UK parliamentary committee calls for biofuel moratorium

Reuters 20 Jan 08;

LONDON (Reuters) - Most biofuels harm rather than help the environment and the British government should call a moratorium on increasing their use, a parliamentary committee said on Monday.

"Biofuels can reduce greenhouse gas emissions from road transport -- but at present most biofuels have a detrimental impact on the environment overall," Tim Yeo, chairman of the House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee (EAC) said.

Biofuels can be substituted for fossil fuels and are seen by advocates as a way of reducing emissions of greenhouse gases believed to contribute to global warming. Grains, vegetable oils and sugar are among the industry's current feedstocks.

Britain has ordered transport fuel suppliers to supply five percent of their UK road fuel from renewable fuels by 2010.

The Royal Society, the national academy of science, issued a report last week saying the government directive would do little to combat climate change because it lacked targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

"There are many different types of biofuels and it's key that the ones we use provide the best greenhouse gas savings and are produced in ways that are good for people and the environment," Dianna Bowles of the Royal Society's biofuels working group said in response to the EAC report.

The EAC report said a large biofuel industry based on current technology is likely to increase food prices and could damage food security in developing countries.

Research is under way to develop so-called second generation biofuels which would use waste products rather than food commodities. The committee noted that these technologies are some years away.

Britain's National Farmers Union rejected the conclusions.

"Biofuels represent the only renewable alternative for replacing fossil fuel in transport and a way of tackling one quarter of UK carbon emissions which transport is responsible for," NFU president Peter Kendall said in a statement.

"UK biodiesel reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 53 percent and UK wheat bioethanol by 64 percent compared with their fossil fuel equivalents.

"Those savings can and should be improved. But for the committee to conclude that, because the savings are small, they are not worth having at all, is illogical and ill-informed," Kendall added.

(Reporting by Nigel Hunt; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Call to abandon biofuels targets
Roger Harrabin, BBC News 21 Jan 08;

The EU should abandon its biofuels targets because they are damaging the environment, a committee of MPs says.

The Environmental Audit Committee says biofuels are ineffective at cutting greenhouse gases and can be expensive.

It also says problematic emissions from cars can be cut more cheaply and with lower environmental risk.

The report comes in the week the EU launches a huge, over-arching climate change strategy which includes rules aimed at reducing damage from biofuels.

In a draft, the EU admits that the current target of 5.75% biofuels on the roads by 2010 is unlikely to be achieved. But it maintains its target of 10% road biofuel by 2020.

It states that in future biofuels should not be grown on forest land, wetland - including peat - or permanent grassland, a move that will please critics.

The EU will also stipulate that biofuels should achieve a minimum level of greenhouse gas savings.

But these figures have been contested, and it looks as though the calculation will exclude the carbon released by disturbing soil when the biofuels are planted. That would prove very controversial.

It is also unclear how the EU will ensure that its biofuels production on agricultural land does not push up food prices or displace food production, forcing local communities or agri-businesses into felling virgin forest to grow crops.

The committee of MPs says the targets are putting up food prices and threatening food supplies for the poor.

The EU and the UK government should concentrate on the use of "sustainable" biofuels such as waste vegetable oil and the development of more efficient biofuel technologies, it adds.

Sustainability fears

The Environmental Audit Committee says the UK government and the EU have been "misguided" in prioritising biofuels for road transport when it is much more efficient under current technology to use them for heating and cooling.

The committee notes that last week BBC News published an admission by the EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas that the EU had not foreseen all the problems entailed in biofuels.

The MPs say this proves the need for a moratorium on the target until it is proved that biofuels can be produced sustainably.

It says current agricultural support for biofuels is largely unsustainable.

Committee chairman Tim Yeo said: "Biofuels can reduce greenhouse gas emissions from road transport - but at present most biofuels have a detrimental impact on the environment overall."

The report is strongly backed by the RSPB which calls current biofuels targets "farcical".

The Royal Society shares the committee's concern that the EU should ensure that the most efficient biofuels are encouraged - but fears a backlash against biofuels which might deter investment in better biofuel technologies.



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Abu Dhabi says to invest $15 bln in green energy

Stanley Carvalho, Reuters 21 Jan 08;

ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Gulf Arab oil exporter Abu Dhabi plans to spend $15 billion in the first phase of an initiative to develop green energy and build the world's largest hydrogen power plant, it said on Monday.

The investment would be part of the Masdar initiative, set up to develop sustainable and clean energy, Abu Dhabi's Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahayan told the World Future Energy Summit in the emirate. He gave no time frame.

"I would like to underscore the government of Abu Dhabi's commitment to the Masdar initiative by announcing an initial investment of $15 billion," he said. "Next month ground will be broken on Masdar city, the world's first carbon-neutral city."

The money will go into infrastructure, renewable energy projects such as solar power, and manufacturing, to position Abu Dhabi as a leader in the global clean energy market, said Sultan Al Jaber, CEO of Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company, or Masdar.

The project includes plans to start building a zero carbon, zero waste city of up to 15,000 residents in the desert in the first quarter of this year. "Achieving a zero carbon city is doable," he said.

Abu Dhabi, capital of the seven-member United Arab Emirates federation, would also build the world's largest hydrogen power plant with 500 megawatts of capacity, said Jaber.

Masdar will hold a 60 percent stake in the "multi-billion-dollar joint venture," a Masdar official said, adding that the rest would be equally held by British Petroleum and Rio Tinto.

The project's engineering and design would be concluded by the end of 2008, he said.

Masdar has said it plans to develop a network of carbon capture and storage projects (CCS) to pump greenhouse gases into oilfields, reducing emissions while boosting oil output.

CCS, an as yet commercially unproven technology, should free up natural gas that is now reinjected to push oil out of oilfields. The UAE needs the gas for power generation to meet rising demand as petrodollars fuel an economic boom.

According to a U.N. Development Programme report issued last year, UAE greenhouse gas emissions were 34.1 metric tons per head in 2004, the third highest in the world after Qatar and Kuwait and well above U.S. per capita emissions of 20.6 metric tons.

Abu Dhabi signed an agreement with France this month for cooperation on the development of nuclear energy in the world's fifth-largest oil-exporter.

Sheikh Mohammed also announced the establishment of the Zayed Future Energy Prize, with an annual prize pool of $2.2 million, designed to reward achievements in energy innovation.

Masdar's $250 million Clean Technology Fund has already invested in different projects and Jaber said there were plans to launch another fund soon.

(Writing by Lin Noueihed and Inal Ersan, editing by Anthony Barker)

Abu Dhabi to build world's first zero-carbon city
by Laith Abou-Ragheb, Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;

Construction work on the world's first zero-carbon city housing 50,000 people in a car-free environment will begin in the oil-rich Gulf emirate of Abu Dhabi next month, the developers said on Monday.

In Masdar City, which will be run entirely on renewable energy including solar power to exploit the desert emirate's near constant supply of sunshine, people will be able to move around in automated pods.

"This is a place that has no carbon footprint and will not hurt the planet in any way," Khaled Awad, director of the Masdar project's property development unit of the Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (ADFEC), told AFP.

"At the same time the city will offer the highest quality of life possible for its residents," he said on the sidelines of the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Once completed in 2013, residents will be able to move around the six-square-kilometre (2.4-square-mile) city using a light railway line and a series of automated transport pods.

"They're like a horizontal elevator. You just say where you want to go, and it takes you there," Awad said of the pods.

Unlike the gleaming towers of nearby Abu Dhabi, a model of the Foster and Partners-designed Masdar City displayed at the summit showed only low-rise buildings with solar panels on each roof.

The city will be sited to take advantage of sea breezes, and a perimeter wall will protect it from the hot desert air and noise from the nearby Abu Dhabi airport.

Abu Dhabi sits on most of the UAE's oil and gas reserves, ranked respectively as fifth and fourth in the world. Proven oil reserves on their own are expected to last for another 150 years.

But like most oil-producing countries, the UAE also wants to diversify to ease its traditional economic dependency on oil.

The zero-carbon city, part of the wider Masdar Initiative launched by the wealthy Abu Dhabi government in 2006, is also a flagship project of the global conservation group WWF.

Masdar chief executive Sultan al-Jaber described Masdar -- Arabic for "source" -- as as an entirely new economic sector fully dedicated to alternative energy, which will have a positive impact on the emirate's economy.

The Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammad bin Zayed al-Nahayan, pledged 15 billion dollars to Masdar at the opening of the three-day summit on Monday.

"Rest assured, the Masdar initiative and Abu Dhabi will continue to play its part" in developing alternative energy sources, Sheikh Mohammed told some 3,000 delegates gathered for the annual event.

Masdar has also announced plans to build a 350-million-dollar 100-megawatt solar plant, which will later be boosted to 500 megawatts to help ease peak-time pressure on the national grid.

The initiative is also founding a university for future energy studies in collaboration with Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Despite its constant access to sunshine, only parking meters in the UAE are currently powered by solar energy. Even solar water-heaters -- popular in several hot-climate countries -- are seldom seen.

Other Gulf countries have a similar poor record in exploiting solar energy.

Abu Dhabi plots hydrogen future
Richard Black, BBC News 22 Jan 08;

The government of Abu Dhabi has announced a $15bn (£7.5bn) initiative to develop clean energy technologies.

The Gulf state describes the five-year initiative as "the most ambitious sustainability project ever launched by a government".

Components will include the world's largest hydrogen power plant.

The government has also announced plans for a "sustainable city", housing about 50,000 people, that will produce no greenhouse gases and contain no cars.

The $15bn fund, which the state hopes will lead to international joint ventures involving much more money, is being channelled through the Masdar Initiative, a company established to develop and commercialise clean energy technologies.

"As global demand for energy continues to expand, and as climate change becomes a real and growing concern, the time has come to look to the future," said Masdar CEO Dr Sultan Al Jaber.

"Our ability to adapt and respond to these realities will ensure that Abu Dhabi's global energy leadership as well as our own growth and development continues."

Technology bridge

The portfolio of technologies eligible for funding under the Masdar Initiative is extensive, but solar energy is likely to be a major beneficiary.

The hydrogen plant, meanwhile, will link the world's currently dominant technology, fossil fuel burning, with two technologies likely to be important in a low-carbon future - carbon sequestration and hydrogen manufacture.

Hydrogen will be manufactured from natural gas by reactions involving steam, producing a mixture of hydrogen and carbon dioxide.

The CO2 can be pumped underground, either simply to store it away permanently or as a way of extracting more oil from existing wells, using the high-pressure gas to force more of the black gold to the surface.

When hydrogen is burned, it produces no CO2. Eventually hydrogen made this way could be used in vehicles, though in Abu Dhabi it will generate electricity.

"It's important because it shows that you can generate hydrogen without carbon release from fossil fuels," commented Keith Guy, an engineering consultant and professor at the UK's Bath University.

"When you look at how hydrogen could be made economically, the route that many people have been looking at, through electrolysis of water, is incredibly expensive."

The Masdar Sustainable City, another component of the Abu Dhabi government's plans which is being designed with input from the environmental group WWF, is envisaged as a self-contained car-free zone where all energy will come from renewable resources, principally solar panels to generate electricity.

Buildings will be constructed to allow air in but keep the Sun's heat out. Wind towers will ventilate homes and offices using natural convection.

The fund and the Masdar City plans were formally unveiled at the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi.


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Alarm bells ringing about Antarctic thaw: Norway PM

Alister Doyle, Reuters 20 Jan 08;

TROLL STATION, Antarctica (Reuters) - Alarm bells are ringing about risks of a quickening thaw of Antarctica that would drive up world sea levels, Norway's Prime Minister said on Sunday after a visit to the icy continent.

Scientists say there are hard-to-quantify chances that newly detected lakes under Antarctica's ice sheets might lubricate a slide towards the oceans, or that climate change could warm southern seas and melt floating sea ice holding back glaciers.

"It is alarming. Alarm bells are ringing. It is irresponsible for decision-makers to ignore these signals," Prime Minister Jen Stoltenberg told Reuters at the end of a two-day visit to Norway's Troll station in east Antarctica.

Norway set an ambitious goal last week of becoming "carbon neutral" by 2030 -- cutting its net emissions from burning fossil fuels to zero.

However, its plan includes a measure to include big forests that soak up greenhouse gases, although it is controversial because current U.N. rules do not allow states to count forests as part of carbon neutral plans.

"We need more exact knowledge. Scientists don't say that they know what is happening (in Antarctica) but they fear...that the ice on land can slip out into the sea and melt," Stoltenberg said in the station, about 250 km (155 miles) inland.

Stoltenberg visited glaciers, opened a satellite monitoring station and was told about climate change research around Troll, where the mountains are home to thousands of birds such as snow petrels. Temperatures were around -10 Celsius (14.00F).

Antarctica, about 1.5 times the size of the United States, contains enough ice to raise world sea levels by almost 60 meters if ever all melted. If Greenland melted seas would rise by about seven meters.

The U.N. Climate Panel, which shared the Nobel Peace Prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, says that world sea levels will rise by between 18 and 59 cms (7 and 24 inches) this century because of human emissions of greenhouse gases.

Stoltenberg said risks were on the upside. Rising seas would threaten coastal cities, islands such as the Maldives and low-lying parts of Bangladesh or Florida.

DEEP FREEZE

Most of east Antarctica has been stable in a deep freeze with little sign of melt linked to global warming. Temperatures in west Antarctica, however, have been rising.

A Norwegian-U.S. expedition will next year examine whether vast lakes recently detected deep below the surface of the Antarctic ice could act as lubricants that accelerate a slide.

"There is preliminary data from the ice over these lakes...that shows that the ice speed is increasing," Jan-Gunnar Winther, head of the Norwegian Polar Institute, told Stoltenberg in a video link from the South Pole.

Ice above the lakes covered about eight percent of East Antarctica -- an area roughly the size of Greenland, he said.

Norway will also study whether signs of rising sea temperatures could eat away at the Fimbulisen ice that floats on the sea north of Troll and acts as a plug preventing part of the ice sheet from slipping into the sea.

Norwegian officials say that Norway will buy greenhouse gas emission quotas to offset Stoltenberg's flights. "There's a big difference between reading about climate change and being here," Stoltenberg said.

(Editing by Jon Boyle)


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Massive volcano exploded under Antarctic icesheet, study finds

Yahoo News 20 Jan 08;

A powerful volcano erupted under the icesheet of West Antarctica around 2,000 years ago and it might still be active today, a finding that prompts questions about ice loss from the white continent, British scientists report on Sunday.

The explosive event -- rated "severe" to "cataclysmic" on an international scale of volcanic force -- punched a massive breach in the icesheet and spat out a plume some 12,000 metres (eight miles) into the sky, they calculate.

Most of Antarctica is seismically stable. But its western part lies on a rift in Earth's crust that gives rise to occasional volcanism and geothermal heat, occurring on the Antarctic coastal margins.

This is the first evidence for an eruption under the ice sheet itself -- the slab of frozen water, hundreds of metres (feet) thick in places, that holds most of the world's stock of fresh water.

Reporting in the journal Nature Geoscience, the investigators from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) describe the finding as "unique."

It extends the range of known volcanism in Antarctica by some 500 kilometres (300 miles) and raises the question whether this or other sub-glacial volcanoes may have melted so much ice that global sea levels were affected, they say.

The volcano, located in the Hudson Mountains, blew around 207 BC, plus or minus 240 years, according to their paper.

Evidence for this comes from a British-American airborne geophysical survey in 2004-5 that used radar to delve deep under the ice sheet to map the terrain beneath.

Vaughan's team spotted anomalous radar reflections over 23,000 square kilometres (8,900 sq. miles), an area bigger than Wales.

They interpret this signal as being a thick layer of ash, rock and glass, formed from fused silica, that the volcano spewed out in its fury.

The amount of material -- 0.31 cubic kilometres (0.07 cubic miles) -- indicates an eruption of between three and four on a yardstick called the Volcanic Explosive Index (VEI).

By comparison, the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980, which was greater, rates a VEI of five, and that of Mount Pinatubo in 1991 is a VEI of six.

"We believe this was the biggest eruption in Antarctica during the last 10,000 years," BAS' Hugh Corr says.

"It blew a substantial hole in the icesheet and generated a plume of ash and gas that rose around 12 kms (eight miles) into the air."

The eruption occurred close to the massive Pine Island Glacier, an area where movement of glacial ice towards the sea has been accelerating alarmingly in recent decades.

"It may be possible that heat from the volcano has caused some of that acceleration," says BAS professor David Vaughan, who stresses though that global warming is by far the greater likelier cause.

Volcanic heat "cannot explain the more widespread thinning of West Antarctic glaciers that together are contributing nearly 0.2mm (0.008 of an inch) per year to sea-level rise," he adds.

"This wider change most probably has its origin in warming ocean waters."


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Best of our wild blogs: 21 Jan 08


Things you can do
a campaign for a better world by Raffles Junior College and ECO Singapore

Sharkwater - the movie
some thoughts on the blooooooooooo blog

First TeamSeagrass monitoring for 2008
out on a hot HOT day at Chek Jawa on the teamseagrass blog and nature scouters blog

First guided walk on Chek Jawa
crabs, stars and more on the tidechaser blog

Nesting Failure of the Red-wattled Lapwing
on the bird ecology blog

Flying Tigers of Singapore
on the butterflies of singapore blog

Green Tip #5 - Reduce your refrigerator’s energy consumption
on the AsiaIsGreen blog


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Singapore: Forgoing the rat race for the 'lilies of the field'

Straits Times 21 Jan 08;

In the end, we are judged in our lives for all our work - not just the work we are paid to do.

Taking a year off from work may not add to his bonus, but Yen Feng discovers a different measure of wealth

THE season for announcing promotions and bonuses is, for many rookies, the annual measure of success.

But it does not account for work we put into our personal relationships, which is harder to quantify - you do not exactly get cash for how good a son, brother, friend or spouse you have been.

That part belongs to another race: the silent marathon to show we are more than the sum of our bank accounts. It is a race we seldom talk about over drinks. It is a race that is easy to forget because we are our own arbiters.

But it exists.

So I consider myself fortunate to have had a reminder of it at the start of my career.

A year ago, I turned in my press pass to take care of a dying loved one.

In that time, my peers whizzed ahead, bagging awards I knew would give them an edge over me in the company. At first, I was envious. Then I thought: How much of it really matters?

A recent e-mail from a senior executive in the newsroom last week brought the point home.

It cited a speech by Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist Anna Quindlen. In it, she tells a class of graduating students that life's measure isn't about 'the next promotion, the bigger paycheck, the larger house', but about cultivating one's soul.

'Consider the lilies of the field,' she said.

As Singaporeans, we have been trained from a young age to covet success in its most admired form: cash.

We compute our worth in dollars and cents. We work hard - the result of being ranked and banded in school from the age of nine.

And, if you take literally what Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew said last week - 'Retirement is death' - we will be working not only harder, but longer than ever.

But it is precisely because we push ourselves so hard that Ms Quindlen's words are all the more relevant.

The challenge is to expand our definition of the words 'success' and 'reward', beyond promotions and bonuses.

In the end, we are judged in our lives for all our work - not just the work we are paid to do.

Since my loved one died, I have adjusted certain priorities in my life.

After a year away from the office, I am ready to buckle down and earn my keep. But I am also working on that other, 'lilies' race.

I know how much it means to listen, to show up, to make time for the people who mean something in our lives.

After all, time, unlike money, is finite. At the end of one's life, no one has been known to say: 'I wish I spent more time in the office.'

So me, I am looking up an old friend. Or lighting a candle at dinner.

That's the part I'm leaving for the lilies.


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Singapore: Exports no longer key engine of growth?

Chuang Peck Ming, Business Times 21 Jan 08;

Is the Singapore economy relying less on external trade and more on the domestic market for growth?

IT WAS not supposed to have happened the way it did. The world economy did well in 2007, which means trade-dependent economies like Singapore would have done well too. It did, scoring 7.5 per cent growth.

But it wasn't so much higher exports that contributed to this; it was something else. If it were just exports, the outcome for the economy would have been disappointing. Singapore's non-oil domestic exports (NODX) last year rose just 2.3 per cent, its worst showing in five years.

This key barometer not only fell short of the official projection of 4-6 per cent - and 2006's 8.5 per cent growth - it lagged behind the larger economy. This is a big departure from past growth pattern.

The NODX used to grow faster or expand more or less in tandem with Singapore's economy. Bigger economies have a large home market to depend on for growth. But with a small domestic market, Singapore must turn to the world for a living. It has always relied on exports to drive the economy. Is this no longer the case?

It seems not. Despite land reclamation, Singapore is still a little red dot on the map. Its population and their spending power have multiplied. But a population touching four million - and straining Singapore's infrastructure to almost bursting point - is still far from enough to even keep Singapore's export-oriented economy running at its current pace. Which is why the government is working hard to increase its number to six million.

The folks at International Enterprise Singapore, the government's trade promotion arm, are sticking to the old belief that the economy and trade share the same fate. They are tipping the NODX to expand more in line with the overall economy in 2008 - by 4-6 per cent, against a 4.5-6.5 per cent growth forecast for the economy.

How do they expect the NODX to do better in a year when the US economy is in danger of going into a recession - if it hasn't already - and dragging the larger part of the global economy down with it, when exports failed to make the mark last year when external conditions were in a far better shape?

IE Singapore says the NODX performed below par last year because of poor electronics shipments, which were hit by a sharp drop in chip prices and 'consolidation' of the disk drive business. Non-electronic exports, led by volatile pharmaceutical shipments, failed to provide the fallback to help pick up the slack.

IE Singapore sees chip prices bottoming out and is counting on a recovery in electronics shipments, stronger exports in chemical products and still-robust Asian economic growth for a pick-up in the NODX in 2008.

The answer is simple - even if it reflects more hope than realism. It would be easier to register a leap in the NODX number this year as any improvement will be made on a smaller base than would have been the case if exports had put up a stronger showing in 2007.

But the answer also leads back to the key question posed here - where did last year's economic growth come from and are exports no longer Singapore's main engine of growth?

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, in unveiling last year's economic growth figure in his New Year Message, singled out the construction and financial services for doing especially well. Reports also point to thriving business in the retail and hospitality industries.

These are economic activities that belong to the domestic sector. In other words, it seems that 2007's economic growth was driven mainly by the home market.

Local spending power has risen and while the numbers might still not be enough to provide a really big lift for the economy, they are joined by a massive inflow of foreign money.

In the past year, Singapore has attracted many of the well-heeled from emerging economies to put their money here with fund managers and in luxury properties. Tourists also came in record numbers - crossing the 10 million mark - filling up hotels here and keeping local shopping malls and restaurants busy.

A globalised economy means the world is fast becoming one big market. It means we do not just have to go out to sell our goods and services. We can also draw customers here to buy them.

But our economic planners are still right in one thing - whether we export to make a living or attract foreigners to come here to spend and invest their money, Singapore's fortune is still very much tied to the health of the global economy.


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Social networking sites may impact how traditional businesses work

Channel NewsAsia 20 Jan 08;

SINGAPORE: Social networking sites, such as Facebook and MySpace, have been around for less than five years, but they are already very much part of the Web 2.0 revolution taking place right now.

Not only are they changing the way people socialise, they are also making traditional businesses sit up and take notice.

It is estimated that about 194 million people around the world are managing at least one profile on a social networking site.

And with 800 million internet users still not registered with such sites, the potential for growth is overwhelming.

A recent study showed Friendster leading the race in the Asia Pacific region, followed by Facebook, Orkut and MySpace.

As proof of its popularity, 14 per cent of Friendster's global traffic comes from Singapore compared with only 3 per cent from the United States.

Friendster's global marketing vice-president David Jones said, "We started in the San Francisco Bay area in California where there are several Chinese, Asian communities. And it quickly vectored to Asia like four or five years ago, and it has just taken off from there."

And according to a UK report, the phenomenon of these sites is set to go bigger with more commercialisation of services.

The report also suggested sites like MySpace and Facebook will make tremendous improvements in being able to send out branding messages according to profiles of users, making it a goldmine for marketing companies.

The various applications on such sites also allow for better advertising.

Google's Open Social platform, for example, is being used by developers to create one-size-fits-all applications or widgets.

The Web2.0 fever has even caught on with highly successful bands like Radiohead, who has ditched traditional record label and used social networking sites to promote its music. And the band has topped the US and UK charts this month. - CNA/ac


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HDB should reconsider replacing ban on cats with 'motivational' regulations

Letter from Tan Chek Wee, Straits Times Forum 21 Jan 08;

I READ with amusement the article in The Sunday Times about 'Getting to know your neighbours" with a cartoon by Miel showing a smiling lady poking her head from her flat and a cat beside her (The Sunday Times, Jan 13). The problem we face nowadays is really 'not knowing your neighbours".

In my neighbourhood, I am fortunate to share a common concern with a few fellow residents on the plight of the community cats.

Cats are pushed to the brink by an increasing human population and decreasing tolerance. They are killed for reasons ranging from noise made during mating, defecation in 'upstairs" common areas (usually caused by cat owners who let their cats roam out), residents' phobia of cats, scratches on cars, etc.

Incensed by the ineffective killing of about 13,000 cats every year for more than two decades and at the public expense of more than half a million dollars annually, we decided to get our butts out of our flats and spent many evenings trapping the cats in our neighbourhood and brought them to the vet to be sterilised.

After about three years, we achieved a near 100 per cent sterilised colony of cats. We also work with the town council to help resolve complaints about cats.

Through this community work, we met fellow residents from all walks of life, of all ages and of all races. We also got to meet residents who complained about cats and residents who owned cats but were unaware of responsible pet ownership (that includes sterilisation and keeping them indoors).

We were touched by the fact that almost all the residents who complained about cats did not want killing as a solution. This was often not known to some town council property officers who assumed that engaging pest controllers to remove 'downstairs" community cats was the solution. This naturally resulted in a recurrence of complaints. By identifying the right cause of the complaints, we could offer a solution that costs only a bottle of vinegar and a packet of camphor balls (to clear the smell of cat poo and to repel the cats).

However, the lack of HDB regulations on responsible cat ownership is a major setback to the success of a managed colony of cats. Irresponsible owners abandon cats and kittens for reasons ranging from moving house, spring cleaning and unwanted litters from unsterilised home cats.

Irresponsible owners let their cats roam freely, resulting in complaints from neighbours. Town Council officers are reluctant to speak to such owners about pet responsibility because they said that 'HDB does not allow cats". Referring such recalcitrant cat owners to their HDB colleagues will only result in the abandonment of these cats in the estate instead. This will only transfer the problem to the Town Council which may then blame the expanding population on caregivers like me and my fellow residents.

I appeal to the HDB to urgently reconsider replacing the ban on cats with regulations so that such irresponsible owners will be 'motivated" by fines to keep their cats indoors and to have them sterilised. This is a win-win situation to residents in general, to caregivers and also to the property officers in the town council.


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Mosquito-borne diseases: efforts stepped up in Singapore

Efforts to stop virus stepped up; no new cases
Straits Times 21 Jan 08;

THE authorities are stepping up efforts to destroy mosquito breeding grounds in Little India in a bid to prevent a new, dengue-like disease from securing a foothold here.

Workers are 'doing whatever they need to do' to remove pools of stagnant water in the wake of an outbreak of chikungunya fever, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim said yesterday.

'We already have a dengue challenge. We do not want another challenge on the public health front. So, we want to try and contain this as soon as possible,' he said.

Eight people have tested positive for chikungunya since last Monday. All the cases were reported around the Clive Street area in the heart of Little India.

No new cases have surfaced in the past two days.

The virus, which is endemic in neighbouring countries like Indonesia, is spread by the Aedes mosquito.

It is rarely fatal, although its symptoms are similar to those of dengue, such as joint pain, chills and nausea.

The National Environment Agency is currently working with medical authorities and property owners in Little India to ensure the area is kept free of standing water, said Dr Yaacob.

'We are confident that, given the current level of effort we've put in place, we can get this under control.'

Health officials learnt important lessons in the dengue outbreak of 2005, Singapore's worst, said Dr Yaacob.

Procedures to contain mosquito-borne illnesses are 'working very, very well,' he said.

Dr Yaacob asked residents across the island to check their households for potential breeding sites.

'If Singaporeans keep their place clean and free of stagnant water, we will not have this problem,' he said.

He also said more measures to combat the spread of the chikungunya virus will be discussed in Parliament this year.

The Ministry of Health was first notified of chikungunya by a general practitioner last Monday when a 27-year-old Bangladeshi patient tested positive for the disease.

Soon, more bite to dengue fight
Leong Wee Keat, Today Online 21 Jan 08;

As the authorities grapple with the latest mosquito-borne disease, chikungunya fever, they have not forgotten about the other, perennial virus: Dengue.

Environment and Water Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim said his ministry would announce in Parliament in March new measures to ensure the number of dengue cases head south for good.

While he did not elaborate, Today understands that enforcement is going to be more stringent, and more stakeholders would be roped in to curb the spread of the virus.

The National Environment Agency (NEA) is likely to come down harder on offenders, said MP Lim Wee Kiak, a member of the government parliamentary committee (GPC) for national development and environment.

While the GPC has not been briefed yet on the ministry's plans, Dr Lim thinks the authorities may no longer warn offenders before issuing a fine.

NEA has consistently pointed to homes as the weak link. The first-time fine for mosquito breeding in residential premises is $100. Commercial operators, for example, of construction worksites, face heavier fines of up to $5,000 for the first offence.

These laws were last updated in 2002, and Major (Ret) G Surajan, who was part of the Dengue Task Force when he served as president of the Singapore Pest Management Association from 2004 to 2006, thinks the fines should be raised to get the message to hit home.

"When their pockets are hit, people will realise it is serious," he told Today.

While most people are doing their bit to stop mosquito breeding, Dr Amy Khor, Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Environment and Water Resources, told Today that safeguards must be put in place to guard against a small minority.

"We still have a lot of lapses … individuals who do not view it as a serious problem - the bo chup (don't care) attitude. All you need is a minority," she said.

Dr Yaacob, who spoke to reporters yesterday after a community event, said the ministry's fight against dengue was to ensure that Singapore "can maintain our public health standards at a very, very high level".

But he does not think there is cause for alarm about the eight cases of chikungunya fever detected last week at Clive Street in Little India, as the NEA's standard operating procedures are tighter after the 2005 dengue epidemic. And they will be tightened further, he said.

"We will continue to monitor this very, very closely until we are satisfied," he said, adding that there were no new infections.

There were 10 cases of the mosquito-borne, dengue-like illness here last year, but none were locally

transmitted, unlike the cases last week.

Dr Lim said this latest outbreak is also of concern because previous cases were sporadic. "This is the first time we had a cluster," he said. "There's a real possibility the chikungunya virus may, from sporadic, become endemic. It could potentially become a second problem for us if left unchecked."

As of yesterday, the NEA had inspected 2,300 premises and had widened its search for mosquito breeding - from the usual 150m radius for dengue - to areas bounded by Sungei Road, Serangoon Road, Lavender Road and Jalan Besar.

Besides conducting checks on the ground, the NEA will hold discussions today with agencies such as the Land Transport Authority and the Urban Redevelopment Authority to explore ways to control the spread of the virus.


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Giant Newt, Tiny Frog Identified as Most at Risk

Jeremy Lovell, PlanetArk 21 Jan 08;

LONDON - A giant Chinese salamander that predates Tyrannosaurus rex and the world's smallest frog are among a group of extremely rare amphibians identified by scientists on Monday as being in need of urgent help to survive.

The Olm, a blind salamander that can survive for 10 years without food, and a purple frog that spends most of its life four metres underground are also among the 10 most endangered amphibians drawn up by the Zoological Society of London.

"These species are the 'canaries in the coalmine' -- they are highly sensitive to factors such as climate change and pollution, which lead to extinction, and are a stark warning of things to come," said EDGE head Jonathan Baillie.

EDGE, which stands for Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered, is a project set up a year ago to identify and start to protect some of nature's most weird and wonderful creatures.

"The EDGE amphibians are amongst the most remarkable and unusual species on the planet and yet an alarming 85 percent of the top 100 are receiving little or no conservation attention," said the project's amphibians chief Helen Meredith.

While last year's launch focused on at risk mammals, this year the focus shifted to neglected amphibians.

"These animals may not be cute and cuddly, but hopefully their weird looks and bizarre behaviours will inspire people to support their conservation," Meredith added.

Not only are the target species unique, the project itself is breaking new ground by using the internet at www.zsl.org/edge to highlight threatened creatures and encourage the public to sponsor conservation.

Global warming and human depredation of habitat are cited as root causes of the problem facing the creatures from the massive to the minute.

The Chinese giant salamander, a distant relative of the newt, can grow up to 1.8 metres in length while the tiny Gardiner's Seychelles frog when full grown is only the size of a drawing pin.

Also on this year's list is the limbless Sagalla caecilian, South African ghost frogs, lungless Mexican salamanders, the Malagasy rainbow frog, Chile's Darwin frog and the Betic midwife toad whose male carries fertilised eggs on its hind legs.

"Tragically, amphibians tend to be the overlooked members of the animal kingdom, even though one in every three amphibian species is currently threatened with extinction, a far higher proportion than that of bird or mammal species," said EDGE's Baillie. (Editing by Jon Boyle)

Weirdest and most endangered creatures
Paul Eccleston, The Telegraph 21 Jan 08;

They could all merit a place in a gallery of Nature's strangest creatures. But apart from their strange looks and shapes they have one thing in common - they are all in danger of extinction.

Amphibians as a rule are not cute and cuddly which puts them way down the pecking order of species that need to be saved.

But they are a key indicator species and if they start to decline it is a clear warning that the environment is in trouble.

The Zoological Society of London (ZSL) has drawn up a list of some of the world's most extraordinary creatures threatened with extinction.

They found 85 per cent of the top 100 of the 'world's weirdest and most endangered creatures' are receiving little conservation attention and will disappear if no action is taken.

They include exotically-named species such as the Lungless salamander and the Betic midwife toad.

All amphibian species were assessed according to how Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered they are and as a result ZSL has launched an amphibians conservation and fundraising initiative which it has called EDGE.

The amphibians are those with few close relatives and are highly distinct genetically. They are also critically endangered and desperately in need of immediate action to save them.

By mathematically combining a measure of each species' unique evolutionary history with its threat of extinction, the scientists were able to give species an EDGE value and rank them accordingly.

Helen Meredith, EDGE Amphibians coordinator, said: "These animals may not be cute and cuddly, but hopefully their weird looks and bizarre behaviours will inspire people to support their conservation"

ZSL has identified and is starting work to protect 10 of the most unusual and threatened EDGE amphibian species this year. They include:

*Chinese giant salamander (salamander that can grow up to 1.8m in length and evolved independently from all other amphibians over 100m years before Tyrannosaurus rex)

*Sagalla caecilian (limbless amphibian with sensory tentacles on the sides of its head)

*Purple frog (purple-pigmented frog that was only discovered in 2003 because it spends most of the year buried up to 4m underground)

*Ghost frogs of South Africa (one species is found only in the traditional human burial grounds of Skeleton Gorge in Table Mountain, South Africa)

*Olm (blind salamander with transparent skin that lives underground, hunts for its prey by smell and electrosensitivity and can survive without food for 10 years)

*Lungless salamanders of Mexico (highly endangered salamanders that do not have lungs but instead breathe through their skin and mouth lining)

*Malagasy rainbow frog (highly-decorated frog that inflates itself when under threat and can climb vertical rock surfaces)

*Chile Darwin's frog (a frog where fathers protect the young in their mouths, this species has not been officially seen since around 1980 and may now be extinct)

*Betic midwife toad (toads that evolved from all others over 150m years ago - the males carry the fertilised eggs wrapped around their hind legs)

Gardiner's Seychelles frog (perhaps the world's smallest frog, with adults growing up to just 11mm in length - the size of a drawing pin)

Dr Jonathan Baillie, head of the EDGE programme, said: "Tragically, amphibians tend to be the overlooked members of the animal kingdom, even though one in every three amphibian species is currently threatened with extinction, a far higher proportion than that of bird or mammal species.

"These species are the "canaries in the coalmine" - they are highly sensitive to factors such as climate change and pollution, which lead to extinction, and are a stark warning of things to come.

"If we lose them, other species will inevitably follow. The EDGE programme strives to protect the world's forgotten species and ensure that the weirdest species survive the current extinction crisis and astound future generations with their extraordinary uniqueness."

Further information about the EDGE programme can be found at www.zsl.org/edge.


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Chinese Police Seize Endangered Pangolins from Home

PlanetArk 21 Jan 08;

BEIJING - A foul stench led Chinese police to a home where they found 16 protected pangolins in cages and plastic bags, and another 37 dead ones in the refrigerator, the Xinhua news agency said on Saturday.

The rescued pangolins, an endangered scaly ant eater sought for their skin and for use in Chinese medicine, ranged in size from the palm of a human hand to four kilograms, Xinhua said, citing the local Forest Police Station.

One bear paw was also found in the fridge in the house in southern China's Guangdong Province.

Four suspects were arrested, Xinhua said.

The solitary and nocturnal pangolin is found only in Asia and Africa. Its meat is considered a delicacy for some, its scaly skin can be made into handbags and shoes, and its scales and blood are used in Chinese medicine to treat allergies and sexually transmitted disease.

All international trade in the animals was banned in 2000.

Earlier this month, two men in the southern city of Xiamen received suspended death sentances for smugging 17 containers of pangolin meat and scales worth 23 million yuan (US$3.2 million) into China. (US$1 = 7.242 Yuan) (Reporting by Lucy Hornby; Editing by David Fogarty)


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Dubai to create The Universe: more artificial islands

The World is not enough for big stars...
Sonia Verma, The Times 21 Jan 08;

Environmentalists have said that dredging the ocean floor to build the islands is wreaking havoc on marine life and coral reefs. However, Nakheel said that its projects were ecologically sound. “We are building this with a lot of warning so we can manage water and energy supplies rather than just plonking something in the sea and turning on the tap,

Rod Stewart is believed to have bought Britain and Angelina Jolie is said to own Ethiopia, but the singer is not our new head of state and the actress has not yet saved Africa's poor.

Instead, the A-list stars are expected to be the new king and queen of plots of land that represent the countries in The World - the cluster of islands created by Dubai's ruling al-Maktoum family that form part of what can be described as the most ambitious development in the galaxy.

That's because next to The World, Nakheel, the developer, plans to build The Universe, its latest attempt to trump itself in the Gulf's surreal property game.

Inspired by the “wonders of the solar system”, The Universe will feature man-made islands built in the shape of the Sun and the Moon, with a string of planets in between. Nakheel's plans show a ringed island of Saturn and Jupiter, the largest planet, divided into three sections. It said that demand would determine the final size of The Universe, which is due for completion in 15 to 20 years' time.

Nestled between two of Nakheel's three Palm developments, The Universe will house luxury homes, shopping centres and miles of beachfront.

Environmentalists have said that dredging the ocean floor to build the islands is wreaking havoc on marine life and coral reefs. However, Nakheel said that its projects were ecologically sound. “We are building this with a lot of warning so we can manage water and energy supplies rather than just plonking something in the sea and turning on the tap,” Shawn Lenehan, its head of environment, said.

Nakheel declined to comment on how much The Universe would cost to build.

The $3billion (£1.52billion) first phase of The World was completed last week. Prices for plots are thought to range from $28million to $263million.


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Did oil canals worsen Katrina's effects?

CainBurdeau, Associated Press Yahoo News 21 Jan 08;

Service canals dug to tap oil and natural gas dart everywhere through the black mangrove shrubs, bird rushes and golden marsh. From the air, they look like a Pac-Man maze superimposed on an estuarine landscape 10 times the size of Grand Canyon National Park.

There are 10,000 miles of these oil canals. They fed America's thirst for energy, but helped bring its biggest delta to the brink of collapse. They also connect an overlooked set of dots in the Hurricane Katrina aftermath: The role that some say the oil industry played in the $135 billion disaster, the nation's costliest.

The delta, formed by the accumulation of the Mississippi River's upstream mud over thousands of years, is a shadow of what it was 100 years ago. Since the 1930s, a fifth of the 10,000-square-mile delta has turned into open water, decreasing the delta's economic and ecologic value by as much as $15 billion a year, according to Louisiana State University studies.

The rate of land loss, among the highest in the world, has exposed New Orleans and hundreds of other communities to the danger of drowning. Katrina made that painfully clear.

"I remember when I was a young boy we had a camp out in the marsh," said Don Griffin, a grocer and seafood dealer in the delta town of Leeville, which became an oil-drilling center for decades. "The same places you used to have to get around with a pirogue and a push pole now you can go with a 25-foot outboard. There's no more marsh, which is your first barrier of defense for hurricanes."

In Katrina's wake, the Army Corps of Engineers has gotten the brunt of the criticism for the disaster. Besides building suspect levees, the Corps' mission to control waterways with spillways, floodgates and other measures has played havoc with nature by restricting the Mississippi's sediment and fresh upriver water from replenishing the delta's wetlands.

There are other reasons for the disastrous wetlands loss: Human development, cypress logging, ill-advised farming on the coast, hurricanes, slipping-and-sliding geologic faults and even a South American semi-aquatic rodent called nutria imported to Louisiana in the 1930s.

But many scientists say the oil industry's 10,000 miles of canals — enough to stretch nearly halfway around the world — and the drilling they supported played a decisive role. Some scientists say drilling caused half of the land loss, or about 1,000 square miles.

"The whole thing was manifest destiny written large on a marshy landscape," said John Day, an LSU professor emeritus who specializes in delta ecologies.

The industry denies that and points to disagreement among scientists over who or what caused damage, and how much.

"I've got duck leases out there and I remember when they were covered in grass. They're all ponds now," said Don Briggs, president of the Louisiana Oil & Gas Association. "It's not gone because of drilling. It's because nutria ate all the grasses."

However, a substantial body of evidence points to oil's heavy toll.

The canals, most dug to access wells by bucket dredges between the 1930s and 1970s when restrictions and mitigation requirements were lax to nonexistent, crisscross the marshy coast like a liquid maze.

In many places, they run perpendicular to the Gulf of Mexico shoreline, allowing salt water to intrude far inland. One spot is dubbed "The Wheel" because a series of canals looks like a wagon wheel from the air.

The muddy slop dredged from the canals had to go somewhere. Oil companies piled it where they found it, creating an estimated 13,000 miles of tide-blocking spoil banks.

R. Eugene Turner, an LSU oceanographer, has calculated that every square mile of the delta is bounded on three sides by oil-canal ridges. Turner has spent more than 30 years studying the oil industry's footprint on the delta.

"If the water is blocked from going in, the wetlands on other side is drier for a little longer and also stays flooded longer than it otherwise would be," Turner said. "By drying it, the land oxidizes and dries out; and if it's wetter, it's like leaving a lawn sprinkler on and the plants are going to die."

The damage doesn't stop with the canals. For example, U.S. Geological Survey scientists say the sucking out of the ground of so much oil and gas likely caused the land in many places to sink by half an inch a year. In oil's heyday 30 years ago, Louisiana's coastal wells pumped 360 million barrels a year, an eighth of what Saudi Arabia ships to the market today.

Oil wells also discharged about a billion gallons daily of brine, thick with naturally occurring subsurface chemicals like chlorides, calcium and magnesium, as well as acids used in drilling.

"It was poured into the marshes," said Virginia Burkett, a longtime researcher of the Louisiana wetlands and the chief scientist for climate change at USGS. It contaminated soils and killed plants and animals, she said, before brine dumping was finally regulated in coastal marshes in 1985.

Still, when politicians in Washington or Louisiana talk about Katrina guilt they blame the Corps of Engineers, global warming and the French for building a city in low-lying swamps nearly 300 years ago — but not the oil industry.

"It's the elephant at the dinner table and nobody wants to say there's an elephant there," said Luke Fontana, a New Orleans lawyer for Save Our Wetlands, one of the state's oldest grassroots environmental groups that has fought the draining of swamps and oil company activity since the 1970s.

But the industry's legacy is getting new attention. Some contrast record petroleum profits with staggering cost estimates — up to $60 billion — to save New Orleans and restore the delta. In 2006, major U.S. oil companies, some of which moved offices from New Orleans to Houston, earned about $162 billion.

Meanwhile, locals increasingly ask why oil shouldn't be made to clean up its profitable mess the same as mining operations had to do in Appalachia.

Delta folks like Griffin, the grocer in Leeville, wonder why Shell, ExxonMobil and other oil behemoths aren't paying for the disappearance of his boyhood duck ponds and dune-lined islands.

"It seems that the government should hold them accountable for some of the problem," Griffin said from behind his cash register.

At mid-20th century, marsh-borne oil derricks towered over Leeville's shacks as far as the eye could see, replacing fields of cotton. Today, those same places, chopped up by bucket dredges, are open water. A town cemetery lies in the water, its tombs barely visible. And as Leeville goes under, New Orleans, 50 miles to the northeast, becomes that much more exposed.

The oil industry has not gone entirely unchallenged.

As far back as the 1970s, landowners and environmental groups were able to stop specific projects or force companies to clean up isolated sites. But no lawsuit or state law has compelled the industry to fill the canals or dismantle old spoil banks.

After Katrina, a class-action lawsuit blamed oil and pipeline companies for "depriving ... New Orleans from its natural protection against hurricane winds and storm surges." The suit was dismissed last October.

In the early 1980s, then-Gov. David Treen proposed a coast-and-levee tax by slapping a levy of 36 cents on every barrel of oil and 6 cents on every 1,000 cubic feet of gas that crossed the coastal plain; but the measure didn't muster the two-thirds majority needed in the state Legislature.

"Today, I would recommend going to two bucks a barrel," Treen said. "That would give us about $1 billion a year. I just feel like they ought to pay for some of the cost we incur."

Eventually, petrodollars may provide relief. In 2006, Congress approved a plan to give Louisiana and other Gulf states a large portion of offshore royalties the industry now pays to the federal Treasury. By 2017, Louisiana hopes to get as much as $650 million a year.

Meanwhile, the anything-goes days for oil are over. Regulators demand the use of less-damaging techniques — directional drilling, rerouting of pipelines, wetlands mitigation. Private landowners often ask oil companies to clean up after themselves.

"My job is to make sure they stay on their right of ways, that they don't traverse onto vegetative areas or use machinery that is harmful," said Forrest Travirca III, a land warden for a swath of wetlands near Leeville held by a public trust.

"It's like strip mining. A good strip miner will repair the land."

Cruising in his bay boat through mangrove brakes and past tugboats and crew vessels docked at the offshore-drilling port of Port Fourchon, Travirca pointed out places where oil companies have patched up the land.

For its part, the industry balks at talk of paying for the damage.

"Worldwide, there's this notion that they want the oil industry to pay for everything," John Felmy, chief economist of the American Petroleum Institute, said during the organization's recent meeting in New Orleans. "It's like the world considers the industry a cookie jar."

The industry denies that drilling damaged the delta that much.

"The real question is, what damage did occur?" said Jim Porter, president of Louisiana's chief oil lobby, the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association. "There's no clear-cut answer on it. But there is no doubt there are many, many causes for wetlands loss and access to oil and gas operations is rather insignificant."

In the 1980s, Porter was in charge of the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources, the agency that regulates drilling and coastal conservation.

Rex Tillerson, chief executive of ExxonMobil Corp., said at the American Petroleum Institute meeting that there were "a lot of reasons" for the delta's decline, including the unstable geology there. "The land moves around a lot along the coast," he said. Geologists say there is evidence that slipping-and-sliding faults have caused land loss.

For now, the oil companies are winning the public relations battle, in part by spending $5 million on a marketing campaign called America's Wetland. "Tell Washington to shore up America's energy coast. It fuels the nation," one TV ad implores, calling on Congress to spend the money it will take to restore the delta. Nowhere is oil's responsibility mentioned.

Many Louisiana politicians, including former Gov. Kathleen Blanco, have backed the campaign.

Taking the other side is a disparate group — among them, Treen; Tab Benoit, a Cajun rock musician who talks about oil's legacy during national tours; and Walter Williams, a writer and animator known for his clay-figure character Mr. Bill, who blogs about it.

"Cigarettes were an easy whipping boy," said Williams. "Oil permeates."

In fact, the industry is resurgent in the delta where, as oil prices soar, wildcatters are turning on long-dormant wells.


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First Japanese Rice Ethanol Plant to Start 2009

Risa Maeda, PlanetArk 21 Jan 08;

Farmers were planting two types of super-harvest rice in more areas than planned this year after the 2007 harvest of one type gave a lower-than-expected yield

TOKYO - Japan's first commercial plant to produce ethanol for cars from locally grown rice will reach full capacity of 1,000 kilolitres a year by March 2009, a few months behind schedule, a senior manager said on Friday.

The project in Niigata, central Japan, for which the Japanese government is paying half the plant construction cost of 1.6 billion yen (US$15 million), is one of Japan's three such government-backed commercial production schemes.

It is managed by the National Federation of Agriculture Co-operative Associations (Zen-Noh) and will use non-food rice.

Ippei Koike, general manager of Zen-Noh's farming planning department, said the delay is partly due to paperwork for construction approval.

He said farmers were planting two types of super-harvest rice in more areas than planned this year after the 2007 harvest of one type gave a lower-than-expected yield of 602 kg of brown rice, excluding broken rice, per 10 ares.

An are is 100 square metres (1,076 sq ft).

In Japan, the average rice farming household cultivates a rice area of 107 ares, or 1.07 hectares, with an annual revenue of 1.8 million yen (US$17,000).

"We had expected this type to consistently harvest 800 kg per 10 ares -- 30 to 40 percent more than that of ordinary rice. But last year's experience made us realise that's hard to achieve," Koike said in an interview.

"We won't give up. Japanese farmers are accustomed to much tougher conditions," Koike said, referring to unusually low temperatures in July last year that thwarted the development of rice kernels.

RICE PLANTING

The Niigata project involves engineering company Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Co and Satake Corp, a food processing machinery maker based in Hiroshima, western Japan.

Japan lacks competitive farm produce to make enough ethanol to mix with gasoline and cut greenhouse gas emissions.

But the project aims to use non-food rice planted in abandoned farmlands. A fall in domestic consumption of rice every year results in the Japanese government's plan to reduce planting for food rice by some 100,000 ha in 2008 from 2007.

Zen-Noh has said it will buy rice from farmers at 20 yen a kg to make its auto fuel competitive with regular gasoline.

Ordinary food-quality rice costs well above 100 yen a kg and harvests 500 to 600 kg per 10 ares.

"Despite the loss-making process, farmers now think that the rice for ethanol is one of the forward-looking options to make the best use of the abandoned fields," Koike said.

Zen-Noh, which retails gasoline mainly for farmers, plans to sell gasoline directly blended with 3 percent of the rice-origin ethanol at its 40 gas stations in Niigata.

The stations will be able to handle the green fuel by March, 2009, after spending 2 to 3 million yen each to upgrade the storage tanks to prevent water leakage, Koike said.

Separately, Japan's powerful oil industry is promoting another type of green fuel, or gasoline mixed with ethyl tertiary butyl ether (ETBE), a gasoline additive made from ethanol.

Japan is set to commence a few tax benefits for such fuels in April. The government plans to exempt the 3 percent legally allowed content of ethanol from the gasoline tax of some 53.8 yen a litre. Japan's gasoline pump price is at around 150 yen a litre, including the tax.

Also, regional governments are expected to suspend the land and building tax on an ethanol plant.

(US$1=106.65 Yen)

(Editing by Michael Watson; editing by Chris Johnson)


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EU plans to charge for pollution rights ruffle feathers

Yahoo News 20 Jan 08;

EU plans to make companies pay for the right to pollute have come under fierce fire from governments and industry, warning they could force business and jobs to leave Europe.

As part of a broad strategy for fighting climate change, the European Commission is to unveil plans on Wednesday to make companies pay for tradeable carbon emissions quotas.

The quotas are the cornerstone of the European Union's emissions trading scheme, under which nearly 12,000 energy-intensive plants can buy or sell emissions credits, which EU governments currently hand out for free.

However, Europe's businesses are up in arms about the plans to make them pay for what are in effect permits to pollute, and European leaders are taking note, fearful of the economic impact.

"The way that it's all planned leaves us no other choice than to leave," the European steelmakers federation Eurofer warned last week.

The secretary general of the BusinessEurope employers association, Philippe de Buck, also wrote to European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso to lobby against the proposal.

"In the absence of a comprehensive international agreement, auctioning of allowances will harm the competitiveness of European companies, especially in energy-intensive industries," he warned.

Such warnings have not fallen on deaf ears in European capitals.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said charging for quotas should be used depending on how much a sector is open to competition from countries that do not impose emissions restrictions.

"If big global economies don't commit to efforts to reduce emissions, European restrictions will push industries to relocate in countries with a lower environmental burden," he said.

Likewise, German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel launched a pre-emptive strike on the plans, telling German deputies in Berlin last week that "the European Union cannot ignore the question of how to preserve international competitiveness.

Under the EU's emissions trading schemes, energy intensive plants are assigned emissions quotas, which they can buy on the market if they overshoot their own limit.

Since its debut in 2005, Europe's emissions market -- the first of its kind -- had a financial value last year worth 28 billion euros with 1.6 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide credits changing hands, according to consultants Point Carbon.

In addition to charging companies for the quotas, the Commission wants to broaden the scheme's scope to include other industries, such as the air transport sector, as well as other gases.

Although the scheme is at the heart of the EU's strategy for slashing emissions, it had a rocky first few years because governments issued more quotas to companies than they needed.

As a result, the market price for excess quotas collapsed, along with the incentive to cut emissions, seriously undermining credibility in the programme.

The situation has since improved after the Commission required member states to offer fewer quotas to industry.


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Firms see Green IT as good for bottom line too

Roy Choudhury Business Times 21 Jan 08;

IDC survey shows 82% of local firms invest in Green IT for cost benefit, writes AMIT ROY CHOUDHURY

BEING Green is not only good for the environment, it is also good for the bottom line; and going by a new study, corporate managers in Singapore understand this very well.

The study by research agency IDC finds that cost considerations are driving corporations here to invest heavily in environmentally friendly IT infrastructure, or Green IT.

IDC reports that 82 per cent of local firms have cited cost savings as the primary driver for investment in Green IT, as compared to 75 per cent in the Asia-Pacific, excluding Japan, (APEJ).

Speaking to BizIT, IDC's Philip Carter noted that green technology will definitely have an impact on the bottom line of companies.

'Good corporate citizenship plays less of a role currently in the preference for Green IT in Singapore,' he commented.

Mr Carter, who is the Asia-Pacific head of IDC's Green IT practice, added that as the concept of sustainability becomes more prominent in the market in the future, the role of good corporate citizenship will become more important.

The IDC survey noted that 22 per cent of companies in Singapore think green infrastructure is an important element in their corporate planning. 'This is expected to go up to 45 per cent a few years down the road,' Mr Carter said.

Not only are companies becoming aware of the need to have green infrastructure in-house, they are getting to the stage when they will also expect their suppliers to be green compliant.

'It's becoming clear across the board that end-users will be expecting vendors to take more responsibility in terms of bringing 'Green' products and services to market as well as improving their own internal 'Green' operations and practices in the future,' the IDC official noted.

The survey notes that 15 per cent of Singaporean companies are already considering the Green compliance of their suppliers. This will go up to 46 per cent within a few years.

Moreover, 19 per cent of Singaporean companies are looking to incorporate Green requirements in their request for proposals (RFPs). Mr Carter added that 22 per cent of Singaporean companies are taking a very hard look at Green policies.

Interestingly, the IDC study shows that in Japan, 52 per cent of the companies surveyed have indicated that Green requirements are a part of their procurement process.

Mr Carter noted that one of the reasons why the Green initiative in Singapore was relatively less developed was due to the lack of education on the topic as well as too many confusing messages from the vendor community.

While the government should take the lead role from an adoption perspective, it also has a major role to play in terms of regulation across the various areas within Green IT, Mr Carter noted.

'We see governments increasingly playing a key role here in the region by way of introducing regulations for energy efficiency and e-waste to expedite organisations down this path.'

He suggests that a good starting point for companies in their Green IT journey would be an assessment of their IT infrastructure, mainly focusing on energy efficiency.

That would mean investigating the benefits of technologies like virtualisation, and blade servers, with a view to cutting the electricity bill.

'In most cases, the first phase of the adoption of Green IT will be about 'Lean IT' - focusing on improving energy efficiency of IT equipment within the data centre to reduce costs in the face of rising electricity costs,' Mr Carter noted.

Initiatives like recycling, e-waste guidelines and paper management, which are perceived to have less of an impact on the bottom line, will not be focal points until sustainability is accepted as part of standard business practice.

'In emerging economies of APEJ, it is very clear that cost savings is the primary driver for investment in Green IT, while the more developed economies like Australia, New Zealand and Japan are beginning to understand that corporate social responsibility will increasingly play a key role as the focus on sustainability becomes more prevalent,' the IDC analyst said.

However, the fact remains that the majority of the organisations do not currently have a Green policy within their IT departments in place, which means that putting 'Green' into practice has not moved into mainstream yet.

'Hence, the key takeaway for vendors is the need to ensure that they are making a business case for Green IT in the context of reducing cost in the short term,' Mr Carter said.

He added that further down the line, as governments become more active in terms of regulating this area, IDC expects the broader notions of corporate social responsibility and sustainability to become increasingly important and drive both growth and financial benefits in this market.


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Carbon Disclosure Project to assess world business CO2 footprint

Yahoo News 20 Jan 08;

The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), a consortium of 315 top institutional investors assessing industries about their CO2 emissions, announced Sunday a new partnership to extend its global initiative to companies and suppliers.

With members including Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Allianz and HSBC that manage assets of more than 41 trillion dollars, CDP since late 2007 has been working with some of the world's largest companies to help them assess greenhouse gas emissions through their supply chains, said its CEO Paul Dickinson.

"The Supply Chain Leadership Collaboration (SCLC) is a key step towards a unified business approach to climate change," he said on announcing the new partnership.

The SCLC sees the CDP teaming up with some of the largest purchasing global organizations, including Dell, Hewlett Packard, L'Oreal, PepsiCo, and Reckitt Benckiser.

They join Cadbury Schweppes, Nestle, Procter & Gamble, Tesco, Imperial Tobacco, and Unilever, which signed on the third quarter of 2007.

Each SCLS member, in turn, has selected up to 50 suppliers to work with them and to respond to the CDP pilot information request in the first quarter of 2008.

The CDP information request gathers detailed information on companies' supply chains. It encourages suppliers to report carbon footprints and climate change-relevant information, such as greenhouse gas emissions data, emissions reduction targets and climate change strategy, the CDP said in a statement.

"By bringing together the purchasing authority of some of the largest companies in the world, CDP will encourage suppliers to measure and manage their greenhouse gas emissions," Dickinson said.

"This will enable large companies to work towards managing their total carbon footprint, as the first step to reducing the total carbon footprint is to measure its size."

The SCLC project will be rolled out in May 2008, and CDP is inviting more companies to join it.

The CDP was created five years ago and it gathers information on a voluntary basis that is not submitted to independent scrutiny.

More than 20 percent of the world's 500 largest companies refuse to provide information about their greenhouse gas emissions, environmental groups said.

Corporations Team Up to Cut Supply Chain Emissions

PlanetArk 21 Jan 08;

LONDON - Eleven of the world's largest companies are teaming up to see how they can work with thousands of their suppliers to curb greenhouse gas emissions, a green consultancy said on Sunday.

Cadbury Schweppes, Dell, Nestle, PepsiCo, Proctor & Gamble and Tesco are amongst the companies in the scheme, called the Supply Chain Leadership Collaboration (SCLC).

The venture is being coordinated by the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), a UK-based non-profit organisation that helps companies and investors to cooperate on fighting climate change.

"Multinationals are seeking to understand where the emissions are lying in their supply chain and what risks and opportunities from climate change will be presented," Paul Simpson, chief operating officer for CDP, told Reuters.

In the scheme's pilot phase, until the end of March 2008, each organisation has selected 50 suppliers to work with, CDP said in a statement.

"We believe that partnerships between companies, suppliers, stakeholders and customers are critical to making a real difference in protecting the Earth," Tod Arbogast, computer maker Dell's director of sustainable business, said in a statement.

The Carbon Disclosure Project will publish a report after the first phase, recommending a standardised approach to emissions cuts and highlighting areas to be targeted.

The CDP will expand the scheme in its second phase, starting in May 2008, to include up to 2,000 suppliers from each participating organisation. More major companies will be invited to join in the second phase.

"When it comes to making changes in their supply chains, the purchasing organisations have a great deal of leverage over their suppliers," Simpson added.

To read the CDP's SCLC questionnaire or for further analysis on the carbon markets, log on to http://www.reutersinteractive.com

(Reporting by Michael Szabo; Editing by Anthony Barker)


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