South Korea to tighten rules against spill-prone oil tankers

Yahoo News 21 Dec 07;

SEOUL (AFP) — South Korea plans to bring forward a ban on visits by single-hulled tankers following the country's worst oil spill, a maritime official said Friday.

A drifting barge smashed into the 147,000-ton Hong Kong-registered supertanker Hebei Spirit on December 7 in the Yellow Sea, holing it in three places.

The single-hulled tanker spilt 12,547 kiloliters (10,900 tonnes) of crude oil into the Yellow Sea, some 20 percent more than the initial estimate, maritime authorities said.

Scores of fish farms and miles of beaches along a section of the west coast were fouled.

"Following the accident, we plan to advance the timetable to phase out singled-hulled vessels," Lee Ki-Sang, deputy director of the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, told AFP.

He said South Korea originally planned to phase out visits by those vessels by 2015 but it is now considering advancing the deadline by up to five years.

International efforts have been underway to require oil tankers to be double-hulled.

Such ships have some 1.2 meters (four feet) between the outer hull and fuel tanks to safeguard against leaks following a collision, said Bernd Bluhm, a representative from the European Maritime Safety Agency.

The European Union is seeking to close its waters to single-hulled tankers starting next year, he told a press conference held a fortnight after the spillage.

"But I don't think single-hulled tankers will disappear. They will sail in other areas, including Asia," Bluhm said.

Vladimir Sakharov, a representative from the United Nations Environment Programme, said experts from the UN and European Union had been impressed at the "spirit of solidarity" by thousands of South Koreans volunteers who joined the clean-up.

But Olof Linden, an oil spill expert working for the UN, warned that excessive clean-up operations would cause additional damage to the ecological system. He said Mother Nature should be given a chance to do the rest of the job.

Local environmentalists say it may be years before the coastline can fully recover, despite the daily efforts of tens of thousands of people and hundreds of ships battling the spill.

The European Union, the United Nations and Japan have despatched environmental experts to assist the cleanup. Aid has also come from Singapore, China and the United States.

South Korea seeks arrests over oil spill
Reuters 21 Dec 07;

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's coastguard has applied for court permission to arrest the captains of the vessels that collided in early December causing the country's worst oil spill, an official said on Friday.

Human error was probably to blame for the accident, when a crane mounted on a Samsung-owned barge punched holes in a Hong Kong-registered tanker, spilling over 10,500 tones of crude oil that washed up on west coast beaches and blackened a nature reserve, local media said.

"We sought arrest warrants for the four captains yesterday (Thursday)," said a Taean Coastguard official.

The four are the captain of the Hebei Spirit tanker, the captains of two tugboats towing the barge and the person responsible for the sea-bound crane.

The barge operators were suspected of failing to heed warnings not to take the crane out in rough waters and the captain may not have responded properly to emergency calls, Yonhap news agency cited a coastguard report as saying.

A towline between the crane of one of the tugboats severed about 15 minutes before the accident on December 7 and the tanker did not move out of the way in time, the report said.

Coastguard officials declined to comment on the report.

A conservation group said several thousand birds may have been contaminated with oil.

"While great efforts have been made to clean a few oil-contaminated birds, it is apparent that the existing infrastructure is completely inadequate to deal with the large numbers of birds presently affected," said the report from Birds Korea.

Tens of thousands of volunteers, soldiers and others have battled to clean the spill that hit coastline about 150 km (95 miles) southwest of Seoul. Environmental groups said oil now sitting on the sea bed will cause problems for years.

Most of beaches have been cleaned but local residents say their livelihoods have been ruined because the spill wiped out fisheries and the tourism industry had dried up.

(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz and Jessica Kim; Editing by Alex Richardson)


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UN: SKorea coast ecosystem should recover

Yahoo News 21 Dec 07;

The ecosystem on South Korea's oil-covered coast should recover in three to five years after this month's oil spill, a U.N. expert said Friday.

Tens of thousands of coast guard officers, soldiers and volunteer workers have been working daily since a wayward barge slammed into a Hong Kong-registered supertanker on Dec. 7, causing it to release about 78,920 barrels of oil into the water off the west coast.

The amount leaked was about a third the size of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill that gushed 260,000 barrels of oil into Alaska's Prince William Sound.

Olof Linden, a member of a U.N. environmental team dispatched to help assess the damage, said it would take years for the ecosystem to fully recover. "I would say within three to five years ... That's the period we're talking about."

He said cleanup efforts have been successful and people should be able to use beaches in the area next year, though small amounts oil and tar will still be present.

"Tourism will suffer much more from the belief that that area is contaminated, rather than the actual situation," Linden said at a joint press conference with other international experts.

A major South Korean environmental group expressed skepticism about Linden's prediction.

"It's possible to revive the ecosystem within three to five years, but I think it will take longer," said Ji Chan-hyuck, a spokesman at the Korean Federation for Environmental Movement.


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EU quota brings new fears for the porbeagle shark

Simon de Bruxelles, Times Online 20 Dec 07;

The EU has agreed a fishing quota that conservationists fear could lead to porbeagle sharks being wiped out.

The Council of Ministers had been urged to impose tough restrictions to allow porbeagles, which are slow-growing, a chance to recover from decades of unrestricted overfishing.

Britain led the way by agreeing to accept a total allowable catch of only four tonnes, equivalent to 20 large sharks weighing an average of 200kg (440lb) each. The EU proposed initially a total quota for Europe of 422 tonnes, but by the time a deal was agreed yesterday lobbying by France and Portugal had increased that to 586 tonnes, about 3,000 adult sharks.

The porbeagle, a close relative of the man-eating great white, is prized in France and sells for £2 a kilo. Its fin is also increasingly in demand in the Far East for shark-fin soup.

Numbers have declined by an estimated 90 per cent because of overfishing, but attempts to introduce quotas have until now been strongly resisted. The porbeagle is listed as “critically endangered” by the World Conservation Union, the IUCN.

France, which has the only dedicated porbeagle fishing fleet, based on the Île d’Yeu, an island off Brittany, has the lion’s share of the quota. Spanish and Portuguese fishermen also catch porbeagles to sell to the French.

Relatively little is known about the shark. A mature adult is about 9ft long with a distinctive barrel chest.

A recent study suggests that Britain’s porbeagle population is likely to be hit hard. Richard Peirce, chairman of the Shark Trust, said yesterday: “I can’t see any justification for going for a higher figure when we are talking about a species that is red-listed as critically endangered.”


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WHO suspects limited human H5N1 spread in Pakistan

Reuters 21 Dec 07;

The World Health Organisation (WHO) suspects there has been only limited human-to-human transmission of the H5N1 virus in Pakistan, but international test results are still pending, a top official said on Friday.

David Heymann, WHO assistant director-general for health security and environment, also said that no new suspect human bird flu cases had emerged in Pakistan since December 6, signaling there had been no further spread.

Global health experts fear that bird flu could mutate into a form that spreads easily from one person to another, triggering a pandemic that could kill millions of people.

Pakistan announced last week that 8 people had been infected since late October, including a veterinarian involved in culling whose two brothers died. A WHO team has investigated the outbreak, and international laboratory results on samples taken are now expected at the weekend.

"The team feels that this could be an instance of close contact human-to-human transmission in a very circumscribed area and non-sustained, just like happened in Indonesia and Thailand," Heymann told a news briefing in Geneva.

In Thailand, a mother was killed by the virus in 2004 after cradling her dying infected daughter all night. The largest known cluster of human bird flu cases worldwide occurred in May 2006 in the Karo district of Indonesia's North Sumatra province, where as many as 7 people in an extended family died.

Keiji Fukuda, coordinator of WHO's global influenza program, told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday the cases in Pakistan are probably a combination of infections from poultry and limited person-to-person transmission due to close contact from caring for a sick loved one.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Jonathan Lynn)

WHO says mass bird flu vaccinations not necessary
Channel NewsAsia 22 Dec 07;

GENEVA - The World Health Organisation (WHO) said Friday there was no need for a massive vaccine campaign against the bird flu virus (H5N1) because it has not been proven that it would become a pandemic.

"There is no evidence available that would say that we should begin vaccinating populations across the board with H5N1 at this point in order to prevent a pandemic because it is not known what may cause a pandemic," WHO Assistant Director General David Heymann told reporters.

H5N1, which has caused 209 deaths out 340 afflicted since 2003, is not the only virus that could start a flu pandemic, he added. Other viruses, such as H5, H7 or H9, pose the same threat, he said.

Heymann said many countries are considering a widespread vaccination campaign as part of a 'first protection' barrier, which would act as an insurance plan for the population.

However, he recalled that the swine flu vaccinations in 1976 in the United States had a lot of side effects.

"So a country would have to weight whether or not that insurance policy of getting a lower level of immunity against a virus which could cause a pandemic is as important as the side effect which might occur from that vaccine," he said.

Earlier this month WHO responded to the case of a father and son in China dying from H5N1 earlier this month.

There were three possible explanations for the father-son case: either they were infected by the same animal, by transmission between them, or by exposure to two different infected animals.

The deadly H5N1 strain has passed from human to human only in very rare cases but scientists fear that such transmission could become more efficient and widespread through mutation, causing a global pandemic.

- AFP /ls


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Coffee fells Sumatra forests despite UNESCO, park status

Oyos Saroso H.N., The Jakarta Post 21 Dec 07;

The island of Sumatra may have lost some five million hectares of forest -- more than a quarter of its total forest area -- between 1990 and 2000, according to statistics.

Lampung Wildlife Conservation Society activist Dwi Nugroho Adhiasto said conversion to farm land was the worst problem, followed by mining and new roads.

These activities, he said, threatened the island's unique bio-diversity, citing the Sumatran tiger, orangutan, rhinoceros and Rafflesia flower.

In 2004 three national parts acquired United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) heritage status: Bukit Barisan in Lampung, Kerinci Seblat in Jambi and Gunung Leuser in Aceh. But this is no guarantee of protection.

Head of Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park, Lusman Pasaribu, said he hoped "all institutions, even from foreign countries, will take part in saving Sumatra's forests," without mentioning what could be done about coffee plantations located within park boundaries.

Lusman said West Lampung and Tanggamus regencies in Lampung and Kaur regency in Bengkulu needed conservation plans, noting that some parts of West Lampung were technically protected areas.

Lusman encouraged the central government and local administrations to suggest alternative livelihoods so that farming would not longer destroy forests.

Sumatra environmental activist Sherly Ering said she wanted people to care about the forest and detailed the activities of the her organizations "Million Hopes" public outreach and education program.

The World Wildlife Federation in Indonesia has reported that coffee plantations -- including some located within national parks such as Bukit Barisan -- cause deforestation

According to WWF Indonesia, about 17 percent of Bukit Barisan's 360,000 hectares have been turned to farming, mostly coffee.

WWF Indonesia reported there were 40 companies exporting coffee from Lampung to dozens of countries in Europe, Africa, North America and Australia, as well as Asia.

According to WWF, in 2003 nearly half of Lampung's export coffee was grown in the park.


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Rush for land to sweep away last Singapore village

Melanie Lee, Reuters 21 Dec 07;
also in Business Times 22 Dec 07 as Singapore's last kampung

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Chillis and limes grow in a lush garden between colorful cement houses with leaking metal roofs in Kampong Buangkok, a village with no roads or computers.

The sight would be nothing out of the ordinary in much of southeast Asia. But Singapore's last village, nestled in a forest clearing, is an oddity in the sophisticated city-state where skyscrapers and high-speed Internet are the norm.

Simple kampongs -- the Malay word for village -- were synonymous with disease and poor sanitation when they went out of style as Singapore introduced government housing in the 1960s.

Mass relocations to tower block Housing Development Board (HDB) flats saw the number of kampongs dwindle. Once home to 40 families, sole survivor Kampong Buangkok now houses only 28, who fiercely guard community bonds among arching banana trees.

"I know all my neighbors, we meet every day, doors open. It's not like the HDB flats, where you can live and not know anyone," said Ramlah binte Kamsah, a secretary in her mid-forties who has lived in the kampong for 40 years.

The village in northeast Singapore, the size of three football fields, has few cars.

"They always ask me if I want to build a road here, but I tell them -- no road. Real kampongs don't have roads," said Sng Mui Hong, owner of the land of Kampong Buangkok, gesturing to the dirt path which runs through the village.

Sng, who is single and in her fifties, inherited the piece of land from her father. While the booming economy and an influx of foreigners has led to a red hot property market, her rates are as low as $6.50 ($4.45) a month -- prices maintained for 30 years.

"If you increase the rent and the prices outside go up, how will the people in here cope?" said Sng, who added that most kampong dwellers are poor and shun Singapore's glitzy malls.

HITTING HERITAGE

Built 60 years old ago on low-lying land, the kampong has weathered many floods.

But the biggest danger it faces is not a natural disaster, but Singapore's voracious appetite for land.

In Singapore, history and heritage are often found at the receiving end of a wrecking ball.

The space-starved island, about one third the size of Greater London, has one of the world's highest population densities. For decades it has reclaimed land from the sea and razed landmarks to make space for development.

"Of course we want to preserve the kampong -- sentimental fools like us. These are the last traces of old Singapore, everything old has been torn down," said Victor, 51, a blogger who writes about life in old Singapore.

However, a government plan aims to turn the kampong into schools and housing.

"Given the need to optimize the use of land in land scarce Singapore, it may not be viable to retain the kampong in its current state," said a spokeswoman from the government redevelopment agency.

Sng has made it clear to private developers that she does not intend to sell her land. But the reality is she would have to sell the land to the government if required, based on the state's laws. Some villagers fear they may only have a year left.

Tan Choon Kuan, 75, comes to the kampong every Sunday with his family to paint. His grandson Nicholas Goh, 17, said the kampong is a "refreshing change from urban Singapore," as they sat next to half-painted canvasses and smoking mosquito coils.

"I can't do much about the government plans to redevelop the land. But by painting these scenes, I preserve it for the future generations," Tan said, dabbing brush strokes on a leafy picture.

(Editing by Neil Chatterjee and Gillian Murdoch)


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Planktos ocean-fertilization plans adrift

Sea-seeding plan goes adrift
Company backed by Nelson Skalbania considers winding down amid financial woes
Wendy Stuek, The Globe and Mail 20 Dec 07;

VANCOUVER -- As gardening schemes go, it was nothing if not ambitious - seed the ocean with iron dust, triggering massive plankton blooms that would fight global warming by sucking carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, generating lucrative carbon credits along the way.

That was the idea. But now the ocean-fertilization plans of Planktos Corp., which generated headlines around the globe and triggered heated debate in the scientific community, may themselves be adrift.

The California company's story has been covered by The New York Times, CNN and others, and its concept has been debated at scientific conferences, though so far it has not seeded any sites with iron dust.

Yesterday, in a statement, Planktos warned of financial trouble and said its ship had been turned away from the Canary Islands, but provided little detail.

Planktos, backed by Vancouver financier Nelson Skalbania, said in a shareholder update yesterday that financial woes and the "unanticipated turn of events in the Canary Islands" have forced management to consider a "general winding down of business operations until such time as it can better assess its priorities in relation to the availability of capital."

Further information will be forthcoming as management and the board explores all options open to the company, the statement said.

According to the statement, Planktos's ship, Weatherbird II, was turned away from the Spanish port of Las Palmas in the Canary Islands earlier this month and is now in the port on the Portuguese island of Madeira.

No reasons were given for the ship being turned away, but Planktos has previously encountered protests from environmental groups opposed to the company's plans to seed the ocean.

The concept that Planktos, based in Foster City, Calif., was promoting has been the subject of studies over the past decade and, with global warming a pressing concern, is generating significant scientific and commercial interest.

Last year, the company filed an amendment regarding its scientific advisory board, acknowledging it had erroneously listed several "informal unpaid advisers" as if they were formally installed on an advisory board.

One of those erroneously listed was Victor Smetacek, a biological oceanographer at Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research and a leading authority in ocean fertilization. Mr. Smetacek asked for his name to be removed from Planktos's advisory board after learning from another scientist that he was listed as a member.

He remains skeptical of the company's approach.

"Although I am convinced that iron fertilization, if carried out in the right locations, will help to reduce atmospheric CO{-2} levels somewhat (only if emissions are drastically reduced), I fail to see how the amount removed relative to iron added can be verified, as can a planted forest," he said recently in an e-mail.

Ocean fertilization requires more independent study that can be verified by recognized agencies, he added.

Planktos may not have achieved the profile it did had it not been for Mr. Skalbania. A financier and one-time sports mogul - he owned teams including the National Hockey League's Edmonton Oilers and the Canadian Football League's B.C. Lions - Mr. Skalbania has been involved with Planktos for several years, helping to take the company public and raising funds.

Neither Mr. Skalbania nor Planktos founder and president Russ George were available to comment yesterday.

But in a recent interview, Mr. George, in response to questions about teaming up with Mr. Skalbania and Vancouver's stock promotion scene, said he had spent years scrounging for funds to pursue his scientific venture before successfully connecting with Mr. Skalbania.

"Nelson Skalbania was the only guy who would put money up," Mr. George said. "Is it a challenge to work with that community? Yes. Has the result been that they have poured millions into this work? Absolutely. Has the work suddenly gained international prominence because of their green angel funding? Absolutely. Is it going to be in time to save the oceans? Maybe not. But we are going to give it a shot."

Planktos said its shares were delisted effective yesterday from Nasdaq's over-the-counter bulletin board as a result of the company's failure to file required reports on time.

The company's shares will continue to trade on the Pink Sheets, a centralized quotation service that, like the bulletin board, has minimal reporting requirements.


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Under pressure, Japan drops humpback hunt

Yahoo News 21 Dec 07;

Japan has dropped its plan to kill humpback whales in Antarctic waters after strong protests led by Australia, Japanese public broadcaster NHK said Friday.

An official at Japan's Fisheries Agency declined all comment on the report, which came hours after Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura warned that the growing row with Australia would be difficult to resolve.

NHK television, quoting unnamed officials, said Japan "has decided to delist humpbacks from the whaling list for now due to concern about the negative impact on relations with Australia."

Japan had planned to harpoon 50 humpback whales in its current expedition to Antarctica, marking the first time that Japan would hunt the animal beloved by whale-watchers since the 1960s.

Japan had earlier denied remarks by Thomas Schieffer, the US ambassador to Tokyo, who said Wednesday that Japan had agreed in diplomatic discussions to stand down from its plan to kill humpbacks.

Australia's new left-leaning government earlier this week stepped up the case against Japan's whaling, saying it would deploy an unarmed customs ship and a surveillance aircraft to monitor the hunt.

Humpback whales, protected under a 1966 worldwide moratorium after years of overhunting, are renowned for their complex songs and acrobatic displays.

The humpbacks' slow progression along Australia's coast to breed has turned into a major tourist attraction bringing 1.5 million whale watchers a year.

Defying warnings from Australia and other Western nations, Japan's fleet set off last month for Antarctica on its largest ever expedition with a mission to kill 1,000 whales, most of them of the small minke variety.

Japan says whaling is part of its culture, although critics point out that Japanese today eat little whale compared with other meats.

Komura, the foreign minister, earlier said he hoped to speak with his Australian counterpart Stephen Smith about the growing row but doubted he would make much headway.

"Japan has its own culture as much as Australia does and since (whaling) involves public sentiment, it's not an issue we can resolve by convincing each other using logic," Komura told reporters.

"That's why it's hard," he said.

"Japan is conducting whaling research in line with international agreements so that's that. We have our own ideas and so does Australia," Komura said.

Japan carries out the hunt using a loophole in a 1986 global moratorium on commercial whaling that allows "lethal research" on the giant mammals. Only Norway and Iceland defy the moratorium outright.

Environmental movement Greenpeace and the militant splinter group Sea Shepherd have each sent a ship to Antarctic waters to try to disrupt Japan's whaling.

During the last Antarctic hunt, Sea Shepherd activists threw acid onto the Japanese mother ship in a bid to disrupt the hunt, leading Tokyo to brand the environmentalists as "terrorists."

Japan removes humpback whales from Antarctic hunt
Reuters 21 Dec 07;

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's whaling fleet in the Antarctic will avoid killing humpback whales for now, but will press on with plans to catch about 1,000 other whales by early in the new year, a government official said on Friday.

The move follows an announcement by Australia on Wednesday that it would send a fisheries patrol ship to gather evidence for a possible international court challenge to halt Japan's yearly slaughter.

"Japan has decided not to catch humpback whales for one year or two," government spokesman Nobutaka Machimura told reporters.

"Japan's relations with Australia could improve, but it depends on how it will see our decision," Machimura said.

(Reporting by Chisa Fujioka and Teruaki Ueno, Editing by Michael Watson)

Japan drops humpback whale hunt
BBC News 21 Dec 07;

A controversial Japanese mission to hunt humpback whales in the Antarctic has been temporarily abandoned, a top government official says.

Nobutaka Machimura said the humpback hunt would not go ahead - although the fleet will still hunt about 1,000 other whales in the area.

The BBC's Chris Hogg, in Tokyo, says Japan is now unlikely to chase the humpbacks for at least a year.

The move comes after pressure from the International Whaling Commission (IWC).

Japan is regularly condemned for its annual whaling missions.

But this year's Antarctic expedition was particularly controversial because, in addition to 935 minke whales and 50 fin whales, the fleet intended to kill up to 50 humpbacks.

It was the first time Japan had targeted the humpbacks since a moratorium was introduced in the mid-1960s - when the species had been hunted almost to extinction.

Australia criticism

Japan says whaling is necessary for scientific research, but other countries say the same goals could be achieved using non-lethal techniques.

"Japan has decided not to catch humpback whales for one year or two," Mr Machimura told reporters.



He said the decision had been reached after a meeting with the IWC.

Mr Machimura said the IWC had not been "functioning normally", claiming that the commission had been distorted by ideology.

He said Japan would suspend the humpback whale hunt while the IWC held talks on "normalising" its functions.

Australia had been particularly critical of the humpback hunt, and Foreign Minister Stephen Smith welcomed Japan's decision.

But he reiterated Canberra's view that there was no credible reason for Japan to hunt any species of whale, and pledged to keep up diplomatic efforts to prevent further missions.


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China reels from worst drought in a decade

Reuters 21 Dec 07;

BEIJING (Reuters) - China is suffering its worst drought in a decade, which has left millions of people short of drinking water and has shrunk reservoirs and rivers, state media said on Friday.

Hardest hit are large swathes of the usually humid south, where water levels on several major rivers have plunged to historic lows in recent months.

"The drought is the most serious of the decade and is affecting almost the whole country," the China Daily quoted Zhang Jiatuan, an official from the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters, as saying.

The surface area of the country's largest fresh water lake, Poyang, in the southern province of Jiangxi, had fallen to a record 50 sq km (19 sq miles) from several thousand sq km at its peak, the newspaper said.

More than 760,000 residents faced drinking water shortages in the rice-growing province.

A Jiangxi official news portal showed pictures of children playing on bare beds of the Gan river, Poyang's main tributary hit by serious boat traffic jams due to the shallow water.

Similar congestion has also occurred on the Xiang river in neighboring Hunan province and authorities have had to release water from behind the massive Three Gorges Dam to ease cargo ship stranding downstream on the Yangtze River, China's longest.

The southwestern region of Guangxi has been hit by its worst drought since 1951, with over a million people suffering from drinking water shortages.

About 400,000 hectares (1,545 sq miles) of crops have been damaged by drought this year, leading to total grain losses of 37.4 million metric tonnes, the China Daily said, adding the consecutive droughts over past years had compounded the situation.

Drought and floods are perennial problems in China, whose meteorologists have complained about the increased extreme weather and partly blamed it on global climate change.

About 30 million Chinese in the countryside and more than 20 million in urban areas face drinking water shortages every year despite huge government investment to address the problem, the China Daily said.

(Reporting by Guo Shipeng; Editing by Nick Macfie)


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New Giraffe Species Threatened with Extinction

LiveScience.com Yahoo News 20 Dec 07;

What was thought to be one species of giraffe might actually be several, scientists said today, raising concern that one or more of the species could be on the brink of extinction.

A genetic study suggests there are six or more species in a region of Africa thought to have one.

“Some of these giraffe populations number only a few hundred individuals and need immediate protection,” said study leader David Brown, a geneticist at UCLA and an associate with the Wildlife Conservation Society. “Lumping all giraffes into one species obscures the reality that some kinds of giraffe are on the very brink.”

Classifying current subspecies as fully fledged species would force a re-examination of conservation initiatives in order to deal with the needs of each separate species of giraffe, according to a WCS statement.

Giraffes are the world's tallest animals.

The most threatened potential species:
The reticulated giraffe (currently Giraffa camelopardalis reticulata). Found in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya, this population was estimated at some 27,000 individuals until the 1990s. Poaching and armed conflicts have reduced this group down to 3,000 individuals. The Nigerian giraffe (currently Giraffa camelopardalis peralta): Found in West and Central Africa, only 160 individuals remain. The Rothschild giraffe (currently Giraffa camelopardalis rothschildi): Formerly found in western Kenya and Uganda, the last few hundred Rothschild giraffes can only be found in a few protected areas in Kenya and in Murchison Falls National Park in Uganda.

All giraffes are under threat, the researchers said, with the overall population dropping an estimated 30 percent in the past decade to fewer than 100,000 in all of Africa.

The study is detailed in the latest edition of the journal BMC Biology.


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Best of our wild blogs: 21 Dec 07

Artificial nesting boxes for our hornbills
on the bird ecology blog

Energy Tower Has Enough Energy for 15 Earths and Could End Global Warming? in the Got2BeGreen blog

Sluggy Merry Christmas
my vote for the cutest wild Christmas card yet on the colourful clouds blog

Creative Christmas at Sungei Buloh
an arts workshop in the mangroves on the art in the wetlands blog


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Johor: Flood mitigation plan for Sungei Muar

Chong Chee Seong, New Straits Times 20 Dec 07;

THE government has appointed a consultant to conduct an in-depth study of Sungai Muar and its landscape to draw up comprehensive flood mitigation plans.

Johor Drainage and Irrigation Department director Chong Chee Han said the RM4 million study would include the estuary of the river and will extend to Bukit Kepong, Labis and Buloh Kasap in Segamat.He said anti-flood measures would be carefully planned after the completion of the study in two years.

Chong said the department had found that the current floods in Johor, which began on Dec 5, had caused only minimal damage to infrastructure.

He said reports from flood-hit areas in the state submitted to him, to date, estimated damages at RM500,000, mostly to roads and bridges.
Chong said the floods were not as serious as those a year ago, which caused damage estimated at about RM210 million.

He said work to repair most of the damage last year had been completed.

Chong said the department had initiated another in-depth package study of four other rivers in Batu Pahat, Mersing, Kluang and the Iskandar Development Region costing RM45 million.

Accompanied by Bentayan state assemblyman Richard Lau Yew Wee, Chong inspected Sungai Bentayan and the cave-in of the sea-wall at the back of the Presbyterian church.

Chong said steps would be taken to repair the damage to the banks of Sungai Bentayan and remove the rubbish inside next year. The project is estimated to cost RM200,000.

He said the department would conduct an in-depth study to repair the affected stretch for the safety of thousands of students in nearby schools.

On the cave-in, Chong blamed tidal currents for the structural defects which began in the l960s.

He said to engage a consultant to study the damage to a 800m stretch and the coastal erosion, the department would need a RM40 million allocation.

He said as the river is about 300m from the residential areas, there was no imminent danger to residents although the areas were hit by floods recently.

The Living Waters Presbyterian Church's senior minister and moderator Reverend Peter Wee Poo feared the church and its quarters would sink into the Sungai Muar if the sea-wall was not upgraded immediately.


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Whale shark population visiting Ningaloo thrives

Science Alert Australia 21 Dec 07;
ECOCEAN

The population of whale sharks visiting Ningaloo, Western Australia, appears to be healthy according to the results of a new, twelve-year study in the upcoming issue of the international journal Ecological Applications*.

The study contradicts previous findings of declines in the Ningaloo population and presents a new approach to analyzing the species. With many global reports finding shark populations in decline, these results provide a glimpse of hope.

"The study suggests that the management practices at Ningaloo are working for the whale shark", said Rolex Awards for Enterprise Laureate and marine biologist Brad Norman. "It is vital that this knowledge be made available to other parts of the world already undertaking or embarking upon whale shark conservation and eco-tourism projects."

Mr. Norman says global concern over the whale shark's future remains justified because of apparent declines in places where whale sharks are still hunted for their fins and meat and in view of sharks' slow population recovery rates.

Cutting-edge software was used to collect data for long-term monitoring, analysis, and management of this local aggregation of one of the world's rarest creatures. The study incorporated 5100 underwater images contributed by hundreds of researchers, divers and ecotourists.

The Ningaloo study forms part of a broader, global project analyzing the vulnerability of the deep sea giant to extinction. Population models based on the photographs, which represent almost ten times more data collected than any previous study, indicated a modest increase in the number of whale sharks returning annually to the northern area of Ningaloo Reef from 1995-2006.

The study also demonstrated the robustness and reliability of computer-assisted photo-identification in combination with ecotourism as a new way of studying populations of rare and endangered animals at a relatively low cost. The marine environment is expensive to research, and this type of collaborative 'citizen science' is a cost-effective, achievable way of better understanding the seas.

"To study whale sharks in a meaningful way, we really had to rethink how we collect data and how we analyze it. We began our work from the ground up, building our own tools on a tight budget and designing our study to be collaborative from the start." said Jason Holmberg, a programmer and author on the study. "The results surpassed our expectations, allowing hundreds of individuals to contribute and providing the necessary data to obtain a closer look at the population's health. This model can be cross-applied to a lot of other research areas."

The study was started in 1995 by West Australian marine scientist Brad Norman. His US colleagues Jason Holmberg and Dr Zaven Arzoumanian adapted astronomical software (originally developed for use with the Hubble space telescope) to recognize the unique pattern of spots on the skins of individual whale sharks. This technology was used recently to identify the 1000th whale shark from over 12,000 photos collected by a global research network, a remarkable feat for so rare an animal.

The project received international recognition with a Rolex Award for Enterprise in 2006.

The authors of the study also discovered that approximately two-thirds of the sharks visiting the reef every year are returning after previous visits. However, the remainder passed through the study area without further resighting, suggesting that some sharks swimming the reef may only be short-term visitors.

Despite the encouraging news from Ningaloo, the authors of the study caution that little is still known about the habits of the giant fish, especially when it is in open ocean or down deep. Their ongoing work may hold a few more surprises. "This study is the tip of the iceberg for whale sharks. Every time we look at the data, we ask more questions. That's the real joy of exploration." says Dr. Arzoumanian.

Whale shark numbers increase at Ningaloo
The Age 25 Dec 07;

The future for the gigantic whale sharks of the Indian Ocean looks good, according to the results of a recent study.

The 12-year study, published in the journal Ecological Applications, contradicts previous findings that the Ningaloo whale shark population, off the coast of Western Australia, is in decline.

Murdoch University marine scientist Brad Norman believes the population increase is a result of good environmental management in the region.

"The study suggests that the management practices at Ningaloo are working for the whale shark," Mr Norman said.

Mr Norman, along with US colleagues Jason Holmberg and Dr Zaven Arzoumanian, analysed 5,100 underwater images contributed by hundreds of researchers, divers and ecotourists between 1995 and 2006.

The researchers used astronomical software (originally developed for use with the Hubble space telescope) to recognise the unique pattern of spots on the skins of individual whale sharks.

Population models based on the photographs indicated a small increase in the number of whale sharks returning annually to the northern area of Ningaloo Reef during the past 12 years.

The authors of the study also discovered that approximately two-thirds of the sharks visiting the reef every year are returning visitors.

The use of donated images, coined "citizen science", allows members of the public to contribute to the research effort via the project's Ecocean website (www.whaleshark.org).

"It's great to give people a sense of involvement in the project. You don't have to be a professor to become involved," Mr Norman said.

Mr Holmberg said taking in contributions from the public helped expand the study without adding to its cost.

"To study whale sharks in a meaningful way, we really had to rethink how we collect data and how we analyse it," Mr Holmberg said.

"The results surpassed our expectations, allowing hundreds of individuals to contribute and providing the necessary data to obtain a closer look at the population's health. This model can be cross-applied to a lot of other research areas."

The report's authors believe the whale sharks still face pressure from places where they are hunted for their fins and meat, and due to their slow population recovery rates.

They said little was still known about the habits of the giant fish, especially when it was in open ocean or deep below the surface.

"This study is the tip of the iceberg for whale sharks," Dr Arzoumanian said.

"Every time we look at the data, we ask more questions. That's the real joy of exploration."

© 2007 AAP

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Singaporeans – Asia's splurge kings

Today Online 21 Dec 07;

WHEN it comes to partying and eating this festive season, Singaporeans, it seems, are the kings of Asia.

Almost half of those polled — 41 per cent — said they would put on the glad rags and make merry this Christmas, while one in two would splurge on a lavish dinner with family and friends.

This, according to a recent GE Money survey of 2,000 of its employees in seven markets across the continent — China, South Korea, Japan, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore and the Philippines.

And guess what these people want most for a Christmas gift? Money.

Yes, an equal number (32 per cent) of Singaporeans and Filipinos would love a wad of notes. But certainly not as much as the Thais – with 37 per cent saying the rustle of crisp new notes in their pockets would be the best Christmas gift they could hope for.

Not the Japanese, Chinese and Koreans. Money was the least preferred present for our East Asian neighbours. They would rather opt for "accessories, including a watch".

But its also "easy come, easy go" for Singaporeans and Filipinos, who are just as fond of spending their money, with more than 50 per cent saying they would buy more than six gifts this year.

Credit card was the preferred mode of payment, with 91 per cent of Koreans using them, followed by the Chinese (78 per cent) and Singaporeans (59 per cent).

If money were no object, most Asians would want to fly away for the holidays — except the Japanese, 40 per cent of whom said they would rather stay at home. An overwhelming number of Filipinos (68 per cent) said they will attend church services.

Malls ringing up bumper festive sales
Booming economy, good bonuses have made shoppers more willing to spend
Lin Xinyi, Straits Times 21 Dec 07;

MALLS across Singapore are packing in the shoppers this festive season, with some reporting up to a third more traffic than last year.

And with four days of shopping left before Christmas, market watchers said sales are primed to shoot through the roof.

'It may very well be the best bumper Christmas ever,' said Mr Colin Tan, head of research at consultancy firm Chesterton International.

A booming economy, good bonuses and a positive outlook on the new year have all fuelled a 'feel good' mood that has consumers willing to spend, he said.

'Everywhere you go is crowded.

'I think people have been working very hard this year, so they've had less time to shop, but they are feeling generous and are looking for excuses to spend.'

Toys 'R' Us is one of the many Singapore retailers which has seen sales rise.

Some 1.3 million shoppers have walked through its doors so far this festive season, up from 950,000 for the same period last year.

Sales, too, have gone up by about 7 per cent, with Transformers figures, Lego sets and Rubik's Cubes among the top-selling items, said a Toys 'R' Us spokesman.

At Paragon, the management has noticed that shoppers have begun their Christmas hunt earlier and were willing to splurge more.

Instead of the traditional December rush, shops were thronging with buyers by the third week of November this year, said Paragon deputy general manager Patrina Tan.

Mr John Cheston, vice-president of the Singapore Retailers Association and chief executive of Robinsons department store, said the shopping climate is bullish.

Robinsons, a popular stop for many shoppers, is seeing low double-digit growth in both store traffic and sales, he said.

At Wisma Atria, where managers estimate at least 30 per cent more shoppers in the mall this year, stores are reporting good business.

Jeweller Goldheart, for instance, told The Straits Times that it was seeing 65 per cent more business this year than last.

Assistant brand manager Gary Goh said the weekly late-night shopping and in-house promotions have contributed to the sales.

That is a trend that Mr Tan of Chesterton International is seeing too. 'Shops which have promotions or specials are likely to benefit because they can capitalise on the shoppers' willingness to spend,' he said.

And people are not just spending on the city's main shopping thoroughfare, Orchard Road. Heartland malls are also experiencing brisk business.

According to Frasers Centrepoint, all its seven malls, including Northpoint (Yishun) and Compass Point (Sengkang), are getting an average of 15 per cent more traffic.

Meanwhile, people are putting pricier goods on their shopping lists this time around.

Jewellery, watches and electronics are hot gift items - possibly due to an expectation of large bonuses, said Ms Tan.

And retailers believe their busiest days are yet to come.

A Tangs Orchard spokesman said: 'Singaporeans tend to be last-minute shoppers, so we expect festive shopping to really pick up this week.'

Cash registers ring with glad tidings for retailers
Shops are jingling all the way to the bank as crowds embark on last-minute shopping sprees
Tan Dawn Wei, Straits Times 23 Dec 07;

IT WAS three days before Christmas, but at the gift-wrapping counter of Robinsons Centrepoint yesterday a hand-scrawled sign read: 'Gift tags, ribbons, boxes, gold wrappers - out of stock.'

Staffed by nine very busy workers speedily wrapping presents of all shapes and sizes, the counter was doing the briskest business in the entire department store.

Upon seeing the queue of at least 30 shoppers snaking around the counter, housewife Christine Goh, 42, decided she would wrap her presents herself.

'I still have more shopping to do, so I'd better not waste time queuing if I can help it,' she said. She was carrying two bags full of purchases.

The drizzle did not dampen shoppers' spirits as they braved the rain and crowds for some last-minute Christmas shopping.

Some, like IT consultant Raymond Chew, 38, said they had no choice but to do their shopping at the eleventh hour. He said: 'I've been too busy with work to even draw up my shopping list, so I have to be very focused today in getting all of the shopping done.'

Others had procrastinated.

'This is a critical weekend for us,' said Ms Ellen Yeo, vice-president of store management at Tangs. She expected the number of shoppers to surge by 20 per cent this weekend and extended the store's opening hours till midnight for yesterday and today.

Tangs has beefed up its manpower for the season by 20 per cent compared to last Christmas and 35 per cent over the usual level. Robinsons boosted its staff strength by 50 per cent.

But it will all be worth it. This Christmas is expected to be a bumper year for retailers.

Robinsons declined to give an estimate of its expected Christmas earnings. Senior commercial manager Jane Lee would only say it would be 'above last year's figures'.

With the buoyant economy and newly paid-out bonuses, shoppers have been spending on more luxury items, said Tangs' Ms Yeo, adding that luxury watches, MP3 players and toys have seen a jump in sales this year.

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Malaysia and Jakarta prepare for second wave of floods

Straits Times 21 Dec 07;

KUALA LUMPUR - MALAYSIA is on alert for an expected second wave of floods today, triggered by high tide.

The Meteorological Department yesterday issued a red alert warning on the prospect of heavy rain in north Johor.

It said moderate and occasionally heavy rain was expected in north Johor from late yesterday until today.

The red alert warning - the highest in the series of colour- coded weather alerts - is issued when heavy and widespread monsoon rains are expected to persist for several hours.

This phenomenon can cause floods in low-lying and riverine areas besides resulting in swift water currents.

The department also issued an orange alert for areas in south Johor and south Pahang. This second-highest warning is issued when moderate monsoon rain is forecast for several hours, with wind speed at 50kmh-60kmh.

The second wave of floods is expected to start today and get progressively worse until Dec 26. High tide is expected to hit 3.7m from 3.4m during the first wave of floods on Dec 10, with wind speed at 40kmh-50kmh.

The department's corporate communications director Muhammad Helmi Abdullah said the high tide phenomenon would hit Peninsular Malaysia's east coast and west Sarawak especially hard.

He said strong wind and choppy seas in the peninsula's east coast, Sarawak and west Sabah, including Labuan, are forecast to persist until Dec 29.

These conditions pose a danger to small boats, recreational activities and sea sports.

'I advise people to be extra careful on the sea and closely follow latest developments in weather conditions,' he said.

Sea water level in and around Johor during normal tide is about 2m.

He said the moderate rain now concentrated in south and east Johor and in north and south Pahang is expected to last until tomorrow, with the possibility of spreading to north Johor.

'Fine weather and less rain are expected in Perlis, Kedah, Penang, Perak, Kelantan and Terengganu,' he said.

BERNAMA

Jakarta warned of Christmas tidal floods
Jakarta Post 21 Dec 07;

JAKARTA (JP): A second high tide in less than a month is likely to hit Jakarta's shores on Dec. 23 and 24, said an Indonesian-Dutch tidal monitoring body.

The city's public works body said it has moved intopreparatory mode and is repairing coastal embankments in seven areas in North Jakarta.

Jakarta Flood Project, the Indonesian-Dutch partnership, said it has closely monitored tide levels and has calculated sea water levels on Dec. 23 and 24 would be as high as Nov. 26, when high-tides caused traffic mayhem along the city's airport toll road.

"Sea water levels are already very high," project leader JanJaap Brinkman was quoted in an email sent to The Jakarta Poston Thursday.

"The 190 centimeter mark was reached at ^YPasar Ikan^Y (Jakarta's fish market) today," JanJaap said.

"Tomorrow levels will increase again.

"It is almost certain that sea water levels will reach the same levels as on Nov. 26."


Read more!

Charity.net: How you can do good on the Web

Lynn Lee, Straits Times 21 Dec 07;

READERS always asked New York Times columnist Nicholas D. Kristof how they could help fight poverty.

In a column in March, the writer, who focuses on human rights, suggested they do so online. He was speaking from experience.

At Kiva.org, which provides information about entrepreneurs in poor countries, he lent US$25 (S$37) each to the owner of a TV repair shop and a baker in Afghanistan, as well as a single mother running a clothing shop in the Dominican Republic.

They used the money to expand their business, hire staff and boost their inventory.

This unconventional deal is known as microfinancing.The best part: It can be done online - via sites like Kiva - making the process effortless. And you don't need to be rolling in money to play a part.

Set up by a young American couple, Kiva matches lenders with loan-seekers whose businesses could do with a cash infusion of around $1,000 or less.

Most would otherwise have no access to loans at reasonable interest rates.

Kiva is just one example of the many organisations in the United States which are using the Web to 'lower the barriers to do good', says American PhD student Fred Stutzman in an article posted on the AOL Developer Network site.

These organisations have struck gold - simply because they have found a new way to tap the vast pool of goodwill that sometimes evaporates because of inertia and ignorance. Sites like Kiva let the well-meaning participate in charitable giving from the comfort of their own homes.

Don't know which charity to give to? A few clicks of the mouse will give you the lowdown on the different charities, from what they do to the size of their coffers.

Indeed, Web-based philanthropy could catalyse more people in super-wired Singapore to 'pay it forward'.

It will allow targeted giving. People can look for a specific cause online and read all about it before deciding to donate.

They might want to put their dollars towards fitting out a Jurong housewife's kitchen so her home bakery can get off the ground. Or pay to help set up a home office for a wheelchair-bound young man, so he can offer accounting services.

They will also jump at a wealth of information on hand to aid them in picking the right cause.

This is especially useful after the charity scandals that have plagued Singapore, leaving in their wake hesitant donors who are sometimes confused by the tangle of local and foreign social causes vying for their concern.

Individuals whose fortunes run to tens of millions and more can easily pay professional bankers who can source, screen and select philanthropic causes that suit their preferences.

But for the ordinary Joe who wants to give maybe tens or hundreds of dollars, charity via the reputable online intermediaries will be a useful platform to help him navigate the terrain.

Some US-based sites deserve recognition for how they have done this.

There is Change.org, where people can find others with similar pet causes and pick from around one million credible charity organisations.

There is also Charity Navigator (charitynavigator.org), an independent site which rates more than 5,000 US-based charities on a four-star scale.

It looks at how financially strong the organisation is, and how much of the funds it raises goes towards its cause, rather than on administration and fund raising - in the spirit of transparency.

Can there be a Singapore version of these two sites, which will help people make informed donations? Are there interested citizens out there willing to do the initial work?

Some groups have already made some headway in Web-based charity.

The Boys' Brigade annual Sharity Gift Box drive is one example. In its 20th year, it lists the 'wishes' of the needy online.

Donors can choose to donate essential food items such as rice and oil at emart.com.sg. This will then be distributed to needy families.

Or they can scroll through requests by children or families - who may want street soccer boots or a washing machine - and tell the Boys' Brigade via e-mail before buying them.

The Web can also serve to liven up the process of charitable giving - it does not have to be a solemn transfer of funds between the haves and the have-nots.

This year, sportswear giant Nike got in on the act by urging buyers of its sports kit -which uses Apple's iPod Nano to measure running distance - to 'clock' their results online.

For every 1km run, Nike gave $5 worth of products to underprivileged children through the Make-A-Wish Foundation, an organisation which works to grant the wishes of children with life-threatening illnesses.

Singapore foodies could take a page out of chezpim.com, where food bloggers have put together a raffle, offering autographed cookbooks, food hampers and restaurant meals as prizes.

Donors pay US$10 for tickets. The money raised will provide lunch for school children in Lesotho in Africa.

More organisations and individuals here should see how they can better harness the Internet's potential to get people on the giving train.

In his column, Mr Kristof tells of how he went from being a columnist to a microfinancier via his laptop. It will not take much for others to do the same.


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Being green online: Let's get together

Being green's more fun when you do it with online 'friends'. Meg Carter meets the men who believe that social networking can save the planet
The Independent 20 Dec 07;

Green brands tend to fall into one of two categories, believes internet entrepreneur Andy Hobsbawm. Either they are worthy, good-cause initiatives nibbling at the mainstream, or they are wannabes – established household names now eager to be seen as green.

Which is why, a little over a year ago, when he began looking around for an eco-friendly idea to become his latest venture, one thing was clear. "Without strong brands in the environmental space it will only ever be a worthy eco-ghetto, which just isn't enough," he explains. "We set out to create a green brand as great as the great brands already out there."

The result – Green Thing – is a new online community dedicated to urging us all to adopt a greener lifestyle.

Sign up to join at www.dothegreenthing.com and you will receive a monthly challenge – such as walking instead of driving short distances, turning your lights off early, or buying fewer things that are new – and an invitation to engage at a number of different levels. It's all sugar-coated with fun and entertaining content added to the Green Thing website throughout each month.

Short films are released every couple of weeks to keep the monthly challenge top of the mind.

Members will discover, too, an array of content contributed by well-known names. John Hegley and Tracy Chevalier have written rhymes and Howie B an original musical soundtrack for people to download then walk to. Former Darkness frontman Justin Hawkins, meanwhile, has written and recorded a new track called "Do It in the Dark", inspired by one of Green Thing's November films about turning off lights, featuring a glow-in-the-dark condom. December's green thing is to "buy an old thing, not a new thing" , a gently anti-consumerist message for Christmas, reinforced by a film about Mary and Joseph and photos of members' "old things".

Top creative talent from leading advertising and design agencies, music producers and film-makers have donated original content, too – inspired by Green Thing's aim to make greener lifestyles smart and sexy.

In exchange for all this fun stuff visitors are encouraged to "do the green thing" and log it via www.dothegreenthing.com each time they do. Green Thing then calculates both the amount of carbon dioxide that individual has saved and the running total of CO2 emissions saved by the community as a whole. Slip back into your bad old ways, however, and Green Thing will give you a nudge. Members collect Green Thing monsters, for example, which can be used on their profile pages or shared with friends. Log fewer green actions and eventually your neglected monster will fade Tamagotchi-style to sepia and start to cry.

Hobsbawm, whose day job is European chairman of interactive advertising agency Agency.com, conceived and developed Green Thing with Naresh Ramchandani, one of adland's best-known creatives, whose high-profile campaigns include ads for Maxell, Tango and Ikea.

"We had wanted to do something together for quite some time," Ramchandani explains from the far corner of the busy London media agency that has offered Green Thing's founders a rent-free floor tile or two on which to set up camp. Despite the two founders' industry profiles, both were keen Green Thing should be independent of commercial associations, so it has been developed and launched on a shoestring budget with much talent and resources provided free. "I'm all about making communications more engaging. Andy is all about creating communities online. It just made sense to pool our expertise."

It was Hobsbawm who proposed they do something positive for the environment. Despite sheepishly admitting to being the proud owner until recently of a car he will only describe as "a bit of a legacy from the dotcom boom days", he insists global warming and young children sharpened his environmental focus a number of years ago.

"My kids are six and three and a half now, but for quite a while I was wondering what I'd say to them when in 10 years' time they turn round to me and ask just what I was doing when climate change was going on," he explains. The challenge, however, was deciding just what to do. Both were keen not to get involved with selling green products.

"The trouble with other models – initiatives like Project Red, for example – is that the suggestion you can consume yourself out of a problem seems flawed," Hobsbawm says. "Even if you encourage people to buy more of the right kind of product, the fact remains you are encouraging consumption at a time when more consumption is part of the problem. So we decided to focus on something small, personal and intimate – individual action – rather than simply create yet another large, high-profile, mass-market campaign."

To be credible, however, it was essential that Green Thing was underpinned by solid insight and sound research. So having come up with the idea of setting up an environmentally focused online community, the pair sought advice and input from a cross-section of leading, international environmentalists to help them identify which tasks to encourage members to do and how best to structure the site.

With input from eco-luminaries including environmental activist Wangari Maathal; Cathy Zoi, a former environmental advisor to Bill Clinton; CarbonSense founder Antony Turner and WWF global policy advisor Jules Peck, they constructed the Green Thing site around the themes of reducing consumption, reusing and recycling across six basic categories including transport, energy, food and products. The monthly task is the simplest way that members can help to tackle each challenge, although the website is designed to lead the willing towards bigger and more far-reaching actions that generate a bigger environmental impact.

Green experts also helped the Green Thing team to calculate a value for the carbon saving of an individual member doing each monthly task once. For example, by substituting one two-mile drive with a two-mile walk – Green Thing's October challenge – you can save 0.67kg of carbon dioxide, based on recent government data analysis of research into distances travelled by different groups of people by different means. It may sound modest, but do it more often, then consider the combined saving made by the entire Green Thing community and the savings start to stack up.

www.dothegreenthing.com


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A wing and a prayer: How nature fared in 2007

It's been a tough year for many species. But others have thrived in 2007.
Peter Marren The Independent 20 Dec 07;

Winners and losers 2007

Losers

Eel (UK)

Where have all the eels gone? One of the staples of Cockney cuisine seems to have gone up in smoke. The slow rivers of eastern England, once a world stronghold for eels, have seen a 95% fall in eels since the 1970s. This is not only a misfortune for the eel, but also for rare species such as the otter and bittern which feed on it.

No one knows why eels have stopped visiting British rivers from their spawning grounds in the western Atlantic. Their journeys upriver are full of obstacles, such as weirs and dams, but many of these were there before. They are known to suffer from a parasitic worm that infests their swim bladders. But the most likely reason is changes in ocean currents triggered by climate change. Migrating eels are being fitted with satellite tags to find out.

Iberian lynx
It's enough to make a cat cry. Despite decades of legal protection, hundreds of studies, and millions of euros, this beautiful animal faces extinction in the wild. As recently as the 1980s, there were an estimated 1,000 lynxes in Spain and Portugal. Today there are just 100 left. Worse, there are only about 30 breeding females. Worse yet, their numbers are scattered, and only two small populations are viable.

Many lynxes are casualties of Spain's increasingly busy roads, but the main reason for the precipitate decline is starvation. Iberian lynxes are dependent on rabbits for food. But Spain's once-teeming rabbits have been reduced by disease: first myxomatosis, and now the VHD virus. Over large parts of Spain there are few, or no, rabbits left. Ultimately no rabbits means no lynxes. If it does die out, the Iberian lynx will be the first big cat to become globally extinct since the sabre-toothed tiger.

Humpback whales
Many people find recordings of the haunting song of the humpback whale strangely therapeutic. Gatherings of this vast and friendly whale are favourite destinations for wildlife tourists, and bring in welcome income. Very much against world opinion, Japan has decided to resume hunting them. Last month, a Japanese whaling fleet set sail for South Pacific waters with instructions to kill up to 1,000 whales, including 50 humpbacks.

Japan is exploiting a loophole in the international rules for whaling, which allow countries to kill a whale or two for the purpose of scientific study. Since 1986, Japan has harpooned 7,656 minke whales, including 1,234 last year. It has also resumed hunting the officially endangered fin whale. The meat and other whale products are sold to consumers at market.

Japan claims that humpback numbers are back to levels that can sustain hunting. This is disputed, since humpbacks live in close-knit pods, and even one death can damage their social structure. Years ago, Peter Scott pointed out that whales are the easiest animal on the planet to save. All we need to do is stop hunting them. But that, it seems, is too much to ask.

Yangtze River dolphin
This strange-looking animal is one of the oldest animals on earth, the last survivor of a family that split from other dolphins 20 million years ago. It hunts fish in one of the world's great rivers, the mighty Yangtze. But the last definite sighting of one was four years ago, and in 2007 it was declared extinct. This bad news may be premature. Last August a probable survivor was spotted and videotaped. But, say scientists, even if a few individuals are still out there, the species is "functionally extinct". The last Yangtze River dolphins are too old to breed.

Some 12 per cent of the human race live within the catchment of the Yangtze. The river is a major highway, with many dams, and is in places badly polluted. The Three Gorges Dam, to supply China's growing energy needs, may have been the last straw. The Yangtze River dolphin is the first large mammal to be declared globally extinct for 50 years.

The distinguished jumper (UK)
Meet Britain's unluckiest spider. A dashing little beast, its buggy eyes and fur might remind you of a teddy bear, except that the distinguished jumper is only half an inch long. It is confined to two brownfield sites, both of them threatened by development. At one, the West Thurrock Marshes, the Post Office wants to build a giant warehouse and a lorry park. This, remember, is the institution that bases its publicity material on friendly little red ants.

Lapwing (UK)
Talk to a birder about lapwings and watch their eyes go moist. Not all that long ago it was an unusual farm that didn't have at least a couple of lapwings in the summer, and many more feeding on the stubble later on. But numbers are plummeting, especially in the lowlands. The RSPB believe it may soon be confined to nature reserves.

It seems everything has gone wrong: land drainage, drought, loss of mixed farms, over-grazing and all-autumn sowing. With such a comprehensive range of problems, turning the situation round will not be easy.

Winners

Goldfinch (UK)

A flock of tinkling, yellow-flashing goldfinches has always been known as a charm: a charm of goldfinches. They are visiting our gardens in greater and greater numbers. This year the goldfinch overtook the starling as the 11th-commonest garden bird. At this rate there will soon be more goldfinches than sparrows (there already are in my garden).

What has caused this meteoric rise? The answer is probably the changing ways in which we feed our birds. A traditional bird table with scraps held little interest for this seed-eating finch. That changed with the rise of sunflower heads, and, especially, those narrow, black niger seeds that are now available in every pet shop. These oil-rich seeds are exactly the high-energy food a busy goldfinch needs, especially in the winter.

Mauritius parakeet
Not long ago it was billed as the world's rarest parrot (a title for which there is, unfortunately, stiff competition). It is the last survivor of a group of parrots inhabiting the Indian Ocean islands off Madagascar. 30 years ago it looked set to follow the others into oblivion: at one point there were only 10 ageing birds left. Introduced pigs devoured their favourite native fruits, and introduced rats ate their eggs. Not that the parrots had many places left to lay them in any case, since, thanks to clearances, the island was also running out of suitable old trees.

A dedicated effort was made to save them, and the solution was nest boxes. Designed to resemble a cavity in a hollow tree, the boxes are hung up on specially trimmed trees, with plastic sheeting stapled to the trunk to deter rats. And to make absolutely sure, rat poison is sprinkled on the ground below. There are now more than 300 Mauritius Parakeets and this year its status was changed from "critically endangered" to merely " endangered".

The Adonis Blue (UK)
All right, 2007 was among the worst years ever for British butterflies. But after the dull, rain-drenched summer things started to pick up in late August. And if you were walking on the downs, especially near the sea, you might have seen hundreds of these brilliant butterflies, coloured somewhere between lapis lazuli and the Mediterranean sky. To see even one Adonis Blue makes your day; to see them in large numbers is unforgettable.

Being rare, pretty and a butterfly guarantees you a lot of attention. Nature reserves have helped, as have farm stewardship payments. Together they mean more land is managed in ways that suit this very fussy butterfly than in the recent past. But the Adonis Blue also seems to be benefiting from climate change, and moving into places where it has not been seen for decades.

North Sea cod (UK)
Cod and chips is back on the menu. This week it is likely that quotas for North Sea cod will be lifted. For the first time in decades British fishermen are to be allowed to catch more cod. Stocks in the North Sea have shown a modest upturn, say fishery scientists, sufficient to sustain an increased fishery. European ministers will no doubt give themselves a pat on the back that our cod stocks have not followed those of Newfoundland into oblivion.

If so, the rejoicing may be premature. Numbers of mature cod are still only half of what they were in the 1960s. Some fear that raising the quotas will start a fishing bonanza that may wreck the progress made in the past 20 years. Still, in 2007 at least, cod is among the winners.

Polecat (UK)
For an animal that is rarely seen except as a squashed corpse on a country road, the polecat is doing remarkably well. Closely related to the ferret, but distinguished by an appropriately bandit-like black marking across its eyes, the polecat is among our least-known animals. In the past it was persecuted ruthlessly by gamekeepers, and if it had not had the uplands of Wales to hide out in, it would probably be extinct by now.

A recent survey carried out by the Vincent Wildlife Trust shows that polecats have reclaimed much of their former range in the English Midlands and south. Like the buzzard, it has benefited from a more relaxed attitude to predators. As well as fewer gamekeepers.

Canada goose (UK)
When you watch this noisy, sociable bird at a gravel pit or in a park it's hard to imagine it as anything other than a honking, screaming success. Yet a century ago it was a seriously endangered bird. In its native North America, where everyone had a gun, it was almost shot out of existence.

What saved the Canada goose was conservation. What turned it into one of the most successful large birds on earth is its tolerance to man. It likes our parks, lawns, golf courses and gravel pits. It likes the low numbers of predators in towns and even likes the bags of stale bread fed to it by urban goose fans. Pound for pound, this is the winner of winners.


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EU Seeks Unified Stance on Protecting Whales

PlanetArk 21 Dec 07;

BRUSSELS - The European Union's executive adopted proposals on Thursday to help the 27-nation bloc speak with one voice when it comes to protecting whales.

The species is already safeguarded in European waters but in all international waters. "One cause of this situation is the absence of a unified European Union position at the International Whaling Commission, which weakens the EU action and deprives it of possible leverage," the European Commission said in a statement.

It said the proposals would enable the bloc's 27 member states to agree a common stance ahead of IWC meetings -- the next one is in June 2008.

A common position would be based on support for the current moratorium on commercial whaling, the setting up of whale sanctuaries and encouraging the use of non-lethal methods to collect scientific data.

EU neighbours Norway and Iceland are the only nations to allow "commercial" whale hunts despite a two-decade moratorium on whaling by the International Whaling Commission.

By the end of August Norwegian whalers caught just over half their annual quota of 1,052 minke whales.

Japan catches hundreds of minke whales but says this is for scientific purposes. (Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Alison Williams)


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Songbird Killings in Cyprus Rise - Conservation Group

PlanetArk 21 Dec 07;

NICOSIA - Up to half a million migrating songbirds, mainly warblers and robins, were killed in Cyprus this year to end up pickled or fried as an illegal restaurant delicacy, a conservation group said on Thursday.

Wildlife groups have long campaigned against trapping of the tiny birds on the east Mediterranean island. The practice is banned but conservation group BirdLife Cyprus estimates some 500,000 birds were trapped this year.

Warblers and robins are the main targets, and the birds end up as a dish called "ampelopoulia." They are served pickled or fried in restaurants usually for three Cyprus pounds (US$7.3) each, the group said.

Trappers use fine mist nets in thickets of vegetation along the island's southeast coast to snare birds. (Writing by Michele Kambas, editing by Michael Kahn)


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Uganda chimps at forefront of pharmaceutical research

Lucie Peytermann Yahoo News 20 Dec 07;

Ugandan and French scientists have for months been observing the behaviour of a group of chimpanzees whose uncanny aptitude for self-medication could help their human cousins discover new drugs.

The great apes' ability to treat ailments by adjusting their diet has long been observed by scientists, including world-renowned primatologist Jane Goodall, but a project in Uganda's Kibale forest offers a unique opportunity for pharmaceutical research.

"It's the first time that a chimpanzee observation aimed at discovering new medicine for humans is conducted within a scientific framework," said Sabrina Krief, a French veterinary and professor at the Paris National History Museum.

Uganda is an ideal research ground for the scientists' double mission of better understanding the chimps' behaviour and using them as guides towards new molecules -- and potentially new drugs.

"Uganda happens to be a country where eight of the 16 centres of endemic plants in the whole of Africa converge," said John Kasenene, professor of botanics at the University of Makerere in Kampala.

The university is conducting the project in partnership with the Natural History Museum in Paris, France's National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) and the Uganda Wildlife Authority.

Should a new drug be discovered through the project, the memorandum of understanding signed by all the partners includes a revenue-sharing clause.

The Kibale equatorial forest, located some 250 kilometres (130 miles) west of the capital Kampala, offers a high concentration of primates.

"There are very few research stations in the world where chimps have been so well accustomed to being in the presence of human observers," said Krief, who heads the chimp project there.

The key moment in the observation is when one among the group of around 50 chimps she monitors gets sick.

The primate's choice of food -- what he pulls out of his medicine chest -- is packed with information that could lead the scientists to new discoveries.

"We want to compare which plants are used by the traditional healers or traditional practitioners, and the medicines used by chimpanzees. Is there a relation for the kind of treatment they go for?," Kasenene said.

At dawn the team collects the animal's faeces from under that night's nest and carry out a range of analyses.

Krief explained how a chimp named Yogi, suffering from intestinal worms, ingested Aneilema aequinoctiale leaves in the morning and Albizia grandibracteata bark in the evening.

Such plants have been used in traditional medicine in some areas and the Kibale team later confirmed through in vitro testing that they acted against parasites.

Another male chimpanzee who had been feverish and weak was observed eating only Trichilia rubescens leaves for a whole day.

The plants' molecules, later isolated by the scientists in a laboratory, were found to be effective against malaria.

"These findings have allowed us to discover new plant molecules with significant properties against malaria, worms or tumours," Krief said.

Dennis Kamoga, a botanics researcher from Makerere University, is tasked with collecting samples from plants ingested by chimps that will later be analysed in both France and Uganda.

"What is surprising to me is that these chimps have no chemist, no lab... They simply move in and collect plants and eventually find themselves getting cured," the 27-year-old marvelled. "It's a proof that they are very close to us."

Around 100 different kinds of plants have already been sampled in Kibale since the start of 2007.

"It's quite rare to find active molecules but especially new molecules which might put us on the path to developing new pharmaceuticals," which is the ultimate goal of the project, Krief said.

The French scientist said she hoped that, while advancing medicine for humans, the research project in Kibale could also contribute to "a better understanding and protection of the flora and the great apes" in the forest, both of which include critically endangered species.


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US Crop supplies "dicey" in 2008

USDA's Conner: Crop supplies "dicey" in 2008
Charles Abbott, Reuters 20 Dec 07;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. farmers will win the race to grow enough corn, wheat and soybeans to satisfy food, feed and biofuel needs although 2008 will be "very dicey," said acting Agriculture Secretary Chuck Conner on Thursday.

"I would never bet against our farmers on this issue," Conner said in looking ahead to 2008 crops. For the second year in a row, zooming demand for U.S. crops will require a huge harvest to avoid shortfalls. "We have said it is going to be very dicey."

The wheat stockpile is forecast to shrink to its smallest level in 60 years before the new crop matures next summer. The soybean stockpile also could drop by 68 percent by next fall while this year's record corn crop assures an ample supply well into 2008.

Livestock feeders face "a rough patch" with grain and soybean prices at record highs, "but we are going to get through," Conner said during a year-end review with reporters. He described the 2007 and 2008 crop years as a watershed time when more corn is needed to make fuel ethanol and disappointing wheat harvests in Australia and Europe deplete supplies.

President Bush signed an energy law on Wednesday requiring use of 36 billion gallons a year of renewable fuels, by 2022 with 15 billion gallons expected to come from corn-based ethanol. Production this year is forecast for around 6.5 billion gallons.

"I think we can march that (corn) production figure right up," said Conner, with the help of biotech seeds and improved cropping practices.

Farmers shifted land into corn in order to reap a record 13.168 billion bushels this year. High yields will be needed in 2008 to help meet demand for U.S. crops, says Darrell Good, University of Illinois economist. Good says high prices will encourage larger soybean and wheat plantings while corn sowings remain large, a difficult combination.

Conner also said:

--"We're watching very, very closely" to see if cropland should be released without penalty from the long-term Conservation Reserve. About 36.8 million acres are idled in the reserve. Contracts on 2.5 million acres, much of it in wheat country, expired this fall;

--Landowners show little interest in breaking Conservation Reserve contracts to return land to crops amid high market prices. Conner said it showed commitment to land stewardship. Landowners must refund their annual rent payments if they want to take land out of the reserve early;

--"We have not written off the possibility of reform in the farm bill." Congress should drop the ideas of higher crop support rates and tax increases in the bill, he said, and stop giving crop supports to the wealthiest Americans.

--There will not be a viable sugar-to-ethanol industry "with the current (sugar support) program as it stands." U.S. sugar prices are too high for ethanol to compete with lower-cost feedstocks, he said.

(Editing by Christian Wiessner)


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McDonald's Sees Restaurants as Green Laboratories

PlanetArk 21 Dec 07;

LOS ANGELES - From low-flow water faucets to converting French fry oil to fuel, McDonald's Corp is testing ways to reduce the impact its 31,000-plus restaurants have on the world's resources.

The hamburger chain, whose iconic brand and presence in 118 countries has made it the target of anti-globalization activists, is using its scale and broad franchise ownership to address the issue.

It is trying out a slew of individualized environmental initiatives, said Bob Langert, vice president of corporate social responsibility, in an interview, adding that it did not make sense to force one solution onto its entire system.

"In Japan, which is very land constrained, it's about waste. In Australia, the big issue is water," Langert said. "There is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to environmental initiatives."

In the last 20 years, McDonald's has made a variety of environmentally driven changes that are, for the most part, invisible to customers. They included reducing the amount and type of packaging it was using, moving a third of its fish purchases to more sustainable sources and implementing a program to buy goods made from recycled materials.

Langert became involved with the company's environmental initiatives after working on its 1988 move to eliminate containers made with chlorofluorocarbons, which were found to contribute to ozone depletion.

"We've eliminated the low-hanging fruit and medium-hanging fruit through the last 20 years," Langert said, but added that the pace of environmental change at McDonald's is picking up.

Increasingly, individual markets and franchisees are spearheading their own "green" initiatives, he said.

In Switzerland, for instance, the company installed dry urinals in its restaurants, cutting its water consumption by nearly 10 percent. Meanwhile in the United Kingdom, some restaurants are converting used frying oil into biodiesel that is used to fuel the trucks delivering goods to the stores.

In addition, in 2005 a franchisee in Savannah, Georgia, built the first McDonald's restaurant certified by the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system.


BREAK OUT THE LAB COATS!

The goal, Langert said, is to use the company's restaurants as "laboratories of green experimentation."

That way, something that works well in one market could later be expanded to the rest of the system. Langert likened the approach to the way some of McDonald's most popular menu items were conceived, with individual franchisees creating products such as the Egg McMuffin and the Filet-O-Fish before they were introduced in all of its restaurants.

Using cooking oil from the restaurants to fuel its distribution system, for instance, is one idea "that we can scale over time," Langert said, adding that "our prognosis is that that actually saves us money."

In addition, the company is trying out various new restaurant designs that incorporate more natural light and energy-efficient equipment.

So far, many of the adjustments McDonald's has made to combat climate change have been behind the scenes, including implementing "environmental scorecards" for its suppliers and joining a Greenpeace-led moratorium on buying soybeans from newly deforested areas in the Amazon.

The challenge going forward, Langert said, is to make changes in the restaurants that customers will not only accept, but appreciate.

Consumers, for instance, didn't like a switch to "greener" brown bags, saying they made the food seem less clean and fresh. The company switched back to white bags, while making other changes that included downsizing napkins and increasing the recycled content of Happy Meal boxes.

"We have to meet multiple needs," Langert said, referring to the balance between pleasing customers and making decisions for the business.

Earlier this year, a Happy Meal tie-in with the animated film "Bee Movie" included games that encourage children to make a positive difference to the environment. He added that the company has an opportunity to talk more to its customers about the environment and the measures it has taken.

"We need to shed more light on this," Langert said. (Reporting by Nichola Groom)


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Mexico's Biggest Clean up to Transform Refinery Site

PlanetArk 21 Dec 07;

MEXICO CITY - Mexico's oil monopoly Pemex is taking on the country's biggest ever environmental clean-up on land at a former refinery that will be turned into a huge park to mark the 200th independence anniversary from Spain.

Pemex will throw more than US$50 million to make a toxic and potentially cancer-threatening site into a park in the north of Mexico City. The former oil refinery operated for almost 60 years until it was closed down in 1991 because of pollution.

Engineers have found residual benzene, diesel and gasoline at depths up to 15 feet in the earth at the 136 acre site inside the sprawling city, which is home to more than 18 million people.

Various soil and land clean up techniques are being used at the site ahead of the scheduled Sept. 2009 handover to the government, which will then develop its park project ahead of the Sept. 2010 anniversary.

"The aim is to leave the land totally free of pollutants so it does not represent absolutely any environmental risk to health," Pemex chief Jesus Reyes Heroles said at a presentation of the plan Wednesday.

Around 250 workers are currently employed in the clean up that so far has involved removing 100,000 cubic meters of earth and will also need the removal of untold quantities of pipeline ducts and old railway tracks.

The government of President Felipe Calderon wants to open a park on the site, which is a third of the size of London's Hyde Park, with tentative plans for an aquarium and a major reforestation.

"We want it to be another lung for Mexico City," Reyes Heroles said.

Chapultepec park is the city's main park. The old refinery site, which has little construction left as Pemex dismantled and rebuilt various parts of it at other installations after it was closed down, will be slightly smaller than Chapultepec. (Reporting by Chris Aspin; Editing by Marguerita Choy)


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Bush says nuclear energy 'best' for greenhouse gases

Yahoo News 20 Dec 07;

US President George W. Bush said Thursday that nuclear power represents the "best solution" to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and stressed he was serious about fighting climate change.

Bush said he told Nobel peace laureate and former vice president Al Gore that he takes the issue of greenhouse emissions "seriously" and that his administration was "developing a strategy that will deal with it."

At a White House press conference, Bush said his administration was working on climate issues from several fronts, including signing a bill making automobiles more fuel efficient, but said nuclear energy was another key.

"If you are truly serious about dealing with greenhouse gases, it seems like you should be a strong supporter of nuclear power," he said.

"I certainly am, and applaud efforts by members of the congress to provide incentives for the construction of new plants ... It is the best solution to making sure we have economic growth and at the same time be good stewards of the environment."

The US leader reiterated the US position that in order for any global treaty on reducing greenhouse gases to be effective all emitting countries "needed to be at the table."

"One of the main reasons I was against Kyoto was that China was not at the table," he told the press conference.

"We could do all we wanted to do, but it would not affect the greenhouse gases over the long run unless a country like China had agreed ... to participate in the strategy."

World negotiations on climate change in Bali, Indonesia, nearly collapsed this month as the US government insisted any successor to the Kyoto treaty must acknowledge a nation's sovereign right to pursue economic growth.

"It is hard to develop the technologies necessary to be able to make sure our standard of living remains strong and deal with greenhouse gases if you are broke," Bush said Thursday.

He was speaking the day after the US government rejected a request by California to be allowed to introduce tough new vehicle emissions standards, dealing a blow to its hopes of slashing greenhouse gas levels over the next decade.

The Environmental Protection Agency said in a statement that after consideration of the requests by California it had found there were no "compelling and extraordinary conditions" to grant a waiver.

The EPA instead said legislation Bush signed this week was a step towards a "clear national solution" towards curbing greenhouse gas emissions rather than a "confusing patchwork of state rules."

Bush said the issue was how to put together an effective strategy for the country as a whole.

"Is it more effective to let each state make a decision as to how to proceed in curbing greenhouse gases? Or is it more effective to have a national strategy?" he asked.


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