Local man leads mangrove tours in Bali

Irawaty Wardany, The Jakarta Post 27 Feb 08;

Sukitra wasn't born a conservationist. It was a turn of events in his home village of Jungut Batu that transformed him into a leading figure of mangrove conservation.

"Several years ago, the villagers decided to open a large-scale salt farm on the beach near the village. In order to do so, we cleared the mangrove forest along the village's coast," he told The Jakarta Post last week.

It was a doomed enterprise. It turned out that salt farming was a grueling endeavor with a large window for failure. Moreover, the clearing of the mangroves made the village more vulnerable to natural disaster.

"The mangrove forest was a natural barrier. When it was gone, the sea water could easily reach our village and it did flood the village several times," he said.

Jungut Batu lies in the northern part of Nusa Lembongan, one of the three islands off Bali's southeastern coast. Nusa Lembongan is a favorite destination for visitors who yearn for a quiet hideaway with a fantastic beach.

The villagers abandoned salt farming and sought their fortunes in seaweed farming. They also replanted the mangrove forest.

"One day a French man came here and he was amazed to see how healthy and abundant the mangrove forest was," Sukitra said.

The foreign visitor later told Sukitra the mangrove forest had promise as a tourist attraction.

"I was so inspired by what he said that later I approached my fellow villagers and asked them to join me in establishing a group that would manage the mangrove forest as a tourist attraction," he said.

In 2000, Sukitra and 18 other villagers worked together and formed the group. It was later named the Mangrove Tour Group and Sukitra was elected its head.

"Each member provided one boat to the group. The boats would be used to take visitors on a tour across the forest," he said.

For a single trip of around 30 minutes, the group charges each visitor Rp 50,000 (US$5.40).

"We set aside Rp 5,000 for the village and Rp 2,000 for the group's fund and the remaining Rp 43,000 goes to the boat owners," he said.

The mangrove tour provides additional income to the group's members, who work mostly as seaweed farmers.

Sukitra said now the group had 33 members. Once a month, all the members participate in a clean-up activity to comb the forest looking for garbage.

Unfortunately, said Sukitra, the group had yet to receive proper support from village leaders.

"This group has yet to be officially acknowledged by the head of the village even though we have set aside a percentage of our income for the village," he said.

An outreach specialist of the Nature Conservancy, Marthen Welly, said he was impressed with the group's efforts.

"They are able to organize themselves in preserving this mangrove forest. All we have to do is to facilitate cooperation between the group and the village so that this place can be better promoted and developed," he said.


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WHO plays down bird flu threat in China after three human deaths

Channel NewsAsia 27 Feb 08;

BEIJING: There are no indications that bird flu is becoming a bigger problem in China despite the deaths of three people from the disease this year, the World Health Organisation said Wednesday.

"The three recent cases were not unexpected considering the winter season and the fact that we know the virus is still circulating in the environment," the WHO's representative in China, Hans Troedsson, said in a statement.

"WHO welcomes the capability of the surveillance system in China to detect these three isolated cases. We have no indications of any larger number of undetected cases."

The latest victim was a 44-year-old woman from Guangdong province in southern China who died on Monday after coming into contact with sick poultry.

The other two reported bird flu fatalities this year were a 41-year-old man who died in China's southern Guangxi region on February 20 and a 22-year-old man in Hunan province who died on January 24.

Since bird flu re-emerged in 2003, 20 people in China have died of the disease while another 10 contracted it but survived.

Avian flu mainly kills birds, but scientists fear it could mutate to easily jump from human to human, sparking a global pandemic.

China is regarded as a potential flashpoint in this regard because it has the world's biggest number of poultry, with tens of millions of chickens reared in densely populated rural areas where epidemic controls remain spotty.

More than 230 people have died of bird flu worldwide, according to the WHO. - AFP/ac


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Best of our wild blogs: 27 Feb 08


Once Upon a Tree - Review of this week's episode
For those who missed it, super-fast upload and great details, on the ashira blog

Seagrass Angels at Labrador
joining the intrepid young seagrassers on the teamseagrass blog

Marine works at Pulau Ular and Punggol
latest MPA notices on the wildfilms blog

Tides of another time
reflections on exploration of the tides on the budak blog

Reflections of California 2005
a life-changing experience on the leafmonkey blog

Caged raptor
Sad sight of a vulture on the bird ecology blog

Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization
Review of the book by Lester R. Brown on the AsiaIsGreen blog


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Keep Jurong Lake as park, not pasar malam

Letter from Seow Joo Heng, Straits Times Forum 27 Feb 08;

I PARTLY agree with Mr Heng Cho Choon in his letter, 'Don't make Jurong Lake another white elephant' (Feb 25). We should ensure the lake does not end up like Tang Dynasty City. But I disagree with his view about the lack of traffic at Chinese Garden or Jurong Lake.

My compliments too to the National Parks Board and Jurong Town Corporation on sprucing up the Jurong Lake area which includes the Chinese and Japanese gardens. I live just across Jurong Town Hall Road which overlooks the lake park.

I am perhaps more informed about the area than Mr Heng who last visited two months ago. Mr Heng also suggested the park is not meaningfully used. That is not true. Every morning, residents go for their morning jog or walk, thanks to the recently completed park connector. My family and I visit the lake area regularly, be it for exercise or leisurely outings. There are many families like ours who do the same because we enjoy the serenity. True, littering is a problem that has to be dealt with along some stretches of the park connector, but that is a different issue.

What is more important is that Jurong Lake maintains its park-like ambience. We should not commercialise it by turning it into a pasar malam (night market) attraction or entertaintment resort like the ones in Johor, Bangkok or Penang, as Mr Heng has suggested.

The lake will lose its serene atmosphere, with the rubbish and pollution such transformations create.

Singaporeans who want a dose of such nightly activities can always find it just round the corner, at Jurong East Central where night markets sprout every other week.

Jurong Lake is a place in Singapore that offers respite from the stresses of daily work. Any future redevelopment should preserve its refreshing


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Sungei Ulu Pandan woodland to be cleared


A place for residents - and birds and trees
Part of Sungei Ulu Pandan woodland to be cleared for flats, but nature lovers' concerns also heeded

Tania Tan, Straits Times 27 Feb 08;

THEY wanted to save the birds and the trees.

The Housing Board needed the area to build five new blocks of flats to replace old ones.

The 1,330 people who signed a petition to save the flora and fauna in the Sungei Ulu Pandan woodland did not get their way.

A part of the area will be cleared, with work having begun last month.

But the HDB, heeding the views of nature lovers, has promised a 'green buffer'' of about 30 trees in a 30m strip separating the proposed residential area from the woodland.

It has also pledged to clear the area in stages so that birds and other animals can migrate to adjacent wooded areas.

The petitioners, ranging from students and retirees to architects and scientists, wrote to the Prime Minister earlier this month. They said they 'truly value the presence and continued existence of this little remaining woodland', and that its destruction would 'be a great loss to our community and the nation'.

The construction will uproot around 150 trees in the 3.7ha stretch, which is tucked away next to Commonwealth Avenue West. There, some trees are almost 40 years old.

And a study of the area by The Nature Society last year uncovered many bird species, including a pair of endangered changeable hawk eagles, which call the woodland home.

But the area is also needed for Ghim Moh residents affected by the Selective En-Bloc Redevelopment Scheme (Sers).

The HDB had announced plans in 2006 for new two- to five-room flats for almost 1,000 households, to replace blocks in the area that were over 30 years old. Construction is slated for completion in 2011.

A check with the HDB revealed that it had no other suitable sites for the project.

Dr Kennedy Chew, an IT researcher who helped to coordinate the petition, conceded that new flats were needed.

'But we are hoping that the Government will consider moving the development somewhere else nearby instead,' added Dr Chew, a long-time resident of the area.

Dr Ho Hua Chew, who chairs the Nature Society's conservation committee, said: 'The woodland provides a home for birds that have otherwise been displaced in this urban jungle.' There are only about five known changeable hawk eagle nesting sites in Singapore, he added.

But Mr Christopher de Souza, an MP for the Holland-Bukit Timah GRC and the area's custodian, said the development was a much-needed one for the Ghim Moh precinct and one that many residents were looking forward to.

The site had been chosen, he said, as it was near the blocks that are to be demolished under Sers.

Nearly four in 10 of the area's affected residents are elderly people who have lived there for decades. They want to continue residing among friends and family.

The HDB, responding to queries, said the eagles' nest was not within the site, and it is working with the National Parks Board to ensure the nest's well-being.

Said Mr de Souza: 'We hope to achieve the best of both worlds.'


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Woodlands cemetery to make way for MRT depot

Straits Times 27 Feb 08;

NEARLY 2,000 graves in Woodlands will be exhumed to make way for a new MRT depot, the Land Transport Authority said yesterday.

The exhumation is scheduled to begin in October in the Kwong Hou Sua Teochew Cemetery, a little-known graveyard said to date back to the 1940s.

Part of the cemetery sits on a 21ha site earmarked for a depot, where trains for the upcoming Downtown Line will be serviced, repaired and parked.

The rail yard, to be located in Woodlands Road across from the Sungei Kadut Industrial Estate, will be twice the size of the Circle Line's Kim Chuan Depot, touted as the world's largest underground train depot. The Woodlands yard, however, will be built above ground.

Its construction will affect 1,957 graves at Kwong Hou Sua. The cemetery's remaining graves, estimated at between 2,500 and 3,000, will be dug up later to make room for a new industrial estate. A temple on the site will have to go as well.

The Singapore Land Authority said that the exact number of exhumed graves would be determined only at a later date.

Relatives can register at www.lta.gov.sg/ projects/kwonghousua/index.htm to claim the exhumed remains.

Construction on the new MRT depot will start in December this year. It is scheduled for completion in 2015, in time for the opening of the second stage of the Downtown Line.

The line is a $12 billion 33-station MRT project, which will be built in three stages. The first stage, which will serve the Marina Bay area, is expected to be up in 2013. The second, snaking up the Bukit Timah area and ending in Bukit Panjang, will be up in 2015. The final stage will head east to end at the Singapore Expo and is scheduled to be completed in 2016.

The line will intersect with other MRT lines, with interchange stations at Botanic Gardens, Newton, Little India, Bugis, Promenade, Bayfront, Chinatown and MacPherson.


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Removed trees at Pasir Ris were in poor form

Prone to brittle branches, which could snap and fall on passers-by
Today Online 27 Feb 08;

Letter from Michael Ngin
Public Relations Manager
Pasir Ris-Punggol Town Council

WE REFER to the letters, "Felled old trees were pride of quaint neighbourhood" and "They were healthy — why cut them down?" (Feb 26) by Ms Ong Siew Khim and Mr David Law, on the matter of removing casuarina equisetifolia trees along Elias Road.

We would like to thank Ms Ong and Mr Law for their feedback. We understand and share their disappointment over the felling of these trees, but it is essential for us to proceed with the removal in view of public safety.

Casuarinas trees are susceptible to basal/trunk rot and brittle branches. In our routine horticultural maintenance, we have also discovered regular snap branches and hairline cracks on the trunks of these casuarinas. Due to the casuarinas' characteristics, we are also unable to carry out corrective trimming, unlike other trees.

Contrary to the personal opinion offered by our contractor (landscape supervisor), our certified arborists have examined the 27 casuarinas within the mentioned precinct and identified 11 of them in poor form, having bad lean and sited close to pedestrian crossings/footpaths.

Although there is currently no eminent danger, we are taking precautionary measures, which include removal of the trees, to prevent any unfortunate occurrences/incidents to our residents.

You may also wish to know that we have also previously received calls from concerned residents who have witnessed snapping branches and requested for a complete removal of such trees.

However, our arborists' examination has shown that some of them are in good condition, with proper form and structure.

Thus, only those trees which are in poor form and bad lean will be felled.


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Singapore eco-friendly lunch boxes turned into advertising platforms

Channel NewsAsia 26 Feb 08;

SINGAPORE: ‘Takeaway’ lunch boxes are getting a new, green look.

Made of paper with waterproof lining, these boxes are recyclable - unlike non-biodegradable styrofoam.

Besides green benefits, these boxes are also microwavable and can be reused at least three times after it’s washed.

Unlike plastic and styrofoam boxes, it has air vents - ensuring that fried food doesn't become soggy.

Pressure release valves also keep the food warm.

Materials to make this lunch box are from trees that are under the reforestation plans in Europe. For every one three cut down, seven more will be planted in replacement.

The company started producing these boxes six years ago, mainly to overseas vendors who were more receptive to eco-friendly products.

With growing environmental consciousness, more Singaporeans are catching on to the idea.

More than 10 million boxes were sold locally in 2007.

However, producing these lunch boxes is not cheap. So to help cut down costs for buyers, the box is currently used as an advertising tool.

Leonard Lau, Managing Director of Microwave Packaging, said: “We invite corporations with CSRs (corporate social responsibility), with advertising, to be printed on boxes like this. And they help subsidise the cost, by then we are able to sell it at a lower price to the vendors." -CNA/vm


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Senseless, agonising death of a gentle giant

Rebekah Cavanagh, Northern Territory News 27 Feb 08;

AUTHORITIES have lashed out at irresponsible litterers after a giant green turtle was found choking to death off a Darwin beach yesterday.

The adult female-believed to be about 40 years old-was spotted in distress floating about 200m offshore in Fannie Bay.

It is believed she had swallowed a plastic bag.
The giant green turtle yesterday. Sadly, it died soon after this photograph was taken, a victim of thoughtless litterers. Picture: CLIVE HYDE

Rescuers battled rough seas to pluck the turtle from the water but the gentle giant died on its way to the Ark Animal Hospital.

Ark vet Stephen Cutter said the turtle more than likely died from swallowing a plastic bag _ a death he described as horribly slow and painful.

"It causes them to vomit and an acid forms on the lungs and they develop pneumonia," he said.

"They also get trapped at the surface and suffer exhaustion and sunburn repeatedly trying to dive back underwater.

"I'd say this turtle had been like that for a while.

"It's covered in green slime, indicating it had been on the water's surface for some time."

The death has infuriated the vet and prompted him to remind people about disposing of their rubbish responsibly when fishing or at the beach.

"Plastic shopping bags kill large numbers of wildlife each year," he said.

"That's one of the most common reasons for deaths in turtles as they think the bags are jellyfish, which is their main food source."

"I urge people to be conscious of what you do. What seems like a little act of littering can cause disastrous affects on marine life."


Territorian David Fong and his four-year-old son Saul were the first to spot the turtle when they were walking at East Point about 8.30am yesterday.

Mr Fong said he was amazed at how big the creature was, but after watching it for a while he knew "something wasn't quite right".

"It just kept flapping its flippers and rolling over," he said. "It looked like it was trying to swim and dive under the water but couldn't."

He reported it to NT Parks and Wildlife.

Senior wildlife officers Ray Chatto and Tommy Nichols, with the help of the Museum and Art Gallery NT's marine officer Steve Gregg, tackled the extremely rough sea and wind conditions in a boat to rescue the stricken animal about 12.30pm.

But sadly, when Mr Chatto was driving her to the veterinary hospital in Palmerston, she died.


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Microplastics in remote sea: marine pollution at worse levels than thought

Haul aboard
Chris Baker, The Guardian 27 Feb 08;

The discovery of large amounts of microplastic in remote seas suggests marine pollution is at worse levels than previously thought

When the crew of the Greenpeace ship Esperanza last year pulled in its 1-metre-net from the surface of the Atlantic about 200 miles south-east of the Azores, it was surprised only by the quantity of what it found.

Washing around in the net were nearly 700 minuscule and unidentifiable fragments of plastic; 57 pieces of synthetic fishing line and leftover strands from dumped nets and rope; a handful of flakes from old plastic bags, including one with a zip-type seal still attached; and a dozen so-called nurdles - white pellets, looking like grains of rice, which are the raw material of the packaging industry. All this microplastic had been collected in just four nautical miles.

"When we conducted the first trawl and brought the sample back on board, I was shocked, and so were the crew," says Adam Walters, a researcher at Greenpeace's laboratory in Exeter. "We had been sailing then for over a month, looking at the ocean every day, and had no idea that all this plastic was floating by the ship."

It was not just the Atlantic Ocean. Wherever the Esperanza went last year as part of Greenpeace's Defend Our Oceans campaign, it trailed its sample net from a boom beside the ship. It was more or less the same story everywhere. After the contents of the trawl had been tipped into a washing tank, and once the sea creatures - jellyfish, by-the-wind-sailors, brightly coloured sea snails, or small crabs hitching a ride on something - and the larger pieces of floating debris had been removed, there was always the same mosaic of pieces of microplastic floating on the surface.

Walters says: "We knew there were big pieces everywhere so we would expect to find small pieces, but it was a shock. It is shocking when something you thought was pristine turns out to be polluted in that way. When you are in the middle of nowhere, thousands of miles from land, and you are scooping up pieces of plastic it is quite shocking."

In the north Pacific, where a gigantic sea of rubbish - dubbed the great garbage patch, and which may contain 100m tonnes of flotsam - swirls around in a system of currents known as the North Pacific Gyre, a large amount of microplastic was expected; indeed, the highest concentrations were found there. But Esperanza also discovered an unexpectedly high number of particles in the Atlantic, around the Canary Islands and the Azores. The haul of microplastic continued in the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean, in the Bay of Bengal, and off Malaysia and the Philippines. Only in the furthest reaches of the south Pacific did the count go down.

David Santillo, senior scientist at the Exeter laboratory, says: "I think it is the first time anyone has really looked in the Indian Ocean, over other parts of the Pacific, and in the Atlantic. I don't think anyone else has been able to look where we have looked. It is giving us a first look at the nature of the problem in other areas. It is showing that the problem is not restricted to the North Pacific Gyre. We found microplastic at some level almost wherever you go in the world, even well offshore.

"I think the Atlantic is showing a similar problem as the North Pacific Gyre - perhaps, on the evidence we have got, not as abundant, but it warrants further investigation. It was interesting that we were finding that spike there. It may be that we were lucky, but it may be symptomatic of the situation in the Atlantic itself."

Plastic makes up 60%-80% of marine litter, and at least 267 species, including 44% of seabirds, and 43% of marine mammals, are known to have suffered because of entanglement or ingestion. The Marine Conservation Society's annual beach clean reports increasingly smaller pieces of plastic being found on Britain's beaches. According to the United Nations Environment Programme, there are about 13,000 pieces of plastic litter in every square kilometre of the ocean's surface.

Microplastic, invisible until you look very closely, would add to the equation. The ever-present nurdles, for example, are shipped around the ocean in vast quantities, to be remelted and remoulded to make finished plastic packaging. A scavenging animal may easily mistake them for fish eggs.

Richard Thompson, reader in marine ecology at Plymouth University, has been able to track the historic build-up of microscopic particles of plastic, using plankton samples collected regularly on silk screens for more than 40 years, on shipping routes between Aberdeen and Shetland, and Orkney and Iceland. In the 1960s and 70s, the number of plastic particles recorded remained fairly static, but rose dramatically in the samples from the 1980s and 90s - a trend that reflects plastic production, from about 5m tonnes a year in the 1950s to 230m tonnes today.

Thompson says: "The amount of small fragments and microplastic is likely to increase, and that material is going to survive in the environment for hundreds, if not thousands, of years. Everyday items, such as plastic bags and plastic bottles, are fragmenting and it is difficult now to find a shoreline that does not contain plastic. There seems nothing to stop them fragmenting into the microscopic particles I am reporting.

"It is something we need to get a much better understanding of. I really think we need more research to find out what the long-term implications are."

Analysis of the samples taken during the Esperanza's voyage should be completed by May, in time to be presented to a meeting of the scientific group of the London Convention - which protects the marine environment from human activities - on preventing pollution caused by dumping waste in the sea. In the meantime, the microplastic from the samples sits in the Exeter laboratory - looking harmless in small glass jars, but perhaps a unique snapshot of a serious problem.


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Haze from Sumatra forest fires covers Aceh

Antara 26 Feb 08;

Banda Aceh (ANTARA News) - Banda Aceh Municipality and Aceh Besar District have been covered by haze from Sumatra forest fires over the past few days, however it did not affect flights at Sultan Iskandar Muda airport.

The haze had covered Aceh since last week, head of the Blang Bintang meteorological office Syamsuir said here on Tuesday.

The haze did not disturb flight schedules at the airport as the visibility was still above five kilometers, he said.

"Although it looks quite thick, the haze is not dangerous for flights even in the evening," he said.

In addition to Banda Aceh and Aceh Besar, the smoke also affected Weh Island, Sabang, Pidie, Central Aceh, and Southeast Aceh.

Hot spots from forest and bush fires were detected among other things in Dumai and Bengkalis districts in Riau Province, West Sumatra, Mandailing Natal in North Sumatra Province, East Aceh, Jambi, South Sumatra and Lampung.

Last Tuesday (Feb. 19), the number of hot spots on Sumatra Island reached a total of 349, including 90 hot spots in Riau Province alone he said. Rains over the past few days helped extinguish most of the hot spots. (*)


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Sumatran deforestation driving climate change and species extinction, report warns


Jessica Aldred, guardian.co.uk 27 Feb 08;

The destruction of Sumatra's natural forests is accelerating global climate change and pushing endangered species closer to extinction, a new report warned today.

A study from WWF claims that converting the forests and peat swamps of just one Sumatran province into plantations for pulpwood and palm oil is generating more annual greenhouse gas emissions than the Netherlands, and is endangering local elephant and tiger populations.

The fastest rate of deforestation in Indonesia is occurring in central Sumatra's Riau province, where some 4.2m hectares (65%) of its tropical forests and peat swamps have been cleared for industrial plantations in the past 25 years, the study shows.

Since 1982, about 30% of the province's natural forest has been cleared for palm oil plantations, 24% for industrial pulpwood plantations, and 17% has become so-called wasteland – land that has been deforested but not replaced by any crop cover. Twenty-five years ago, according to the report, forest covered 78% of the Riau province. Today it covers just 27%. In just one year, 2005-06, it lost 286,146 hectares – 11% of forest cover.

Illegal and legal forest clearance for the development of settlements, infrastructure and agriculture has traditionally driven deforestation in Riau, but the "speed and finality" of forest conversion for the rapidly expanding pulp and paper and palm oil industries is matched "by no other type of deforestation", the report says.

The resulting average annual CO2 from forest loss, degradation, peat decomposition and fires between 1990-2007 in Riau province alone was 0.22 gigatons – higher than that of the Netherlands, or equivalent to 58% of Australia's total annual emissions, or 39% of the UK's annual emissions, the report says.

The report, a joint effort between WWF, Remote Sensing Solutions and Hokkaido university in Japan, claims to be the first piece of research to analyse the connection between deforestation and forest degradation, global climate change and declining wildlife populations.

It has analysed deforestation and forest degradation over a 25-year period between 1982-2007. By using satellite images to map land cover and usage it has identified the main drivers of forest clearance. Researchers used remote sensing analysis and two different land management scenarios to estimate historical and future CO2 emissions related to deforestation up to 2015.

Riau is home to vast peatlands that are estimated to hold south-east Asia's largest store of carbon, and contains some of the most biodiverse ecosystems that are home to critically endangered species such as Sumatra elephants and tigers, rhinos and orang-utans.

In the past 25 years, WWF says there has been a clear correlation in Riau between the clearance of forests and declining wildlife populations, largely thought to be due to an increase in human-wildlife conflict as animals are driven from their disappearing forest habitats.

The report shows there has been a huge decline in elephant numbers – from an estimated 1,067-1,617 in 1984 to possibly as few as 210 individuals today. If this trend continues and the two largest remaining elephant forests are not protected, Riau's wild elephant population will face extinction, the report warns.

Similarly, figures in the report show that Riau's Sumatran tiger population has declined by 70% in 25 years, from 640 to 192 today. Unless the last remaining patches of tiger habitat are connected by wildlife corridors, these too will face extinction, the report says.

"We found that Sumatra's elephants and tigers are disappearing even faster than their forests are in Riau," said WWF International's species programme director, Dr Susan Lieberman. "This is happening because as wildlife search for new habitat and food sources, they increasingly come into conflict with people and are killed.

"The fragmentation and opening up of new forest areas also increases both the access and the opportunities for poaching. Therefore, a concerted effort to save these forests will contribute significantly to slowing the rate of global climate change, and will give tigers, elephants, and local communities a real chance for a future in
Sumatra."

About 20% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions are estimated to come from global annual deforestation, which often takes place in the most biodiverse regions of the world, such as Brazil and Indonesia.

Indonesia's carbon emissions are likely to increase, the study predicts, as most future forest clearance will be conducted in areas with deep peat, which releases greenhouse gases when it decomposes or burns.

During December's UN climate change conference in Bali, the Indonesian minister for forestry promised to provide incentives to stop unsustainable forestry practices, and to protect Indonesia's forests. The governor of Riau province has also made a public commitment to protect the province's remaining forest. WWF is urging the government to uphold these promises.

"If the commitments by the Indonesian government are implemented, it will not only save its endangered species, but actually slow the rate of global climate change through the carbon savings," said Ian Kosasih, the director of WWF Indonesia's forest programme.

"If government and local industry were to create positive incentives for projects to reduce emissions by saving forests in Riau province, it would both protect the province's massive carbon stores and also contribute to the economies of local communities that are dependent on these forests," Kosasih added.

The demand for palm oil, which is fuelling much of the forest clearance, has risen in recent years to meet a global demand for biofuels.

Last week, the transport secretary, Ruth Kelly, ordered a government review of the environmental and economic damage caused by growing biofuels.

Ministers say a number of studies have emerged recently that question the environmental benefits of biofuels, and the government wants to check that UK and European biofuel targets will not cause more problems than they solve.


Pulp and palm oil the villains in Sumatra's global climate impact and local elephant losses
WWF Website 26 Feb 08;

Pekanbaru, Sumatra: Turning just one Sumatran province's forests and peat swamps into pulpwood and palm oil plantations is generating more annual greenhouse gas emissions than the Netherlands and rapidly driving the province's elephants into extinction, a new study by WWF and partners has found.

The study found that in central Sumatra's Riau Province 4.2 million hectares of tropical forests and peat swamp have been cleared in the last 25 years. Forest loss and degradation and peat decomposition and fires are behind average annual carbon emissions equivalent to 122 percent of the Netherlands total annual emissions, 58 percent of Australia's annual emissions, 39 per cent of annual UK emissions and 26 per cent of annual German emissions.

Riau was chosen for the study because it is home to vast peatlands estimated to hold Southeast Asia’s largest store of carbon, and contains some of the most critical habitat for Sumatran elephants and tigers. It also has Indonesia's highest deforestation rate, substantially driven by the operations of global paper giants Asia Pulp & Paper (APP) and Asia Pacific Resources International Holdings Limited (APRIL).

The report by WWF, Remote Sensing Solution GmbH and Hokkaido University breaks new ground by analyzing for the first time the connection between deforestation and forest degradation, global climate change, and population declines of tigers and elephants.

The province has lost 65 per cent of its forests over the last 25 years and in recent years has suffered Indonesia's fastest deforestation rates. In the same period there was an 84 per cent decline in elephant populations, down to only 210 individuals, while tiger populations are estimated to have declined by 70 per cent to perhaps just 192 individuals.

“We found that Sumatra's elephants and tigers are disappearing even faster than their forests are in Riau,” said WWF International's Species Programme Director, Dr Susan Lieberman. “This is happening because as wildlife search for new habitat and food sources, they increasingly come into conflict with people and are killed.

“The fragmentation and opening up of new forest areas also increases both the access and the opportunities for poaching. Therefore, a concerted effort to save these forests will contribute significantly to slowing the rate of

global climate change, and will give tigers, elephants, and local communities a real chance for a future in Sumatra.”

Led by global paper giants APP and APRIL, the pulp & paper and palm oil industries are driving Riau's Sumatran tigers and elephants to local extinction in just a few years by destroying their habitat, the study found.

At last December's Bali Climate Change Conference, the Indonesian minister of Forestry pledged to provide incentives to stop unsustainable forestry practices and protect Indonesia's forests. The governor of Riau province has also made a public commitment to protect the province's remaining forest.

“If the commitments by the Indonesian government are implemented, it will not only save its endangered species but actually slow the rate of global climate change through the carbon savings,” said Ian Kosasih, director of WWF-Indonesia's forest programme.

Carbon emissions are likely to increase, the study predicted, as most future forest clearance will be conducted in areas with deep peat.

“If government and local industry were to create positive incentives for projects to reduce emissions by saving forests in Riau Province, it would both protect the province’s massive carbon stores and also contribute to the economies of local communities that are dependent on these forests,” said Kosasih.

As part of its efforts to save Sumatra’s remaining natural forests, WWF is working urgently with the Indonesian government and the pulp and palm oil industries to identify and protect the forests that are home to elephants, tigers, orang-utans and rhinos. Sumatra is the only place on Earth where all four species co-exist.


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Town councils active in recycling campaign

Straits Times Forum 27 Feb 08;

WE REFER to the letter, 'Town councils should be more involved in recycling effort' by Mr Phillip Ang Keng Hong (Feb 12).

Under the National Recycling Programme administered by the National Environment Agency (NEA), town councils have partnered public waste collectors to provide one set of recycling bins for every five blocks of flats. The public waste collectors undertake to collect the recyclable materials weekly. We will increase the number of recycling bins and frequency of collections as and when the quantity of recyclables collected increases to target levels. It is necessary to balance this with operational cost to avoid escalating costs which would lead to higher fees for residents.

On the suggestion that recycling companies could explore working with town council cleaners in recycling efforts, we are glad to inform Mr Ang that our public waste collectors have indicated that they are ready to work with town council cleaners to explore opportunities for cooperation in sourcing recyclable items and maximising returns.

On his suggestion that town councils do more to encourage residents to recycle, Mr Ang may be pleased to know that town councils already work with NEA, community development councils, grassroots organisations and recycling companies to promote recycling as a way of life. Programmes implemented include a 'cash for trash' initiative where residents can exchange recyclable materials for instant cash, a recycling drive under the umbrella of MediaCorp's Save The Earth campaign, and the annual Recycling Day in the heartland to promote and encourage recycling among the public.

Town councils also take on the responsibility to educate residents on the proper way of recycling. Residents should not simply discard unwanted things, including non-recyclable items and food waste, in our recycling bins. On the other hand, our cleaners can help clear these items left beside the recycling bins as they do items left around litter bins. We firmly believe that a successful national recycling programme entails the full cooperation of both residents and cleaners.

We assure Mr Ang the town councils and NEA will continue to work with all stakeholders to make the national recycling programme a success.

Albert Teng Ann Boon
General Manager
Holland-Bukit Panjang Town Council
on behalf of the 14 PAP Town Councils

Ong Seng Eng
Director, Resource Conservation Department
National Environment Agency

Recycling: Cooperation vital
Town councils, NEA working with all stakeholders
Today Online 28 Feb 08;

Letter from Albert Teng Ann Boon
General Manager Holland-Bukit Panjang Town Council on behalf of the 14 PAP Town Councils
Letter from Ong Seng Eng
Director, Resource Conservation Department National Environment Agency

We refer to the letter by Mr Phillip Ang Keng Hong, "Town Councils, rev up recycling" (Feb 12).Under the National Recycling Programme administered by the National Environment Agency (NEA), town councils have partnered the public waste collectors (picture) to provide one set of recycling bins for every five blocks of flats. The public waste collectors undertake to collect the recyclable materials on a weekly basis.

We will increase the number of recycling bins and the frequency of collections as and when the quantity of recyclables collected increase to target levels. It is necessary to balance this with the operational cost to avoid escalating costs which would lead to higher fees for residents.

On the suggestion that recycling companies could explore working with town councils' cleaners in recycling efforts, we are glad to inform Mr Ang that our public waste collectors have indicated that they are ready to work with town councils' cleaners to explore opportunities for cooperation in sourcing for recyclable items and maximising the returns.

On Mr Ang's suggestion, town councils should do more to encourage residents to recycle, Mr Ang may be pleased to know that town councils are already working with NEA, Community Development Councils, grassroots organisations and recycling companies to actively promote recycling as a way of life.

Some of the programmes which have been implemented include a 'cash for trash' initiative where residents can exchange their recyclable materials for instant cash, a recycling drive under the umbrella of MediaCorp's Saving Gaia campaign, and the annual Recycling Day held in the heartlands to promote and encourage recycling among the public.

The town councils also take on the responsibility to educate residents on the proper way of recycling. Residents should not simply discard their unwanted things, including non-recyclable items and food waste, into our recycling bins. On the other hand, our cleaners can help to clear away these items left outside the recycling bins in the same manner as they would for items left on top or around litter bins.

We firmly believe that the implementation of a successful national recycling programme entails the full cooperation of both the residents and the cleaners. We wish to assure Mr Ang that the town councils and NEA will continue to work with all our stakeholders to make our national recycling programme a success.


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Synthetic rubber plant set up to use Bukom petrochemicals

Synthetic rubber plant gives Singapore more bounce
Lanxess's $834m facility will supply to tyre makers in Asia
Ronnie Lim, Business Times 27 Feb 08;

(SINGAPORE) Singapore has landed the world's first entirely-new butyl or synthetic rubber plant investment since 2000.

'It's the right time to have a plant here,' Lanxess chairman Axel Heitmann said, after the German chemicals group - formerly Bayer - announced yesterday a massive 400 million euro (S$834 million) investment in a state-of-the-art Singapore facility.

The move, marking Lanxess's largest-ever investment, culminates its three-year-long global search for an appropriate site. Singapore won out over Map Ta Phut in Thailand and Kuantan in Malaysia, its two closest contenders.

'All the products from Singapore will go to Asia,' said Mr Heitmann. The big customers will include tyre makers in Asia, which accounts for over half of global demand for synthetic rubber.

The German chemicals group said that the overriding factor in Singapore's favour was the ready supply of higher olefins needed by its speciality chemical plant.

These will become available from 2010 or 2011, thanks to the upcoming new Shell and ExxonMobil petrochemical complexes here which will help create the critical mass needed to produce sufficient quantities of these C4 and higher fractions.

Ron Commander, head of Lanxess's butyl rubber unit, said that the Singapore plant has already finalised a long-term agreement with Shell Chemicals which will provide it with isobutene and Raffinate 1 feedstocks from its Bukom petrochemical complex.

Other factors which favoured Singapore include its political stability, its free market economy, excellent IT and shipping connections, and the high level of research and development activity, Mr Heitmann told an international media conference here.

Lanxess's choice of the site for its butyl rubber plant was earlier expected to be announced last December, but there had been complete silence until now. It finally came down to an 'official site competition' among the three short-listed countries, he said.

Lanxess's 100,000tonnes per annum (tpa) Singapore plant, producing two key products - halobutyl and regular butyl rubber - will help it meet the rapidly-growing Asian demand from tyre manufacturers including Michelin, Goodyear and Bridgestone, which use the products to make inner liners and inner tubes for high-performance tyres.

Halobutyl, the 'next generation' butyl rubber, helps to make tyres safer - by preventing them from deflating regardless of speed - and last longer.

Mr Heitmann said that with the China market growing at 6 per cent and India at over 8 per cent a year, production from its 135,000-tpa Canadian plant and 130,000-tpa Belgian plant would be insufficient for Asia.

Construction of the new plant, on a 20,000-square metre site at Tembusu sector on Jurong Island, will involve over 1,500 workers and 150 engineers.

Detailed engineering has begun and construction proper will start in the first quarter of next year. It is scheduled to be completed by end-2010. When operational, the plant will create an initial 200 jobs.

Singapore wants more speciality chemical makers to set up here.

Aw Kah Peng, Economic Development Board assistant managing director, said that Singapore's strategic intent is 'to further extend the higher olefins chemistry chains on Jurong Island'.

Upcoming new petrochemical crackers, which will double Singapore's ethylene output to 4 million tpa by 2011, will allow the chemical industry here to move a big step forward in value-add, she added.

'This is possible because new chemistry chains are being introduced downstream, resulting in the production of more speciality and higher-value chemicals and polymers,' she said, adding that the Lanxess project was an example of this.


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What just one child can do

Jerusha DEvan, Today Online 27 Feb 08;

I read with similar sentiment the letter from Phillip Keng Hong, "Going Green a PR stunt?" (Feb 25).

As a volunteer for my company's global project to reduce our carbon footprint, I cannot help but notice that Singaporeans go about their daily lives without much concern for the long-term impact that their actions may have on the environment.

This is because there is not enough awareness propagated to both young and old to transform this into a reality that can be felt.

Floods that ruin rice fields and droughts that damage fields of wheat are probably due in part to global warming. Unless we make a concerted effort to cut down our carbon footprint, a global food shortage will begin and continue to affect us adversely.

The use of disposable utensils should be stopped unless they are for takeaways. When packing food back to the office, there is an option to use office utensils instead.

Styrofoam boxes are not environmentally friendly and more should be done to cut down on their usage. I know of a chicken rice stall which has switched to biodegradable cardboard boxes, and kudos to them for moving away from the norm.

I also agree that there are not enough recycling bins available, and the ones I have access to are not ones where you can segregate paper items from glass and plastic — it is just one big bin.

There was a recycling company near my office and my colleagues and I were happy to use them until we found out they were not 100 per cent genuine.

We collected cans, bottles and plastic containers, even taking the effort to bring them from our homes only to find out from one of the workers that the company only recycled paper and everything else was simply disposed of in the main garbage dump downstairs. When I called the company, they had no comments to make. It seems there is only money to be made in recycled paper and nothing else.

As part of our office project to reduce our carbon footprint, volunteers report on how much energy we use for different items such as transport and electricity and how much we send for recycling. We have to be more conscious of switching off unused equipment and lights, using only energy-saving bulbs throughout the office and making full use of natural light where possible.

However, while we are more than willing to save our cans and bottles for recycling, we were unable to get the cooperation of the building management to engage someone to help collect these items. We also did not get much positive response when we enquired if there was any area where we could, as a group, help plant trees as part of our corporate Go-Green effort.

And, yes, there are too many unnecessary mailers that only end up as waste. I feel the whole Going Green concept needs to be more actively inculcated as part of a social lifestyle that is wholesome and forward thinking.

For a start, may I recommend that parents and teachers try to read to their children such books as One Child written by Chris Cheng and illustrated by Steven Woolman. It is about children, our planet and what one child can do. Global warming, habitat destruction, the accumulation of waste, pollution and many other environmental issues are covered.

It is a simple text with richly coloured illustrations that draw on the imagery of an old stained glass window that is gradually cleaned to reveal the beauty underlying the pollution. This is a hopeful book about the environment for young children. "One child saw trees torn from the ground; saw oceans stained with waste, no longer blue and clean; saw skies choking, blocking the sun."

What can just one child do about the devastation of our planet?


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Singapore must boost drive to be clean-energy hub

Singapore must keep up in fast-emerging green sector, says NMP Edwin Khew
Alvin Foo, Straits Times 27 Feb 08;

LOOK at Singapore's competition: Abu Dhabi has pledged to spend US$15 billion (S$21 billion) on a cutting-edge city based on renewable energy.

Closer to home, Malaysia, Australia, South Korea, India and China all have aggressive initiatives designed to attract renewable energy companies and related investments.

In the face of this fierce competition, Singapore must maintain its momentum in the fast-emerging green sector to become a clean-energy hub.

The call came in yesterday's Budget debate from Nominated MP Edwin Khew, a waste recycling firm boss.

He urged Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam to give funding to aid this cause as there was no mention of support for the sector in the Budget.

Mr Khew said: 'We should not be complacent, and lose the momentum that we started in 2007.

'There's still much that needs to be done for Singapore to be recognised as a clean-energy hub.'

The lack of 'green' incentives in the Budget for this year, such as tax credits to encourage environmentally sustainable business practices, has left industry players in various sectors disappointed.

He added: 'We should aggressively promote our intentions and walk the talk.'

Still, despite his gripes, Mr Khew, also chairman of the Sustainable Energy Association of Singapore, praised the Government for a slew of measures last year to boost the clean-energy sector.

These included investing $350 million in clean-energy research and starting the Energy Efficiency Programme Offices.

Last year, Singapore also managed to attract leading Norwegian solar energy company Renewable Energy Corp to build a $6.3 billion solar plant here by 2010.

He said: 'But there are more such companies which are considering Singapore as a base for Asia, but have as yet not committed.'

Singapore is in a good position to be a clean-energy hub, with the right infrastructure and a well-trained technically skilled workforce, he said.

He added: 'Most importantly, the Government and private sector are in sync.'

The green issue was also mentioned by Dr Ahmad Magad (Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC).

He asked the authorities to consider a system similar to France's green tax on petrol-guzzling cars. There, buyers of new cars with high carbon emission rates face a green tax, while buyers of more energy-friendly cars are given a bonus or rebate.

He said: 'Could our road tax system be tweaked such that it is based on fuel consumption and carbon emission and not just the engine capacity of a vehicle?

'This will complement our efforts to promote a cleaner and greener environment, as car buyers will be further incentivised to buy more fuel-efficient cars and avoid petrol guzzlers.'

Related articles

MP Teo calls for more incentives to promote 'green' culture

Channel NewsAsia 25 Feb 08;

Lack of green perks disappoints industry players in Singapore
Budget surplus gives scope for perks such as tax credits, say industry players
Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 23 Feb 08;


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Flour prices in Singapore to go up

Jessica Lim, Straits Times 27 Feb 08;

SINGAPORE importers say they expect flour prices to increase within the next two weeks or so.

Industry players contacted by The Straits Times say the price surge overseas has not filtered down to Singapore yet, but it is only a matter of time before it does.

Prices of flour-based items - bread, noodles and cakes - are likely to head north as well, unless retailers decide to absorb the increases.

According to Singapore Bakery and Confectionery Trade Association chairman Liow Kian Huat, the last big wheat price increase occurred in November.

That led to an $8.50 hike in the price of a 25kg bag of flour, a rise of about 25 per cent. This led to some bakeries and confectionaries increasing their prices by about 20 cents for a loaf of bread.

Singapore imports about 150,000 tonnes of wheat a year from countries such as the United States, Australia and Canada.

Wheat prices surge 25% in biggest one-day jump
Straits Times 27 Feb 08;

Latest increase is triggered by major exporter Kazakhstan's move to curb sales abroad
NEW YORK - WHEAT prices have jumped by 25 per cent in their largest one-day increase, adding to concerns over spiralling food prices and tightening global supplies.

The prices shot up after Kazakhstan, one of the largest exporters, said it would slow grain exports by imposing customs duties.

On Sunday, Kazakhstan's Agriculture Ministry said the country has sold about 75 per cent of its wheat and will impose export tarrifs on what is left - about 110 million bushels - to curb sales.

'In a normal year, 110 million bushels wouldn't be a big deal but, with tight supplies like you have, it's a chunk of wheat,' said Mr Jason Ward, analyst with Northstar Commodities in Minneapolis.

Kazakhstan's move, which follows similar export restrictions in Russia and Argentina, is likely to put further pressure on already tight global wheat supplies, Financial Times reported on Monday.

Prices of top quality wheat have surged to historic highs as bad weather has battered crop after crop around the globe, most recently in India and Canada.

Global supplies also fell after drought hurt plants in Australia and excessive rain curbed yields in France and Germany.

Relentless demand for agricultural products from fast-growing countries, including China and India, has exacerbated the supply crunch for wheat, which has more than doubled in price since last year.

Food prices, as a whole, rose 40 per cent last year because of rising demand and other factors, according to a BBC report.

The impact has been felt around the world. Food riots have broken out in Morocco, Yemen, Mexico, Guinea, Mauritania, Senegal and Uzbekistan, The Guardian reported yesterday.

Pakistan has reintroduced rationing for the first time in two decades. Russia has frozen the price of milk, bread, eggs and cooking oil for six months. Thailand is also planning a freeze on food staples.

After protests around Indonesia, Jakarta has increased public food subsidies. India has banned the export of rice except the high-quality basmati variety.

And on Monday, the United Nations said it was considering plans to ration food aid, partly because of rising prices.

The higher wheat prices may not affect US consumers immediately since big food companies such as Kellogg, General Mills and Kraft Foods typically protect themselves from price volatility with long-term supply contracts.

But analysts say consumers should eventually expect higher prices to work themselves into the grocery aisle.

'In May or June you're going to start seeing some ramifications of these prices,' said Mr Ward.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, BLOOMBERG


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Sri Lankan monks battle monkeys to save Buddhism's holiest tree

Channel NewsAsia 26 Feb 08;

ANURADHAPURA, Sri Lanka: Buddhism's holiest tree in Sri Lanka's ancient capital, tightly guarded by monks and security forces after Tamil rebels attacked it 23 years ago, is under threat again -- this time from monkeys.

Pilgrims are frisked and scanned by metal detectors before being allowed to worship the "Sri Maha Bodi," grown from a sapling of a tree in India that sheltered the Buddha when he attained enlightenment more than 2,550 years ago.

But primates in the temple compound are free to swing from tree-to-tree, grab sweet offerings and in the process endanger what Sri Lankan Buddhists believe is the world's oldest religiously significant tree, a Banyan species propped up by iron supports at temple ruins dating back 2,300 years.

In the mainly Buddhist nation, the tree is not only an object of worship, but a symbol of national sovereignty.

Buddhist devotees from India, Myanmar, Thailand, Korea and Japan visit to pay homage, while tourists also flock to the scene despite the security procedures.

Sri Lanka's chief Buddhist monk Pallegama Sirinivasa, 54, said he is now more worried about damage caused by the troops of monkeys than Tamil Tiger rebels. In 1985, Tiger rebels shot dead three monks, 25 worshippers and 117 pilgrims at the site.

"Terrorists had an idea of destroying this tree because it's a spiritual magnet," the monk told AFP at his temple near the tree. "Even in the 1985 attack, this tree didn't suffer a single bullet."

He said he was unaware of any recent reports of the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) planning to strike again.

"What I see as the main challenge today is protecting the Sri Maha Bodi (or sacred fig tree) from macaques and monkeys," the monk said.

The tree already arguably has the tightest security in Sri Lanka. It is surrounded by a gold-plated fence and protected night and day, spiritually and physically, by an army of soldiers and police as well as monks.

But the monk said he wanted to use technology to help police as well as civilian volunteers guard the tree from monkeys.

Guards ring bells, burst crackers or flash torch lights to scare off the invading primates, but Buddhism won't allow the use of violence to deter the monkeys. - AFP/ac


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Singapore's eco-city in China can expect keen contest

Apart from Tianjin, there are at least three major eco-city projects
Tracy Quek, Straits Times 27 Feb 08;

BEIJING - SINGAPORE'S ecological city in Tianjin will be closely scrutinised as comparisons are made with at least three other eco-developments in China, and more as Beijing turns increasingly to such projects to meet green goals.

There are four major foreign-invested eco-city projects in progress in China and the authorities are in talks with other developed nations concerning more such schemes, Vice-Minister of Construction Qiu Baoxing told The Straits Times, on the sidelines of a press conference yesterday.

Besides the Singapore-China eco-city in the northern port city of Tianjin, one of the other three projects in progress is being developed by British engineering firm Arup on Shanghai's Chongming island.

Of the other two projects, Mr Qiu said agreements have been signed. He declined to reveal the foreign partners involved, saying 'there are still some things to work out'.

The Singapore project is not 'the largest in terms of investment or scale'. But of the four approved developments, it is 'the one that is proceeding the most smoothly and the most quickly', Mr Qiu said.

'The project with Singapore has very high-level government attention on both sides,' he added.

This seems to be the first time the Construction Ministry, which oversees major building projects, has given an idea of how many major eco-cities are in the works.

With several springing up in the future, individual projects will not be able to escape comparison and will be under pressure to distinguish themselves from the rest in terms of technology as well as design and planning, said observers.

Eco-cities are envisioned as entire towns or cities where economic activity and growth will not exact the high toll that resource guzzling modern cities inflict on the environment.

This can be achieved by ensuring that urban design, buildings, road layouts, modes of transportation and clean technology meet strict green requirements.

China in recent years has promoted such projects as part of efforts to drastically reduce energy consumption and pollution emissions in the short term.

'The building of eco-cities is a new attempt...and is extremely beneficial in helping China solve the problems it faces in cutting energy use and pollution,' said Mr Qiu.

Experts say there are now dozens of small and medium-scale experiments in China to build eco-cities or to transform current cities or towns into more environmentally friendly areas.

The Singapore project and Arup's development, however, are particularly visible as they involve building from scratch on substantial plots of unused land, billions of yuan in investment and have strong government backing.

Chinese media have reported that the Singapore venture, spread over 30 sq km in Tianjin's Binhai new district, will cost at least 30 billion yuan (about S$6 billion).

Officials involved in the project previously said it will eventually house some 300,000 people. But yesterday, Xinhua news agency reported that the project hopes to attract some 1.5 million people.

Xinhua added that construction has started on a service centre as part of preliminary work for the official launch of the Tianjin eco-city.

The 46,000 sq m building will house the project's administrative committee and joint venture investment company comprising a Singapore consortium led by Keppel Corporation and a Chinese group.

The building is expected to be up in mid-June and operational in July, when a ground-breaking ceremony is planned.


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Half of world to live in cities by end 2008

Louis Charbonneau, Reuters 26 Feb 08;

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - By the end of this year one half of the world's population will be living in cities for the first time in human history, the United Nations said in a new report released on Tuesday.

According to the report, by the year 2050 there will be 6.4 billion people living in cities, up from 3.3 billion at present. The world's total population is expected to rise to 9.2 billion in 2050 from the current figure of 6.7 billion.

As urbanization increases, the world's rural population is expected to begin declining in around a decade and should fall to 2.8 billion people in 2050 from 3.4 billion in 2007, the report said.

Some countries, like India -- home to two of the world's biggest metropolises, Mumbai and Delhi with 19 and 18.8 million people respectively in 2007 -- aim to slow down the process of urbanization by encouraging development of rural areas.

Despite the challenges urbanization poses for governments and local authorities, Hania Zlotnik, head of the U.N. Population Division, told reporters urbanization is generally a sign of a lively economy.

"Governments would be well advised that urban growth is a proof of economic dynamism," Zlotnik told reporters.

Still, intense urbanization and the expected addition of eight new "megacities" -- cities with 10 million or more inhabitants -- by the year 2025 will pose new challenges.

Governments need to make sure large urban populations have access to basic services, above all health care, Zlotnik said.

Asia and Africa are still mostly rural but will see booming urban populations over the next few decades. Both have around 40 percent in cities and 60 percent in the countryside now.

But this is steadily changing. Half of Africa's population will be in cities by between 2045 and 2050 while Asia will reach that point between 2020 and 2025, Zlotnik said.

MEGACITIES

Around 40 percent of China's population is in cities now, a figure that is expected to exceed 70 percent by 2050, when over 1 billion people will be living in Chinese cities, she said.

By 2025, China's booming foreign investment center Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong, will join Beijing and Shanghai as China's third megacity with 10.2 million people, the U.N. report projected.

The world's second most populous country, India, has only 29 percent of its population in cities at the moment. By 2050, India will have 55 percent of its people in urban centers.

"India is expected to urbanize much less than China and therefore it's expected to remain the country with the world's largest rural population," Zlotnik said.

But India will get two new megacities to join Mumbai and Delhi by 2025 -- Calcutta, which will have an estimated 20.6 million people, and Madras with 10.1 million.

Europe will continue to lag well behind the urbanization seen elsewhere, the U.N. report said. Of the 19 megacities today, the only European metropolises are Moscow and Istanbul.

By 2025 there will be 27 megacities and Europe will add only one more to the list -- Paris. It will have an estimated 10 million people, making it number 27 on the list.

Tokyo is projected to remain the most populous city in the world. With 35.7 million people in its urban agglomeration at last count, this should rise to 36.4 million by 2025, it said.

Africa currently has only one megacity -- Egypt's capital Cairo. Joining the ranks of megacities by 2025 will be Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Lagos, Nigeria.


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Life encyclopedia: too popular to live

Seth Borenstein, Associated Press Yahoo News 27 Feb 08;

The concept of a comprehensive encyclopedia of life on the Internet proved too popular. Its computers were overwhelmed and couldn't keep it alive when it debuted Tuesday.

The encyclopedia, which eventually will have more than 1 million pages devoted to different species of life on Earth, quickly crashed on its first day of a public unveiling, organizers said.

Scientists at the Encyclopedia of Life sought help from experts at Wikipedia for keeping their fledgling Web site going despite massive — and anticipated — interest. The site went back up Tuesday afternoon, but with expectations of more problems, although only temporary ones.

"We've been overwhelmed by traffic," encyclopedia founding chairman Jesse Ausubel said. "We're thrilled."

The encyclopedia's Web site logged 11.5 million hits over 5 1/2 hours, including two hours of down time, according to organizers.

Tuesday's unveiling included limited Web pages for 30,000 species. There are also "exemplar pages" that go into more depth with photos, video, scientific references, maps and text of 25 species ranging from the common potato to the majestic peregrine falcon to a relatively newly discovered obscure marine single celled organism called Cafeteria roenbergensis. Eventually, planners hope to have all 1.8 million species on the Web and already have set up 1 million placeholder pages.

The most popular of the species for Web searches is the poisonous death cap mushroom, which may say something about people's homicidal intentions, joked Ausubel.

All the pages have been made by scientists, but in a few months the encyclopedia will start taking submissions from the public, like Wikipedia.

http://www.eol.org

First edition of Encyclopedia of Life goes online
Glenn Chapman Yahoo News 27 Feb 08;

A premier edition of an unprecedented online Encyclopedia of Life was unveiled Wednesday as part of an ambitious project to catalogue the 1.8 million species known on Earth.

The first pages were unofficially made available on the Internet at www.eol.org a day earlier, encountering such fierce demand that overwhelmed computer servers crashed for about two hours.

The encyclopedia was then unveiled at the prestigious Technology, Entertainment and Design gathering in California, and despite being offline for a time, the aspiring catalogue of Earth's precious biodiversity logged more than 11 million hits in its first six hours.

The project, which creators believe will take a decade to complete, stems from a "wish" scientist Edward Osbourne Wilson made at an annual TED conference in Monterey last year.

TED was launched in 1984 by US architect Richard Saul Wurman as a new-age think tank. Renowned thinkers and doers gather to explore ways to take action in the face of opportunities and challenges facing the planet.

Each year, three people get TED prizes consisting of "a wish to change the world" plus 100,000 dollars and the support of conference attendees in making it real.

Wilson wished for an online encyclopedia of life and how it is inter-related to serve as a guide and inspiration to protect biodiversity, with the first 30,000 pages now unveiled.

"The Encyclopedia of Life will have a profound and creative effect in science," Wilson said.

"It aims not only to summarize all that we know of Earth's life forms, but also to accelerate the discovery of the vast array that remain unknown. This great effort promises to lay out new directions for research in every branch of biology."

Consolidating the information about the planet's 1.8 million species in a single place is unprecedented.

"It is exciting to anticipate the scientific chords we might hear once 1.8 million notes are brought together through this instrument," said EOL executive director Jim Edwards.

Later this year EOL will let people contribute pictures, video, facts or other content to the website "wiki-style."

Wikis are web pages that viewers can modify as they wish, a well-known example being eponymous Wikipedia.

"There are very many species for which we do not have high quality images or text," Edwards said. "Think of these pages as invitations to contribute to EOL."

The encyclopedia's creators predict its uses will include tracking how diseases spread and determining how creatures and plants adapt or succumb to climate changes.

"The Encyclopedia of Life can raise our sights and expand our view of life on Earth," said Jonathan Fanton, president of the John and Catherine MacArthur Foundation, which provides millions of dollars in funding for the project.

"Just as a microscope reveals and helps us better understand the small and particular, the EOL will allow us to discern patterns previously unseen. What was once viewed by many as 'wishful thinking' is now entirely possible and underway."

Along with the support of major US universities, philanthropic foundations and biology institutes, EOL is getting backing from technology giants Adobe, Microsoft and the Wikimedia Foundation.

Web design firm Avenue A/Razorfish crafted the basic template for the EOL species pages.

"EOL is a good example of the way the World Wide Web can be used innovatively to assemble diverse kinds of information in an easy-to-use, ever-growing compendium," Edwards said.

"It can accommodate almost any kind of information about species and, unlike a published book, can be updated instantly."

This year's prize winners are cosmologist Neil Turok, author Dave Eggers, and former British Roman Catholic nun turned religion authority Karen Armstrong. They will reveal their wishes before the conference ends Saturday.


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Brazilian police in huge crackdown on Amazon deforestation

Yahoo News 26 Feb 08;

Three hundred police and security agents have been deployed to the Amazon in a massive crackdown ordered by the Brazilian government against loggers illegally stripping the forest, officials said Tuesday.

"Operation Arc of Fire" was started Tuesday in the Amazon town of Tailandia, 250 kilometers (150 miles) from the city of Belem, the head of the state environmental agency Ibama, Flavio Montiel, told AFP by telephone.

He said the police, rangers and environmental ministry agents were inspecting forest exploitations for signs of illegal tree-felling, which is rife in the region. The operation would last up to three weeks, he said.

In April, a second-phase operation will kick in when 1,000 agents will be deployed to widen the crackdown into other regions in the states of Para, Mato Grosso and Rondonia.

"In all, 36 areas will be inspected in the Operation Arc of Fire," which was mandated under a 2004 preservation plan for the Amazon, Montiel said.

He estimated that the beefed up security presence had already cut logging by 59 percent.

A previous, shorter operation was carried out early this month in Para. In three days, 15,000 cubic meters of illegally cut wood were seized in Tailandia mills.

That initiative was halted when 10,000 people mobbed the officers doing the inspections, complaining that their livelihoods were being threatened.


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Indonesia Fault Line Quakes Nearly 20 Times This Month

Chris Brummitt, Associated Press National Geographic News 26 Feb 08;

The fault line that spawned the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami has ruptured nearly 20 times this month, causing three strong earthquakes.

The activity shows the stress the seam is under and could be a harbinger of worse to come, scientists warn.

Kerry Sieh, from the California Institute of Technology, has studied the fault for more than ten years. He likened it to a length of rope in an imaginary tug of war between a group of men and an elephant.

"One by one, two by two, the men are getting worn out and are letting go of the rope. That puts more stress on each of the remaining men," he wrote in an e-mail Tuesday.

"Who knows which one will let go next, or whether they will let go all at once?"

Sieh and other scientists using Global Positioning System transmitters to measure the uplift of the quakes say another massive temblor sometime in the next hundred years or so is likely, but they cannot predict exactly when that will occur.

"Nothing New"

The fault line is the boundary between the Eurasian and Pacific tectonic plates that have been pushing against each other for millions of years, causing huge pressure to build up. It runs the length of the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, about 125 miles (200 kilometers) offshore.

The steady stream of earthquakes it has produced this month do not seem to be alarming residents much. Witnesses say some have prompted people to flee swaying homes, but few are heeding or are aware of the tsunami warnings that routinely accompany the big jolts.

"People did not really care because such a tremor is nothing new," Erwin, a resident in the coastal town of Padang, said minutes after a powerful quake early Tuesday.

"It was just like the one in the afternoon," said Erwin, who, like many Indonesians, goes by a single name.

The 2004 earthquake off Aceh province in northwest Sumatra had a magnitude of 9.2, making it the most powerful temblor in four decades.

It triggered a tsunami that killed 230,000 people in 12 Indian Ocean countries, with more than half the victims in Indonesia.

Three months after the tsunami, a magnitude 8.6 quake farther down the fault line killed a thousand people. Then in September last year, an 8.7 quake opposite Bengkulu province damaged thousands of homes, killed about 25 people, and sent a ten-foot (three-meter) tsunami crashing into nearby coastlines.

Last Wednesday a magnitude 7.4 quake killed three people and damaged scores of houses. (See story.) Since Sunday, four other events strong enough to prompt tsunami warnings by international agencies have jolted the region.

"They are best seen as part of a chain that began in 2004," said Dr. Fauzi, a top scientist at Indonesia's National Earthquake Center. "The stability of the fault has been disturbed," said Fauzi, who goes by a single name.

Since the Indian Ocean tsunami, Indonesia has spent millions of dollars to establish a nationwide tsunami warning system, but there are still only a few warning sirens in Sumatra's threatened western coast and other beach areas.

Officials and residents of the two populous cities of Padang and Bengkulu said no sirens sounded following the recent earthquakes despite warnings issued by the country's Meteorology and Geophysics Agency.

"We don't have such equipment," said Suyud, an official at Bengkulu's Meteorology and Geophysics Agency. "If there were tsunami warnings issued it was only government officials who knew that from text messages on their cell phones."


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Global warming opens new sea lanes for shippers

Business Times 27 Feb 08;

(TORONTO) Norilsk, the world's biggest producer of nickel, is building its own shipping fleet to capitalise on the melting of the polar ice caps.

The company ordered five reinforced cargo vessels that can plough through the waters north of Siberia as new sea routes open. Norilsk is spending at least 320 million euros (S$669 million) to buy reinforced vessels rather than rent both freighters and icebreaker escorts.

The thawing sea 'has enormous economic implications, and commerce is going to push this ecological zone to the limit', said Rear Admiral Timothy McGee, head of the US Navy's Meteorology and Oceanography Command.

Global warming, while threatening environmental disasters, is creating economic opportunity for shippers, makers of ocean cargo vessels and tour operators. New routes may expand access to the world's second-biggest oil supply, deliver US wheat to Asia 30 per cent faster and increase Arctic tourism as much as 50 per cent in a decade.

Ice shrinkage may enable ships to sail straight over the top of the world, cutting a 17,700 km trip to 11,265 km and saving as much as 11 days and US$800,000 in fuel and labour.

Investment in reinforced vessels jumped fivefold to US$2.5 billion in 2006 from US$500 million in 1999 and may climb 10 per cent a year through 2010, London-based shipping broker Clarkson plc estimates.

Norway's Aker Yards AS and South Korea's Samsung Heavy Industries Co are producing ships for Arctic investors, including oil refiner ConocoPhillips and metals producer OAO GMK Norilsk Nickel.

'We decided we'd be better off with our own' equipment, said Victor Borodin, a spokesman for Moscow-based Norilsk.

Temperatures above the Arctic Circle have risen at about twice the rate of the global average in the past three decades, United Nations data show. Arctic sea ice shrank to the smallest area on record last summer, covering 22 per cent less than the previous low in September 2005, said the US National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado.

Norilsk is shipping nickel, copper and palladium north of Siberia to Europe from the Taimyr Peninsula in northern Russia. One reinforced ship is already in service and four are being built by Aker Yards for delivery by mid-2009, all using new hull designs that allow for bow- or stern-first sailing, depending on the thickness of the ocean surface\. \-- Bloomberg


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Top water utilities to study climate change

Reuters 26 Feb 08;

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Eight of the top U.S. water utilities are joining forces to study how rising sea levels, droughts and other effects of global warming are taking a toll on supplies of drinking water, they said on Tuesday.

The coalition, known as the Water Utility Climate Alliance, said water agencies need access to the best possible climate change research as they prepare to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in infrastructure over the next 15 years.

"Our systems are facing risk due to diminishing snowpack, bigger storms, more frequent drought and rising sea levels," said Susan Leal, general manager of the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, a member of the alliance. "We need to be organized to respond to these risks -- that's why we've formed this alliance."

Other members of the coalition include Denver Water, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, the New York City Department of Environmental Protection, the Portland Water Bureau, the San Diego County Water Authority, the Seattle Public Utilities and the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

Altogether, the WUCA members supply drinking water for more than 36 million people, the alliance said.

Last month, scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography said a water supply crisis was looming in the western United States thanks to human-caused climate change that has already altered the region's river flows, snow packs and air temperatures.

Changes over the past half century have meant less snow pack and more rain in the mountains, rivers with greatly reduced flows by summer and overall drier summers in the region, they noted.

In its first official act, the WUCA said it is urging the U.S. Climate Change Science Program and researchers in the climate change field to improve and refine climate models to apply them at the regional or local level and to ensure that water providers have access to consistent climate data.

The coalition also called on scientists to coordinate international research efforts and to develop tools for policy-making and planning for abrupt climate changes.

(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Andre Grenon)


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Global warming sceptics bouyed by record cold

Catherine Elsworth, The Telegraph 26 Feb 08;

Global warming sceptics are pointing to recent record cold temperatures in parts of North America and Asia and the return of Arctic Sea ice to suggest fears about climate change may be overblown.

According to the US National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), the average temperature of the global land surface in January 2008 was below the 20th century mean (-0.02°F/-0.01°C) for the first time since 1982.

Temperatures were also colder than average across large swathes of central Asia, the Middle East, the western US, western Alaska and southeastern China.

The NCDC reported that the cold conditions were associated with "the largest January snow cover extent on record for the Eurasian continent and for the Northern Hemisphere".

In some parts of China and central Asia, snow fell for the first time in living memory, the NCDC noted.

"For the contiguous United States, the average temperature was 30.5°F (-0.83°C) for January, which was 0.3°F (0.2°C) below the 20th century mean and the 49th coolest January on record, based on preliminary data".

Much of North America was also hit by the heaviest snowfall since the 1960s.

Meanwhile, the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre found the January 2008 Northern Hemisphere sea ice extent, while below the 1979-2000 mean, was greater than the previous four years.

And the January 2008 Southern Hemisphere sea ice extent was significantly above the 1979-2000 mean, ranking as the largest sea ice extent in January over the 30-year historical period.

Generally there were cooler-than-average conditions in the southern oceans and in Niño regions, where the average temperature decreased markedly in January.

Canada's National Post reported that there were so many snow and ice storms in Ontario and Quebec that the property market has suffered because buyers did not want to go out. And in the first two weeks of February, Toronto received 70 cm of snow, smashing the record of 66.6 cm for the entire month set back in 1950.

Asked about the Arctic ice cover, Gilles Langis, a senior forecaster with the Canadian Ice Service in Ottawa, told the Post the Arctic winter had been so severe, the ice has not only recovered but was actually 10 to 20 cm thicker in many places than the same time last year.

"OK, so one winter does not a climate make. It would be premature to claim an Ice Age is looming just because we have had one of our most brutal winters in decades," writes Lorne Gunter in the National Post.

"But if environmentalists and environment reporters can run around shrieking about the manmade destruction of the natural order every time a robin shows up on Georgian Bay two weeks early, then it is at least fair game to use this winter's weather stories to wonder whether the alarmist are being a tad premature."

He also quotes Kenneth Tapping, of Canada's National Research Council, who oversees a giant radio telescope focused on the sun and is convinced the Earth is destined for a long period of severely cold weather if solar activity does not pick up soon.

"The last time the sun was this inactive, Earth suffered the Little Ice Age that lasted about five centuries and ended in 1850," Gunter writes.

"It's way too early to claim the same is about to happen again, but then it's way too early for the hysteria of the global warmers, too."

Other figures from the NCDC, however, show that during January 2008, Europe, northern Asia and most of Australia experienced above average temperatures. According to the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), temperatures were 3-4°C (5-7°F) above average across large areas of Western and Central Australia and as a whole, the country had its warmest January on record.

Sea surface temperatures were also warmer than average in the Atlantic, Indian, and the northwestern Pacific oceans.


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