persuade people not to use the car and instead use public transport is not going to go very far, not at the prices we pay for cars.'

Glance at the 1996 White Paper, and there is a sense of deja vu. The wish for quality transport remains, for one. Balance between cab supply and demand is still sought.

What has changed?

The LTA counts the air-conditioned Toa Payoh transport hub and the North-East Line among its milestones.

Since 1996, the transport system is also supporting a 25 per cent surge in population.

Transport Minister Lim urges a little perspective: 'The perennial issues will remain, and in fact, become more complex, as travel demands become more varied over time.'

Even the Land Transport Review will be a work in progress. Importantly, he says, there is a process to continually relook and refine policies to meet travel needs.

Unresolved issues do not detract from the system's strengths, but mean the worrying and strategising do persist.

He says a global panel told him that Singapore has a good system, so the danger is slipping into complacency.

His response: 'Members of the public keep us on our toes. And in any case, we're perpetual worriers.

'We worry what's going to happen next, what we should do, so constantly we're trying to make it better.'

So the journey continues.

...drive your dream car into traffic jams
'It's the congestion that we want to tackle, not really the ownership (of cars).'
Lee Siew Hua, Straits Times 15 Dec 07;

MOTORISTS have labelled car policy here 'pay and pay'.

But the Transport Ministry folks disagree, naturally.

They say that, behind the scenes, there is hard thinking to soften the impact of unpopular rate hikes.

The outcome, as they see it, is less 'pay and pay' than a menu of options from which commuters are free to pick and choose.

As an example, the policymakers cited the changes they made ahead of this August's notice that Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) operating hours would soon expand.

These hours are now stretched on the city-bound Central Expressway (CTE), before the Braddell exit.

New gantries have also risen along the CTE, East Coast Parkway and Bukit Timah Expressway.

But first, the officials tried to get a handle on people's main concern: If they tossed their car keys out in favour of public transport, could they still enter the city in time for work?

In response, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) worked with the Public Transport Council to relax the rules on premium buses.

By the time the ERP changes were flagged in August, 36 premium bus services were ready to offer direct, fast rides into the city from various parts of the island.

At the same time, the peak-hour frequencies of basic bus services were cut from 15 to 10 minutes.

To help bus passengers beat congestion, the operating hours for bus lanes were extended. More full-day bus lanes were rolled out too.

Policy in flux

IN CASH-RICH, land-poor Singapore, cars are dream assets that the Government will neither deny nor encourage.

The story of Singapore-style car ownership and usage is riddled with conflicting demands and calibrated trade-offs.

Transport Minister Raymond Lim pinpoints the central dilemma: 'If you want more cars on the road, and at the same time you want smooth-flowing traffic, then invariably ERP rates will go higher and the coverage will be more extensive.'

Car policy is also a story of the COE and ERP, two sides of the policy coin.

The COE, or certificate of entitlement, is very much a settled policy (See Page S4). It is a solution, unique to Singapore, for fixing car quotas, with the market determining COE prices.

ERP, or Electronic Road Pricing, has an established lineage; it was birthed from the world-first Area Licensing Scheme (ALS) in 1975. So road pricing is familiar to all and younger people were born with it in place, but it remains a policy in flux.

This comes across clearly in the way that planners are still keen to explain the trade-off between having more cars and paying higher ERP rates.

'In fact, we use ERP as a last line,' Transport Minister Lim says. 'We tried traffic engineering possibilities first - expand roads, widen them - before introducing the congestion charge.'

The ERP may be a last line of action, but Singapore is the first country to have it city-wide.

Other cities watched, sceptical, but London and Stockholm have now embraced it.

The LTA's group director of policy and planning, Mr Lew Yii Der, says: 'ERP is the right congestion management tool that every city around the world is beginning to wake up to.'

ERP rates can move up or down by 50 cents every quarter to keep traffic flowing at 45kmh to 65kmh on expressways. On arterial roads, the optimum speed is 20 to 30 kmh.

The LTA uses this measure of speed to apply its judgment on equitable ERP rates.

The LTA says that each time the rates move, its data proves that road speeds generally return to the optimum boundaries.

The link between speed and traffic flow is unique to a city. 'It depends on the road network, our rules and how our motorists behave when they drive,' Mr Lew says.

Along the way, the ERP continues to be fine-tuned. One major adjustment involved the evening ERP.

Evening jam

MR YEO Cheow Tong, who was transport minister from November 2001 to May last year, recalls some of the debate surrounding the evening ERP.

This was prompted by severe evening congestion. The CTE resembled a carpark in stretches.

A couple of years were spent deliberating it, with hints of what was to come appearing around 2000.

Mr Yeo says people were asking: 'Why should you impose evening ERP just to make our travel faster, because we're quite happy, we're not rushing anywhere?'

Within official circles, this point was also debated.

Over time, a consensus formed. Summarising, he says: 'A road is an expensive economic asset.' People need a choice of whether to pay evening ERP for smoother traffic, for instance, if they are rushing for the evening shift.

But the ERP still invites dissension easily.

MP Michael Palmer says: 'You up the prices, it doesn't work. It's still a jam, what's going on?'

Transport Minister Lim is familiar with such sentiments and says the Land Transport Review, expected next month, is tackling the issue after weighing public input.

He, too, lists the litany of public complaints: higher rates simply shift congestion to other roads, hikes work for just a while and so on.

'All these are valid points,' he says. 'As a direct result of this public input, one of the key agenda items of this Land Transport Review is: How do we make the ERP system more effective?'

Road pricing will always be in flux, both by design and otherwise, since external factors such as the economy also affect road use.

First, the ERP was created as a flexible tool. The LTA constantly tracks road use. Most cabs are fitted with the global positioning system (GPS) so data on their movements is tapped as a proxy for average road speeds. Cameras and observers in cars and on roads also pull data for analysis.

Next, many factors change road usage: school holidays, a rip-roaring economy, petrol prices. The opening of the integrated resorts will again reshape road use patterns.

In that sense, the ERP is a tool intended to change in dynamic tandem with what is happening on and off the roads.

The ERP has come into extra prominence since 1998, when planners shifted from a tax regime focused on car ownership to one concentrating on car usage.

The turning point occurred when policymakers decided that a more balanced approach was needed, what with Singaporeans chalking up more intensive mileage than many other nations.

The 1996 White Paper showed that the average mileage of a car here was 18,600 km a year. This trumps usage in the United States, Britain, Japan and France.

Last year, the average car mileage even rose 2.5 per cent to 21,075km per year. That means more congestion to tame.

'It's the congestion that we want to tackle, not really the ownership,' says Mr Lew. 'There's no reason why we want to continually impose very high taxes on people.'

For a driver last year, the cost of owning a car was about 57 per cent of his total bill. His usage costs made up the remaining 43 per cent.

Ownership costs include upfront costs, like the Open Market Value and COE, plus annual fixed costs, such as road tax and insurance.

Usage costs include fuel, parking and ERP.

The shift to usage charges has brought on another big balancing act. Mr Lew adds:

'We realised that we really need a balance of both ownership and usage measures because, once someone owns a car, he wants to use it regardless of the cost of using it.'

The trick is to get the balance right.

No one has easy answers and transport policy expert Paul Barter of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy has flipped sides himself:

'I used to think I knew, and I used to think the answer was usage-based pricing.'

But there must be enough focus on ownership controls, he says. He does some quick mathematics:

'Once people buy a car, they have every incentive to use it a lot. If you leave it at home, the car is depreciating $20 a day, some $10 and $30 a day, depending on the car.' People rationalise that since they have splurged on a car, they will drive it. They'll wonder why they should ride the MRT. 'Unless there is a really strong disincentive, like it's impossible to park or the ERP is huge,' he says.

It's unpopular, but new, clever ways to dissuade people from owning cars and also to drive in moderation are likely to be sought.

One idea that fits these twin objectives may be distance-based COEs, which gives buyers the right to drive a certain number of kilometres. Prof Barter champions this instead of the 10-year COE.

Officials haven't taken their eyes off car ownership either. The 3 per cent annual rise in car population was set in 1990, when vehicle quotas were introduced. The rate will be reviewed next year.

Political capital

BUT the Singapore Government does not waver from unpopular choices. It does consult and does try to sell, but the principle stays: Is the policy sound?

It is prepared to spend its political capital. Mr Lim says:

'We take a long-term view of the problem and not the short-term view that is heavily influenced by the political business. We don't do that.'

He has met US policymakers, who 'applauded' when the ALS was introduced in 1975. 'Transport planners know that this is the way to go: congestion charging. But the political will, they say, was never there,' he says.

'So if you go to Los Angeles, you get yourself caught in a gridlock.'

The trade-off there is freedom of choice. The cost is economic wastage for the individual and the city.

But it is still the onus of planners to offer transport solutions and to sell policies well. In the case of the ERP, selling has ranged from explaining the options in an 'upfront and honest' way, as Mr Lim sees it, to the fun of an e-game where people play at being the transport minister.

One person who played the game recently is Mr Septo Sutedja, 26, an IT worker. He drives and takes public transport on different days.

The Indonesian, who has lived here since 1999, says the game showed him that trade-offs are made all the time and inputs are weighed.

'Making policy is not very simple: close eyes, toss coin,' he says.

On a lighter note, Mr Lim says: 'We hope the game is fun... and hopefully you have a sense of the complexity of issues and the trade-offs.'

He quips: 'Of course, I've always said if anybody wants to do it for more than a day, they're welcome to be Transport Minister.'

From the ground up
In its wide-ranging consultation exercises, the Transport Ministry finds there is no shortage of ideas from commuters, motorists and experts on how the system here can be improved. Here is a look at some of the suggestions
Goh Chin Lian, Straits Times 15 Dec 07;

'Naked' streets, slower speeds

WHEN transport expert Paul Barter walks through some small streets in HDB estates, the scene reminds him of the small towns and villages in Europe.

People on foot and on bicycles are crossing the streets and cars slow down for them.

'There's no shouting. You make eye contact,' says Professor Barter from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.

Indeed, the scene reflects a new thinking among European transport planners.

It is called the shared space concept, and he looks forward to it being introduced extensively here.

Essentially, it involves stripping a street bare of traffic lights, road signs and kerbs. People are free to roam or ride bicycles, and for the less mobile elderly, travel in a motorised wheelchair.

In this less predictable surrounding with no clear signs of who has right of way, motorists automatically become more wary and slow down.

This was one outcome when the concept was put into practice in Friesland province in the Netherlands. It has spread to various towns in Britain and other European nations such as Austria and Denmark.

But the greatest benefit is that it can lead to more people taking public transport, says Prof Barter. 'It's so much more attractive to use the bus or the train if you can easily cross the road, and take a pleasant walk to get there.'

Also, when Dutch traffic engineer Hans Monderman, as head of road safety in the 1980s, tested the concept in Friesland, it reduced road accidents and long lines of cars at traffic lights.

Says Prof Barter: 'The key to sharing is speed: If you get the speed low enough, you can actually share.'

He believes Singapore can slow traffic to 30kmh, from the current 50kmh, on streets in HDB estates or smaller roads in the city centre like Killiney Road.

These are streets where motorists start or end their journey, heading to or coming from a road carrying more and faster-moving vehicles.

Another group that will gain from slower speeds is cyclists, who now occupy either footpaths where they risk hitting pedestrians, or roads where they may be hit by cars whizzing by.

Says Prof Barter, a cyclist himself: 'If the traffic is going at 30kmh, we can suddenly fit bicycles in.'


Engaging the public
Public consultation was the cornerstone of the Land Transport Review, with six focus group discussions organised. There were tours to the Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway tunnel as well. And since April, there's been an e-game on the LTA website that lets you play at being Transport Minister.
Goh Chin Lian, Straits Times 15 Dec 07;

Many avenues to have your say

EVERY other week, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) would gather about 50 people for a two-hour powwow. Their goal: to help find ways to improve Singapore's transport system.

In all, six such focus group discussions were held over three months to let a cross-section of the travelling public have their say.

It was one of two modes of communication LTA transport planners chose to get the pulse of the ground for the Land Transport Review.

The other was the Internet. A website portal was set up for four months to let commuters give their ideas and wish list via e-mail.

By end-June, the LTA received 225 e-mail messages.

Most centred on public transport. Ideas ranged from letting even individuals run feeder services to introducing a taxi service using electric cars on rails. Others included ways to curb the car population, like giving a tax rebate to those who switch from cars to buses and trains.

These views were in addition to those from 300 people who took part in the focus groups that dwelt on three topics: making public transport the preferred choice of people, managing road use and meeting people's diverse needs.

Holding forth at these sessions were commuters, motorists, people with disabilities, interest groups representing cyclists and the elderly as well as representatives of public transport operators and cabby associations.

They suggested, among others, cutting back on parking lots in the city and offering cheaper parking at MRT stations so people can park and ride.

Such efforts to engage people are pivotal in Singapore's approach towards handling its transport issues and policies, says Transport Minister Raymond Lim in an interview.

'You need to get them involved because transport impacts on their lives every day.

'By engaging them, you give the public a better understanding of the wider issues involved, which go beyond their personal interest.

'At the same time, it allows the policymakers to have a better understanding of their concerns. So you create a two-way process.'

Besides lending them an ear, the LTA also believes in giving people a first-hand experience. For instance, residents were invited to visit nearby worksites of infrastructure projects like the Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway (KPE).

Also, its engineers went door to door to get feedback on, say, dust and noise levels.

Beyond these targeted measures, the LTA also has two ongoing efforts.

One is an online role-playing game, and the other a programme that deploys LTA officers to work with MPs and grassroots leaders on problems raised by residents.

In April, the online game was launched to let a person play the role of the Transport Minister, so that person could get a grasp of the trade-offs involved in each policy decision.

More than 3,000 people have taken on the role, and most said they went away with a better understanding of the complex nature of Singapore's land transport policies.

As for the LTA's liaison officers, MPs such as Mr Michael Palmer find them a big help.

The MP for Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC recalls a resident complaining that a side road was too narrow for school buses to make a U-turn safely.

The LTA officer took over the case and dealt directly with the resident. The authorities later expanded the turning radius for the buses.

Mr Palmer believes these officers make a difference.

'Singaporeans know you can't solve every problem.

'Still, they raise it and appreciate it when the ministries have someone who will listen and give an explanation.

'It's better than sending an e-mail and not getting a reply, or to receive a reply saying, 'Thank you very much for your feedback' and that's it.'

Changes on the way
Straits Times 15 Dec 07;
A WHIFF of change in land transport policy is in the air

The much awaited Land Transport Review, due next month, is still under wraps.

But officials, commentators and a Land Transport Authority (LTA) e-game provide indications of the problem areas and the possible solutions.

Overhaul: Hassle of bus and train transfers.

Options: Integrate bus and train services better. Shorten waiting time for feeder buses.

Publish timetable. Create one season pass for whole bus-and-rail network.

Overhaul: Crowded, slow public transport.

Options: Add premium buses. Raise bus frequency from 15 to 10 minutes. Extend bus-lane hours. More full-day bus lanes.

For the long term, Circle Line will add connections in 2010; build more MRT lines.

Overhaul: Cab availability during peak periods, and within the Central Business District.

Options: Price cab fares appropriately. Enhance public transport, so more people switch to buses and trains.

Overhaul: Empty cruising cabs.

Options: Convert to call bookings. Build more cab-stands. Charge a cruising tax - possibly with GPS-based ERP.

Overhaul: Travel barriers for rising elderly population

Options: Give elderly more time to cross roads, possibly with the aid of technology. More pedestrian-friendly zones with low speed limits.

Barrier-free access in key sites. Overall, focus on human dimension.

To play with more options, and to role-play at being the Transport Minister, visit this LTA website: www.transport2020.gov.sg


Read more!

Climate pact: Hard talks, but Singapore minister still upbeat

Dr Yaacob Ibrahim confident of resolution despite breaking points
Arti Mulchand, Straits Times 15 Dec 07;

Singapore, which lacks alternatives to fossil fuels and serves as a global petrochemical, air and sea hub, has taken the stance that there should not be a one-size-fits-all solution on emissions cuts. 'We do it (performing hub services) very well and very efficiently, and that is the way it must be seen,'

BALI - WHEN it comes down to laying a Bali 'road map' leading to an eventual global climate change agreement, the devil, clearly, is in the details.

So when the United States unexpectedly turned some of those details on their heads - on the eve of when marathon talks should have ended, no less - Singapore's Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim was taken by surprise.

He was part of a group of 40 ministers appointed to try and sort out remaining contentious issues, including the big question of whether a final text will include emissions reduction targets for developed countries.

The aim is to form a framework for Copenhagen, Denmark, in 2009, when negotiators will work out a successor to the current Kyoto Protocol.

The United States, which has been pursuing voluntary reduction pledges under a 'major economies' plan, tried to change the draft late on Thursday.

Its proposal essentially called for cuts from all countries based on level of economic development.

'I knew it was a non-starter,' Dr Yaacob said.

Many of the other delegates were shaking their heads, and some went into a huddle in one corner, he told The Straits Times yesterday.

'By 1am I couldn't take it, I left,' he said of the closed door meeting at Nusa Dua's Laguna Resort.

The meeting finally broke up in acrimony at 4am yesterday, after a slew of counterproposals had been tabled, and no resolution reached.

The issue was left in the hands of Indonesian Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar, who is presiding over the talks.

He formed an even smaller group to sort it out.

The breaking points yesterday was just one of many in the arduous negotiations over the past four days that Dr Yaacob has been here.

Yesterday, just as he prepared to return to Singapore, there were yet more meetings among the ministers, but no resolution was forthcoming.

Still, he seemed confident that one would come.

'The meetings were long and hard...but this must be so,' he said.

'But both sides have made compromises. Countries do come to the table with vested interests, but because they are aware of the urgency, they are prepared to give in.'

A successful outcome is just as crucial to Singapore as it is to the rest of the world, he said.

Singapore, which lacks alternatives to fossil fuels and serves as a global petrochemical, air and sea hub, has taken the stance that there should not be a one-size-fits-all solution on emissions cuts.

'We do it (performing hub services) very well and very efficiently, and that is the way it must be seen,' Dr Yaacob said.

'You are doing a service to the world, cut that back and it doesn't serve anybody any good.'

Not having binding targets 'doesn't mean you stand by and do nothing', he said, pointing to some of Singapore's green initiatives.

Still, all the big emitters have to be on board and 'signal to the world that they are doing something'.

'Only then can the smaller countries do our part,' he said.

He left the conference, expected to drag into later today, confident that at the end of the day, logic would be hard to defeat and 'wriggling room' at the drawing board would ensure a positive outcome from Bali.

He said: 'There is a strong spirit to move the process...and they owe it to the rest of the world to come up with something.'


Read more!

Recycling and rubbish: Make clearing up a way of life

Dumped items posing a hazard in estates
One resident blames it on lack of civic consciousness while some complain about lax clearing
Straits Times 15 Dec 07;

A MASS of dismantled wooden furniture.

Mounds of dried-up rubbish next to trash cans.

A mountain of discarded items, including electrical appliances.

These are a common sight in Housing Board corridors, void decks and other common-use areas. Not only do they attract pests, they are also a fire hazard.

Since June this year, The Straits Times' interactive online portal Stomp has received many e-mail and MMSes from readers highlighting such hazardous dumps.

Their worst fears came true for the residents of a block of flats in Dover Road, where a blaze broke out last Sunday.

The fire, which is believed to have been ignited deliberately, was made worse by the discarded furniture on the third-floor lift landing.

The West Coast Town Council, in response to a Straits Times query, said that it had not been told about the discarded furniture, although residents had directly asked a worker to clear the debris.

Going by the photos received by Stomp, the dumping of rubbish seems common.

Manager Evelyn Seah told The Straits Times that she had to keep calling the authorities, asking them to clear the rubbish dumped behind some old shophouses in Yio Chu Kang.

Real estate agent Justine Heng, 38, who sent in photos of a mound of rubbish around a bin in the void deck, said she had 'given up hope' on irresponsible residents.

Although the piles of rubbish are cleared daily, inconsiderate neighbours continue to treat the area as their personal dumping ground.

'The town council did put up a notice at the waste bins informing residents that it is illegal to dump rubbish around the bin, but someone actually took that down and threw it away!' Ms Heng said.

Engineer Alex Kok blamed the situation on a lack of civic consciousness.

'You can't blame it on the cleaners. They have done a good job but there are only so many of them,' he said.

But other residents were concerned about the lack of action on overflowing recycling bins that have been left uncleared.

Ms Subashini Sivananthan from Jurong West said: 'The message (on the bins) says 'Make recycling our way of life'. Clearing up the bins frequently should be the authorities' way of life.'


Read more!

Highway Habitats: Wasteland? - No, say biologists

Highway Habitats: Where Rodents Thrive
LiveScience.com Yahoo News 14 Dec 07;

Highway medians look like dead zones to most of us, islands of grass and trash largely devoid of wildlife. Not so, a new study finds.

Rodents, anyway, seem to love these places.

"Biologists have often considered roadways as useless or worse for wildlife," said Dale Sparks, a biologist at Indiana State University. "The traditional view is that these areas are too badly damaged to serve as effective habitat. However, any birdwatcher and many bored drivers know that hawks spend a lot of time sitting on the roadside staring at the ditches, medians and highway triangles, so there must be something out there."

Sparks and colleagues are studying the median and roadside habitats along a stretch of Interstate 70 in Indiana.

"Everything in the preliminary data says medians are great habitats," Sparks said today. "We're finding a pretty good community of rodent species."

White-footed mice, deer mice and voles inhabit ditches and other roadside locations. In the medians: white-footed mice, deer mice and shrews.

To estimate the populations, the team traps the small mammals, then marks and releases them. Also, they set out feeding trays of seeds mixed with sand and see who shows up.

"Mice that have no fear of predation can spend all night digging up each seed," Sparks said. "Scared mice, conversely, eat very little of the seed and soon leave. We can get an estimate of the habitat quality by seeing how much seed the mice leave behind."

No estimate yet on how well these creatures avoid speeding motorists.


Read more!

Dolphin, turtle carcasses examined for red tide link on US Beach

Melanie Stawicki Azam, News Journal Online 14 Dec 07;

NEW SMYRNA BEACH -- Several dolphins, two sea turtles and hundreds of fish have washed up dead on Southeast Volusia beaches, prompting biologists to investigate whether red tide is the culprit.

A mother dolphin -- with a baby dolphin born prematurely -- was found dead Thursday morning on New Smyrna Beach near the 4600 block of South Atlantic Avenue. Later in the afternoon, Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute reported a sixth dead dolphin in the Canaveral National Seashore area.

Thursday's deaths followed a report of four dolphins found deceased Wednesday on the shores of Canaveral National Seashore.

"There is a presumption of a connection" of the dolphins deaths to red tide, said J.B. Kump, executive director of Florida development for Hubbs-SeaWorld. But he said that can't be confirmed until toxicology tests on the dead dolphins are completed in a few days.

Florida red tides are natural phenomena caused by a microscopic organism, Karenia brevis. It produces a toxin that can kill fish, birds and marine mammals, such as dolphins and manatees, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's Fish and Wildlife Research Institute.

Carli Segelson, wildlife commission spokeswoman, said two manatee deaths -- in which exposure to red tide is the suspected cause of death -- were reported in Volusia County last month in Mosquito Lagoon. One was reported Nov. 5 in Edgewater and another Nov. 6 in Oak Hill.

"They're basically ingesting the red tide organism, as well as swimming in it," she said.

Dolphins eat fish, which can contain the red tide toxin, Segelson said.

"It's the worst I've seen," Canaveral National Seashore's Chief Ranger Eric Lugo said about the red tide outbreak and its possible effects on local wildlife.

The park has had a rash of dead sea creatures wash up on its beaches, especially Tuesday and Wednesday, he said. Besides the dead dolphins, thousands of dead fish, one leatherback and one loggerhead turtle and a couple of sea birds were found over the past couple of days on the park's beach side, not along the river, he said.

Volusia County Beach Patrol spokesman Capt. Scott Petersohn said red tide conditions have plagued plenty of humans in New Smyrna Beach this week.

"(Wednesday) we even closed lifeguard towers a little early," he said. "Guards were hacking, sneezing and coughing so bad."

The red tide conditions seemed to re-emerge Monday, peaked Tuesday and Wednesday, he said, and subsided a bit Thursday.

Thursday, he said he felt its effects in Daytona Beach and it seemed to be moving north. A cold front is expected Saturday, which could put a damper on the algae bloom and give some relief to beachgoers, he said.

Red tide has been found sporadically in waters along Volusia and Flagler counties' coasts since early October. Segelson said the bloom off Volusia County is one big, patchy bloom moving around with the currents and tides.

Since 1957, blooms have been reported eight times along the state's east coast, she said, while 46 to 47 blooms occurred on its west coast.


Read more!

Indonesia loses Rp30 trillion per year by illegal fishing

Antara 14 Dec 07;

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Illegal fishing in Indonesian waters is causing a financial loss of Rp30 trillion a year to the country, Maritime and Fisheries Minister Freddy Numberi said here Friday.

"Immaterial losses from illegal fishing include coral reef damage due to the use of explosives and potassium in the activity," he said on the sidelines of a coordinative meeting on fishery resources protection.

He said the coral reef ecosystem was of vital importance to the survival of submarine biota.

Illegal fishing by foreign fishermen were also a threat to the country`s sovereignty.

Numberi said eradicating illegal fishing activity was one of his ministry`s priority programs which would continue to be implemented over the next five years.

Therefore, fishery resource monitoring should be intensified as it was playing a significant role in upholding the law in Indonesian waters.

"Of course we also need the support of regional governments," he added.

The maritime and fisheries sector, he said, had a competitive ability to move the national economy.

The fisheries sub-sector`s contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) had increased by 18 percent in 2006. Fishery production in 2005-2006 increased by an average of 7.64 percent.

Fishery exports in 2006 totaled 1.02 million tons and added US$2.08 billion to the country`s foreign exchange earnings.

Ironically, the country`s fishery resources were being seriously threatened by the wide-spread use of irresponsible management and exploitation methods, he said.(*)


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Global warming, competition blamed for drop in tuna catch

Edwin G. Espejo, MindaNews 14 Dec 07;

GENERAL SANTOS CITY (MindaNews/13 December)- Admitting that there has been a steep decline of tuna catch over the last few years, one of the city's biggest tuna producers on Wednesday blamed global warming as one of the major reasons for the drop in tuna production.

Marfenio Tan, former president of the South Cotabato Purse Seiners Association, said warm temperatures are driving tuna stocks deeper and above the equator line.

"The sea temperatures in our traditional fishing grounds have risen by two or three degrees. And these have affected our tuna catch," Tan said Wednesday.

Tan said they have monitored sea temperatures at 29 to 30 degrees Celsius, a notch higher than the "comfort level" of tuna species at 27 to 28 degrees Celsius.

"We have to address this global problem," he said.

Tan likewise tagged rising production cost and stiff competition as key factors to the decline of tuna catch.

"We have many competitors now. The Vietnamese and even China are now into tuna fishing aside from Taiwan which is the world's leading tuna producer," he explained.

The Philippine tuna producers and purse seiners are hard pressed keeping up with Taiwan and Japan because it is lagging in technology.

"The Japanese and the Taiwanese have modern and fast fishing vessels. They can fish anywhere in the world with their fleets and state of the art fishing technology," Tan explained.

The local tuna industry is likewise bearing the brunt of rising fuel costs which eat up a major chunk of the production cost.

But Tan was quick to add that the decline of tuna catch has not yet reached critical level.

Being highly migratory, however, Tan said tuna species may have created new path due to rising temperatures although he also added that wanton fishing and catching of juveniles in past are slowly taking its toll in the production. (Edwin G. Espejo/MindaNews contributor)


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Global warming blamed for Walrus deaths

Dan Joling, Associated Press Yahoo News 15 Dec 07;

In what some scientists see as another alarming consequence of global warming, thousands of Pacific walruses above the Arctic Circle were killed in stampedes earlier this year after the disappearance of sea ice caused them to crowd onto the shoreline in extraordinary numbers.

The deaths took place during the late summer and fall on the Russian side of the Bering Strait, which separates Alaska from Russia.

"It was a pretty sobering year — tough on walruses," said Joel Garlach-Miller, a walrus expert for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Unlike seals, walruses cannot swim indefinitely. The giant, tusked mammals typically clamber onto the sea ice to rest, or haul themselves onto land for just a few weeks at a time.

But ice disappeared in the Chukchi Sea this year because of warm summer weather, ocean currents and persistent eastern winds, Garlach-Miller said.

As a result, walruses came ashore earlier and stayed longer, congregating in extremely high numbers, with herds as big as 40,000 at Point Shmidt, a spot that had not been used by walruses as a "haulout" for a century, scientists said.

Walruses are vulnerable to stampedes when they gather in such large numbers. The appearance of a polar bear, a hunter or a low-flying airplane can send them rushing to the water.

Sure enough, scientists received reports of hundreds and hundreds of walruses dead of internal injuries suffered in stampedes. Many of the youngest and weakest animals, mostly calves born in the spring, were crushed.

Biologist Anatoly Kochnev of Russia's Pacific Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography estimated 3,000 to 4,000 walruses out of population of perhaps 200,000 died, or two or three times the usual number on shoreline haulouts.

He said the animals only started appearing on shore for extended periods in the late 1990s, after the sea ice receded.

"The reason is the global warming," Kochnev said.

The reports match predictions of what might happen to walruses if the ice receded, said wildlife biologist Tony Fischbach of the U.S. Geological Survey.

"We were surprised that this was happening so soon, and we were surprised at the magnitude of the report," he said.

Scientists said the death of so many walruses — particularly calves — is alarming in itself. But if the trend continues, and walruses no longer have summer sea ice from which to dive for clams and snails, they could strip coastal areas of food, and that could reduce their numbers even further.

No large-scale walrus die-offs were seen in Alaska during the same period, apparently because the animals congregated in smaller groups on the American side of the Bering Strait, with the biggest known herd at about 2,500.

Young Walruses Trampled by Stampedes in Warming Arctic
John Roach, National Geographic News 26 Dec 07;

Add the Pacific walrus to the growing list of species imperiled by fast-melting Arctic sea ice.

Several thousand young walruses were trampled to death this past summer and fall when giant herds of stranded animals got spooked and stampeded into the water, scientists report.

Walruses feed on clams and other bottom-dwelling creatures in the shallower waters along the coasts and usually rest on ice floes between meals, said Bruce Woods, a spokesperson for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Anchorage, Alaska.

But in 2007 northern sea ice retreated faster and farther from the shoreline than ever recorded—well beyond the shallow waters. The hungry mammals were forced to clump together on land instead.

"They came ashore in places that we hadn't seen before and in numbers that in many cases were considerably larger than we'd ever seen before," Woods said.

The crowding was particularly acute on the Russian side of the Bering Strait, according to Russian biologists who collaborate with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

At one location, the scientists counted 30,000 walruses.

Like any herd animal, walruses are easily spooked, Woods noted. Loud boats, low-flying airplanes, or the sight of predators such as polar bears cause them to panic and rush toward the water.

"Particularly when their numbers are so great, sometimes walruses are hurt or killed in stampedes, and the ones that tend to be hurt or killed, of course, are going to be the smaller animals," Woods said.

Russian biologists counted about 3,000 to 4,000 walrus carcasses along the coast in the areas they surveyed—higher than normal. Polar bears were spotted scavenging the remains.

Population Impact?

The loss of 4,000 or more Pacific walruses is not a major blow to its population, wildlife service experts say.

While scientists lack a firm population estimate for the species, researchers have encountered herds as large as 100,000 in recent years, Woods said.

But if the sea ice continues to shrink—as climate models suggest it will—"we've got to anticipate that there will be additional impacts," Woods said.

For example, large congregations of walruses on the coastline may begin to overgraze available food, noted Kassie Siegel, an attorney and climate change campaigner for the Center for Biological Diversity in Joshua Tree, California.

Siegel's organization has led the effort to protect polar bears under the U.S. Endangered Species Act in light of their melting sea ice habitat. A final decision on the listing is due early next year.

The activists also filed a petition last week to list the North Pacific-dwelling ribbon seal under the act. Like the polar bear, the seal depends on the sea ice for survival.

The Pacific walrus also likely warrants protection, Siegel said, though scientists currently lack sufficient data on the species' habitat and population size compared to species such as polar bears.

Another subspecies of walrus, the Atlantic walrus, lives in Canada and Greenland and is already considered in danger.

"It's not that the species is necessarily at less risk," Siegel said. "It's just that we don't know as much about it."

Stopping Stampedes

Wildlife service biologists, in collaboration with Russian colleagues, are currently pulling together data from the first attempt to estimate the Pacific walrus population.

Their research methods included tagging, satellite imagery, and infrared photos taken from airplanes. The infrared images allow scientists to count walruses from heat escaping from their bodies.

Woods said the unexpectedly rapid melt of the sea ice this summer increases the need for the population estimates and will likely drive more studies on the impact of the melting ice. (See pictures of the "Big Thaw".)

In the meantime, the service is ramping up outreach efforts to the airline, hunting, and tourism industries to alert them to the presence of stranded walrus populations.

"People are working with us to try to avoid disturbing the animals unnecessarily," Woods said.


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Hungary offers Indonesia loan for bird flu vaccine

Reuters 14 Dec 07;

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Hungary has offered loans to Indonesia to build a plant to develop and produce a birdflu vaccine for humans using Indonesia's H5N1 avian flu virus strain, a senior industry ministry official said on Friday.

With 93 human deaths from bird flu so far, Indonesia has the world's highest death toll from the disease.

Hungary has offered its vaccine-making technology so that Indonesia could test the virus and make the vaccine, said Rifana Erni, the head of research and development at the Industry Ministry.

"They have the technology and funds to develop the vaccine," said Erni, adding that Hungary expressed an interest in helping because of the high number of cases in Indonesia as well as the row between Indonesia and the World Health Organisation over sample sharing.

Hungary made the offer during a United Nations Industrial Development Organisation meeting in Vienna earlier this month, she said.

The official did not give details of how much Hungary would lend or which pharmaceutical companies are involved, but she said more details would be provided early next year.

Hungary has not had any human infections with bird flu so far, but it had an outbreak of the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of bird flu in a flock of geese in January.

In April, Egyptian vaccine maker Vacsera said it was interested in teaming up with an Indonesian company to develop a bird flu vaccine for humans.

Earlier this year, Indonesia signed a preliminary agreement with a unit of drugs firm Baxter International to develop a human bird flu vaccine.

Contact with sick fowl is the most common way of contracting bird flu which is endemic in bird populations in most part of Indonesia. Experts fear that the virus could mutate into a form easily passed from person to person, and could lead to the deaths of millions of people worldwide.

(Reporting by Yayat Supriatna, writing by Fitri Wulandari)


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Hong Kong Mai Po Nature Reserve closed after bird flu case

Hong Kong bird reserve closed after H5N1 case
Reuters 13 Dec 07;

HONG KONG, Dec 14 (Reuters) - A wild heron in Hong Kong has tested positive for the H5N1 bird flu virus, prompting authorities to close a bird reserve on the border with China on Friday.

Hong Kong's Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department said the grey heron, a migratory species, was found sick on December 5 near the reserve. It later died and tests confirmed it was infected with the H5N1 avian influenza.

"As a precautionary measure, the Mai Po Nature Reserve will be temporarily closed to visitors for 21 days," Hong Kong's Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department said in a statement.

"We will monitor the situation closely and review the closure period as necessary," it added.

A 24-year-old Chinese man surnamed Lu from eastern Jiangsu province died last week of the H5N1 strain of bird flu in the first case in China since June.

Chinese state media have warned of a "very high" possibility of bird flu over winter and spring.

Mai Po and its lush wetlands straddling the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen and Hong Kong, have for decades been an important wintering point for tens of thousands of waterbirds. (Reporting by James Pomfret; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)


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Food Miles Concept and Christmas Dinner

Pause for thought
Sarah Murray, Straits Times 15 Dec 07;

THIS Christmas will probably be greener than any holiday in recent years. Greeting cards will be sent online. Carbon offsets might be fashionable seasonal gifts. So what should we be doing about Christmas dinner?

Some in the US are bound to suggest that buying ingredients only from local farmers would help reduce the carbon emissions associated with the festive dinners. This 'food miles' diet is a neat concept. The trouble is, the distance food is transported is not necessarily an accurate measure of its environmental impact.

For a start, consider the relative efficiency of different forms of haulage. If you look at fuel consumption per kilogram carried, an ocean-going vessel carrying thousands of containers (a single 20ft container holds about 48,000 bananas) does quite well, while in the case of an American family, a 16km trip to the farm in a big car to pick up a few bags of vegetables seems, in emissions terms at least, downright destructive.

And while it might seem logical that the further a food item travels, the more carbon emissions it generates, this turns out not to be so. When you count the energy used by harvesting and milking equipment, farm vehicles, feedstock and chemical fertiliser manufacture, hothouses and processing factories, transportation emerges as just one piece of the carbon dioxide jigsaw puzzle.

Take the potato chip, for instance. When Walkers, a British snack-maker, studied the carbon footprint of a packet of its chips, distribution represented just 9 per cent of the total. The greatest emissions came in storing and frying the potatoes.

Farmers store potatoes in artificially humidified warehouses, which take energy to run, generating emissions. Because of the way they are stored, the potatoes contain more water and take longer to fry, again generating more emissions.

And since farmers sell potatoes by weight, they have no incentive to drive off excess water. Changing the way potatoes are warehoused and sold could therefore significantly cut the carbon footprint of chips.

Obviously, calculating the carbon footprint of food is an extraordinarily tricky business. But only when we understand a food's energy use throughout its life cycle from seed to kitchen can we make intelligent decisions on where to start on cutting the greenhouse gas it generates.

Sometimes this might mean choosing products with far-off origins because the methods used to raise or process them are more environmentally sustainable than the nearby equivalent. But the local food movement is not only about the environment. Local food purchases, say 'locavores', also support local or nearby farmers. True enough.

But it depends on your perspective as to what constitutes a local farmer. Should we not consider supporting an African farmer for whom supplying richer markets with produce has provided a vital source of income - and who, by the way, often farms in a way that produces fewer emissions.

Perhaps the most powerful driver of the local food movement is its rejection of industrialised production. Yet feeding the world's 6.6 billion people, more than half of whom live in cities, is not possible without mass production. Rather than turning away from the big food companies, we should press them to find safer, healthier and more environmentally sustainable methods of supplying our dinner tables.

The 'food miles' concept has helped raise awareness of the environmental impact of one aspect of our lives: eating. Yet the potato chip example shows greening our food supply means we have to think more creatively.

The danger of going for the easy target of transportation is that we focus too narrowly and miss the bigger picture.

The writer, a contributing writer for The Financial Times, is the author of Moveable Feasts: From Ancient Rome To The 21st Century, The Incredible Journeys Of The Food We Eat.


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U.S. food inflation parallels 70s on ethanol boom

Christine Stebbins, Reuters 14 Dec 07;

"The underpinnings for the higher commodity prices are world economic growth, a weak dollar and increased use of our corn crop for the production of ethanol,"

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Rising U.S. food inflation, now a 25-year high, is reminiscent of the 1970s and will continue for the next five years due to growing world economies, increased food demand and a sharp expansion of corn-based ethanol production, a top food economist said on Friday.

"What happened in the early '70s and what is happening today is that we have moved food input price to a new plateau. Ultimately, the consumer is going to have to absorb those increased costs," said Bill Lapp, president of Advanced Economic Solutions, who on Thursday released a study that looked at food inflation data going back to the 1960s.

Futures prices on the Chicago Board of Trade, the benchmark for commodity grain and soy markets, have risen to multi-year highs this year. Wheat hit an all-time high of $9.81-3/4 a bushel just on Friday. Soybeans on Friday reached over $11.60 a bushel, a price not seen since 1973, and corn rose to $4.37-1/4 in February, the highest level in a decade.

"The underpinnings for the higher commodity prices are world economic growth, a weak dollar and increased use of our corn crop for the production of ethanol," Lapp told Reuters in an interview.

While most of the U.S. corn crop, or 43 percent is fed to livestock to produce meat, dairy products and eggs, an increasing percentage is being used to produce ethanol. Twenty-four percent of this year's corn crop will be turned into ethanol, up from just 14 percent two years ago.

The higher cost of raw commodities contributed to the Consumer Price Index for food, a broadly used gauge for inflation, which rose to an annual rate of 5.4 percent during the first 10 months of 2007, a level not seen since 1980, according to Advanced Economic's study.

"During the next five years, food inflation is forecast to increase by an average of 7.5 percent, well above the 2.3 percent average of the past 10 years.

"The U.S. experienced a similar period of rising commodity prices and food inflation in the 1970s. Commodity prices doubled ... this ultimately resulted in food inflation from 1972 to 1981 averaging 8.2 percent," the study said.

Traditionally, the food industry -- processors, grocery stores, restaurants, and others -- absorbed the cost of higher commodity prices within its operating margins as the rise was temporary given the competitiveness of retailers.

But times are changing, said Lapp, who is a consultant to the food and agricultural industries.

"The difference in the current environment is that we're in the midst of a sustained increase," he added.

The world is not going back to the long-term averages -- $2.40 a bushel corn, $3.50 wheat or $5.50 soybeans, he said.

From 2008-2012, Lapp is estimating that CBOT corn prices will average $4 a bushel, wheat $6.50 a bushel and soybeans $10 a bushel.

Experts agree that global demand for food and rising energy prices are two key drivers of rising inflation, but they differ on how much of an influence corn prices are having on food inflation.

Another study released by analytical firm Informa Economics this week said that historically, there has been very little relationship between corn prices and food inflation.

In the past, for every dollar an American consumer spends on food, only 19 cents goes to the farmer, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The balance, or 81 cents, goes to labor, fuels transportation, packaging, and other non-farm costs.

"The input costs increases are tremendous. Without any relief, the only recourse is to pass along some of the costs to consumers," Lapp said.

(Reporting by Christine Stebbins; Editing by Marguerita Choy)


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