Farmers affected by red-dye incident get S$370,000 in compensation

Channel NewsAsia 22 Jan 08;

SINGAPORE: Six farm owners in the Lorong Semangka area have received a total of S$370,000 as compensation from the Ministry of Defence.

Out of this, S$332,000 was used to compensate those farmers whose vegetables were destroyed.

In November 2007, vegetables in the area, south-east of Tengah Airbase, were stained red. The colouring came from a red dye, used in the smoke effects of the Singapore Air Force's Black Knights aerobatics display

The compensation was worked out in consultation with the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA).

Defence Minister, Teo Chee Hean, was replying to queries in Parliament from Sembawang GRC MP Ellen Lee Geck Hoon, who asked about the total compensation amount. - CNA/vm

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India risks bird flu 'disaster'; human cases feared

Channel NewsAsia 22 Jan 08;

KOLKATA, India : India's worst ever outbreak of bird flu could turn into a disaster, an official warned Tuesday, as five people were reportedly quarantined with symptoms of the virus.

Eight districts in the eastern state of West Bengal have been hit by the virus, and dead birds are being sold and locals said to be "feasting" on cheap chicken.

The state's animal resources minister, Anisur Rahaman, said authorities were "determined to cull all poultry in the districts in three or four days, otherwise the state will face a disaster."

More than 100,000 bird deaths have been reported, and teams are racing to cull two million chickens and ducks.

The Times of India reported five people in West Bengal have been quarantined with "clinical symptoms" of avian flu -- including fever, coughing, sore throat and muscle ache -- after handling affected poultry.

If the tests are positive, this will be the first case of human infection in India, home to 1.1 billion people and hit by bird flu among poultry three times since 2006.

Health officials in New Delhi said they were currently analysing blood samples from close to 150 people who have complained of fever.

On the ground, culling teams have been facing an uphill battle with villagers smuggling birds out of flu affected areas and selling them in open markets.

Thirty-year-old Sheikh Ali, a vendor in Birbhum's Gharisa market, 340 kilometres (192 miles) from the state capital Kolkata, said the sale of poultry had doubled in the past week.

"The prices of chicken have come down from 60 rupees to 20 rupees (1.5 dollars to 50 cents) per kilogramme (2.2 pounds).

"Poor villagers are feasting on chicken. At normal times, they cannot afford to buy as prices are so high. Now they are enjoying the meat," Ali said.

People typically catch the disease by coming into direct contact with infected poultry, but experts fear a flu pandemic if the H5N1 mutates into a form easily transmissible between humans.

Migratory birds have been largely blamed for the global spread of the disease, which has killed more than 200 people worldwide since 2003.

In Birbhum, police seized two trucks of smuggled poultry early Tuesday but culling teams were yet to arrive at the spot, an AFP correspondent said.

"Poultry owners are smuggling their birds out at night and transporting it to different places for fear of culling," said Shubhendu Mahato, a security guard at Arambagh Hatchery, one of the biggest in West Bengal.

Chicken shops had also sprung up along the main highways overnight with people crowding them, the AFP correspondent said.

Neighbouring Nepal, which has banned poultry imports from India since 2006, said its border posts were on high alert.

Bangladesh, which also borders West Bengal, was meanwhile battling its own serious outbreak -- with experts warning the situation was far worse than the government was letting on.

"Bird flu is now everywhere. Every day we have reports of birds dying in farms," said leading poultry expert and the treasurer of Bangladesh Poultry Association M.M Khan.

"Things are now very, very serious and public health is under danger. The government is trying to suppress the whole scenario," Khan said, adding that farmers were also holding back from reporting cases.

- AFP/ms


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Climate change threatens N. Ireland's Giant's Causeway: report

Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;

The Giant's Causeway, the spectacular rock formation on the Northern Irish coast, could soon become difficult to access due to climate change, a report warned Tuesday.

The iconic world heritage site, one of the province's biggest tourist attractions, will be under threat if sea levels rise and storms worsen, said the National Trust conservation organisation, which owns and manages the site.

The report warned that the site was at risk from coastal erosion and flooding over this century.

"In the short term (2020) increasing storminess would require increasingly rigorous hazard management, while in the medium term (2050-2080) slope instability and cliff retreat increase," the report said.

Rising sea levels and greater peak surges on the Atlantic coast could significantly increase the area of Causeway stones washed by waves, it added.

"In the long term (2080-2100) there could be periods when winter access to the Causeway stones would be more difficult and different means of access may need to be explored."

The Giant's Causeway comprises around 40,000 interlocking mostly hexagonal basalt columns formed by volcanic activity. More than half a million tourists visit each year.

Celtic legend has it that the giant Fionn mac Cumhaill (Finn MacCool) built the causeway as stepping stones across to Scotland in a challenge to a giant called Benandonner.


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Tanzania refugees seen eating endangered species

George Obulutsa, Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Hungry refugees in Tanzania are eating chimpanzees and other endangered species in order to supplement their meager diet, an international conservation group said on Tuesday.

Traffic said refugees living near national parks in northwestern Tanzania were also illegally hunting buffalo, topi, eland, elephant and waterbuck.

"The scale of wild meat consumption in East African refugee camps has helped conceal the failure of the international community to meet basic refugee needs," said George Jambiya, the report's lead author.

Traffic, whose report was based on studies carried out in 2005 and 2006, said refugees were being denied adequate nutrition and then punished when caught seeking bush meat.

"Something has to be wrong if refugees, who have run from guns in their home country, then find themselves fleeing wildlife rangers' firearms in their search for food," said report co-author Simon Milledge.

"Relief agencies are turning a blind eye to the real cause of the poaching and illegal trade: a lack of meat protein in refugees' rations," he said.

Traffic said game consumption soared to an estimated 7.5 tons of illegal bush meat per week in two refugee camps in the mid-1990s, when refugee numbers in Tanzania hit a peak of more than 800,000.

The report did not give more recent consumption figures.

The illegal bush meat trade has also caused a drop in government revenues from lucrative licensed sport hunting and game viewing, it said, adding that aid and conservation groups should work more closely together to help reverse the damage.

Since the east African nation's independence in 1961, more than 20 major refugee camps have been established close to game reserves, national parks or other protected areas. Of these, 13 still existed in 2005, Traffic said.

According to the U.N. refugee agency Tanzania hosted 11 camps in January 2007, housing 287,061 refugees, down from 350,590 in 2005.

Most of the refugees fled conflict in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo from as far back as the 1960s, and Rwanda in the 1990s.

(Editing by Helen Nyambura-Mwaura and Jon Boyle)

Refugee link to wildlife decline

Richard Black, BBC News 22 Jan 08;

Conservation groups say they have found an unusual threat to East Africa's wildlife - hunting by hungry refugees.

A report from the wildlife trade monitoring body Traffic says wild meat is covertly traded, cooked and consumed in Tanzanian refugee camps.

Traffic suspects species affected may include chimpanzee, buffalo and zebra.

Tanzania hosts more refugees than any other African nation, a legacy of conflicts in Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The UN says there are more than half a million refugees in the country, mainly living in camps near the western border.

The border is also home to important wildlife refuges such as Gombe National Park, which achieved international fame as the site of Jane Goodall's pioneering studies of chimp behaviour.

Basic 'failure'

In its 60-page report, Traffic says the refugees are turning to wildlife because agencies supplying food are not providing meat.

"The scale of wild meat consumption in East African refugee camps has helped conceal the failure of the international community to meet basic refugee needs," said the report's principal author Dr George Jambiya.

"Relief agencies are turning a blind eye to the real cause of poaching and illegal trade - a lack of meat protein in refugees' rations."

The World Food Programme (WFP), which supplies food to more than 200,000 refugees in Tanzania, said it did not believe there was a big problem.

A survey conducted last year showed little response to a question on whether refugees were obtaining food from hunting, gathering or fishing.

"The refugees are given a balanced diet of cereals, dried beans, vitamin-fortified blended food, vegetable oil fortified with Vitamin A and iodised salt," a WFP spokesman told BBC News.

"To continue to meet the nutritional requirements of the refugees with meat as suggested by the report would require substituting canned meat for the much less expensive beans that we currently provide."

This would almost double the budget for food provision, WFP calculates.

Tale of decline

Traffic admits that the real scale of the hunting problem is not known, but offers a raft of observational evidence and first-person testimony to back its case.

In 1994, when intense ethnic fighting in Rwanda drove an estimated 600,000 refugees into the area of Tanzania surrounding Burigi National Park, wildlife in the park declined sharply.

Buffalo numbers fell from about 2,670 to just 44. Roan antelope declined from 466 to 15 and zebra from 6,552 to 606, while the estimated population of 324 Lichtenstein's Hartebeest, a type of antelope, vanished completely.

Similar trends have been found in other parks near camps.

And when camps have closed, numbers have often recovered.

Long-time residents of camps, meanwhile, told researchers that a clandestine network of hunters and processors continues to supply illegally caught wild meat.

Traffic, which is a joint operation of the World Conservation Union (IUCN) and WWF, recommends that refugee agencies and the Tanzanian government look for ways to increase the supply of meat protein to the refugees.

Livestock rearing, ranching of wild species, and regulated hunting are all measures that could help provide a sustainable supply of meat in some areas, the agency says.


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Toxic chemicals found in dead Tasmanian devils: study

Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;

Potentially cancer-causing chemicals used as flame retardants have been found in the bodies of Tasmanian devils, suggesting a possible role in a disease that threatens to wipe them out, a report said Tuesday.

Scientists have for years been unable to explain why the animals -- the world's largest marsupial carnivore -- have been afflicted with the disease, which causes facial tumours.

A study in which fat was taken from 16 of the animals, including some with the disease, found high levels of retardant chemicals commonly used in computers and foam in bedding and furniture, The Australian newspaper said.

Activists seeking a ban on the toxins said the finding was significant as it showed "reasonably high" levels of a chemical that industry had argued was safe.

"We were quite shocked," said Mariann Lloyd-Smith, co-chair of the International Persistent Organic Pollutants Elimination Network. "Certainly this study will have ramifications."

The National Measurement Institute found high levels of hexabromobiphenyl ether, known as BB153, and "reasonably high" levels of decabromobiphenyl ether, known as BDE209, the newspaper said.

For years, manufacturers had argued that BDE209 was safe, Lloyd-Smith told AFP, but activists believed it broke down into more dangerous chemicals.

The health risks of both chemicals include cancer, developmental problems and neurological effects.

Although the sample of the recent study was too small for firm conclusions, Lloyd-Smith said the toxins weakened the immune system and might theoretically be a factor in the disease that threatens to wipe out the Tasmanian devil.

"They are basically used in a host of domestic and industrial settings to stop the product catching on fire. The problem is once they are used they don't stay in the treated material," she told AFP.

Lloyd-Smith said high levels of the chemicals can be found in dust in offices and at home, which can move thousands of kilometres on the wind and fall to the earth when they hit a colder climate.

Warwick Brennan, spokesman for the Save the Tasmanian Devil Project which commissioned the study, said it needed more assessment.

"We have got some raw data there. It requires an expert toxicologist to interpret it."

The Tasmanian devil now only lives in Australia's island state from where it gets its name, having been competed to extinction on the mainland by the dingo, which was introduced by Aborigines thousands of years ago.

A top biologist said predators are good indicators where chemicals are going, as they are nearer the top of the food chain.

"I'm sure there's a huge interest from the medical point of view in pursuing this," biologist Nick Mooney told national radio.


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Dozens of rare gharials die in India

Biswajeet Banerjee, Associated Press Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;

Conservationists and scientists scrambled Tuesday to determine what has killed at least 50 critically endangered crocodile-like reptiles in recent weeks in a river sanctuary in central India.

Everything from parasites to pollution has been blamed for the deaths of the gharials — massive reptiles that look like their crocodile relatives, but with long slender snouts. The bodies, measuring between five and 10 feet long, have been found washed up on the banks of the Chambal River since early December, according to conservationists and officials.

The precise number of gharials that have died remains unclear, with the Gharial Conservation Alliance saying 81 bodies have been found since early December, butt Chief Wildlife Warden D.N.S Suman putting the number of dead animals at 50.

Conservationists believe there are only some 1,500 gharials left in the wild, many of them in a sanctuary based along the Chambal, one of the few unpolluted Indian rivers. The Chambal contains the largest of three breeding populations in the world.

In early December, officials found the bodies of at least 21 gharials over three days. The bodies have continued washing ashore in the weeks since.

The latest possible clue to what's killing the rare reptiles is an unknown parasite that scientists found in the dead gharials' liver and kidneys, according to Dr. A.K. Sharma of the Indian Veterinary Research Institute.

"We can say that liver and kidney of these gharials were badly damaged," said Sharma. "They were swollen and bigger than their usual size."

Other believe the gharials may have gotten sick and died after eating contaminated fish from the polluted Yamuna river, which joins the Chambal in the state of Uttar Pradesh. Pathological tests confirmed lead and cadmium in the bodies of the dead gharials, said Suman, the wildlife official.

"The Chambal river has clear water free from heavy metals. The only possibility seems that these gharials might have migrated from heavily polluted Yamuna river where they might have eaten fish," said Suman.

The gharial, also known as the Indian crocodile, was on the verge of extinction in the 1970s, but a government breeding program that has released several hundred into the wild has raised their numbers.


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Whole Foods to end use of plastic bags

Reuters 22 Jan 08;

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Whole Foods Market Inc said on Tuesday that it will aim to end the use of disposable plastic grocery bags in all of its 270 U.S., Canada, and United Kingdom stores by April 22, Earth Day.

The grocer, which features natural and organic foods, said it hoped shoppers would bring their own reusable bags, but it would offer 100 percent recycled paper grocery bags when needed.

(Reporting by Ritsuko Ando; Editing by Valerie Lee)


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World wind energy market seen growing in 2008

Sylvia Westall, Reuters 22 Jan 08;

BERLIN (Reuters) - The global wind energy market is set to keep growing in 2008, despite pressure on turbine makers from raw materials prices, but it is likely to slow in Germany, the German Engineering Federation (VDMA) said on Tuesday.

Thorsten Herdan, head of VDMA power systems, said Germany, one of the world's biggest markets, would probably experience a further slowdown after shrinking by 25 percent in 2007.

"Worldwide we see further growth," Herdan said.

"The situation in the supply markets is a little tight and that has to do with the fact that lots of companies have invested in new capacity," he told a news conference.

The world market for wind energy grew by 30 percent in 2007, with around 20,000 megawatts (MW) installed, the VDMA said. This was compared with 32 percent growth in 2006.

Herdan said China had experienced three-fold growth while the U.S. market had doubled in size.

Debate over European Union plans on how to share the burden of cutting carbon dioxide emissions in Europe and the planning rehaul of the emissions trading system (ETS) had, however, caused some uncertainty among investors, Herdan said.

"This current discussion is not necessarily beneficial for potential investors in the market," he said.

GERMAN SLOWDOWN

Herdan said the German outlook was gloomy, despite a draft law that seeks to make wind energy production more attractive amid plans to shut down the country's nuclear power plants.

"Even respective of this, there will be a fall, definitely. It could happen that we have a fall of around 1,000 MW," Herdan said. Germany is the world's largest producer of electricity from wind power and has 22,247 MW installed.

Hermann Albers, President of the German Wind Energy Association, said the German market was under pressure from high raw material and energy costs, which make up around 10-20 percent of total manufacturing costs, according to the VDMA.

Around 1,666 MW worth of wind turbines were installed in Germany in 2007, down 25 percent from a year earlier.

Albers said the turbine industry was not planning to move production to other countries, unlike Finnish cell phone maker Nokia, which last week it announced the closure of a German plant.

"Our policy at present is that Germany continues to be an attractive market," Albers said.

He added that while Germany's first offshore wind farms should be running by 2010, they were not going to be the answer to Germany's energy needs.

"The wind industry and power companies are in agreement that we are going to have relatively small capacity, even taking into account climate protection," he said, estimating that around 500 to 1,000 MW were expected to be produced from offshore in 2010.

"The onshore market remains and will remain of central importance for the industry and the government's climate protection program," he said.

(Reporting by Sylvia Westall, editing by Anthony Barker)


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Leatherback turtle's 12,744 mile migration: longest recorded migration in ocean

Paul Eccleston, The Telegraph 22 Jan 08;

This one leatherback's migration provides a perfect example of how marine conservation strategies must be as global as the ocean life we are trying to safeguard.

A turtle has set a new record for the longest recorded migration journey through the ocean.

The tagged female leatherback turtle crossed the Pacific from west to East and then part of the way back again.

It was tracked by satellite for 647 days and covered at least 12,774 miles before the signal was lost. The turtle's epic journey took it from Jamursba-Medi beach in Papua, Indonesia where it was first recorded nesting, to Oregon on the Pacific northwest coast of America.

Of vertebrates that travel through the ocean, the leatherback's journey was the longest ever recorded.

The leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea) is the most widely distributed marine reptile on the planet and is found in warm open seas across the world including the Pacific, Indian and Atlantic oceans.

But they have also been seen in freezing waters off Argentina, southern Chile, and Tasmania as well as the subarctic northern latitudes off Alaska, Nova Scotia, and the North Sea.

They are massive creatures and can span nine feet weight from the tip of one front flipper to the tip of the other and can weigh 1200lbs.

Adults migrate from their temperate feeding and foraging areas to tropical breeding grounds and tagging is gradually unlocking some of the secrets of their migration paths.

Work by the US's National Marine Fisheries Service, at the Southwest Fisheries Science Center, with international partners in Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands has revealed that leather­backs living in the North Pacific, including waters near the U.S. west coast, are part of the western Pacific breeding population.

Details of the turtle's odyssey were given in the State of the World's Sea Turtles (SWOT) magazine at the 28th Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation, being held in Loreto, Baja California Sur, Mexico.

Scott Benson, one of the scientists involved in the research, said: "Understanding sea turtles' and other marine animals' movements in this way is critical to ensuring their protection. Ocean-going animals often pass through multiple nations' territories and international waters as they migrate, making their survival the responsibility of not just one nation but many."

Roderic B Mast, chief editor of SWOT, as well as a vice president of Conservation International and co-chair of the IUCN Marine Turtle Specialist Group, said: "SWOT Report is all about providing a global perspective of sea turtles to encourage international protection of these ancient, endangered animals.

This one leatherback's migration provides a perfect example of how marine conservation strategies must be as global as the ocean life we are trying to safeguard."

Scientific research has shown that nesting turtles from the western Pacific, which is the last sizable nesting population remaining in the Pacific, migrate through areas in the Philippines, South China Sea, and Japan, into the Southern Hemisphere. The species has become endangered in the Pacific and has led to work on an internationally coordinated conservation strategy.

*The longest measured annual migration of any animal, terrestrial or marine, is the sooty shearwater (Puffinus griseus) of 40,000 miles between New Zealand and the North Pacific.


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Best of our wild blogs: 22 Jan 08


Johora singaporensis mating
on the johora singaporensis blog

4 Feb (Mon): "Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives on Climate Change: Economics and Business" a seminar on the champions of the environment blog

Art from recycling
art workshops for adults and kids on the postcards from seletar blog

Global Warming & Rising Sea Levels: Videos of New York, Boston, Miami on The Daily Galaxy blog


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Climate change deal: Jaya sets out Singapore's guiding principles

Clarissa Oon, Straits Times 22 Jan 08;

IT IS early days yet for international talks on a post-2012 climate change deal, but Singapore is not sitting idly by, Deputy Prime Minister S. Jayakumar said yesterday.

It has laid out guiding principles, one of which is to support plans to fight smoke haze and reduce emissions from the razing of forests, said Professor Jayakumar, who heads a ministerial committee to tackle climate change.

Preliminary agreements on forest conservation proposed by Indonesia were reached at last month's United Nations climate change talks in Bali.

Singapore, a victim of the annual haze that blankets the region's skies, will adopt a 'principled and forward-looking stance as a responsible member of the global community while preserving our core national interests', said Prof Jayakumar.

The key principles that he spelt out were, firstly, that Singapore would participate actively in negotiations, but that any new framework should consider the national circumstances of each country.

Secondly, emission reduction targets should not be at the expense of a country's economic growth, particularly for developing countries.

Thirdly, the green technologies that are deployed should be 'pragmatic and cost-effective'.

Finally, he highlighted the need to protect the world's carbon sinks, calling for a stop to slash-and-burn practices and the large-scale burning of peatlands. Such activities release huge amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.

The minister warned of a long road ahead for international talks because of the sheer number of countries and interests involved.

He was responding to a question by Nominated Member of Parliament Edwin Khew on Singapore's climate change strategy following the Bali talks.

Marked by fractious debates among developed and developing countries alike, the Bali conference launched two more years of formal negotiations on a deal to replace the current Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

The United States, for one, has not ratified the protocol. The protocol also does not bind fast-growing developing countries such as China and Brazil to emission reduction targets.

At home, Prof Jayakumar urged businesses to improve on their energy efficiency and called for non-governmental organisations to promote energy-saving measures here.

A survey conducted in 2006 by the National Environment Agency showed that only 63 per cent of the public are aware of the occurrence of global warming and climate change.


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Pandemic risk is now at an unprecedented level

Andy Mukherjee, Business Times 22 Jan 08;

The bigger risk is the absence of an international order that has legal authority over both recalcitrant nation states and profiteering drugmakers

'Chikungunya what?' asked a newspaper headline in Singapore last week. Chikungunya fever, a cousin of dengue fever, is caused by a mosquito-borne virus that may have originated in Africa, or at least it was named there.

Since its re-emergence in India in 2005, the disease, which causes fever and acute joint pain, has afflicted 200,000 people there, and reached Italy last summer.

Yet, in Singapore, barely three hours by flight from some of the worst-affected cities in southern India, the virus has hardly been a health scare. Sure, there were 10 cases last year. But they were all introduced by infected foreign travellers. That changed last week.

A day after the newspaper headline, Singapore's health ministry said it suspected a local outbreak of Chikungunya fever: The 27-year-old who contracted the bug hadn't been abroad for several months.

Meanwhile, India is grappling with bird flu, an imported disease that it didn't know much about until recently.

In the developed world, the discontent with freer cross-border movement of goods, services and people centres on job losses and declining competitiveness of the subsidised sectors of the economy, especially agriculture.

In low- and middle-income countries, the most common complaint about globalisation concerns the loss of monetary-policy autonomy in the face of fickle-minded inflows of overseas capital and excessive exchange- rate volatility.

Adequate attention isn't being given to the other big risk associated with increased international economic integration: a global pandemic.

The threat, as the 2003 outbreak of Sars, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, demonstrated in so chilling a manner, is real enough.

At about one billion journeys a year, international travel has made the world 'tightly coupled', said Lonnie King, who directs the fight against pathogens that are transmitted from animals to humans at the Atlanta-based Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. An intertwined world is, in turn, a source of 'unprecedented vulnerability' for global health, Mr King said in an October presentation to the World Bank in Washington.

And travel is just one element of globalisation. Research has even linked imported used-car tyres - which often carry mosquito eggs - to dengue fever outbreaks.

But trade and travel have always been known to spread malady alongside prosperity. So why should we be alarmed now? Science today is much more advanced than in the late 19th century when Roland Ross proved the link between mosquitoes and malaria in his lab in India. Public healthcare systems are much more robust and better-funded than at the previous peak of globalisation a century ago.

If as many as 25 people are now crossing national borders every second, then information about diseases and knowledge of remedies, too, are getting disseminated faster than before. The real challenge lies in the realm of international law.

That became apparent in a most bizarre manner in late 2006 when Indonesia refused to share samples of the avian-flu virus with the World Health Organization. The country claimed a sovereign right to the samples under the Convention on Biological Diversity, an international legal treaty.

A lethal disease that threatens humanity can't reasonably be viewed as any nation's sovereign property.

Indonesia took recourse in this argument to make a point. Its position was this: Why should pharmaceutical companies get their samples from developing countries, develop patented products based on them and then price them out of reach of poor nations, including the original providers of vital information?

'The incident involving Indonesia's actions with virus samples illustrates both the importance and the limitations of international law in global health diplomacy,' says David Fidler, a law professor at Indiana University in Bloomington.

As long as the legal position remains unsettled, other developing countries may adopt a stance similar to Indonesia's to negotiate better terms for the drugs they need to combat pandemics. And pharmaceutical companies won't be able to shirk the bargaining.

'When possession is cloaked in the principle of sovereignty, those who require access to the property have to come to terms with the need to bargain for it,' Mr Fidler noted in a recent study.

More than the increased speed at which diseases can spread in a shrinking world, the bigger risk is the absence of an international order that has legal authority over both recalcitrant nation states and profiteering drugmakers.

Just as there's no global institution to either regulate the quality of cross- border capital flows or judge the fairness of currency manipulation by central banks, the job of apportioning responsibilities for cross-border disease prevention, too, currently isn't being done by anyone.

By initially suppressing information about the outbreak of Sars in Guangdong province, local Chinese officials eventually presented the world - and their own country - with a bigger problem than there would have been if stricter rules on international information-sharing, and penalties for flouting them, had existed.

Five years later, the world is even more interconnected and there still isn't enough in the law to assure us of sincere and swift global cooperation the next time there's an outbreak as deadly as Sars.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own


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Nine probable cases of chikungunya fever in Singapore

Nine probable cases of chikungunya fever detected as of Jan 20
Channel NewsAsia 21 Jan 08;

SINGAPORE: Nine probable cases of chikungunya fever have been detected as of Sunday.

The Ministry of Health (MOH) and the National Environment Agency (NEA) said all nine were assessed at the Communicable Disease Centre at Tan Tock Seng Hospital and five of them remain in the hospital for isolation and management.

Eight of the probable cases are from the same section of Clive Street, while the ninth is from the nearby vicinity of Dickson Road.

The MOH said more than 800 people in the Clive Street area have been screened since the first case was detected on 14 January.

The NEA inspected more than 2,500 premises in Little India, and a total of 33 indoor breeding and 10 outdoor breeding sites were detected and destroyed.

Residents and premise owners have been advised to check their premises daily to remove any stagnant water that may breed mosquitoes.

Persons infected with chikungunya fever should stay indoors to reduce the risk of further transmission of the virus.

Those who have been in the Clive Street area recently and have developed a fever are advised to consult their doctors. - CNA/ac

CHIKUNGUNYA OUTBREAK
One more found with disease, NEA steps up mosquito control efforts
Lee Hui Chieh, Straits Times 22 Jan 08;

ONE more individual has been found to be infected with chikungunya, the mosquito-borne, dengue-like disease, bringing the total number infected so far to nine.

Five are in the Communicable Disease Centre (CDC). The others have recovered.

The latest patient to be diagnosed lodged in Dickson Road, off Clive Street, where all the other cases originated.

All nine patients are foreign nationals, mostly from Bangladesh and India.

Like dengue, chikungunya is spread by the Aedes mosquito and causes similar symptoms such as fever, joint pains and nausea, but is rarely fatal.

The CDC's clinical director, Associate Professor Leo Yee Sin, told The Straits Times yesterdaythat as the number of infected patients is low, there is probably not a large 'human reservoir' of virus which can be spread to mosquitoes, and then to more humans.

She added: 'Coupled with good mosquito control, it is hopeful that this outbreak is under control.'

A Health Ministry spokesman noted that infections have been limited to the Clive Street area.

But the outbreak will be considered over only when no new cases have been found within 24 days of the previous one, she said.

Since health officers were first notified of a case by a general practitioner last Monday, they have taken blood samples from 822 people living or working within a 150m radius of the patient.

Over the past week, the National Environment Agency has intensified mosquito control efforts.

It has checked 2,514 premises, destroyed 43 breeding sites - 33 indoor, and 10 outdoor - and fined 27 people for having breeding sites on their properties.

It has also fogged the Clive Street vicinity repeatedly.

Many patients were from the same shophouse in Clive Street. Another, a male tourist from India, lodged in a shophouse opposite.

An assistant in a wine shop on the ground floor of the second shophouse, Mr Dhasan Munusamy, 40, said the shop gets about 20 customers a day now, down from about 30 before.

He said: 'Families are scared. We try to take care of our customers by spraying insecticide, and checking for stagnant water twice a day.'


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Indian villagers eating birds hit by avian flu

Straits Times 22 Jan 08;

KOLKATA - VILLAGERS in eastern India are continuing to eat chickens killed by bird flu, prompting fears that the country's worst outbreak of the virus could spread.

West Bengal's Animal Resources Development Minister Anisur Rahman yesterday described the situation in the affected areas as 'horrible', and said the authorities needed to accelerate a cull of hundreds of thousands of chickens and ducks.

'The ignorance of villagers is one of the main hurdles. They are carrying the dead chickens without any protective gear,' he said.

'Most villagers are not aware of the disease. They are eating the dead chickens. Their children are playing with the infected chickens in the courtyards. It's horrible.'

Six districts in West Bengal state have reported outbreaks of avian flu among poultry.

The minister said there were fears that the disease could be spreading further afield in the state. Suspect poultry have been spotted in the hill resort of Darjeeling on the border with Nepal, and in several villages in Coochbehar bordering Bangladesh, which is also fighting a bird flu outbreak.

'Blood samples of the dead poultry have been sent for tests. We are awaiting the report,' said Mr Rahman.

He also said the authorities had so far killed 200,000 birds and were planning to cull 500,000 more in the next three to four days.

The outbreak is the third in India since 2006 and the worst so far because it is more widespread, according to the World Health Organisation.

Officials are having trouble containing the outbreak because it has largely struck poultry living in tens of thousands of homes rather than at farms, said Mr Rahman.

'Here you have to deal with poultry birds in backyards. In many places, the villagers consider the poultry as part of their family and do not want to part with them,' he said.

Many villagers have refused to give up their chickens, claiming government compensation was inadequate.

The state government said yesterday that it was allotting extra funds to compensate villagers.

On Sunday, police arrested 12 farmers in Birbhum, one of the worst-affected areas, who attacked five officials after health workers slaughtered their chickens, said a local government official.

No human cases of infection have been reported in India so far.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, ASSOCIATED PRESS


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Shipping industry explores ways to cut fuel costs

Business Times 22 Jan 08;

(BERLIN) Oil at more than US$90 a barrel is concentrating minds in the shipping industry. Higher fuel costs and mounting pressure to curb emissions are leading modern merchant fleets to rediscover the ancient power of the sail.

The world's first commercial ship powered partly by a giant kite sets off on a maiden voyage from Bremen to Venezuela today, in an experiment which inventor Stephan Wrage hopes can wipe 20 per cent, or US$1,600, from the ship's daily fuel bill.

'We aim to prove it pays to protect the environment,' Mr Wrage told Reuters. 'Showing that ecology and economics are not contradictions motivates us all.'

The 10,000-tonne MS Beluga SkySails - which will use a computer- guided kite to harness powerful ocean winds far above the surface and support the engine - combines modern technology with know-how that has been in use for millennia.

But if Skysails is a relatively elaborate solution, another development shows that the march of progress is not always linear: shipping companies seeking immediate answers to soaring fuel prices and the need to cut emissions are simply slowing down.

The world's 50,000 merchant ships, which carry 90 per cent of traded goods from oil, gas, coal and grains to electronic goods, emit 800 million tonnes of carbon dioxide each year. That is about 5 per cent of the world's total. Also, their fuel costs rose by as much as 70 per cent last year.

That dramatic increase has ship owners clambering onto a bandwagon to reduce speed as a way to save fuel and cut the greenhouse gases blamed for global warming, said Hermann Klein, an executive at Germanischer Lloyd classification society.

'The number of shipping lines reducing speed to cut fuel costs has been growing steadily,' Mr Klein, whose organisation runs safety surveys on more than 6,000 ships worldwide, told Reuters.

'Slowing down by 10 per cent can lead to a 25 per cent reduction in fuel use. Just last week, a big Japanese container liner gave notice of its intention to slow down,' he added.

Shipping was excluded from the UN's Kyoto Protocol to slow climate change, and many nations want the industry to be made accountable for its impact on the climate in the successor to Kyoto, which runs to 2012.

In Hamburg, the Hapag-Lloyd shipping company is not waiting for 2012. It reacted to rising fuel prices by cutting the throttle on its 140 container ships travelling the world's oceans, ordering its captains to slow down.

The company in the second half of last year reduced the standard speed of its ships to 20 knots from from 23.5 knots, and said that it saved a 'substantial amount' of fuel.

The calculation used in shipping is complex: longer voyages mean extra operating costs, charter costs, interest costs and other monetary losses. But Hapag-Lloyd said that slowing down still paid off handsomely.

'We've saved so much fuel that we added a ship to the route and still saved costs,' said Klaus Heims, press spokesman at the world's fifth largest container shipping line. 'Why didn't we do this before?'

Climate change was an additional motivating factor. 'It had the added effect of cutting carbon dioxide emissions immediately,' Mr Heims said. 'Before, ships would speed up to 25 knots from the standard 23.5 to make up if time was lost in crowded ports. We calculated that five knots slower saves up to 50 per cent in fuel.'

Slowing down has not involved a decrease in capacity for the company. For container ships carrying mainly consumer goods from Hamburg to ports in the Far East, the round-trip at 20 knots now takes 63 days instead of 56, but to make up for this, it added a vessel to the route to bring the total to nine.

Hapag-Lloyd board member Adolf Adrion told a news conference in London on Jan 10 that speeds are now being cut further, to 16 knots from 20, for journeys across the Atlantic. 'It makes sense environmentally and economically,' he said.

The world's largest container shipping operator, Danish group AP Moller-Maersk, is also going slower to cut emissions although Eivind Kolding, chief executive of the group's container arm, told the January event that this would mean a delay to clients of 1.5 days. He added he believed that was a price customers were willing to pay for the sake of the environment.

'We reduce speeds where it makes sense,' said Thomas Grondorf, Moller-Maersk spokesman in Copenhagen. 'It entails careful planning and is only appropriate on certain routes.'

Not only are giant ocean-going vessels slowing down, the trend is also catching on among ferry services.

Norway's Color Line ferry between Oslo and Baltic destinations said in early January that it would add 30 minutes to the 20-hour trip from Oslo to Kiel: 'It's good for the environment and it's good for us economically,' said Color Line spokesman Helge Otto Mathisen in Oslo.

Color Line CEO Manfred Jansen has said that the company will save 1.4 million litres of fuel per year by sailing slower.

But if fuel prices keep rising, innovations like the kite powered Beluga SkySails could also pay off. German-based Beluga Shipping has already ordered two more vessels and Mr Wrage's company has a total of five orders in hand.

If the maiden voyage is a success, Mr Wrage, the company's chief executive, hopes to double the size of its kites to 320 sq m, and expand them again to 600 sq m in 2009. The company hopes to fit 1,500 ships by 2015.

At Germanischer Lloyd, Mr Klein said that the classification body has urged ship owners to explore other simple ways to save fuel, including using weather forecasts to pick optimum routes for vessel performance, regularly cleaning their vessels' hull and propeller to remove sediments that cause resistance, and using fuel additives to improve combustion efficiency.

'Ship efficiency is of paramount importance considering a fuel bill for a big container ship over a 25-year lifespan adds up to nearly US$900 million,' he said.

He also saw scope for designers to create slower speed engines with better fuel effiency rather than just having ship owners operate fast-propulsion engines at reduced speeds. -- Reuters


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Honeybees may be wiped out in 10 years

Jasper Copping, The Telegraph 20 Jan 08;

Honeybees will die out in Britain within a decade as virulent diseases and parasites spread through the nation's hives, experts have warned.

Whole colonies of bees are already being wiped out, with current methods of pest control unable to stop the problem.

The British Beekeepers Association (BBKA) said that if the crisis continued, honeybees would disappear completely from Britain by 2018, causing "calamitous" economic and environmental problems.

It called on the Government to restart shelved research programmes and to fund new ones to try to save the insects.

Tim Lovett, the association's president, said: "The situation has become insupportable and the Government is unwilling to take steps to avoid disaster.

"We're increasingly unable to cope with threats as they arise. No bees means a huge cost to agriculture, without touching on the ecological and environmental issues. We're facing calamitous results."

Last year, more than 11 per cent of all beehives inspected were wiped out, although losses were higher in some areas.

In London, about 4,000 hives - two-thirds of the bee colonies in the capital - were estimated to have died over last winter. Of the eight colonies inspected so far this year, all have been wiped out.

The losses are being blamed on Colony Collapse Disorder, a disease that has severely affected bee populations in America and Europe, and a resistant form of Varroa destructor, a parasitic mite that affects bees.

The decline in honeybees is risking the sustainability of home-grown food. They pollinate more than 90 of the flowering crops we rely on for food. They are estimated to contribute more than £1 billion a year to the national economy yet the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), spends an average of only £200,000 a year on research to protect them.

The BBKA will this week launch a campaign aimed at forcing ministers to take the plight of the bee more seriously, and to spend the £8 million over the next five years which it believes is essential to guarantee its survival.

At their annual meeting held earlier this month, the association's 11,200 members voted unanimously to condemn the Government's position.

At a showdown meeting, between Lord Rooker, the farming minister, and the BBKA last month, the minister refused to increase the spending, even though in November, he appeared to admit the severity of the threat, when he said: "If we do not do anything, the chances are that in 10 years' time we will not have any honeybees."

Mr Lovett added: "Defra has been alerted, but chooses to take no action. If nothing happens, we may not even have to wait 10 years."

Professor Francis Ratniek, a bee expert at Sheffield University, said: "If there was to be a bee collapse the effect on Britain would be huge.

"In Britain we haven't had our fair share of bee research funds and research into bee disease has decreased just as the threat to colonies is increasing. A complete die-off is a worst case scenario."


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Carnivores released into wild 'fail and die'

Charles Clover, The Telegraph 20 Jan 08;

Most carnivores bred in captivity and released back into the wild fail to cope and die, according to a study published on Monday.

Researchers are calling for a complete rethink of such reintroductions before others are carried out, including the suggested release of animals such as the lynx, wildcat and wolf into Scotland.

The study looked at reintroductions involving such carnivores as lynx, Amur tiger, cheetah, brown bear and otter, and found only one in three captive-bred animals released into their natural habitat survived.

Most of the deaths were caused by human activities, suggested the captive-bred animals were too trusting of humans, and some starved to death because they did not know how to hunt.

Kirsten Jule, lead author of the paper, said: "Animals in captivity do not usually have the natural behaviours needed for success in the wild. Their lack of hunting skills and their lack of fear towards humans are major disadvantages.

"We have suspected for some time that captive-born animals fared less well than wild animals, but here it is finally quantified, and the extent of the problem is critical."

The scientists from Exeter University looked at 45 reintroductions, involving 17 carnivore species. It found that over half the animals were killed by humans, generally in shootings and car accidents.

For example, of 46 captive-bred lynx released into Switzerland, only 15 survived.

Five wolves released into Yellowstone national park in the United States were shot by ranchers bordering the park.

The study, published online in the journal Biological Conservation, also found captive animals were more susceptible to starvation and disease than their wild counterparts and less able to form successful social groups.

Despite the problems raised in the research, Miss Jule still believes reintroduction projects are vital to conservation.

They need, however, to be reassessed to prepare animals better for living in their natural environment.

This could mean reducing contact with humans, creating opportunities for hunting while in captivity and encouraging the formation of natural social groups.

The study also points out the importance of talking to local communities and winning their support before any reintroductions are carried out, since most extinctions originally came about as a result of conflict with humans.

Miss Jule added: "If we are to try to redress the balance, it is important for us to help provide captive-born animals with the opportunity to gain the skills that they will need for survival in the wild. The next step is for scientists, conservationists and animal welfare groups to develop guidelines to help captive animals prepare for a new life in the wild."


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Australia Floods Bless and Curse Farmers, Hit Coal

James Regan and Fayen Wong, PlanetArk 22 Jan 08;

SYDNEY - Flooding across large tracts of eastern Australia was giving long-sought drought relief to farmers while forcing coal mines to curtail operations.

"Finally, some good rains," said Ron Storey of Australian Crop Forecasters, which upped its sorghum crop forecast by 17 percent to nearly 2 million tonnes on Monday.

The deluge that has caused rivers to overflow, forcing residents in rural towns to evacuate to higher ground, was set to provide long-absent water for irrigation and long-term benefits worth around A$1 billion (US$877 million), AgForce Queensland chief executive Brett De Hayr said.

However, farmers whose sorghum crops are nearly ready for harvest may see the tallest crops severely damaged and unable to stand up again once the flooding recedes.

"A lot of crops are physically washed away and there's a lot of mold and that will certainly have an impact," De Hayr said.

The Bureau of Meteorology has issued flood warnings for 13 rivers and creeks and a strong wind warning for coastal waters.

Xstrata Plc, Rio Tinto Ltd, BHP Billiton Ltd and Macarthur Coal Ltd all said their operations had been hampered by the deluge.

"The news will definitely spook the market and spot coal prices could potentially go through the roof," said Andrew Pedler, a resource analyst at Wilson HTM.

Mid-size producer Ensham Resources Pty Ltd, which had to use helicopters to evacuate workers stranded at the mine, said on Monday it has declared force majeure at its Ensham coal project, which has a production rate of about 8.4 million tonnes a year.

Queensland's rail operator was forced to halt coal transport on Friday after rail tracks were cut by flooding.

The state's emergency services department has dropped food by helicopter to isolated areas and brought in sandbags to construct temporary levees.

Xstrata, the world's largest exporter of thermal coal, said flooding at its Newlands and Collinsville mines had made it difficult to get to its mines and reduced output.

Xstrata spokesman James Rickards said it was too early to assess the damage and the impact on production.

Newlands produces about 10 million tonnes of thermal coal a year, most sold to Japanese utilities. The Collinsville mine produces a combined total of 5 million tonnes of coking and thermal coal annually.

Rio said workers at its 3.7 million-tonnes-a-year Kestrel coking and thermal coal mine were being advised to stay home.

"In the interest of safety across the business we have limited production at our operations to varying degrees," said BHP spokeswoman Emma Meade.

Coal mining in Queensland directly employs almost 23,000 people, according to Queensland Resources Council.

While output from collieries has been hurt, some companies were drawing on stockpiled coal to keep shipments moving, Greg Smith, general manager of the Dalrymple Bay coal terminal, said. (US$1=A$1.14) (Editing by Michael Urquhart)


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Red Cross refocuses on threat of climate change

Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;

The international Red Cross said on Monday it will refocus its budget and aid appeals for the coming year to better meet the growing threat of climate change and associated natural disasters.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) launched an appeal for 326 million Swiss francs (292 million dollars, 198 million euros) for 2008, saying that some three quarters of this aid will go towards health operations and disaster management.

The aid agency expects to launch another appeal for the same amount of money for 2009.

"For many people, climate change tends to be seen as more of an environmental, scientific or political issue," IFRC policy and communications head Encho Gospodinov told journalists.

"We believe it must also be seen as a humanitarian issue, first and foremost, an issue that is already impacting on the lives of millions of vulnerable people around the world," he added.

IFRC secretary general Markku Niskala said that the number of weather-related natural disasters, such as droughts and floods, has risen to around 400 each year in the last two years, from an average of 200 per year in the last decade.

"Climate change is also having a very real and very worrisome impact on water supplies, on food production and even on health crises," he said.

The IFRC said that changing weather patterns and melting glaciers are already threatening water resources, while changes in temperature and rainfall are expected to seriously damage agriculture in future years.

"The impact of climate change on disasters, on health crises -- on vulnerability in general -- emphasises the importance of making communities stronger and more resilient," Niskala said.


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Oil andthe Arctic

Arctic Oil Activity Seen Up, Eco-Risks Loom - Report
PlanetArk 22 Jan 08;

OSLO - Exploitation of the Arctic's huge oil and gas wealth poses a growing danger to an icy wilderness that can recover only slowly from heavy oil spills, a report by the eight-nation Arctic Council said on Monday.

"Oil spills can kill large numbers of animals by covering them in oil, and create long-term contamination that can affect populations and ecosystems for decades," an overview report by the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), an Arctic Council body, said.

According to some estimates, as much as a quarter of the world's undiscovered oil and gas may lie in the Arctic,.

"With rising global demand, oil and gas activity in the region is expected to increase," the report said.

The Arctic already produces about a tenth of the world's crude oil and a quarter of its gas, with about 80 percent of the oil and 99 percent of the region's gas coming from Russia, the report said.

"The Arctic is generally considered to be vulnerable to oil spills due to slow recovery of cold, highly seasonal ecosystems, and the difficulty of clean up in remote, cold regions, especially in waters where sea ice is present," it said.

Around 100 scientists have been working on the report "Arctic Oil and Gas 2007" since 2002.

The report was delayed until this year from 2007, and sources familiar with the process said that the United States and Sweden had blocked publication of policy recommendations.

The difficulty stemmed partly from the identification of vulnerable areas in the Arctic, an official said. The report mentioned the Barents Sea and Bering Sea as two such areas.

The Arctic Council's member states are Canada, Denmark, -- including Greenland and the Faroe Islands -- Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States.


EXXON VALDEZ

AMAP was established in 1991 to implement parts of an Arctic environmental protection strategy, to provide information on risks to the environment and to advise governments on preventive and remedial actions to deal with them.

"While routine oil and gas activities have produced relatively little hydrocarbon contamination, accidents such as oil spills are a different story," the AMAP report said.

The report noted some big spills on land, including one caused by a ruptured pipeline in 1994 in Russia's Komi Republic, but it said: "To date there have been no large oil spills in the Arctic marine environment from oil and gas activities."

It said, however, that the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil tanker spill off southern Alaska and spills in the North Sea -- neither of which are in the Arctic proper -- "give some indication of the likely impacts should such a spill occur."

Natural seepage is a bigger source of oil contamination into the Arctic environment than human sources, the report said. "Routine oil and gas operations currently contribute a very small fraction of the total input," it said.

Where spillages occur, though, their local intensity means they inflict greater damage. (Reporting by John Acher, editing by Ralph Boulton)


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U.S. says world must improve energy efficiency

Simon Webb, Yahoo News 21 Jan 08;

Bodman earlier repeated his call for the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to boost output at its February 1 meeting.

The world's largest energy consumer the United States on Monday called for a global push for increased energy efficiency to help meet rising demand and alleviate the impact of high prices on economic growth.

The U.S. consumes about 21 million barrels per day of oil, around a quarter of the world's supply. Record oil prices have cooled U.S. appetite for gas guzzling cars and, along with increasing environmental concerns, leant weight to calls for more sparing use of energy.

The country last month passed a bill requiring increased fuel efficiency in vehicles for the first time in over 30 years.

"We must promote increased energy efficiency," U.S. Energy Secretary Sam Bodman said in a speech to a green energy conference. "The biggest source of immediately available 'new' energy is the energy that we waste every day."

Energy efficiency measures "will not only take some pressure off demand, but also improve the health of our shared environment," he said.

The challenge of meeting growing energy demand was global and required huge investment in both conventional and alternative energy sources in the developed and developing world alike, he said. New technology needed to be rapidly deployed to diversify the global energy supplies.

"The world needs safe, reliable, clean, affordable and diverse energy supplies - and in considerably greater numbers than it now has... to do that we need a global response... and, by that I mean all nations, including those that produce our world's oil supply."

Bodman earlier repeated his call for the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to boost output at its February 1 meeting.

To encourage investment in clean and efficient oil and gas production, Bodman called for an end to "market interventions," without specifically mentioning OPEC.

"It is time to stop doing the things that we know will not help," he said. "We know that purposeful market distortions - such as rationing supply, cutting production, or creating price floors and ceilings - do not work."

Bodman was on the third stop of a trip to the Middle East taking in Jordan, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Egypt.

(Reporting by Simon Webb; editing by James Jukwey)


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