Singapore youths launch campaign to reduce plastic usage

Channel NewsAsia 12 Jan 08;

SINGAPORE : Singapore is a big consumer of plastic.

In 2006, plastic is the third most disposed of waste (with 656,800 tonnes disposed) and it is also one of the least recycled.

To reduce the use of plastic this year, three students from the Nanyang Technological University along with the Environmental Challenge Organisation have launched a [minus] plastic campaign.

They hope this will raise the awareness of responsible consumerism which will eventually lead to a sustainable lifestyle among the youth.

They aim to get at least 10,000 pledges by the end of the month through their website.

Once this target is reached, the team plans to target corporations by submitting proposals to them so that the use of plastic can be even further reduced. - CNA/ch

LINKS

[minus]plastic website with links to the [minus]plastic blog where celebrities take a 7-day challenge to reduce their plastic bag use and the [minus]plastic forum where you can learn and discuss plastic issues.


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Best of our wild blogs: 12 Jan 08


New bird species sighted in Singapore
on the bird ecology blog

World's Worst Predator
a review of SharkWater on the cooler insight blog

Plastic bags and marine life
a summary of recent articles and initiatives on the singapore celebrates our reefs blog

Post-Bali UN Climate Change Conference: What lies ahead? ISEAS seminar on 16 Jan on the ISEAS website

The environmental impact of India's Nano car
from New Scientist Environment Blog


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Garbage kills: At least 19 bald eagles die in Alaska

Yahoo News 12 Jan 08;

At least 19 bald eagles died Friday after gorging themselves on a truck full of fish waste outside a processing plant.

Fifty or more eagles swarmed into the truck, whose retractable fabric cover was open, after the truck was moved outside the plant, said Brandon Saito, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service who coordinated the recovery operation.


The birds became too soiled to fly or clean themselves, and with temperatures in the mid-teens, began to succumb to the cold. Some birds became so weak they sank into the fish slime and were crushed.

The truck's contents had to be dumped onto the floor of the Ocean Beauty Seafoods plant so the birds could be retrieved. Some tried to scatter, but since they couldn't fly, wildlife officers soon retrieved them. The eagles were then cleaned with dish soap in tubs of warm water to remove the oily slime and warm them.

The survivors were taken to a heated fish and wildlife warehouse to recover, though some were in critical condition. Saito said they would be released as soon as they were dry and strong enough.

The dead birds will be shipped to a U.S. Department of Interior clearinghouse, where Native American groups could apply to be given the birds or their feathers for ceremonial purposes.

Requests for interviews from Ocean Beauty officials were not returned.

Commercial fishing is the main industry in Kodiak, a city of about 6,000 on Kodiak Island on the south coast of Alaska.


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Ocean carbon fix using iron is unproven, marine scientists say

Alex Morales, Bloomberg 10 Jan 08;

Jan. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Releasing iron into the ocean to stimulate the capture of carbon dioxide and alleviate global warming is an unproven method, and shouldn't be rewarded with pollution credits, marine scientists from around the world said.

The technique, known as ocean iron fertilization, uses the metal to stimulate the growth of microscopic plants that absorb and trap carbon dioxide from the air. Some private groups are planning to use the process to generate so-called carbon credits, tradable pollution permits, the scientists say in tomorrow's edition of the journal Science, without naming the organizations.

While trials of the process have increased scientific understanding, there isn't yet enough proof that it can be used as an effective way to trap carbon dioxide, the main gas blamed for global warming, the scientists, led by Ken Buesseler at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, say.

"As yet, there is no scientific basis for issuing such carbon credits for ocean iron fertilization," they wrote. "Adequate scientific information to enable a decision regarding whether credits should be issued could emerge from reducing uncertainties; this will only come through targeted research."

The researchers proposed field studies be conducted across a wider portion of ocean and a longer period of time. They also suggested an investigation of the effects on seabirds, fish and marine mammals of adding iron to the ocean.

"While we do envision the possibility of iron fertilization as an effective form of carbon offsetting, we believe larger scale experiments are needed to assess the efficiency of this method and to address possible side effects," one of the paper's authors, Professor Andrew Watson of the U.K.'s University of East Anglia, said in a statement. "There remain many unknowns and potential negative impacts."

Other institutions whose scientists contributed to the paper include the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, Stanford University in California and establishments in New Zealand, the Netherlands, India and Germany.

RELATED ARTICLES

Blooming stupid: Why ocean fertilisation could do more harm than good

Hold back the geo-engineering tide
Kristina Gjerde, BBC News 11 Dec 07;

Ocean Fertilization 'Fix' For Global Warming Discredited By New Research
Science Daily 30 Nov 07;

Iron dumping solution to global warming needs more research, warns IUCN
Proposed global warming solution needs more scientific research, IUCN warns
UN Observer 19 Nov 07; and IUCN website

Iron is a tonic for climate-saving plankton
Jim Loney and Michael Christie, Reuters 18 Nov 07;


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Littering in Singapore: What does it take to solve this filthy problem?

Lynn Lee, Straits Times 12 Jan 08;

THE man sheepishly picked his cigarette butt off the floor. He then refused to get into the same lift, saying he would take the stairs.

Bukit Purmei resident Walter Lim recalls this encounter as he describes how he reproached his neighbour for littering at the lift landing.

'Since that day, the lift lobby seems cleaner,' says the 37-year-old corporate communications director, who believes there is no harm in gently ticking off litterbugs.

Indeed, he thinks more Singaporeans could take his lead to 'police' those who treat common spaces like their rubbish bin.

Many years of anti-littering campaigns and a host of penalties do not seem to have quashed litterbugs here.

Last year, the National Environment Agency recorded a whopping 21,269 littering offences after it stepped up checks. It was a three-fold rise over the previous year.

Recalcitrant litterbugs were among them, with 533 Corrective Work Orders issued - a more than four-fold increase over 122 from the year before.

Common excuses they give include 'forgetting to throw their litter, having the wind blow it away, or simply missing their 'target' - the litter bin', recounts Senior Parliamentary Secretary (Environment and Water Resources) Amy Khor.

At least, that is what she hears from constituents who appeal to her against their littering fines.

What will make litterbugs turn over a new leaf? Will harsher penalties work, or perhaps the use of security cameras to catch culprits in action?

Insight digs up the dirt on this filthy habit.

Why littering is so hard to sweep away
Straits Times 12 Jan 08;

They have been fined. They have been forced to pick up rubbish in public. But Singapore's litterbugs are unrepentant, with a record number caught last year. Time for more draconian measures? LYNN LEE and PEH SHING HUEI scour for some answers
LAST week, while she was sweeping the foot of a block of flats in Hougang, a cigarette butt plopped onto cleaner Thanapackiam Somoo's head.

Unperturbed, she flicked it off. She is used to it and it is not the worst type of trash hurled from high-rise flats or chucked in stairwells, the 50-year-old tells Insight.

She has come across old mattresses, clothes, textbooks, broken appliances, kitchen scraps, soiled sanitary pads and - get this - used condoms.

With an abashed grin, she says: 'So pai seh lah, but I have to pick it up.'

Her tale barely skims the surface of Singapore's dirty little secret: Litterbugs are lording over us.

The National Environment Agency recorded 21,269 littering offences last year after it stepped up its checks. This was up from 7,027 in 2006 and 3,819 the year before.

Festive days are when litterbugs strike. On New Year's Day for instance, the trash toll from bins and the street can snowball to six tonnes.

Cigarette butts are the top trash item - they make up over a third of all litter.

The lack of social responsibility is disappointing, given how keeping Singapore litter-free has been at the forefront of the national consciousness for decades.

Early efforts began 40 years ago in 1968, when then-Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew launched the Keep Singapore Clean campaign.

He said then: 'No other hallmark of success will be more distinctive than that of achieving our position as the cleanest and greenest city in South-east Asia.'

Singapore has attained that position. Tourists gawk at its clean streets while international rankings trumpet it as the best place to live for Asian expatriates and the top Asian city to live, work and play in.

But beneath the shiny surface lies the scruffy truth - that being litter-free still does not come naturally to people.

Forty years on, even Mr Lee concedes that he will not see a gracious Singapore in his lifetime. 'It will take time, but I hope it will come with cultivated living over a long period of time,' he said at a dialogue on Monday.

Have penalties to deter people from littering failed? Will more draconian measures be the only way to get them to put their trash where it belongs - in the bin?

A 'cleaned' city

WHERE'S the litter, one might ask, surveying the city landscape early one morning.

The answer: The cleaners have already cleaned it up.

It led MP Masagos Zulkifli (Tampines GRC) to lament: 'We are a cleaned city, rather than a clean city.'

Indeed, a whole army of cleaners is hired by the agencies in charge of Singapore's public spaces.

The star of the clean-up show is the National Environment Agency (NEA), responsible for areas like roads and underpasses.

Its cleaning bill came to $34 million last year. On its payroll: 1,200 men and women, who ensure 7,000km of roads and 4,500km of pavements, among other areas, look good.

Areas like parks, state land and industrial space come under different agencies.

In the heartland, the job of keeping the surroundings spick and span falls on the 16 town councils, of which 14 are run by the People's Action Party (PAP).

It is a job taken seriously.

One cleaner is hired for every 170 to 200 flats. That translates to around 6,000 cleaners across the PAP town councils.

From dawn till mid-day, they sweep common corridors, clear piles of junk mail strewn around the letter-box areas, and empty common trash bins in the void decks.

The cleaning bill accounts for between 16 and 20 per cent of PAP town councils' operating expenditure.

At Aljunied Town Council, for instance, the bill came to around $4.2 million last year.

Says MP Teo Ho Pin (Bukit Panjang), coordinating chairman of the PAP town councils: 'We pay great attention to cleanliness, as that's one of the first things residents notice.'

A persistent pest

IF SINGAPOREANS are so concerned with cleanliness, why is littering still a problem?

Past street polls by The Straits Times had people saying that it was 'too inconvenient' or they were 'too lazy' to dispose of their trash properly.

An NEA survey last year of more than 3,000 people, half of whom are litterbugs, revealed several common characteristics among those prone to littering.

Litterbugs tend to be men aged below 30, not very highly educated, and smokers.

Some Singaporeans want to add foreigners and new citizens - especially those from developing countries - to the list. But Senior Parliamentary Secretary (Environment and Water Resources) Amy Khor says it is a misperception.

What is more worrying, she says, is the growing trend - especially among youngsters - to think it is all right to litter because someone will pick up the trash.

'I hope it is not because the maid-assisted lifestyles at home of many have led them to think that there is always someone to clean up after them,' she adds.

Cleaner Buhari Hussain, 61, agrees. He has been keeping three HDB blocks in Lorong Ah Soo clean for the past three years.

'People always throw things next to the lift - like boxes, plastic bags and food. More when it's around Chinese New Year,' he says.

'When I tell them to take it to the rubbish dump nearby, they scold me and say, 'But I'm paying money to the town council to hire cleaners'.'

The residents are referring to the conservancy charges that households pay. The amount, depending on the size of their flat, ranges from under $20 to over $80 a month after rebates.

Bring on Big Brother

THE attitude that cleaning up is the job of those paid to do so, likely explains why littering is rampant here.

In other places, plain indifference to the state of public cleanliness is another cause of why chewing gum and cigarette butts stick on sidewalks in the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia.

Penalties are in place - Australia has 'on the spot' fines that can run into the hundreds of dollars - but what stands out are community efforts to keep littering at bay.

In the American city of Pittsburgh, volunteers have formed the group Citizens Against Litter, while local British companies have 'adopted' beaches, which they clean up several times a year.

In Singapore, schools and town councils have launched extensive campaigns urging residents to keep the estates litter-free.

Fines have gone up, from $25 in 1965 to $200 for first-time offenders today.

Public shaming has been in place for 16 years, with recalcitrants given Corrective Work Orders (CWO) to spend up to three hours cleaning public areas like the East Coast Park, while wearing a brightly coloured vest.

Despite a total of 4,792 CWOs meted out since 1992, there was a more than four-fold jump last year from 2006, with 533 tickets issued, up from 122.

Is it time for more draconian measures to combat this stubborn scourge?

Straits Times reader Jonathan Toh, who wrote to the Forum page last week, says yes.

He is suggesting a blacklist of repeat offenders so they have lower priority when applying for government jobs, university and polytechnic places and vehicle COEs.

'Also, give them zero chance of National Day Parade tickets, Safra and NTUC membership,' he adds.

MP Charles Chong (Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC), who heads the Government Parliamentary Committee for National Development and Environment, suggests more closed-circuit cameras.

'CCTVs are a big deterrent. When we had a lot of break-ins in a precinct in the past, we increased the patrols by the police. It didn't work.

'Once we installed the CCTVs, the break-ins disappeared. They knew that Big Brother was watching.'

But most MPs prefer a continuation of current efforts of education and enforcement.

MP Dr Teo says residents can inform the town councils about the litterbugs in their estates so they can be 'educated'.

Residents can also speak up, says Mr Wilson Ang, the head of environmentalist group Eco Singapore. He himself has no qualms telling people that they have 'dropped their stuff' accidentally.

'People are quite receptive and they feel bad doing so and they would pick it up and discard it. This is because they know it is wrong.'

Blogger Lam Chun See, who blogs frequently against littering, even suggests, half in jest, that a Litter Zone be set up for the litterbugs to throw stuff to their hearts' content.

But a look back at past efforts shows that litterbugs do respond to a harsh blitz.

After the law allowed flat owners to be evicted for throwing killer litter, the number of such offenders dipped from 36 in 1984 to 14 a year later and further down to four in 1986.

Who knows, the spectre of tough laws could loom large in the litterbug's consciousness the next time he feels like 'dropping his stuff'.

While a police state-like stance against littering will not bode well for the image and reputation of this First World nation, it may be necessary until courtesy comes naturally.

And it may not be a bad thing if it means that Singapore becomes a cleaner - not cleaners' - city.


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Where have all the flowers gone?

Letter from Anthony Yeo, Straits Times Forum 12 Jan 08;

FOR many years as I drove to my office in Hong Lim Complex, I was greeted by a row of luxuriant flowering cannonball tress lining Cross Street beside China Square.

This must be one of the most nurtured rows of cannonball trees here, with beautiful scented flowers blooming every other day.

Not only were these trees a refreshing sight to behold on my way to work, but the aromatic scent of its flowers also often awakened my senses whenever I stopped at the traffic junction of Cross Street and South Bridge Road.

Now these trees are gone except for one lone tree standing amid concrete patches covering the places where the other trees once stood.

That was the shocking welcome I received on my way to work the other day, on my return from vacation.

What used to be a refreshing sight has left me in grief over the cruel demolition of such beautiful flowering trees that provided sight, scent and shade.


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Malaysian farmers hit by low vegetable prices

Straits Times 12 Jan 08;

Good harvest and imports from China cause oversupply, leading some growers to dump produce

IPOH - JUST as Malaysia bounces back from a cooking oil shortage, it is now facing a glut of greens.

A bumper harvest due to good weather, combined with imports from China, has resulted in a sharp rise in the supply of vegetables leading to a corresponding fall in price.

The glut marks a turnaround from the short supply that Malaysia experienced just last month, when floods drove up prices of greens such as round cabbages and spinach by 40 to 50 per cent.

Then, buyers were expecting to live with the high prices in the run-up to Chinese New Year, but now farmers are being hit hard by plummeting prices of vegetables such as choy sum, spinach and kangkong.

Choy sum prices, in particular, have hit an all-time low, dropping by as much as 75 per cent in the last two weeks, and some farmers are even dumping the near-worthless greens.

Farmer K.S. Ho was on his way back from his plot in Chemor when he stumbled upon six baskets of choy sum left next to a river.

'My guess is that wholesalers were reluctant to buy them because of the low price, and farmers had no choice but to get rid of them,' he said.

Farmer Yong Ah Choon said on Wednesday that he was getting between 50 sen and 60 sen for a kilo of choy sum. 'Two weeks ago, choy sum fetched between RM1.50 (S$0.66) and RM2 a kilogramme, but today it has gone down drastically,' he said.

Another farmer, Mr Liew Yow Fatt, 48, lamented that the price of local greens had been dropping since Christmas.

'The weather here has been good and there is more supply than demand,' said the Kinta Farmers Association chairman.

The import of greens from China, he added, had resulted in vegetables flooding the market. 'Greens like spinach and kangkong are very cheap now,' he said.

But the glut is not across the board - farmers have indicated that red and green chillies and bitter gourd are still fetching high prices.

They also complained about the rising cost of fertilisers. The price of a 50kg packet of fertiliser has gone up from RM75 to RM110, with some expecting to see it hit RM120 by next month.

In Singapore, prices of vegetables such as kangkong, spinach and xiao bai cai have been dropping.

Prices of greens in Singapore had gone up earlier because of the floods in Malaysia, which usually supplies the Republic with about 300 tonnes of vegetables each day.

But the impact was softened because vegetable stocks are flowing in from local farms and other countries such as China, Thailand, Australia and Indonesia.

THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK


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Glitch at CNG car refuelling station

Christopher Tan, Straits Times 12 Jan 08;

A BREAKDOWN at Singapore's solitary compressed natural gas (CNG) refuelling station is causing drivers of the 420 or so 'green' bi-fuel vehicles here to see red.

Such vehicles run on both CNG and petrol.

The glitch occurred on New Year's Eve, when a compressor at the SembCorp Gas-owned Jurong Island station failed. One of the station's two pumps became inoperable. As for the remaining pump, it has to pause for up to 15 minutes after filling three to five vehicles.

Mr Ang Kwang Wee, who drives a bi-fuel Toyota Picnic, said that since the breakdown nearly two weeks ago, drivers typically have to queue at least one hour to fill up.

The 46-year-old project manager, who works on Jurong Island, said: 'I pity the taxi-drivers who come from all over and have to wait up to two hours.'

Product manager Lim Sim Leng, 45, who drives a bi-fuel Mercedes Vito, said: 'I'm upset, since that's the only station around. I'm running on petrol now.''

SembCorp Gas director Francis Gomez told The Straits Times that repairs will be carried out this weekend, and that it took time because spare parts had just arrived.

'The pumps will be back to normal by this Sunday, or Monday at the latest,' Mr Gomez said. He said the failure was 'one in a thousand, or even one in a million', which was why the company did not keep spares.

Meanwhile, SembCorp Gas will open a new CNG refuelling kiosk at Singapore Petroleum Company's Jalan Buroh station later this month. Smart Taxis will open another in Mandai next month.

Mr Gilbert von der Aue, sales manager at C. Melchers, a German firm that is converting petrol cars to run also on gas, said: 'The fact that the Jurong Island station has operated for five years without breaking down is a good thing.'


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Swiss solar firm sets up plant, Asian HQ in Singapore

Chew Xiang, Business Times 12 Jan 08

A SECOND solar equipment manufacturer is moving into Singapore, following Norway's Renewable Energy Corporation (REC) which announced a $6.3 billion plant last October.

Oerlikon Solar, a unit of the Swiss technology group OC Oerlikon, is investing at least 30 million Swiss francs (S$38.9 million) in a facility here.

The plant, to be completed by the first quarter of 2009, will develop and produce equipment to manufacture thin-film solar modules comprising arrays of individual solar cells.

The facility will be Oerlikon Solar's Asian headquarters and will house sales, research, logistics and operations centres, as well as a thin-film pilot line for product certification.

The company is now recruiting up to 100 people, mostly highly qualified engineers and other professionals. Singapore 'is a unique environment from a business perspective', said the company's chief executive, Jeannine Sargent.

Its infrastructure 'can handle the demands of this very strong growth market' and it has 'a very strong academic environment' supported by research institutions, she added.

The company already has two customers from Taiwan. It expects Asian demand for solar panels to grow to more than double that of the US and Europe by 2010.

Oerlikon Solar has an existing facility in Truebbach, in Switzerland, and the new plant here will double the company's production capability when it is ready.

The facility will support a different solar technology from REC's. Thin-film solar modules use only a very thin layer of photovoltaic material - that converts light to electricity - sandwiched between panels of glass. This means less raw material is needed compared to traditional solar technology which uses silicon wafers - the kind that REC is producing.

Economic Development Board (EDB) managing director Ko Kheng Hwa said: 'The Oerlikon project is expected to generate a strong demand for the component suppliers and equipment contract manufacturers.

'Oerlikon's facility here will create significant spin-offs for our supporting industry and provide opportunities for them to upgrade, diversify and enter the new high-growth area.'

The EDB expects the clean energy industry to contribute $1.7 billion to Singapore's economic output and create 7,000 jobs by 2015.


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Don't forget the ills of globalisation

Letter from Lai Yew Chan, Today Online 12 Jan 08;

I REFER to the letter, "Break barriers … with a burger" (Jan 10).

While we rejoice that the world is closer through the sharing of global brands, we must be mindful that globalisation does not come without its disadvantages. For one thing, workers are displaced as manufacturing moves to places in which they enjoy less bargaining power for wages.

Also, even with inter-country barriers to technology, migration and capital flows torn down, is the world a more cohesive place? A reality check is in order. Another financial crisis across the region is possible.

Therefore, enjoy the fruits of globalisation by all means, but remember that its ills call for our attention.


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Cheap China goods, but at what cost?

David Barboza, New York Times Today Online 12 Jan 08;

"At Wal-Mart, Christmas ornaments are cheap, and so are the lives of the young workers in China who make them,"

Factory conditions are much better, but China workers still have it tough

Nearly a decade after some of the most powerful companies in the world — often under considerable criticism and pressure — began an effort to eliminate sweatshop labour in Asia, labour rights groups say that worker abuse is still common in many Chinese factories that supply Western companies.

The groups say some Chinese companies routinely underpay their employees, withhold health benefits and expose them to dangerous machinery and harmful chemicals, including lead, cadmium and mercury.

"If these chemicals are so dangerous for the consumer, then how about the workers?" said Ms Anita Chan, a labour rights advocate who teaches at the Australian National University. "We may be dealing with these things for a short time, but they deal with them every day."

While American and European consumers worry about exposing their children to Chinese-made toys coated in lead, Chinese workers, often as young as 16, face far more serious hazards. In the Pearl River Delta area near Hong Kong, for example, factory workers lose or break about 40,000 fingers every year, according to a study by the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

Pushing to keep big corporations honest, labour groups regularly smuggle photographs, videos, pay stubs, shipping records and other evidence out of factories that they say violate local law and international worker standards.

Last year, factories in China that supplied corporations, including Wal-Mart, Disney and Dell, were accused of using child labour, forcing employees to work 16-hour days and paying workers less than the minimum wage, which is about US$0.55 ($0.79) per hour.

In recent weeks, a flood of reports detailing labour abuse has been released. The timing could not have been worse, as China is still coping with last year's wave of made-in-China product recalls.

No company has come under harsher scrutiny than Wal-Mart. In 2006, it sourced about US$9 billion in goods — from hammers to high-definition televisions — from China.

Last month, two non-governmental organisations (NGOs) documented what they said were abuse and labour violations at 15 factories that supplied goods to Wal-Mart — including the use of child labour at Huanya Gifts, a factory in Guangzhou that makes Christmas tree ornaments. Wal-Mart officials said they were investigating the allegations, which had been published in a report issued three weeks ago by the National Labour Committee, a New York-based NGO.

The report criticised Wal-Mart for not doing more to protect workers. The NGO charged that last July, Huanya Gifts recruited about 500 16-year-old high school students to work seven days a week, often for as long as 15 hours a day, during peak production months.

Some high school students later went on strike to protest the harsh conditions, the report said. The students also told labour officials that at least seven children, as young as 12 years old, worked in the factory.

"At Wal-Mart, Christmas ornaments are cheap, and so are the lives of the young workers in China who make them," the report said.

Disney and Dell have also been criticised by labour rights groups. Company officials declined to comment on specific allegations, but both companies said they monitored factories in China and took action when they found problems or unfair labour practices.

Many multinationals were criticised in the 1990s for using suppliers that maintained sweatshop conditions. Iconic brands including Nike, Mattel and Gap formed corporate social-responsibility operations and worked with contractors to create a system of factory audits and inspections. These changes have won praise in some quarters for improving conditions.

But despite spending millions of dollars and hiring thousands of auditors, some companies admit many of the programmes are flawed.

"The factories have improved immeasurably over the past few years," said Alan Hassenfeld, Hasbro chairman and co-chairman of Care, the ethical-manufacturing programme of the International Council of Toy Industries. "But let me be honest: There are some bad factories. Bribery and corruption occur, but we are doing our best."

Some factories are warned about audits beforehand and some factory owners or managers bribe auditors. Inexperienced inspectors may also be a problem.

Chinese factories regularly outsource to other suppliers, who may in turn outsource to yet another operation, creating a supply chain that is hard to follow — let alone inspect.

Many labour experts say part of the problem is cost: Western companies are constantly pressing their Chinese suppliers for lower prices while also insisting that factory owners spend more to upgrade operations, treat workers properly and improve product quality.

At the same time, rising food, energy and raw material costs in China — and a shortage of labour in the biggest southern manufacturing zones — are eating into factory owners' profits.

The situation may get worse before it improves. The new labour law that took effect on Jan 1 makes it more difficult to dismiss workers and has created new laws that will almost certainly increase labour costs.

Yet, it may become more difficult for human rights groups to investigate abuses. Concerned about the growing threats to their profitability, and embarrassing exposés, factories are heightening security, harassing labour-rights groups and calling the police when journalists show up at their gates.

"China has too many factories. The workers' bargaining position is weak and the government's regulation is slack," said Mr Liu Kaiming, director of the Institute on Contemporary Observation, which aids migrant workers in Shenzhen.

At the root of the problem is a labour system that relies on young migrant workers. Many leave small rural villages for two or three-year stints at factories, where they hope to earn enough to return home to start families.

As long as life in the cities promises more money than rural areas, they will brave the harsh conditions in factories. And as long as China outlaws independent unions and proves unable to enforce its own labour rules, there is little hope for change.


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Malaysia palm oil council defends 'green' TV ads

Straits Times 12 Jan 08;

KUALA LUMPUR - MALAYSIA'S palm oil council yesterday defended advertisements claiming its plantations were environmentally sustainable after they were declared misleading and pulled from British television.

The Advertising Standards Authority, an independent British watchdog, this week criticised the commercials, saying they wrongly implied that Malaysia's vast palm oil plantations were good for the environment.

The Malaysian Palm Oil Council said on its website that it was 'extremely disappointed' with the verdict.

'We do not feel that the advertisements mislead in any way, and we stand by our claim that Malaysian palm oil is produced sustainably,' it said.

Environmentalists had taken issue with the choice of words used on the television commercials aired last July on BBC World, such as 'its trees give life and help our planet breathe, and give home to hundreds of species of flora and fauna'.

Friends of the Earth International spokesman Paul de Clerck said: 'It is a complete lie to advertise palm oil as sustainably produced. It has devastating impacts on the environment and local communities.'

Palm oil producers - including Malaysia, which is the global leader - have fought a long battle against allegations that plantations destroy rainforests, annihilate orang utans, exploit workers and cause air pollution.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, ASSOCIATED PRESS, THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

RELATED ARTICLE

UK stops Malaysian palm oil ad after complaint

Business Times 11 Jan 08;


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World Bank pledges to do more for DR Congo rainforest

Yahoo News 11 Jan 08;

The World Bank, accused of negligence in a forestry program in the Democratic Republic of Congo, pledged Thursday to do more for the world's second-largest rainforest.

As the World Bank studied Thursday a complementary action plan, it also received an internal report on its role in the western African country that is still emerging from a five-year civil war.

"The action plan was broadly supported," said Marjory-Anne Bromhead, head of the Bank's environment and natural resource management for Africa.

She said the plan, estimated at a cost of 64 million dollars, is based on four main points: respect for social and environmental criteria, work with indigenous populations, the future of the forestry sector and communication.

"We were asked to report back a year from now on what we were doing," Bromhead said in a teleconference with reporters.

The Bank's board of directors also received an internal report Thursday on the institution's actions in the DRC but the document was not made public at the time of the teleconference.

The new action plan came as the World Bank faces criticism of its actions in DRC by nongovernmental organizations, including Greenpeace, which accuse the Bank of failing to adequately take into account the well-being of the estimated 500,000 Pygmies living in the rainforest.

They also allege the Washington-based development lender has been lax in its dealings with a DRC government incapable of enforcing its own moratorium on awarding new forestry concessions.

After the Amazon in Brazil, the DRC has the second-largest rainforest on the planet at 86 million hectares (212 million acres), of which nearly 60 million hectares (148 million acres) are exploitable.

In May 2002, the Bank convinced the transition government to suspend the allocation of new forestry rights and the renewal or extension of existing rights.

The concessions already extended will be the subject of a reappraisal that should end in April or May, Bromhead said.

"Both the inspection panel and all of the board members emphasize the importance of the World Bank work in the forest sector in DRC and the need for us to stay engaged in that sector and indeed to scale up our engagement and our support to forest management there," she said.

In 2003, DRC began slowly emerging from a five-year war in which some 2.5 million people lost their lives, either directly in combat or through disease and hunger, and which left the infrastructure of the vast, resource-rich country in shambles.


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Russian oil spill threatens drinking water

Reuters 11 Jan 08;

"This is not an ecological disaster," said Oleg Lomakin, first deputy chief for Moscow emergency department.

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian volunteers on Friday scooped dead ducks out of a river outside Moscow polluted by an oil spill from a nearby power plant that is threatening to spread and contaminate drinking water.

The oil leaked into the River Dulov on Sunday. Conservation group WWF said the spill measured around 500 tonnes and accused authorities of playing down its size and being slow to respond.

"Local authorities in the first days after the accident did not take any action and lost a lot of time," WWF representative Alexei Knizhnikov said in a statement.

"Once again, we are certain that there is no willingness to put into action the appropriate, civilized rescue operation with oil spills which involve caring about animals in distress."

WWF said that ice is preventing the oil from seeping into the River Klyazma, the main water source for thousands of people living to the east of Moscow, into which the River Dulov flows.

In November, a storm smashed an oil tanker near Russia's Black Sea coast, spilling hundreds of tonnes of oil which coated thousands of birds in thick sludge.

A senior official from Moscow's emergencies department said the spill had been controlled.

"This is not an ecological disaster," said Oleg Lomakin, first deputy chief for Moscow emergency department.

(Writing by James Kilner; editing by Keith Weir)


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U.S.: 300 million gallons treated sewage a day pumped into the sea, reefs

State wants to end dumping of treated sewage into ocean
Linda Kleindienst, Sun-Sentinel 10 Jan 08;

Bacteria levels in treated sewage being pumped into the ocean off South Florida meet federal guidelines, but one government scientist admitted Wednesday he wouldn't want to swim in it.

"I'd prefer not to," Dr. John Proni, director of the Ocean Chemistry Division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told the state Senate's Environmental Preservation and Conservation Committee when asked if he'd feel comfortable swimming near the outfall pipes.

Six pipelines from Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties dump 300 million gallons of treated sewage a day about two miles offshore – some of it onto reefs that attract recreational divers.

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection is hoping to eliminate the practice, which agency officials concede could take decades, and find other uses for the much-needed water, such as watering lawns.

A first step is likely to be a request that state legislators mandate improved treatment of the sewage before it is dumped in the ocean.

"And if you improve the level of treatment, that puts you on the path to using that water for something else in the future," said Phil Coram, DEP deputy director.

Other short-term steps the Legislature could take include prohibiting new outfalls, limiting outfalls to current levels and diverting more treated sewage to water reuse projects.

Pipeline foes, including environmental and diving groups, claim the sewage is killing South Florida's reefs and could endanger the health of those who swim in it.

"The nutrients kill coral reefs and cause algae blooms," said Ed Tichenor, of Palm Beach County Reef Rescue. "Every grade-school student knows that manure makes plants grow. It does the same thing on a coral reef."

Legislators say there is no quick fix to the problem.

"It has to be an extended process," said Sen. Nan Rich, R-Weston, a member of the committee. "In Broward, there is no place to put the water [that is now being discharged through the outfall]. And nobody knows the exact cost this will be to taxpayers."


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Japanese electronics giants take on "e-waste"

Glenn Chapman, Yahoo News 12 Jan 08;

Electronics titans at the world's largest consumer electronics trade show united to combat "e-waste" as the deadline nears for US residents to replace analog televisions with digital models.

Mountains of old television sets are expected to be discarded in the gargantuan US electronics market due to a government-imposed shift to digital television broadcasting in 2009.

The looming deadline and a drive to show that gadgets don't have to harm nature inspired Panasonic, Sharp and Toshiba to form the Electronics Manufacturers Recycling Management Company (EMRM).

"We at Panasonic are very concerned that the US is only a year away from transition to all-digital TV," Yoshi Yamada, chairman of Panasonic of North American, said at the Consumer Electronics Show that ended Thursday.

"Forming a company to recycle is the best way to develop economies of scale and create a usable and sustainable recycling system for electronics. EMRM has tremendous potential to make a substantial difference."

Panasonic heads the joint venture, which will manage recycling programs in the United States.

"We have a responsibility of dealing with end-of-life analog electronics," said Panasonic chief operating officer Joseph Taylor.

EMRM claims agreements with more than a slew of electronics makers including Hitachi, Mitsubishi, Philips, Sanyo and Pioneer.

The joint venture will start with programs that meet "take-back" laws requiring companies that sell gear to help recycle the stuff.

The announcement came as CES proclaimed a "green" theme for the first time in the 40-year-old annual event's history.

Non-toxic batteries activated with water and cars powered by electricity or other non-oil-based "flexfuels," were among Earth-friendly offerings showcased.

CES conferences included seminars devoted to making energy-efficient gadgets, using non-hazardous materials, and "keeping electronics off the curb" by extending life cycles and easing recycling.

CES featured for the first time a "Sustainable TechZone" dedicated to "pioneering technologies that benefit the environment and sustainability of the global economy."

Innovations in the TechZone include voltaic solar-power generating backpacks made from recycled plastic soda bottles.

Firms specializing in automating homes touted computerized systems that reduce the amount of energy wasted in cooling, heating or lighting residences or by televisions and other entertainment electronics.

"The smart-home ecosystem is good for the world's ecosystem," a CES organizer maintained.

CES organizers arranged with Carbonfund.org to offset the estimated 20,000 tons of carbon attributable to CES.

Carbonfund will do so by investing in renewable energy, reforestation, and energy conservation programs, according to CEA.


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Power to monitor reduces electricity use

Saving power
New York Times Straits Times 12 Jan 08;

Households embrace chance to adjust electricity use and cut bills
NEW YORK - GIVING people the means to closely monitor and adjust their electricity use lowers their monthly bills and could significantly reduce the need to build new power plants, a new study has found.

The study results, released on Wednesday, suggest that if households have digital tools to set temperature and price preferences, the peak loads on utility grids could be trimmed by up to 15 per cent a year.

This could save US$70 billion (S$102 billion) in spending on power plants and infrastructure over a period of 20 years, the study concludes. It would also avoid the need to build the equivalent of 30 large coal-fired plants, say scientists at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory of the US Energy Department, which conducted the demonstration project.

The project was as much a test of consumer behaviour as it was of new technology.

Scientists wanted to determine if the ability to monitor consumption constantly would cause people to save energy.

In the Olympic Peninsula, west of Seattle, 112 homes were equipped with digital thermostats, and computer controllers were attached to water heaters and clothes dryers. These controls were connected to the Internet.

The home owners could go to a website to set their ideal home temperature and adjust it as per requirement. This also indicated their level of tolerance for fluctuating electricity prices.

They soon became active participants in managing the load on the utility grid and their own bills.

'I was astounded at times at the customer response,' said Mr Robert Pratt, the programme director for the project. 'It shows that if you give people simple tools and an incentive, they will do this.'

On the website, they were presented with graphic icons to set and adjust.

'We gave them a knob,' Mr Pratt said. 'If you don't like it, change the knob.'

The knobs' software and analytics were designed by IBM Research and functioned very much like a stock market. Every five minutes, the households and local utilities were buying and selling electricity, with prices constantly fluctuating by tiny amounts as supply and demand on the grid changed.

'Your thermostat and your water heater are day-trading for you,' said Mr Ron Ambrosio, a researcher at the Watson Research Centre of IBM.

The households in the demonstration project on average saved 10 per cent on their monthly utility bills. Mr Jerry Brous, a retiree who owns a three-bedroom house in Sequim, Washington, saved about 15 per cent, which added up to US$135 over a year.

Mr Brous, 67, said he and his wife would allow the household temperature to go 12 deg C above or below the target as the outside temperature changed.

The project was done with an eye towards guiding policy on energy-saving programmes. But how quickly the federal laboratory's project could be developed across the country remains uncertain.

NEW YORK TIMES


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More countries turn to nuclear power as competition for oil intensifies

Straits Times 12 Jan 08;

PARIS - DESPITE controversy over safety, pollution and cost factors, nuclear power is rapidly gathering steam in the race to guarantee energy as emerging economies compete for fuel, particularly oil.

A decision by Britain on Thursday to build new nuclear power generation plants is the latest example of this trend for countries to renew or to begin building nuclear capacity.

Today, there are 442 nuclear power reactors at work in 201 power stations in 31 countries. Of these, 104 are in the US, 58 in France and 55 in Japan, together accounting for about half of the total.

A plant is under construction in Finland by the world-leading French nuclear power group Areva, headed by Ms Anne Lauvergeon, who says that 100 to 300 reactors will be built around the world by 2030. She wants Areva to build one third of these.

The US also expects to build new nuclear power stations, while Egypt, Morocco, Algeria and Libya too have voiced such intentions.

China, experiencing a huge increase in demand for energy, has ordered two European pressurised reactors (EPRs) from France, while India too wants to develop nuclear power but must first sign an agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) ensuring that any such facilities would not be used to provide material for nuclear weapons.

Nuclear power produces little carbon dioxide, but it generates radioactive waste which is difficult to store with safety. But a surge in oil prices and commitments to combat the effect of carbon on global warming have re-opened debate on its benefits.

Also, the construction of a nuclear power station takes 10 years compared with four years to build a coal-fired plant.

The potential market is attracting interest from many companies, but there is always opposition from ecologists and people living near a planned site.

The head of French electricity generator and distributor EDF, Mr Pierre Gadonneix, said the biggest challenge for those who support nuclear energy is to make it acceptable to public opinion.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Widespread technology

# There are 442 nuclear power reactors in 201 power stations in 31 countries.

# Of these, 104 are in the US, 58 in France and 55 in Japan.

# A plant is under construction in Finland, the US expects to build new nuclear power stations and Egypt, Morocco, Algeria and Libya too have voiced such intentions.

# China has ordered two European pressurised reactors from France.


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UK going nuclear – a great con job?

Polly Toynbee, The Guardian Today Online 12 Jan 08;

A looming energy crisis has forced Britain to announce an aggressive nuclear energy policy, with the construction of up to 10 nuclear power stations by 2020.

Marking the new political year, Prime Minister Gordon Brown promised to take "the difficult long-term decisions, even if at times it may be easier to do simpler or less difficult things".

Going nuclear is a big decision and a difficult one but that does not necessarily make it the right one.

In fact, the government chose the easier option — and it is easy to see why.

The nuclear cause has been on a roll as Labour and Conservatives have felt the sheer grinding pressure of the nuclear industry, the engineering institutes and a host of powerful interests.

Back in 1997, the nuclearists were losing the argument but now they have turned nuclear into the grown-up choice, the one serious men agree is the must-have ingredient in the "energy mix".

This must rank as one of the great public relations triumphs of all time.

What genius masterminded its selling to the very same government that picked up the still-rising £5.3 billion ($14.8 billion) bill for the gigantic failure of British Energy?

The cost of storing nuclear waste and decommissioning decaying stations will be about £70 billion.

This is like a conned householder buying another new roof from the same cowboy who destroyed the last one.

No voice in Cabinet queried this decision — and it is easy to see why.

Under heavy bombardment from both sides, it takes time to wade through detailed arguments. How are ordinary politicians (or journalists) to know which group of distinguished professors bearing statistics is right?

Thus, momentous decisions are made.

After Iraq, it might be hoped that ministers and Conservatives had learned lessons about not always trusting the establishment view.

But most people are in the same situation: How can we know? Reading through submissions on both sides, what becomes plain is that no one can know.

Nuclear power certainly feels safer than it did, with so many reactors around the world and only one deadly accident in the dysfunctional Soviet Union.

No one denies that nuclear is better than boiling the planet alive, if that was the choice. But it is not.

The politicians had to choose which low-carbon energy would be best and cheapest. In the end they ducked choosing by declaring they would leave it to the market.

The hidden hand would sort it all out. The main opposition Conservative Party and the ruling Labour Party swear there will be no subsidy: Let nuclear find its own place.

It sounds easy, whereas forcing greater energy efficiency is untidy and requires people to do things.

The danger is that politicians have decided they have taken the "hard decision" and nuclear is "the answer".

If a "mix" is needed, the nuclear concrete mixers may grind up the wind, solar, wave and tidal generators that will be needed before the first lightbulb is lit by a new reactor.

Meanwhile, the "nuclear answer" deceives the public and delays yet further the necessary great national energy-efficiency drive that politicians continue to avoid. — THE GUARDIAN

A longer version of this commentary appeared in The Guardian on Friday.


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Scientists to discuss how global warming effects diseases

Yahoo News 12 Jan 08;

Global warming in Europe could mean a host of potentially fatal diseases become more prevalent, a leading scientist warned Friday ahead of a major conference on the subject.

Warmer temperatures could encourage the spread of mosquito-spread malaria and the potentially fatal West Nile Virus, David Rogers, who heads up the EU-funded Eden project into emerging diseases, told AFP.

On the positive side however, rising temperatures could eventually rid the continent of tick-borne encephalitus and other diseases, said Rogers, a professor of ecology at Oxford University.

He was speaking ahead of a five-day conference starting Monday in the eastern Czech city of Brno, where some 150 scientists will discuss the impact of global warming on diseases in Europe.

Rogers' conclusions were drawn on data culled half-way through the five-year Emerging Diseases in a Changing European Environment (EDEN).

The project, a collaboration between 49 institutions from 24 countries, aims to map out the impact of climate change on the spread of diseases in Europe and Mediterranean countries.

"The southern limits and northern limits of this disease will move north," said Rogers. "By 2050-2080 we could see the disappearance of this disease from Europe."

The rodent-spread Hatavirus, which often leads to lung failure and death in humans without proper treatment, could also disappear if spring temperatures increased, he added. "The virus survives longer on colder days."

On the other hand, insect-borne diseases, such as mosquito-spread malaria and the potentially fatal West Nile Virus were likely to increase with a warmer climate in Europe.


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Climate change impact on tourism in Thailand

La Nina impact possible this year
Chadamas Chinmaneevong, Bangkok Post 12 Jan 08;

The weather phenomenon known as La Nina will hurt tourist-related businesses this year, says an environmental and resources expert at Mahidol University. Dr Chirapol Sintunawa said La Nina would cause heavier-than-usual rainfall in the wet season, particularly in flat areas such as Bangkok and the Northeast.

He said the provinces along the west coast would face unusually high tides, as well as strong waves and winds. Importantly, higher sea temperatures could lead to coral reef bleaching and kill coral.

He said Phuket and Samui would face insufficient water during the hot season. "Consequently seaside tourist attractions will be damaged," said Dr Chirapol, who is with the Association for the Development of Environmental Quality.

"It is difficult to solve the problem right now. We can only ease the problems with efficient use of energy."

Other environmental problems, such as those arising from traditional slash-and-burn agriculture, are also challenges in Thailand.

In the North, people usually start forest fires between the first and third months of every year to pave the way for mushrooms and sweet vegetables to grow. Earth star mushrooms retail at 150-300 baht per kg, according to Dr Chirapol.

The thick smoke last year caused northern provinces to lose about three billion baht in revenue. More than 100,000 rai of forests were burned.

The level of dust particles smaller than 10 microns was 128 microgrammes per cubic metre (ug/cu m) in Chiang Mai, 142 in Chiang Rai and 160 in Mae Hong Son. Each exceeded the accepted safety standard of 120 ug/cu m.

Dr Chirapol added that forest fires could cause haze in the northern provinces for a long time and worsen the greenhouse effect.

"If carbon dioxide emissions continue at the same level, climate change will be increasingly worse. Unlike Europeans who are well aware of the global problem, Thai people still take it as a problem far from them and do not bother to help fight global warming. People will face a terrible future if they do not lend a helping hand," said Dr Chirapol.

Rising world temperatures have also stimulated growth in germs. This is due to contaminated water and food, according to Dr Chirapol.

All parties must address the problem, especially tourism firms in direct contact with scenic destinations. Dr Chirapol warned that hoteliers may miss their business targets if pollution escalates.

"I cannot estimate the damage costs because I can't anticipate the level of the damage, but it will happen certainly."

Operators should reduce unneeded costs and develop efficient energy usage, particularly city hotels in Chiang Mai.

Dr Chirapol said hotels should be designed in more energy-efficient ways, including no carpeting and open-air lobbies to reduce air-conditioning.

"Cutting the use of fossil fuels, changing energy-consumption habits and increasing forest areas to absorb carbon dioxide will save us from rising sea levels. This can help the world," he noted.

La Nina means "the little girl" in Spanish, and its climate counterpart El Nino means "the little boy".

During the period of La Nina, the sea surface temperature across the equatorial areas of the Pacific Ocean will be lower than normal by 0.5 degrees Celsius. By definition, an episode of La Nina lasts at least five months.

La Nina manifests the opposite effects of El Nino. La Nina results in higher rainfall, more high tides and floods in parts of Southeast Asia and Northern Australia.

The last La Nina was a minor one, occurring in 2000-01. Currently there is a moderate La Nina, which began developing in mid-2007. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) confirmed that the conditions would likely continue into 2008.

According to the NOAA, "Expected La Nina impacts during November to January include a continuation of above-average precipitation over Indonesia and below-average precipitation over the central equatorial Pacific."


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World warming despite cool Pacific and Baghdad snow

Alister Doyle, Reuters 11 Jan 08;

OSLO (Reuters) - Climate change is still nudging up temperatures in the long term even though the warmest year was back in 1998 and 2008 has begun with unusual weather such as a cool Pacific and Baghdad's first snow in memory, experts said.

"Global warming has not stopped," said Amir Delju, senior scientific coordinator of the World Meteorological Organization's (WMO) climate program.

Last year was among the six warmest years since records began in the 1850s and the British Met Office said last week that 2008 will be the coolest year since 2000, partly because of a La Nina event that cuts water temperatures in the Pacific.

"We are in a minor La Nina period which shows a little cooling in the Pacific Ocean," Delju told Reuters. "The decade from 1998 to 2007 is the warmest on record and the whole trend is still continuing."

This year has started with odd weather including the first snows in Baghdad in memory on Friday and a New Year cold snap in India that killed more than 20 people. Frost hit some areas of Florida last week but orange groves escaped mostly unscathed.

Iraqis welcomed snow as an omen of peace. "It's the first time we've seen snow in Baghdad," said 60-year-old Hassan Zahar. "I looked at the faces of all the people, they were astonished."

Last year, parts of the northern hemisphere were having a record mild winter with even Alpine ski resorts starved of snow.

Delju said climate change, blamed mainly on human emissions of greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels, would bring bigger swings in the weather alongside a warming trend that will mean more heatwaves, droughts, floods and rising seas.

"The more frequent occurrence of extreme events all over the world -- floods in Australia, heavy snowfall in the Middle East -- can also be signs of warming," he said.

"UNEQUIVOCAL" WARMING

The U.N. Climate Panel said last year that global warming was "unequivocal." It said temperatures rose by 0.74 degrees Celsius (1.3 Fahrenheit) in the 20th century and could rise by a "best guess" of another 1.8 to 4.0C (3.2 to 7.2F) by 2100.

The record year for world temperatures was 1998, ahead of 2005, according to WMO data. Among recent signs of the effects of warming, Arctic sea ice shrank last year to a record low.

Rajendra Pachauri, the head of the U.N. Panel that shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, said he would look into the apparent temperature plateau so far this century.

"One would really have to see on the basis of some analysis what this really represents," he told Reuters, adding "are there natural factors compensating?" for increases in greenhouse gases from human activities.

He added that skeptics about a human role in climate change delighted in hints that temperatures might not be rising. "There are some people who would want to find every single excuse to say that this is all hogwash," he said.

Delju said temperatures would have to be flat for several more years before a lack of new record years became significant.

He noted 2005 was the second hottest year and that 1998 was boosted by a strong El Nino event which can raise temperatures worldwide in the opposite of the La Nina cooling.

Underscoring an underlying rise in temperatures, British forecaster Phil Jones said 2001-07, with an average of 0.44 Celsius above the 1961-90 world average of 14 degrees, was 0.21 degree warmer than the corresponding values for 1991-2000.


First snow for 100 years falls on Baghdad
Yahoo News 11 Jan 08;

Light snow fell in Baghdad early on Friday in what weather officials said was the first time in about a 100 years.

Rare snowfalls were also recorded in the west and centre of Iraq, plunging temperatures to zero degrees Centigrade (32 degrees Fahrenheit) and even colder, an official said.

The snow in Baghdad, which melted as it hit the ground, began falling before dawn and continued until after 9 am, residents said.

"Snow has fallen in Baghdad for the first time in about a century as a result of two air flows meeting," said a statement by the meteorology department.

"The first one was cold and dry and the second one was warm and humid. They met above Iraq."

The director of the meteorology department, Dawood Shakir, told AFP that climate change was possibly to blame for the unusual event.

"It's very rare," he said. "Baghdad has never seen snow falling in living memory.

"These snowfalls are linked to the climate change that is happening everywhere. We are finding some places in the world which are warm and are supposed to be cold."

Snow was also reported in the mountainous Kurdish north of the country, where falls are common.


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ADB to help Southeast Asia find ways to cut greenhouse gases

Yahoo News 11 Jan 08;

The Asian Development Bank said Friday it will conduct a yearlong study on what six Southeast Asian countries can do to cut their greenhouse gas emissions.

The 900,000 dollar study, funded by Britain, will estimate the costs of reducing the emissions and look at ways Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam can work together to mitigate the impact of climate change, the Manila-based bank said in a statement.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimates that Asia's booming economies will raise the continent's contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions to 29 percent by 2030 from 24 percent in 2003, an ADB statement said.

The panel has also forecast that coastal and low-lying areas in South, East, and Southeast Asia will be at greatest risk due to increased flooding from sea and rivers.


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Global warming forcing the world to change the way it does business

Paul Eccleston, The Telegraph 9 Jan 08;

Global warming is forcing the world to change the way it does business, according to a new report.

A more sustainable global economy is emerging as countries and companies move to combat the challenges posed by climate change.

Huge amounts of money are pouring into clean energy projects, carbon trading and environmental and energy hedge funds, says the annual State of the World 2008 report from the Worldwatch Institute, an independent research organisation.

"Once regarded as irrelevant to economic activity, environmental problems are drastically rewriting the rules for business, investors, and consumers, affecting over £50bn in annual capital flows," said the report's co-directors Gary Gardner and Thomas Prugh.

The report reveals that an estimated £26bn was invested in renewable energy in 2006, up 33 per cent from 2005 and early estimates say it will reach £33bn in 2007.

Carbon trading grew even more explosively, reaching an estimated £15bn billion in 2006, nearly triple the amount traded in 2005.

Some of the world's biggest companies have announced breakthrough environmental initiatives in the past two years and in a surprising U-turn, huge corporations in American were actually pressing the US Congress to pass laws regulating greenhouse gas emissions, something that would have been unthinkable even two years ago, according to the report.

Companies had also woken up the fact that they could actually make money out of becoming more environmentally friendly. The chemical giant DuPont had cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 72 per cent below 1991 levels by 2007, saving £1.5bn.

Another sign of dramatic change was the 575 environmental and energy hedge funds which had sprung up in the last few years. Clean technology was now the third most popular destination for venture capital behind the internet and biotechnology.

And 54 banks, representing 85 per cent of global private project finance capacity, have endorsed the Equator Principles, a new international standard of sustainability investment.

But the report said two major economic modelling studies had estimated that climate change damage could equal as much as eight per cent of global economic output by the end of the century.

The World Bank had calculated that 39 countries had lost five per cent or more of their wealth because of unsustainable forest harvesting, depletion of non-renewable resources, and damage from carbon emissions. For 10 countries, the decline ranged from 25 to 60 per cent.

The report calls for major reforms of government policy to steer investment away from destructive activities such as the extraction of oil and gas and toward a new generation of environmentally sustainable industries if global economic collapse is to be averted.

It said subsidies for fossil fuels should be reduced and replaced by environmental taxes.

"We have the tools today to steer the global economy onto a sustainable path," said report authors Gardner and Prugh.

"The task now is to bring them together and scale them up so that they become the norm across today's economies."

The report said there was growing evidence suggesting the global economy was destroying its own ecological base.

Worldwatch president Christopher Flavin said: "Continued human progress now depends on an economic transformation that is more profound than any seen in the last century.

"We should be practising a sustainable approach to economics that takes advantage of the ability of markets to allocate scarce resources while explicitly recognizing that our economy is dependent on the broader ecosystem that contains it."

He added: "It is breathtaking to see how much innovation has been unleashed by the wave of concern about climate change that has broken across the world in the past year, culminating in the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to the world's leading climate scientists and their most effective evangelist, Al Gore."

"Innovative ideas and big money are a powerful combination - and the sums now moving in a green direction are eye-popping."
# State of the World 2008 costs £14.99 plus plus p&p and can be purchased through the Earthscan website at www.earthscan.co.uk, by emailing earthinfo@earthscan.co.uk.

Factfile

Energy

• Corporate R&D spending on clean energy technologies reached $9.1 billion in 2006.

• Venture capital and private equity investment in clean energy totalled $8.6 billion in 2006, 69 per cent above the 2005 level and 10 times the 2001 level.

• Average auto efficiency standards will soon rise to 47 miles per gallon in Japan and 49 miles per gallon in Europe. Biofuel production has grown by 20 per cent per year since 2005.

Agriculture

• A 2003 Swedish study found that beef cattle raised organically on grass emit 40 per cent fewer greenhouse gases and use 85 per cent less energy to make beef than cattle fed on grain.

• A recent two-year study found that sows raised in hoop houses had more live births than those in confinement facilities. Researchers found that group housing could reduce production costs by as much as 11 per cent compared with use of gestation crates.

• Wal-Mart announced that within three to five years it would be certifying that all its seafood for the North American market was raised sustainably.

Investing for Sustainability

• The Equator Principles have been endorsed by 54 signatory banks and represent over 85 per cent of global private project finance capacity.

According to the UN, global venture capital and private equity investment in sustainable energy totaled $8.6bn in 2006, up 69 per cent from $5.1bn in 2005, with the number of deals increasing by 12 per cent.

• There are now 575 environmental and energy hedge funds. Global "clean-tech" capital investment increased by 78 per cent in 2006 to $2.9bn, making it the third-largest venture investment category (and the third largest such sector in both China and the United States).

Measuring Wealth and Wellbeing

• Bhutan has made "gross national happiness," not economic growth per se, its official goal.

• Interest in ways to promote human wellbeing is widening among policymakers, with well-being now a national policy goal in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom.

• A recent global assessment found green accounting programs in place in at least 50 countries and identified at least 20 other countries that were planning to initiate such programmes soon.


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