Quieter Lunar New Year for Malaysians as food prices increase

Channel NewsAsia 7 Feb 08;

KUALA LUMPUR: It's a more subdued Lunar New Year this time round in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur as higher food prices, and a sense of uncertainty over the economic outlook, are putting a dampener on the usual spending spree.

Shoppers and business owners said the pre-new year shopping spree has been slow to take off.

Despite that, shoppers head down to the heart of Chinatown to soak up the feel of Lunar New Year.

The popular grilled meat or Bak Kwa shop is still pulling in the loyal customers, and maybe more new ones.

And to cut waiting time, customers are encouraged to indicate their orders even before they arrive at the serving counter.

The hot favourites are grilled chicken and ham, but all varieties cost US 60 cents more per kilo this year.

Elaine Kiew, a shop owner, said: "It's because of the raw material. If the ingredients cost more, then we have to raise our prices a bit."

Apart from the festive season, rising transport, food and fuel costs have pushed prices up by some 20 per cent.

In an effort to control spiralling prices, the government recently launched a national stockpile, which included petroleum.

But inflation or otherwise, the Chinese community is determined to make the best of the occasion.

Although the Chinese only makes up about less than half of the country's population, the spirit of unity fills the air with all races joining in the celebrations. -CNA/vm


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India struggles to contain its worst avian epidemic

Channel NewsAsia 7 Feb 08;

NEW DELHI: India is struggling to contain its worst avian epidemic which broke out in January in the state of West Bengal that borders Bangladesh.

Three and a half million birds have been culled in the 5-kilometre zone where the avian influenza broke out in the second week of January in the eastern Indian state of Western Bengal.

At least a million more will be culled in the days to come.

Culling of infected poultry is also taking place in the states adjoining West Bengal as many farmers had illegally exported the birds out of the borders to sell them in the open market.

Dr Jai P Narain, communicable diseases director for World Health Organisation’s South-east Asia regional office, said: "I think the response of the government of India has been rapid and also to the scale that is required.

“And you can see the impact of these operations also. The outbreak is coming under control now. There are fewer number of deaths among poultry and no human cases have happened so far," he added.

Central health officers said about 2.7 million people in West Bengal were under surveillance.

All the 25 samples collected from those suspected to have come in contact with infected birds have been found negative.

Surya Kanta Mishra, West Bengal State’s Health Minister, said: "Within the 3 to 10 kilometre range, we have been conducting house to house surveillance, particularly on those above 18 years of age. The survey is done twice a week. The blood samples tested were negative for bird flu."

Chicken prices in cities like New Delhi, which does not get any poultry from the affected area, is down by 50 per cent.

Restaurants still have chicken preparations on the menu though some prefer to avoid eating chicken till they are sure that the flu hasn't spread.

The epidemic is a blow to India's fast growing US$4 billion poultry industry, which employs three million people.

India's share of world poultry exports is small but has grown 30 fold over the past 15 years. -CNA/vm


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Best of our wild blogs: 8 Feb 08


Free Underwater World at Sentosa
a young explorer shares on the nautilus blog

Crab goes *crunch*
Horseshoe crabs being chopped up on the budak blog

New Year visitation: Sisters Island
on the wildfilms blog and manta blog and nature scouters blog

Escape to the mangroves
on the budak blog

Sunbird New Year surprise
amazing photos on the mountain and sea blog

Didactic Short Films of Lasting Values
clips for the family, on the flying fish friends blog

An interview with Google's green energy czar, Bill Weihl The phrase "to Google" has become synonymous with "to search." But soon it may connote something altogether different: "to green." on the grist mill blog


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Use of recycled decorations in Chinatown saves cost, wastage

Channel NewsAsia 7 Feb 08;

SINGAPORE : Red and gold may be the "in" colours this festive season, but it does not mean that decorations can't "go green" as well.

Some decorations in Chinatown have been recycled to save costs and cut wastage.

Some of the lanterns at Chinatown may look familiar because they have been used before during other festivals, including the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Other materials for the main decorations in Chinatown have also been reused.

The people behind these artworks had used less plastic and so they find it easier to recycle their materials.

David Ong, Chairman, Kreta Ayer-Kim Seng Citizens' Consultative Committee, said, "Wires, if they cannot be used, they can be stripped...Likewise, for light bulbs, they can be reused for the next light-up as well.

"So for iron structures, yes, you can take them off and you can put them back again - in different forms and shapes - even for wires as well. So all these can be reused."

"Reuse" is also the theme for decorations at Chinatown Point.

Cindy Low, Manager, Advertising and Promotions, City Developments Limited, said, "The difficulty is these decorations are meant for Christmas. So we actually need to refashion them to suit the Chinese New Year Theme.

"It helps us save costs...and also the time for the transition from Christmas to Chinese New Year decorations."

So instead of overhauling decorations to suit two very different occasions, which take place in a short span of time, organisers used some creativity and a lot of planning to cut down on wastage and costs. - CNA/ms


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Pet shops see rise in sales of hamsters ahead of Year of the Rat

Channel NewsAsia 7 Feb 08;

SINGAPORE : Pet shops have recently seen a jump in sales ahead of the Year of the Rat.

The favourite buy has been hamsters, with an increase in sales of between 5 and 20 percent. PetMart sells an average of 10 to 20 hamsters a month.

However, more have been sold in recent weeks, and staff say mostly teenagers are buying the hamsters.

Benjamin Wee, Managing Director, PetMart, said, "Right now at the moment, the most popular one is the Roborovski Hamsters, but the new one is a bit golden colour called Pudding Hamsters. So they are quite popular now...these two species in the market."

Hamsters are by nature timid and social, and they are easy to keep as pets - just like rabbits or mice.

They are also meticulous in hygiene and can groom themselves.

Another pet shop, Pet Lovers Centre, said it has also experienced a jump in sales in a species of hamster.

The Syrian species has a golden coat and a little more than 1,900 have been sold across its 18 stores - an increase of about 20 percent.

The Rat is the first of 12 Chinese Zodiac animal signs.

The Year of the Rat stretches until January 25 next year, after which the Year of the Ox begins.

Meanwhile, if you are looking to buy a pet, do remember the responsibilities that come with it.

Do your research to see what type of pet best suits you, and if you have time for the pet.

Check out the SPCA website for more information: http://www.spca.org.sg/adoption/responsibility.asp - CNA/ms


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World's largest river island washing away under flood waters

Andrew Buncombe, The Independent 7 Feb 08;

It may be the largest river island in the world but it is steadily shrinking – eroded by the Brahmaputra river in which it is situated. Efforts to preserve the island and halt the erosion, caused by the glacial flood waters of the Himalayas, have been unco-ordinated and – say critics – ineffective.

Now the authorities are staking their hopes that having the island of Majuli listed as a World Heritage Site can bring about the focus and the funds needed to help save the culturally rich island.

"If it is listed as a World Heritage Site, there will be a co-ordinated management plan. The state and federal authorities will be obliged to prevent the erosion," said Diganta Gogoi, project director with the Majuli Island Protection and Development Council.

This week, the Indian government submitted an application to Unesco, requesting that Majuli, in the north-eastern state of Assam, be listed for special status under the "cultural landscape" category. The UN body has in turn asked the Indian authorities to provide them with a risk-preparedness strategy, outlining how it planned to save the island.

The island – formed by a change of course by the Brahmaputra – has a long and rich history and is considered a centre of Vaishnavite Hindu culture, whose followers worship the god Vishnu. The island is home to more than 30 satras or monasteries, many of which house irreplaceable collections of writings, antiques and masks.

But the island is fast disappearing. In 1950 it was around 1,256 sq km but by 1990 it had shrunk to about half that size. Since 1990 up to 35 villages have been washed away and some reports suggest the island could disappear within as little as 20 years.

"The erosion problem is everywhere," said K N Dikshit, general secretary of the Delhi-based Indian Archaeological Society. "There are many historical artefacts and paintings. If the island is not preserved it will all disappear."

Majuli's people are also suffering as the land slowly disappears. Worst affected are those who try to eke out a livelihood on the edge of the river. Most of these people belong to the Mishing clan and, as their land and villages have disappeared, so they have been transformed from farmers into labourers. Reports from Majuli say that many of these communities are living in dire conditions.

"The main problem is that the Brahmaputra is a massive river. During the high flood season the discharge of water is enormous," said S Jagannatana, secretary to Assam's governor, Lt-Gen Ajay Singh. "The soil on the edge of the island is very loose – it's all alluvial silt."

The central government has set aside around £10m to fund measures to try to prevent the erosion. These have included concrete barriers placed in the river to try to divert the water and measures to strengthen the embankments of the island.

But local people say these steps have made little difference and that the land from which they try to survive continues to disappear, sometimes requiring them to move overnight. Their lives have become a constant struggle to find a piece of land that seems stable – at least for a while.


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Artificial reef to mitigate impact of US nuclear station

Artificial Reef Off the SC Coastline?
SC Times 6 Feb 08;

Vol. 3, Issue 6, February 7-13, 2008

THE LATEST: The California Coastal Commission approved a permit on Wednesday for Southern California Edison to build a 126.7-acre artificial reef from San Mateo Point to just north of the San Clemente Pier. The reef will stretch 2.5 miles in length approximately .6 miles offshore.

The reef has been in the works since the 1960s when a study revealed that water pumped from the Pacific Ocean into the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station to cool Units 2 and 3 was returned to the ocean 20 degrees warmer, which was declared harmful to the ocean’s kelp beds. To compensate, Southern California Edison agreed to build an artificial reef to mitigate any damage done to the ocean environment.

“What we’re about to do it attempt to create a complex eco system on a rather large scale,” said SCE Manager of Environmental Projects David Kay at Wednesday’s meeting. While optimistic about the project, he did warn the commissioners that it may not go perfectly. “We have time to adapt our reef to the curveballs that Mother Nature occasionally throws,” he said.

In the past four decades, Southern California Edison has cooperated in years of study and testing. In 1999 they build their first test reefs: 22.5 acres in 56 different patches, crafted from ruble and rock in various densities and heights. In the years since, project leaders have learned that these reefs must be located in waters not too deep or shallow and not on ground that’s too sandy or too hard. They also learned that smaller formations of rock that move with major storms is most effective for the kelp, a weed-like plant that claims ground quickly but can be blocked out by coral. This coral, in turn, is usually jarred from the rocks when they move during a storm, allowing the kelp to again thrive.


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'New type of bird' found in Nepal

Charles Haviland, BBC News 5 Feb 08;

A previously unknown sub-species of bird has been discovered in the southern grasslands of Nepal, scientists say.

The bird is a warbler with a very long tail and slender beak and has been named the Nepal Rufous-vented Prinia.

Scientists say the bird provides an important geographical link between previously-known varieties in Pakistan and India.

But they warn its tiny population means the sub-species is endangered.

The bird was first spotted in 2005 in a wetland area.

But it is only now that taxonomists have decided it is distinctive enough to be described as a separate sub-species.

'Exciting find'

It has different dimensions from the two other types of Rufous-vented Prinia, and in colour comes between the rich chestnut of its western neighbour and the grey of the one to the east.

Hem Sagar Baral of Bird Conservation Nepal said the find is exciting because while the other two types belong to Pakistan's Indus river basin and the Brahmaputra of north-east India, this Nepalese sub-species fills the gap.

The latest find "appears to form the link" between the two pre-existing sub-species, he said.

The new find brings the number of bird species spotted in Nepal to an exceptionally high 862.

But the conservationists are warning that with habitat loss and degradation, the newly-identified variety is highly threatened, with at most 500 birds currently alive.

They are however elated that it has been found in a reserve which is well monitored by bird-watchers, and are now speculating that there may be more species waiting to be found - new to Nepal, or even to the world.


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Rescue appeal as big turtles are washed up on British beaches

Michael McCarthy, The Independent 7 Feb 08;

The endangered reptiles, including loggerheads often found off Florida and central America, are probably being washed up as a result of south-westerly winds. The winds are forecast to continue and more turtles are expected to turn up on British and Irish beaches, according to the Marine Conservation Society and Marine Environmental Monitoring (MEM).

Most turtles eventually die in cold seas, but some survive. While stranded turtles may appear to be dead, they may be comatose because of the cold conditions, and can recover.

"While many of the turtles reported this year have washed up dead, three have been alive," said MEM's strandings co-ordinator Rod Penrose. "Under no circumstances should live turtles be put back into the sea here in the UK. If rescued in time, these animals can be nursed back to health, indeed, 11 out of 19 live stranded turtles rescued from UK and Irish beaches in the past decade have been successfully rehabilitated and released."

The strandings started in Scotland in late December, when a dead juvenile loggerhead turtle washed up on the shores of Islay.

Since then, another 10 have stranded on beaches in Gwynedd and Anglesey in Wales, Argyll in Scotland, counties Clare, Cork and Wexford in Ireland, and in south-west England. In the past two weeks, two live loggerhead turtles were found – one at Bude, Cornwall, on 26 January and another at Putsborough Beach, north Devon last Saturday.

Both are juveniles, and are now recovering in the Blue Reef Aquarium in Newquay, north Cornwall. The aquarium's curator, Matt Slater, said it was extremely rare for two turtles to wash up around the same time and that they were recovering. He said they were probably from America or Mexico.

If they recover they will be flown to a dedicated rescue centre in Gran Canaria and eventually be released into warmer seas. The latest stranding, reported on Monday, was of a dead leatherback turtle that washed up without its head or flippers at Tywyn in Gwynedd, Wales.

Six of the seven known species of turtle are classified as endangered or threatened. They were formerly hunted on a large scale for their meat, fat and shells, and their eggs were also taken, but now they are protected. However, they are sometimes accidentally caught by fishing boats, or swallow plastic bags, mistaking them for food.

Stranded turtles should be reported to MEM on 01348 875000, which will rescue live turtles and recover any that have died.


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US group files to protect Pacific walruses

Dan Joling, Associated Press Yahoo News 8 Feb 08;

A conservation group filed Thursday to protect Pacific walruses because of the threat to their northern habitat by global warming.

The Center for Biological Diversity petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list walruses as threatened under the Endangered Species Act because of warming and its effect on sea ice used by the animals as a feeding and resting platform. The group also said oil and gas development throughout the animals' range was a threat.

The listing request was filed as the Fish and Wildlife Service decides whether to list polar bears as threatened because sea ice has diminished due to global warming.

"The Arctic is in crisis from global warming," said Shaye Wolf, lead author of the petition and a biologist with the conservation group. "Arctic sea-ice is disappearing at a stunning rate that vastly exceeds the predictions of the best climate models."

Bruce Woods, a spokesman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Anchorage, said the law calls for a review to determine whether the petition contains "substantial information" within 90 days if practicable.

If the petition passes that first hurdle, the agency would have nine months to perform a status review on walruses.

Summer sea ice last summer receded to 1.65 million square miles, the lowest level since satellite measurements began in 1979, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado. In September, sea ice was 39 percent below the long-term average from 1979 to 2000.

Sea ice in the Chukchi Sea, the part of the Arctic Ocean between Alaska's northwest coast and the Russian Far East, receded well beyond the shallow outer continental shelf over water too deep for walruses to dive to reach clams and other benthic creatures they eat.

As many as 6,000 walrus in late summer and fall abandoned ice over deep water and congregated on Alaska's northwest shore.

Herds were larger on the Russian side, where one group reached up to 40,000 animals. Russian observers estimated 3,000 to 4,000 mostly young walrus died in stampedes when herds rushed into the water at the sight of a polar bear, hunter or low-flying aircraft.

Aside from stampedes, biologists worry that if current ice trends continue, and walrus are based on coastlines every summer, they will put tremendous pressure on nearby foraging areas rather than rich offshore feeding areas they historically have reached by living on the edge of the ice pack.

"The Pacific walrus is an early victim of our failure to address global warming," Wolf said. "As the sea ice recedes, so does the future of the Pacific walrus."

Unlike seals, walruses cannot swim indefinitely. Females and their young traditionally use ice as a diving platform, riding it north in spring and summer like a conveyor belt over offshore foraging areas, first in the northern Bering Sea, then into the Chukchi Sea.

An adult walrus can eat 200 pounds of clams in a day.

Scientists at the National Snow and Ice Data Center have said they do not expect summer sea ice to bounce back without changes in current warming trends. Mark Serreze, senior research scientist, said in December that the complete loss of summer sea ice by 2030 was a reasonable expectation.

Two scientists at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif., said last month the Arctic Ocean could be entirely ice-free during the summer months by 2013. Wieslaw Maslowski, research associate professor in the Navy school's Department of Oceanography, and researcher Jaclyn Clement Kinney modeled and monitored Arctic ice melt by analyzing data provided by submarines and satellites, scientific studies and records over the past several decades.

Wolf also said walrus are likely to be affected by petroleum development. The U.S. Minerals Management Service on Wednesday accepted high bids on 2.76 million acres of Chukchi Sea ocean bottom. Five other lease sales in the Pacific walrus's habitat in the Chukchi, Beaufort and Bering seas off Alaska's shore are planned by 2012.

Increased oil and gas development and a proliferation of shipping routes pose threats to the Pacific walrus from the heightened risk of oil spills and rising levels of noise pollution and human disturbance, according to the group.

Wolf said the window of opportunity to act is closing rapidly and rapid action is needed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. She called for a moratorium on oil and gas development.

Oil and gas development, shipping, and greenhouse gas emissions affecting the Arctic would be subject to greater regulation under the Endangered Species Act if the walrus is listed.


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Wal-Mart to pay more for "greener" goods

Nichola Groom, Reuters 7 Feb 08;

INDIAN WELLS (Reuters) - Wal-Mart Stores Inc is willing to pay more for products that last longer and hurt the environment less, the company's director of sustainability said on Thursday, adding it might not necessarily have to raise retail prices as a result.

"Bad quality products create waste, and so having tighter standards on the social side, on the environmental side and on the quality side will reduce waste," Matt Kistler, Wal-Mart's senior vice president of sustainability, said in an interview.

"We are even willing to pay more for products that have that." But that does not have to mean higher prices for customers.

"I don't know if we have to pass on the higher costs," Kistler said at the Clean-tech Investor Summit in Indian Wells, California.

"We are looking at a very small amount of dollars and the savings in the supply chain that we are finding because of sustainability in some cases will more than offset the incremental costs of what we are paying for a better quality item."

Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, has set a goal of one day using only renewable energy and creating zero waste.

As part of that effort, the company has pushed its suppliers to cut back on the amount of packaging they use by 5 percent by 2013.

To meet that goal, it has developed a "packaging scorecard" that will rate its 60,000 suppliers on their ability to cut waste and conserve resources.

Wal-Mart's suppliers had a February 1 deadline to comply with the "packaging scorecard" initiative, but many of the company's smaller vendors -- which represent roughly 20 percent of the goods the company buys -- have yet to do so, Kistler said.

"We do not have all suppliers 100 percent compliant today, which is a disappointment because we did give them a year," he said. "The smaller companies that we may not buy consistently from or the same product from, those are the ones that either have not (complied) or it simply doesn't make sense for them."

But Kistler added the scorecard had already produced a lot of change in the packages of its most popular products.

"The scorecard is really more geared toward the products we buy year after year," he added.

(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Andre Grenon)


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The price of cheaper chicken

Tesco hits a new low with arrival of the £1.99 chicken
Martin Hickman, The Independent 6 Feb 08;

Tesco slashed the price of a whole chicken to £1.99 yesterday, in a move that critics warned would heap financial pressure on the poultry industry and make it harder to the improve welfare of factory-farmed animals.

Britain's biggest supermarket chain said the price of a "standard" bird would be cut by 60 per cent until Sunday to help families on tight budgets, adding that it had doubled its order for higher-welfare chicken.

The animal welfare group, Compassion in World Farming (CIWF), said the arrival of a £1.99 bird was "depressing", as it followed weeks of publicity and debate about the welfare of broiler chickens, arising from a Channel 4 series and campaign by the chef High Fearnley-Whittingstall.

Dr Lesley Lambert, the CIWF's director of research and education, said: "£1.99 doesn't reflect the real price of producing a chicken. At the moment, farmers make only 2p per chicken, so this will push them to the limit."

She said that Tesco should be cutting the price of its higher-welfare chicken rather than its bottom-of-the-range birds. However, Tesco, which said that a family of four would now be able to eat a roast dinner for 99p each, claimed that it wanted to improve animal welfare while helping shoppers squeezed by "mortgage worries, energy price rises and inflation". Jonathan Church, a company spokesman, said: "We have been working hard for a while to increase the amount of higher-welfare chicken we sell and the recent debate in the media about chickens has helped raise awareness of the choice available.

"But our investment in premium chicken should not be seen as a move away from providing more affordable options. No one should feel guilty for buying a chicken just because it is good value. The only reduction we make is in the price, not the welfare."

The promotion – which was surprising given Tesco's refusal to respond to a £2 chicken offer from Asda last year – could prompt a supermarket price war. Last night, a spokeswoman for Asda said: "We always endeavour to be best on price. As far as I know we have no plans to cut prices, but it might all change tomorrow."

Sales of free-range chickens increased over the past month after Channel 4's week-long series Hugh's Chicken Run showed how the country's 800 million broiler chickens lead cramped, painful lives compared with their free-range counterparts.

In a study published today in the Public Library of Science One journal, researchers at Bristol University found that, by the age of 40 days, 27 per cent of fast-growing indoor broiler chickens have walking problems. Three in 100 were completely lame. The study, funded by Defra, warned that only the introduction of slower-growing birds would improve welfare standards.

In his television show, Fearnley-Whittingstall divided a chicken shed in two to show how the lives of free-range and standard birds differ; his mass-produced birds had higher rates of leg burn and had to be culled in greater numbers.

Fearnley-Whittingstall said yesterday: "I'm very surprised [at Tesco] because everybody is selling out of free-range chicken. To launch a £1.99 chicken is in direct contradiction to a statement [the chief executive] Sir Terry Leahy made last summer when he said he didn't want to get into a food price war on chicken."


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Biofuels can have real ecological benefits

Stephen Whittaker, The Telegraph 7 Feb 08;

The 'biofuels backlash' has certainly gathered pace in recent months and we anticipate that the recent spate of reports, from both sides of the Atlantic, criticising the negative environmental impact of biofuels production is only the tip of the iceberg.

Perhaps, given the size and scale of the industry today, this is not surprising.

There's no doubt that globally there has been a rush by some emerging countries to produce biofuel on the same industrial scale as fossil fuels and there is evidence that deforestation has been one unfortunate consequence of this.

However, there is the danger that we throw the baby out with the bathwater; that the failure to differentiate between 'good' and 'bad' biodiesel production undoes years of sound ecological progress.

Any journey that takes a 'green' product from its perception as a niche alternative and turns it into a successful, globally available commodity is unlikely to happen without causing a few ripples.

What is important is that any issues are monitored and handled responsibly, that the industry is regulated as effectively as possible and that improvement in best practice is continuously encouraged.

If we want the world's innovators and entrepreneurs to take new, alternative products through to mass production, then we need to be as assertive in the crucial expansion stages as we were when it was a quirky, niche idea.

Sustainably produced biofuels genuinely deliver significant net benefits when it comes to the environment, and in the UK they are certainly helping many local councils and environmentally-aware private businesses achieve and exceed their carbon-reduction targets.

Biofuels consistently offer many environmental and performance advantages over traditional diesel. They produce no net emissions of carbon dioxide, one of the main gases responsible for global warming, and they burn more cleanly and efficiently than fossil diesel and cause less pollution when burnt.

At the heart of the current biofuel debate is the sourcing of raw materials used in its production process. Historically, our fuels have always been based on the recycling of waste vegetable oils, sourced locally from food manufacturers, pubs and restaurants and then recovered in the biofuel production process as an oxygenated vegetable oil ester.

This remains our principal source of raw material, but more recently supplemented by other genuinely sustainable feedstocks such as animal fats or fish oils of known (preferably local) origin and with traceable history.

For the producer that remains genuinely determined to produce a sustainable, environmentally-friendly product and uses these raw materials to achieve that objective, biofuel does make a fantastically positive contribution to the climate change agenda, in line with key Government policy.

The European manufacturer that is sourcing locally produced vegetable oils such as rapeseed, sunflower or olive oil as the basis of its biofuel production is, literally and metaphorically, miles and miles away from those associated with the destruction of Indonesian or Amazonian rain forests. To lump them all together in a critical report is a sweeping and inaccurate generalisation.

We must not dismiss or ignore the negative consequences that mass biofuel production is undoubtedly having on some parts of the world, but nor should we underestimate the very real ecological benefits that sustainably produced biofuels are having on the UK's ability to reduce its dependency on fossil fuels."

Stephen Whittaker is managing director of Cheshire-based ESL Biofuels established almost 10 years ago as the UK's first commercial manufacturer of biodiesel.


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Study: Ethanol may add to global warming

H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press Yahoo News 8 Feb 08;

The widespread use of ethanol from corn could result in nearly twice the greenhouse gas emissions as the gasoline it would replace because of expected land-use changes, researchers concluded Thursday. The study challenges the rush to biofuels as a response to global warming.

The researchers said that past studies showing the benefits of ethanol in combating climate change have not taken into account almost certain changes in land use worldwide if ethanol from corn — and in the future from other feedstocks such as switchgrass — become a prized commodity.

"Using good cropland to expand biofuels will probably exacerbate global warming," concludes the study published in Science magazine.

The researchers said that farmers under economic pressure to produce biofuels will increasingly "plow up more forest or grasslands," releasing much of the carbon formerly stored in plants and soils through decomposition or fires. Globally, more grasslands and forests will be converted to growing the crops to replace the loss of grains when U.S. farmers convert land to biofuels, the study said.

The Renewable Fuels Association, which represents ethanol producers, called the researchers' view of land-use changes "simplistic" and said the study "fails to put the issue in context."

"Assigning the blame for rainforest deforestation and grassland conversion to agriculture solely on the renewable fuels industry ignores key factors that play a greater role," said Bob Dinneen, the association's president.

There has been a rush to developing biofuels, especially ethanol from corn and cellulosic feedstock such as switchgrass and wood chips, as a substitute for gasoline. President Bush signed energy legislation in December that mandates a six-fold increase in ethanol use as a fuel to 36 billion gallons a year by 2022, calling the requirement key to weaning the nation from imported oil.

The new "green" fuel, whether made from corn or other feedstocks, has been widely promoted — both in Congress and by the White House — as a key to combating global warming. Burning it produces less carbon dioxide, the leading greenhouse gas, than the fossil fuels it will replace.

During the recent congressional debate over energy legislation, lawmakers frequently cited estimates that corn-based ethanol produces 20 percent less greenhouse gases in production, transportation and use than gasoline, and that cellulosic ethanol has an even greater benefit of 70 percent less emissions.

The study released Thursday by researchers affiliated with Princeton University and a number of other institutions maintains that these analyses "were one-sided" and counted the carbon benefits of using land for biofuels but not the carbon costs of diverting land from its existing uses.

"The other studies missed a key factor that everyone agrees should have been included, the land use changes that actually are going to increase greenhouse gas emissions," said Tim Searchinger, a research scholar at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and lead author of the study.

The study said that after taking into account expected worldwide land-use changes, corn-based ethanol, instead of reducing greenhouse gases by 20 percent, will increases it by 93 percent compared to using gasoline over a 30-year period. Biofuels from switchgrass, if they replace croplands and other carbon-absorbing lands, would result in 50 percent more greenhouse gas emissions, the researchers concluded.

Not all ethanol would be affected by the land-use changes, the study said.

"We should be focusing on our use of biofuels from waste products" such as garbage, which would not result in changes in agricultural land use, Searchinger said in an interview. "And you have to be careful how much you require. Use the right biofuels, but don't require too much too fast. Right now we're making almost exclusively the wrong biofuels."

The study included co-authors affiliated with Iowa State University, the Woods Hole Research Center and the Agricultural Conservation Economics. It was supported in part indirectly by a grants from NASA's Terrestrial Ecology Program, and by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. Searchinger, in addition to his affiliation with Princeton, is a fellow at the Washington-based German Marshall Fund of the United States.

The study prompted a letter Thursday to President Bush and Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress from nearly a dozen scientists who urged them to pursue a policy "that ensures biofuels are not produced on productive forests, grassland or cropland."

"Some opportunities remain to produce environmentally beneficial biofuels" while "unsound biofuel policies could sacrifice tens of hundreds of million of acres" of grasslands and forests while increasing global warming, said the scientists, including four members of the National Academy of Sciences.

Food-Based Biofuels Can Spur Climate Change - Study
Deborah Zabarenko, PlanetArk 8 Feb 08;

WASHINGTON - Alternative fuels made from corn, soybeans, sugarcane and palm trees can in some cases increase the amount of climate-warming carbon dioxide that goes into the atmosphere, US researchers reported on Thursday.

These so-called food-based biofuels can actually hurt the environment if they are produced on land that was formerly grassland, rainforest or savanna, the scientists said in the journal Science.

Nonfossil fuels -- ethanol made from corn or sugarcane and biodiesel made from palm trees or soybeans -- are meant to lessen dependence on petroleum products, which release the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide when they burn.

However, biofuels can release carbon even before they are burned, depending on how they are made, said study co-author Jason Hill of the University of Minnesota.

As demand for these alternative fuels grows, farmers are plowing under forests and grasslands that used to store carbon and keep it from getting into the atmosphere, and using these lands to grow the food crops that now can be used for ethanol or biodiesel.

Biofuels grown this way come with a "carbon debt," the researchers found. Instead of cutting greenhouse pollution, the net effect is to increase it.

The carbon lost by converting rainforests, peatlands, savannas and grasslands outweighs the carbon savings from biofuels. Some conversions release hundreds of times more carbon than the annual savings from replacing fossil fuels.

CENTURIES OF CARBON DEBT

For example, the scientists wrote, Indonesia's conversion of peatlands for palm oil plantations had the world's greatest carbon debt, one that would take 423 years to repay.

The next worst case was the planting of soybeans in the Amazon, which would not pay for itself in renewable soy biodiesel for 319 years.

There are biofuel sources that do not rack up these formidable carbon debts, Hill said: nonfood plants including perennial grasses that only have to be harvested, without plowing under existing species that hold on to carbon.

"Our group has looked at using diverse mixtures of native species ... (on) prairie land, land that's restored back into prairies," Hill said in a telephone interview. "We essentially have no native prairies left in this nation but we can restore land into prairies, thereby restoring an ecosystem that was natural and also getting the biofuel benefit from it."

Biofuels, whether made from prairie plants, corn or soybeans, lack the potential to satisfy US fuel needs, Hill said.

"If we take every corn kernel we produce in this nation and convert it to ethanol, we would offset only 12 percent of our gasoline use," he said. "And that doesn't include the energy it took to produce that ethanol in the first place.

"None of these are solutions, but we better be sure we're not making the problem worse, and that's what's happening with the current generation of food-based biofuels," Hill said. (Editing by Xavier Briand)


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Charge Your Cell Phone Just By Walking

Clara Moskowitz, LiveScience Yahoo News 7 Feb 08;

Charging your cell phone might soon be as simple as taking a walk around the block.

Scientists have created a new machine that harvests energy from the movement of the knees while walking.

Six volunteers wore the devices on their legs while strolling on a treadmill and were able to produce about five watts of electrical power each. That's enough energy to run 10 cell phones simultaneously.

"Since muscles are the powerhouses of the body, my colleagues and I designed our device to generate electricity from the motion of the knee joint," said Max Donelan, director of the Locomotion Laboratory at Simon Fraser University in Canada. "It resembles a knee brace and weighs about 1.5 kilograms [3.3 pounds] including the gearing and generator."

Results from tests of the device were published in the Feb. 8 issue of the journal, Science.

The apparatus captures the energy of a person's movement by coupling an electrical generator to knee motion.

When the wearer extends the knee, a gear on the device turns and spins the generator, which builds up energy.

When the knee is flexed, the device turns off so as not to tax the wearer. The machine senses motion and knows when to activate itself.

The design allows a person to use the tool without expending much additional energy beyond the normal demands of walking. The researchers measured the volunteers' oxygen intake and carbon-dioxide output to make sure it wasn't strenuous to use.

Work on a similar device built into a backpack was announced in 2005.

“People are an excellent source of portable power," Donelan said. "An average-sized person stores as much energy in fat as a 1,000-kilogram battery. People recharge their body batteries with food and, lucky for us, there is about as much useful energy in a 35-gram granola bar as in a 3.5-kilogram lithium-ion battery.”

The device could be used to power computers in remote regions where electricity is scarce, Donelan said.

"The early markets are people whose lives depend on portable power, such as people with artificial limbs," Donelan told LiveScience. "On the military side, soldiers have an incredible dependence on batteries these days, so both these groups could benefit."

Knee dynamo taps 'people power'
Jonathan Fildes, BBC News 7 Feb 08;

"All of the new developments in prosthetics require large power budgets," Dr Douglas Weber of the University of Pittsburgh, and one of the authors of the paper, told BBC News.

"You need power to run your neural interface; you need it to run your powered joint, and so on.

"Getting that power is going to be really important."

Walk and talk

The new device generates power by a process known as "generative braking", analogous to the braking systems found in hybrid-electric cars such as the Toyota Prius.

"Walking is a lot like stop-and-go driving," explained Dr Max Donelan of Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada, lead author of the paper.

"Within each stride muscles are continuously accelerating and decelerating the body.

Hybrid electric cars take advantage of stop-and-go driving using so-called "regenerative braking" where the energy normally dissipated as heat is used to drive a generator.

"We have essentially applied the same principle to walking."

Using a series of gears, the knee brace assists the hamstring in slowing the body just before the foot hits the ground, whilst simultaneously generating electricity.

Sensors on the device switch the generator off for the remainder of each step.

In this way, the device puts less strain on the wearer than if it was constantly producing energy.

Tests of the 1.6kg device produced an average of 5 watts of electricity from a slow walk.

"We also explored ways of generating more electricity and found that we can get as much as 13 watts from walking," said Dr Donelan.

"13 watts is enough to power about 30 minutes of talk time on a typical mobile phone from just one minute of walking."

However, to generate this amount of power the generator had to be constantly switched on, which required more effort from the wearer.

Battery pack

The knee brace is the latest development in a field known as "energy harvesting".

The field seeks to develop devices and mechanisms to recover otherwise-wasted energy and convert it into useful electrical energy.

"We're pretty effective batteries," Dr Donelan told BBC News. "In our fat we store the equivalent of about a 1,000kg battery."

Tapping this power source is not a new idea and has been exploited in everyday devices such as wind-up radios and self-winding watches.

The US defence research agency Darpa has a long-standing project to tap energy from "heel-strike" generators implanted in soldier's boots and powered through the pumping motion of a footstep.

And in 2005, US scientists showed off an energy-harvesting backpack which used a suspended load to convert movement into electrical energy.

However, heel-strike devices generate relatively little energy whilst people using the backpack have to bear the burden of carrying the bag.

"It requires a relatively heavy load - around 38kg - to get a substantial amount of power," said Dr Donelan.

Simulations showed that a soldier carrying the pack and walking at a relatively brisk pace could generate around 7.4 watts of power. "It's about the same amount of power as [the knee braces] produce," said Dr Donelan.
Kit list

The team believes the new device could have many uses.

"I think the early adopters will be people whose lives depend on portable power," he told BBC News.

"On the medical front, portable power is used by those who have amputated limbs to charge their powered prosthetic limbs," he said.

However, Dr Art Kuo at the University of Michigan does not believe it will be simply a case of strapping the device on to an existing prosthetic.

"It would probably involve building a new [prosthetic] knee that uses some existing ideas and then also tries to harvest energy using these principles," he said.

The team also hope the device could be useful for people who have suffered a stroke or spinal chord injury who wear an "exoskeleton" to help them move.

"The current and future emphasis is on powered exoskeletons," said Dr Donelan.

Soldiers may also benefit from wearing the knee brace to power the multitude of devices they now carry ,such as night vision goggles and GPS.

"They treat batteries like they treat food and water - they are so essential to what they do," he said.

Dr Donelan has now set up a spin-out company to exploit the technology and believes it will eventually be possible to develop a small device that can be fitted internally across different joints.

However, in the short term he has his sights set on a light weight, slim-line version of the knee brace.

"That's about 18 months away, so it's not science fiction far in the future stuff," he said.


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Office block warmed by body heat

David Chazan, BBC News 7 Feb 08;

If you have to endure the daily grind of commuting by train, you'll know how unpleasant it can be to be jammed like a sardine into a grumpy crowd of hot, sweaty passengers.

And you might take comfort from the idea that in future, some of the collective body heat can be harnessed and used to reduce energy consumption.

In Sweden, the Jernhusen company, which owns Stockholm's central station, is planning to channel passenger warmth to heat a 13-storey office block being built next to the station.

Heat exchangers in the station's ventilation system will convert the body heat into hot water, which will be pumped into the heating system of the building.

It is not yet certain how effective the technique will be.

But Jernhusen engineers hope it will meet up to 15% of the heating needs of the building, which will provide about 40,000 square metres of space for offices, hotels, restaurants and shops.

Innovative concept

Some existing buildings already recycle body heat from people in the building to contribute to heating requirements.

But this is the first time excess heat is to be transferred from one building to another.

The building is to be completed by 2010.

The concept is innovative - but like many good ideas, it's quite simple.

"It's based on old technology," says Jernhusen's managing director, Per Berggren.

"It's more like thinking out of the box, being environmentally smart and using the heat from the station to produce and transport heat to a new building."

The idea arose because the architects and engineers designing the new office block set a goal of reducing its energy consumption to half the level of a similar building.

“Everybody was on board, trying to make the building as environmentally friendly as possible,” says project manager Karl Sundholm.

"We were sitting and discussing how we could achieve that, and the idea just came up. We’ve already been approached by a number of other companies interested in applying the same concept to other projects."

Role model

The building will also incorporate a number of other environmentally friendly features, for example the facade, designed to minimise heat loss.

"We hope this office block will attract tenants who are keen to work with us to achieve sustainable energy use and maintain an exceptional level of environmental consideration," says Mr Berggren.

"Our ambition is for this building to become a role model for the modern property market."

He says the design of the building reflects an increasing awareness of the need to combat climate change.

And recycling body heat from the adjacent station should help office workers keep warm in the depths of thel Swedish winter with minimum damage to the environment.


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The pros and cons of solar power

Maggie Ayre, BBC Radio 4 Costing the Earth 7 Feb 08;

Even in grey, overcast Britain, some householders are managing to use solar power to meet their energy needs.

But there are far more ambitious plans for Europe to import solar power from huge installations in North Africa.

Johannes Gleede installed a solar thermal panel in the roof of his semi-detached house in south west London ten years ago and paid around £1,500 for it.

From a flat plate solar collector slotted into his roof, water is conducted into a cylinder where it heats. You don't need direct sunlight, just light. And when we visited Johannes' on a December afternoon, the water was certainly hot enough for a shower.

It was an ideal time for Johannes to invest, because he needed to replace the boiler so the total cost was around £5,000 in total.

"I wanted to see if it worked," says Johannes."You have to dare to be crazy." It did work and has cut his electricity bills by 50%.

Most householders should expect to pay upwards of £3,000 for installation depending on the type of house, says David Mathews, Chief Executive of the Solar Trade Association. The cost will also go up if you have to upgrade other parts of your central heating system.

It takes a number of years to get that investment back. But the most recent government figures (2006) state 78,470 UK homes have solar thermal, making domestic water heating by far the biggest area for the use of solar power in Britain.

Expensive option

It is far more expensive to generate electricity from solar power. For a typical British house, this requires a rooftop solar collector in order to provide enough silicon cells to generate sufficient electricity.

The technology is proven, but the costs for a single house are £12,000 to £14,000 according to the British Photovoltaic Association. So far this has been installed in about 1300 homes. But it is also being used in some commercial buildings and public buildings such as schools.

More electricity can be generated in summer and less when we need it most - on dark winter evenings. And at present there is no mechanism for storing electricity generated on long summer days for use in winter.

Dr Thomas Markvart from the University of Southampton says photovoltaics could provide a substantial amount of the electricity Britain needs but fears we risk losing our expertise to countries like Germany and Spain where the industry is booming.

"We need to have the stimulus for manufacturing in this country, and that comes partially from government. Otherwise it will go abroad. Companies like BP are going to Spain where there is government support"

Last year, Spain inaugurated the world's first commercial solar plant near to Seville. But much of the engineering expertise in solar power has been nurtured in Germany where solar power has really taken off.

Saharan plants

An ambitious plan to build massive plants in the Sahara desert using concentrated solar power (CSP) was unveiled by German engineers last year.

The Desertec organisation supported by Prince Hassan of Jordan wants to use giant parabolic mirrors in the desert to track the Sun and absorb heat in a central receiver which is cooled with water to produce steam. The steam drives a turbine and produces electricity.

Hang on, you're thinking, there is no water in the Sahara desert. True, but the plants are to be placed near the Mediterranean coast so water can be pumped in and be desalinated in the process.

Franz Trieb of the German Aerospace Center (DLR) who carried out the feasibility studies into the Desertec idea sees it as a win-win scenario creating energy, water and income for the Middle East and North Africa.

"Yes you are creating shade in the desert, but shade in the desert is a good thing. It will create communities. And when I see that there will be 300 million more people in the Middle East-North Africa region in 30 years, we are going to need more water," he says.

Prince Hassan goes as far as to call it an industrial revolution for the southern Mediterranean that will create further stability in the region.

Trading dependence?

Trieb says a method of storing heat overnight using tanks of molten salt has been developed, and electricity will be exported to mainland Europe via high voltage direct cables under the Mediterranean right up to northern Europe.

Germany and Algeria have already reportedly signed a deal to lay cables stretching as far north as Aachen on the German-Belgian border.

BBC Radio 4's Costing the Earth visited Egypt where a £30m pilot plant is being built south of Cairo. Rows of parabolic troughs 50-60m wide will cover an area of 130,000 sq m. Initially it will provide electricity for 200,000 Egyptian homes. Further plants are planned or in progress in Libya, Algeria, Israel and Morocco.

In Britain, the idea of importing solar energy has been received with cautious optimism. Energy Minister Malcolm Wicks calls it "an exciting 21st century idea" and says "We have to think in revolutionary terms if we are to move away from a carbon intensive society".

But he is wary of the costs of establishing a European "supergrid" and concerned about energy security. Could it be that we would simply be trading our dependence on the Middle East for oil for a dependence on sunshine?

However, enthusiasts of the Desertec concept say there is around 8,000 times more energy than we need to be harnessed from the Sun, an unlimited renewable resource. Perhaps the sun over the Sahara could indeed be the future super generator of our electricity.


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La Nina strengthens, may persist into summer

Reuters 7 Feb 08;

La Nina, which means "little girl" in Spanish, usually results in cooler than normal water in the equatorial Pacific which in turn drenches the Pacific Northwest while sparking drought in the parched U.S. Southwest.

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The La Nina weather anomaly has strengthened and there is a chance it could plague countries around the Asia-Pacific rim until the summer, the U.S. government's Climate Prediction Center said Thursday.

In a monthly update, the Center said current "oceanic and atmospheric conditions are similar to those accompanying the last strong La Nina episode in 1998-2000."

The weather phenomenon should last through June and even though there are considerable differences in the computer models, approximately half indicate that "La Nina could continue well into the Northern Hemisphere summer."

That would mean La Nina would last into the annual Atlantic hurricane season, which begins on June 1 and runs to November 30.

La Nina, which means "little girl" in Spanish, usually results in cooler than normal water in the equatorial Pacific which in turn drenches the Pacific Northwest while sparking drought in the parched U.S. Southwest.

In the more famous El Nino phenomenon, waters in the Pacific turn abnormally warm, wreaking havoc in weather patterns around the Asia-Pacific rim.

The CPC said the northern Rockies, the Pacific Northwest, and the Ohio and Tennessee valleys should see above-average rain. The south and southeastern United States will receive below-average rain.

The Southeastern United States was recently hammered by a bad drought which threatened to reduce water supplies to cities like Atlanta, Georgia.

The center said above-average rains should drench Indonesia and saw below-average rainfall in the central Pacific. But a searing drought has also battered Australia.

(Reporting by Rene Pastor, editing by Matthew Lewis)

La Nina Pacific cooling may last to mid-year: U.N.
Robert Evans Reuters 11 Feb 08;

GENEVA (Reuters) - A sea-surface cooling in the Pacific, which may have contributed to strong hurricanes in the United States and a freeze-up in China, could last at least until mid-year, the U.N. weather body WMO said on Monday.

The cooling pattern, known as La Nina, alternates naturally with a warming effect called El Nino, and both have been associated with extreme weather around the globe.

"Information coming in indicates that the likelihood of La Nina conditions in the central and eastern Pacific remains heightened through the second quarter," said Rupa Kumar Kolli, climatological expert at the World Meteorological Organisation.

Presenting the Geneva-based body's latest update on the ocean cycle, he said it was also possible, if less likely, that the present La Nina cycle could stretch into the third quarter.

Longer-term statistics suggested that the decline of the La Nina would be followed by a "neutral" period at least for the second half of 2008, Kolli added, rather than a rapid transition to an El Nino.

The two closely linked natural phenomena have probably occurred since before recorded history and are popularly blamed for unusual weather extremes, but specialists say they are not the sole cause.

Kolli said the two, which follow each other with a neutral break in between, create favorable conditions for changing local and regional weather patterns around the globe to spark floods, droughts, hurricanes and freeze-ups.

Meteorologists say the nearly month-long Chinese snow and ice-storms at the start of this year, which killed scores of people and cost the economy at least $7.5 billion, were partly caused by a cold surge from the north and west.

El Nino -- "the Boy Child" in Spanish -- got its name because it generally starts in December, the month in which Christians who predominate in Latin America celebrate the birth of Christ. La Nina means "the Girl Child".

Experts say it is not clear if the El Nino/La Nina cycle -- which occurs around once every five years -- is intensified by global warming, but they say it makes it more likely that climate changes caused by warming will bring disasters.

In an El Nino, the sea surface heats up, leading to drier than normal weather over northern Australia, the Philippines and Indonesia and wetter conditions than usual over much of Latin America and in parts of the United States and Africa.

In La Nina, these regional patterns are reversed.

Both also contribute to abnormal temperature swings around the globe, especially during the December-April period when they are strongest, experts say. El Nino generally helps bring hotter weather than normal and La Nina leads to unusual cold.

The last El Nino, whose intensity caused devastation along the western coast of North and South America in 1997-98, lasted for nearly 12 months, just slightly more than average.

The La Nina which followed lasted nearly 2 years. The current one started in the third quarter of 2007.

(Editing by Jonathan Lynn and Mark Trevelyan)


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Sahara sand, the ocean and global climate

The race to chase Sahara's sand
Rebecca Morelle, BBC News 6 Feb 08;

Scientists have been sailing across the Atlantic in a bid to track down sand from the Sahara Desert.

The team is trying to find out how the dust is affecting marine biology and, in turn, the ocean's ability to soak up the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.

The researchers encountered two large sand storms during their cruise and recorded footage of their dust-drenched experience for the BBC News website.

They followed the sand with the help of satellite images and wind forecasts.

Eric Achterberg, principal scientist for the Natural Environment Research Council (Nerc) funded Solas (Surface Ocean Lower Atmosphere Study) expedition, said he was relieved to have encountered dust storms during the one-month cruise.

Another expedition that took place two years ago had failed to find any Saharan sand, he said.

He told the BBC: "We encountered two dust storms: one lasted for about three days, the other was a big one that lasted for about four to five days.

"We were on top of the ship, you could just see it coming - there was a wall of dust coming towards us and it got very hazy after that. The ship was covered in dust - it was just fantastic.

"The dust from this one went all the way to south-west England; we heard reports that in Plymouth there was Saharan dust on cars."

Fuelling growth

Each year, about 1,700 million tonnes of dust are produced by deserts around the world and about one third of this falls into the oceans.

The North Atlantic receives the most dust thanks to its proximity to the Sahara Desert. This sprinkling of sand can be critical for marine life in the area.

Dr Achterberg, who is from the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, explained: "The dust releases nutrients to the ocean."

The sand particles contain nitrogen, phosphorous and iron, which help to fuel the growth of microscopic plants.

"If these organisms grow, they take up more carbon dioxide and remove it from the atmosphere," he said.

"If we understand how the dust functions here, we will have a better idea of how the ecosystem in the North Atlantic takes up carbon dioxide, how quickly it takes it up and how this changes over time."

The international team of 28 scientists and technicians set off from Tenerife on 5 January aboard UK research ship RSS Discovery and headed towards the west coast of Africa to hunt for Saharan sand storms in the tropical and sub-tropical Atlantic Ocean.

Dust storms are most common at sea during winter, and the scientists were able to locate where they might occur by using satellite images provided by Neodaas (Nerc Earth Observation Data Acquisition and Analysis Service), tracing wind patterns as they came off of the Sahara and computer model predictions.

Each time they encountered a dust storm, a range of scientific experiments would commence to find out how the Saharan sand was influencing the ocean's chemistry and biology.

Early results

Early results from the experiments suggest that the sand was affecting the growth of the nitrogen-fixing bacterial organism Trichodesmium.

Dr Achterberg said: "It is clear these became more abundant during the dust storm.

"These organisms require a lot of iron, which is supplied by the dust."

The data gained from the trip will be analysed back on land over the coming months.

The ultimate aim of the expedition, said Dr Achterberg, was to look at the dynamic relationship between dust, marine organisms and carbon dioxide absorption.

As well as increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, climate change was also affecting deserts such as the Sahara and the amounts of nutrient-containing sand that they deposit in the seas and elsewhere, Dr Achterberg explained.

A recent report suggests that increases in rainfall levels could make deserts greener, while other studies support the idea that they will grow in size in some regions - either way the amount of sand falling into the oceans around the world could change.

Dr Achterberg said: "We want to ask: 'If the dust levels were increased, what effects might have in the ocean?'

"And we can do this by collecting dust, looking at its chemistry, looking at its biology. Our project is the first real look at how dust is affecting our oceans."


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Siberian Deer Herders Take Aim at Russian Dam Plan

Guy Faulconbridge, PlanetArk 8 Feb 08;

MOSCOW - An indigenous tribe who herd deer in Russia's frozen tundra fear their way of life will perish if plans to build of one of the world's biggest hydro-electric dams on their land go ahead, their representative said on Thursday.

The Evenki have enlisted the help of WWF, Greenpeace and a host of local environmental groups to ask President Vladimir Putin and his protege Dmitry Medvedev, who is running in the March 2 presidential election, to scrap the idea.

They say the project, expected to cost US$13 billion, would flood an area more than ten times the size of New York City and drive about 2,000 Evenki -- out of 28,000 in Russia -- from their traditional villages and pasture lands.

Pavel Sulyandziga, first vice president of the Association of Indigenous Peoples of Russia's North, Siberia and Far East, said the groups opposing the dam have approached all the candidates in the presidential race.

"If the Evenki have their land destroyed by this project then they will not be able to carry out their traditional customs -- deer herding and hunting -- on their land, " he said at a news briefing. "And that means they will cease to exist."

Russia's state hydro-electric power company, RosHydro, said it is looking at plans to build an 8,000 megawatt station at Turukhansk on the Lower Tunguska River in northern Siberia that would flood some of the Evenki pasture land and villages.

In 1998, the Soviet Union cancelled plans to construct a giant dam at the site after Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev questioned the policy of building giant hydro-power stations.

But Anatoly Chubais, the chief of Russia's power monopoly, has said the revived project will change the face of the region, bringing railways, roads and factories to the desolate spot.

A spokeswoman for RosHydro said the project had not yet been approved and local concerns would be addressed, with all of those displaced given compensation.

"We are working out the project at the moment and looking at the ecological impact," she said. "If it is approved then it will have to go through all the proper environmental studies."

The Evenki said they were being exposed to a new threat to their way of life after only just surviving Communist attempts to "Sovietise" their culture.

"The Soviet Union used to call on us to build a 'bright future' without paying any attention to the differences in culture and traditions of indigenous peoples and so destroyed a whole way of life," local Evenki said in a petition.

"Now with the market, in the race for profit, peoples' interests are ignored," it said. "Land is not only somewhere to live, it is the spiritual foundation of life. Without it a people is doomed to disappearing." (Editing by Michael Winfrey)


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