Electronics greener, but long way to go: Greenpeace

Reuters 5 Mar 08;

HANOVER, Germany (Reuters) - Consumer electronics are becoming greener, but manufacturers still have a long way to go to eliminate hazardous substances from computers and mobile phones and make them more energy efficient, Greenpeace said.

In a survey published at the CeBIT information technology fair in Hanover on Wednesday, Greenpeace praised notebooks and mobile phones from Sony, Sony Ericsson, Nokia and Apple.

"We have already witnessed the arrival of greener products in the market, such as Apple's new laptop, the MacBook Air, and Nokia's new phone, the Evolve," Greenpeace international toxics campaigner Yannick Vicaire said.

"Manufacturers still have a long way to go, but more and more are now taking the environmental impacts of their products seriously," he added.

Greenpeace tested 37 products that 14 major electronics brands picked out as their greenest and agreed to submit for testing, awarding them points for substitution of toxic substances, energy efficiency and recyclability.

The three top products -- the Sony Vaio TZ11 notebook, the Sony Ericsson T650i mobile phone and the Sony Ericsson P1i PDA (personal digital assistant) -- each scored just over half the 100 available points.

Microsoft and Nintendo were among companies who did not agree to participate, and Greenpeace said that all the makers of games consoles either did not submit products at all or submitted them too late to be included.

Greenpeace said its survey, which it began in 2006, was nowhere near comprehensive enough to be used as a green guide for consumers.

Greenpeace toxics campaign leader Zeina Al-Hajj said the environmental group was talking extensively to makers of electronics. "We are seeing a dialogue happening," she told a news conference at CeBIT.

Al-Hajj said it was time for the green IT debate, which has been a recurring theme at this year's CeBIT and other technology fairs, to produce results beyond isolated, showcase products.

"It's not enough just to offer a green computer for the tree-huggers. Environmentally friendly devices must become a general trend and dominate mass production," she said.

(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan, editing by Will Waterman)


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Beijing says water a "severe test" it can pass

Reuters 5 Mar 08;

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's capital has been "severely tested" in ensuring there will be enough safe water for the 2008 Olympics but is sure that recycling run-off and tapping additional sources will avoid shortages, a city official said.

Beijing lies in the country's arid north, a region where urban growth, industrialization and pollution have strained supplies, forcing the city of 16 million to draw increasingly on declining underground sources.

With the Olympic Games opening in August set to lift demand, Beijing has turned to neighboring Hebei province, enduring a long drought, to supply 300 million cubic meters of "back-up" water through a network of canals.

Northern China has had very little rain or snow throughout the winter, adding to worries. But Zhang Shouquan, a deputy chief of the Beijing water bureau, said athletes and visitors could expect clean, full supplies for pools, taps and a big scenic lake.

"How to ensure water supplies for the Olympic Games period has been a severe test for us," Zhang told the Chinese-language Sohu news Web site (news.sohu.com) in an on-line interview.

"Now our water quality is fine and we can absolutely guarantee supplies for the competitions ... We can certainly ensure the water-quality security for athletes."

Zhang gave apparently contradictory numbers for supply and demand, saying that Beijing planned to supply 3 billion cubic meters of water in 2008, which he said was "much higher than the past year." But he also said that in recent years Beijing had consumed up to 3.5 billion cubic meters of water a year.

"The problem we have now is that, as well as shortfalls in water sources, there is also severe pollution of the aquatic environment," Zhang said. "Our task in cleaning up water is extremely arduous."

But a combination of increased water-saving and recycling, the planned extra supplies from Hebei and tapping underground sources would ensure that the spike in demand could be met, Zhang said.

Critics including Dai Qing, a prominent Beijing environmental advocate, have said that the Olympic Games projects are badly straining aquifers, which have already fallen sharply in recent years.

But Zhang appeared to suggest that pumping underground supplies could be safely increased -- for a while.

"We still have abundant underground water," he said. "Although there may be some situations of shortages, we can absolutely guarantee providing water sources under safe transfer conditions for a period of time."

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Nick Macfie)

China to divert more Yellow River water for Olympics: official media
Yahoo News 6 Mar 08;

China has begun diverting water from the Yellow River towards Beijing for the second time this year as part of a major effort to supply the capital ahead of the Olympics, state press said Thursday.

The diversion of up to 156 million cubic metres (41 billion gallons) of water from the already parched Yellow River to Lake Baiyangdian near Beijing began on March 1 and would continue for 20 days, the China News Service reported.

A nearly equal amount of water had already been diverted along a 399-kilometre (250-mile) canal between the river and the lake in late January and early February, it said.

The project was being carried out to "safeguard the environmental security of the region surrounding the Olympic Games and the ecological balance of north China," the report said.

The amount of water in each diversion is the equivalent of roughly 17 days worth of water to the capital, based on Beijing's average water use of about 9.4 million cubic metres a day in 2005, the latest official figures.

Although the water does not go directly to Beijing, the government has already cut off the flow from four major reservoirs that naturally feed Baiyangdian, northern China's largest freshwater lake, and diverted that to the capital, which suffers chronic shortages.

The lake, about 70 kilometres from Beijing, has been decimated by environmental degradation for more than a decade as both water use and pollution has skyrocketed in tandem with China's booming economy.

Northern China is wracked with water shortages due to soaring demand, an ongoing drought and global warming. Per capita water usage in Beijing is already far below national averages.

The Yellow River, China's second largest and of huge symbolic and cultural importance, has itself been hit by rising water usage and has run dry short of the ocean for long periods in recent years.


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Best of our wild blogs: 6 Mar 08


Black tipped reef shark at Semakau
and the importance of responsible fishing on the manta blog and tidechaser blog

Albino Javan Mynah
accepted by others on the bird ecology blog

Dame Anita Roddick – The inspiration behind The Body Shop
an upcoming talk, details on the AsiaIsGreen blog

Understanding an orchid's name
on the garden voices blog


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OECD says protecting environment affordable

Alister Doyle, Reuters 5 Mar 08;

OSLO (Reuters) - Tackling climate change and other environmental hazards is affordable but urgent action is needed to avert irreversible damage, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said on Wednesday.

The 30-nation OECD said possible environmental safeguards might slow world growth by just 0.03 percent a year -- meaning that by 2030 the global economy would be 97 percent bigger than in 2005 instead of almost 99 percent larger with no measures.

"This is not a lot to pay," said Angel Gurria, head of the Paris-based OECD group of rich democracies in a 520-page Environmental Outlook issued in Oslo, saying costs were similar to those of an insurance policy.

"The consequences and costs of inaction...would be much higher," he said.

The study identified issues for most urgent action including global warming, losses of species of animals and plants, water scarcity, illegal logging, pollution and hazardous chemicals.

"If no new policy actions are taken, within the next few decades we risk irreversibly altering the environmental basis for sustained economic prosperity," it said.

The report recommended overhauling sectors that cause most damage -- energy, transport, agriculture and fisheries. "Removal of environmentally harmful subsidies, particularly for fossil fuels and agricultural production, is a necessary first step," Gurria said.

POLLUTION

A hypothetical policy package included a 50 percent cut in farm subsidies, a $25 per ton tax on emissions of heat-trapping carbon dioxide phased in by region, new biofuels, measures to cut air pollution and improved sewerage systems.

The measures would limit overall growth in greenhouse gas emissions to 13 percent rather than 37 percent by 2030. Stiffer greenhouse gas goals would be a slightly bigger brake on economic growth.

The study adds to evidence that curbing global warming, blamed mainly on use of fossil fuels, is affordable. Last year, the U.N. Climate Panel also said that measures to curb climate change would cost between 0.06 and 0.1 percent of world gross domestic product a year to 2030.

And a 2006 report by former World Bank chief economist Nicholas Stern warned that unchecked warming would be as damaging as world wars or the Great Depression with more floods, droughts, heat waves and rising seas.

More than 190 governments agreed in Bali, Indonesia, in December to work out by the end of 2009 a new treaty to fight climate change and succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which binds 37 developed nations to cut emissions by 2012.

The United States is outside Kyoto, with President George W. Bush reckoning it would damage the U.S. economy and saying it wrongly omitted 2012 curbs for developing nations. Washington has agreed to join a new global plan.

To combat climate change, the OECD said "developed countries will need to work closely with emerging economies -- especially Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia, China and South Africa."

Without curbs, greenhouse gas emissions from China, India, Russia and Brazil alone "will grow by 46 percent to 2030, surpassing those of the 30 OECD countries combined," it said.

The OECD said that its members can point to some successes in recent decades -- industrial pollution has fallen, the area of forests and natural protected areas has increased and economies have become more efficient.

(Editing by Ibon Villelabeitia)

World can 'afford' to solve its environmental woes: OECD
Yahoo News 5 Mar 08;

The world could solve many of the major environmental problems it faces at an "affordable" price, the OECD said Wednesday, warning that the cost of doing nothing would be far higher.

In a report presented in Oslo, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development suggested a range of measures to address what it said were the greatest global environmental challenges through 2030: climate change, biodiversity loss, water scarcity and the impact on human health of pollution and toxic chemicals.

"It's not cheap. It is affordable, but also it is considerably less onerous for mankind and for the economy than the alternative of inaction," OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria told reporters.

The suggested measures would cost just over 1.0 percent of the predicted global gross domestic product in 2030, meaning world wealth would grow on average 0.03 percentage points less per year over the next 22 years, the organisation said.

If nothing is done however, global greenhouse gas emissions could rise by over 50 percent by 2050, while "one billion more people will be living in areas of severe water stress by 2030 than today, and premature deaths caused by ground-level ozone worldwide would quadruple by 2030," the OECD report said.

"It has a positive cost-benefit result. Regardless of the ethical, of the moral, of the social, of the political consequences, simply looking at it from the business and the economic point of view, it is a better idea to start right away focusing on the environment," Gurria insisted.

The OECD said its proposed investment would allow the world to slash "key air pollutants by about a third," and significantly limit greenhouse gas emissions.

The group placed a special emphasis on the need to rein in carbon dioxide emissions through special taxes and increased emission trading.

"We know the enemy. It is called carbon. We have to fight the enemy and we have to put a high price on the carbon," Gurria said.

The OECD also suggested measures like increasing waste charges and implementing "more stringent regulations and standards" in the most environmentally harmful industries, like energy, transport, agriculture and fishery.

The organisation also insisted on the importance of international coordination and cooperation.

"If we do not have everybody, and that includes every single developed country but also Brazil, China, India, South Africa, Indonesia etc, it will obviously not work," Gurria said.

By 2030, Brazil, Russia, India and China's combined annual emissions "will exceed those of the 30 OECD countries combined," the group said.

This time, world should heed OECD call to action on environment

WWF website 5 Mar 08;

Paris: The OECD’s Environment Outlook to 2030, issued today, was welcomed by WWF as yet another compelling argument that the costs of inaction on the environment will far exceed the costs of action.

The OECD Outlook is the latest - and at 520 pages one of the weightiest - in a run of reports from prominent economic institutions and commissions calling on governments and international institutions to face up to the seriousness and immediacy of global environmental problems.

“When a body such as the OECD says that on a range of environmental issues we need to act globally and we need to act now, then it is clear that as communities, countries and companies we need to roll up our collective sleeves and get on with it,” said WWF International Director General James Leape.

“It is sobering to think how much better off we would be today if the world, the wealthy world in particular, had heeded OECD's 2001 call to take action on many of these same issues. We should not make the same mistake again.”

James Leape said the OECD outlook should be commended for looking beyond the urgent challenge of climate change to other urgent issues of biodiversity loss, mismanagment of water resources and escalating health threats. WWF also welcomed OECD’s call to prioritise action in the key sectors of energy, transport, agriculture and fisheries.

“The OECD outlook underlines both the magnitude of the largely self-inflicted threats we face and the urgency of acting effectively on them,” said James Leape. “It is rapidly becoming the case that it will be as hard to find a sceptical economist as it is now to find a sceptical scientist."

While generally supporting market liberalisation, the OECD noted that in the absence of “sound environmental policy and institutional frameworks” globalisation “can amplify market and policy failures and intensify environmental pressures”.

The OECD repeated its 2001 call for the removal of subsidies to environmentally harmful activities, with special mention of subsidies to fossil fuel use, agricultural production subsidies, fishing overcapacity subsidies and the subsidy and underpricing of damaging transport modes.

The OECD also repeated that environment policy should not be just a concern of environment ministers, but has to be elevated into being a priority of central and economic policy making in particular.

“There is now no reason not to act," said James Leape. "The OECD outlook is emphatic that the policies and technologies to address urgent environment issues are available and affordable, that taking them will increase efficiencies and reduce costs and that the earlier we take action, the better the cost-benefit equation will be.”


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Tom Keaveny from Discovery on being green in Singapore

Truly Keen on Green
Michelle Bong, Today Online 6 Mar 08;

YOU wouldn't look twice if you see Tom Keaveny cycling along East Coast Park or jogging on the streets in training for the yearly Standard Chartered Marathon. He would just be another tall, broad-shouldered "ang moh" enjoying some weekend R&R.

But the native of Birmingham, UK, and father of two has an important agenda when the T-shirt and shorts are replaced by office attire. Green could very well be Keaveny's favourite colour. Based here as the executive vice-president and managing director of Discovery Networks Asia, he not only makes personal efforts to reduce carbon emissions — both he and his wife drive hybrid cars — he hopes to use the station as a springboard to help create awareness for the environment.

The station recently launched bi-monthly Discovery Channel Magazine in a collaboration with Reader's Digest Asia. More than just providing listings for upcoming programmes, it celebrates the wonders of planet Earth and the lifestyles of its occupants.

In its inaugural issue, it features Kazakhstan's futuristic tent city Khan Shatyr Entertainment Centre, an analysis on the exploration of Iceland's Langjökull Glacier and the survival of animals among the towering sand dunes of Namib, the world's oldest desert.

Come April 16, Discovery Channel will launch an initial weekly one-hour block called Planet Green, with a programme highlight being Eco-Town — a 13-part series executive-produced by actor and environmentalist Leonardo DiCaprio that charts the rebuilding of a mid-western farm town of Greensburg, Kansas, into a green model of the future.

How do you enjoy the great outdoors, Singapore-style?

I cycle at both East Coast Park and the West Coast area, and I like to run. I've been in the Standard Chartered marathons this and last year. And of course, I enjoy the great outdoors watching Discovery programmes!

How do you think the channel's additional offering, Planet Green, will fare?

We want to offer entertaining and creative stories that relate to the audience. Environmental issues are now at the forefront of consumer consciousness throughout the Asia-Pacific region, and we are positioned to help lead this effort. The programmes aren't aimed to lecture about the climate or about doom and gloom. They are opportunities to provide entertainment and help viewers make a difference.

Between you and Leonardo DiCaprio, who's doing more to save the world?

I'd like to think of it as a great partnership (laughs). But seriously, saving the planet isn't the responsibility of one individual or one company. It's a global issue that warrants a global solution.

So, what do you personally do, as a global citizen?

I have been driving a Honda Civic Hybrid for some time now, and my wife drives a Toyota Prius. Through the company, I've been involved in several efforts: Discovery Networks Asia went fully tapeless (digital) in July 2005, and has been working with the Singapore Recycling Centre for the last eight years to collect paper, bottles and containers weekly for recycling. Our name cards are printed on recycled paper, and we stress heavily on double-printing in the office.

We are also committed to responsible operations in Asia by lessening the environmental impact through energy efficiency and the reduction of carbon emissions in our office by working with Carbonfund.org to be carbon neutral. We also work with partners in Asia including non-profit Bangkok-based UK organisation Plant A Tree Today.

Outside of his office, what's the simplest environment-related thing the man on the street can do to make a difference?

There are lots, from saving electricity to using the recycling bins provided all over Singapore. It's about giving something a degree of thought and making a simple decision to follow through. Choose one small act that's best for you, and do it.

Recycling, using less electricity, carpooling — we've heard it all before. Cynics complain that all this green talk is on overkill mode. What do you say to that?

I hope they will only say that years down the road, after seeing that changes have been made. For now, I'd rather reinforce the message that we need to do something.

But it's good to know ... people are becoming more aware of these issues. Sales of hybrid vehicles are going up, for one. And I see Singaporeans making informed decisions like shopping for organic produce. Saving the planet is not going to go out of fashion anytime soon.

If you had a drink with Nobel Prize winner Al Gore some day, what would you two talk about?

I'd be interested to know if he feels vindicated and justified to have gone out on a limb (to lead the green movement). I'd also want to find out how he keeps himself motivated, what keeps the momentum going in his efforts to save the planet and what it's like to run for political elections. I'd be there for days with him!


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WHO says bird flu well entrenched in Asia

Channel NewsAsia 5 Mar 08;

MANILA : The bird flu virus is "firmly entrenched" in Asia and a pandemic among humans remains possible, a World Health Organization (WHO) expert warned Wednesday.

While Asian countries are more prepared to react to any outbreaks than before and have vaccine stockpiles, deaths and infections have continued, noted Takeshi Kasai, the WHO's regional adviser in communicable disease surveillance and response unit.

"The virus has been firmly entrenched in this region, I'm afraid," Kasai told reporters during an exercise to test the Philippines' preparations against the disease.

"The virus itself keeps changing, so the risk of pandemic persists."

Experts fear the virus, which is usually spread directly from birds to humans, could mutate into a form easily transmissible between people, sparking a deadly global pandemic.

Three people have died in China in 2008 of bird flu while a boy and his father were admitted this week to a hospital in Indonesia on suspicion of having the disease.

Since the first human cases were reported in 2003, at least 200 people have died from the H5N1 virus around the world, the WHO said. Indonesia is the world's worst-hit country, with 11 deaths so far this year.

Brunei, Singapore and the Philippines remain the only countries in the region where the flu, either in birds or humans, has not been detected.

Kasai praised China for being more transparent in reporting suspected cases.

"I think China now is very open and has been positively sharing information, including lab results," he said.

China has been highly criticised in the past for withholding information relating to the spread of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) that ravished the region several years ago.

- AFP/vm


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Australian firm 'shortlisted' to supply LNG to Singapore

Today Online 6 Mar 08;

Australia's Woodside Petroleum said it is among the companies shortlisted in January to become the exclusive supplier of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Singapore, the first of five firms to have publicly identified itself.

Chief executive and managing director Don Voelte of Perth-based Woodside, Australia's largest listed oil and gas exploration and production company, will brief the media today on its plans for Singapore's first LNG plant, the company said in a statement.

Singapore's Energy Market Authority (EMA) announced on Jan 14 that it chose five firms for the second stage of selection to find an "aggregator" but did not provide names, citing requests for confidentiality.

"EMA targets to select the aggregator in the second quarter of 2008," the regulator said at the time.

When selected, the aggregator, which may be a consortium of firms and may comprise natural gas producers or end-users, will consolidate demand from end-users across the country and buy LNG on their behalf.

The planned LNG facility, to be built on the oil and petrochemical hub of Jurong Island, will include a receiving terminal and a re-gasification plant and is scheduled to open in 2012. The facility is likely to cost "in the ballpark of S$1 billion to US$1 billion ($1.4 billion)", Minister of State for Trade and Industry S Iswaran said in September last year, when he named gas distributor Power Gas to build the plant.

The EMA received 18 proposals involving 22 firms during the first stage of selection, which closed on Dec 4. — Dow Jones

Aussie firm a top contender to buy LNG for Singapore
Woodside Energy bidding to be LNG aggregator
Ronnie Lim, Business Times 6 Mar 08;

AUSTRALIAN LNG for use by power stations here - that is the likely scenario especially if Australia's Woodside Energy, which has emerged as one of a handful of shortlisted, second-round contenders to be the sole LNG buyer for Singapore, eventually wins.

A study by a Tokyo Gas Engineering-led consortium which advised the Energy Market Authority (EMA) on the LNG project here had earlier also identified four Australian gas fields and one in Qatar as the top five potential suppliers of the liquefied natural gas to Singapore.

Woodside, Australia's largest oil and gas exploration and production company with a market capitalisation of over A$35 billion (S$45 billion), is expected to disclose more details of its bid to become the LNG aggregator for Singapore at a media conference today.

The EMA in January announced that it had shortlisted five groups vying to be the LNG aggregator from a total of 18 initial proposals involving 22 companies. But it did not disclose the identities of the five then - with Woodside now known to be one - following requests for confidentiality from some groups.

The authority said that it expects to choose the aggregator in the second quarter.

Woodside said in its advisory that it is 'looking for the optimal outcome for Singapore's energy future, and believes the solution may be geographically very close'.

The company, a pioneer in the LNG business in Australia, is the region's pre-eminent LNG operator.

It operates one of the world's largest LNG projects - the A$20 billion North West Shelf Venture in Western Australia, and it is also building the Pluto LNG Project which will begin production in late-2010. It also operates the Browse and Sunrise LNG developments, both scheduled to begin construction early next decade.

The four Australian gas fields identified by Tokyo Gas to be the best potential suppliers to Singapore are two on the North West Shelf and the Gorgon and Browse fields nearby.

Singapore intends to start building the estimated S$1 billion LNG terminal on Jurong Island by year-end or early next year to enable it to start importing LNG by late-2011/early 2012, S Iswaran, Minister of State for Trade and Industry, has said.

He added that the main consideration in the choice of the aggregator will be that 'Singapore gets reliable steady supplies of LNG at competitive prices'.

Of the five shortlisted contenders, he indicated that 'some have their own sources of gas, some are involved in trading'.

The aggregator is expected to initially bring in 0.8-1.2 million tonnes per annum of LNG, with this building up to 3 million tpa by 2018. The latter date is when the LNG aggregator's exclusive import licence is expected to lapse, at which time others will be free to import LNG.

LNG is meant to help Singapore diversify its source of natural gas, which at the moment is piped in from neighbouring Malaysia and Indonesia - both of which are expected to increasingly need the gas for their own domestic use.


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Cut off gas supplies to S'pore? Indonesia denies remark

Salim Osman, Straits Times 5 Mar 08;

JAKARTA - INDONESIA'S oil and gas regulator has denied a report by state-owned Antara news agency quoting one of its top officials as saying gas supplies to Singapore could be cut off if bilateral relations worsen.

Mr Mochtar Djaya of BP Migas was quoted by Antara as saying in Batam that if gas supplies were cut off to Singapore, power supply for the whole of the island would be affected.

'It's easy for us to turn off the gas pipe from Natuna to Singapore if Singapore gives us problems,' he was quoted as saying, adding that: 'If the supply is cut off, all lights will be switched off.'

Mr Mochtar is the head of security for BP Migas, which is responsible for regulating the upstream production of oil and gas.

Antara noted that his comments followed differences between Indonesia and Singapore on an extradition treaty and a defence cooperation agreement.

When contacted, a spokesman for BP Migas told The Straits Times that Mr Mochtar had denied making the remarks.

The spokesman, who did not wish to be identified, said Mr Mochtar was in Batam for a seminar on security for oil and gas pipelines and had spoken to an Antara reporter there.

However, she said that Mr Mochtar only explained why the Indonesian navy was guarding the 656km-long marine pipeline from Natuna to Singapore.

'There was no mention about cutting off gas supply if bilateral relations worsen. We will issue a statement denying the report tomorrow,' she said.

She added that there was a contract to supply gas from Pertamina to Sembawang Corp which Indonesia was honouring.

According to the Antara report, Pertamina supplies some 9.2 cu m of natural gas a day to Singapore.


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Scheme to protect 1.8m acres of rainforest in Aceh

Charles Clover, The Telegraph 5 Mar 08;

A world-first rainforest conservation project which will lock up 100 million tons of carbon dioxide, the equivalent of 50 million flights from London to Sydney, has been agreed in Indonesia.

The scheme will protect 1.8 million acres of rainforest in northern Sumatra, including endangered species such as the Sumatran tiger, Sumatran elephant and the northernmost population of orang utans.

The project is designed to deliver millions of carbon credits for future sale under the treaty that will eventually emerge from the world climate talks in Bali last December.

The project's activities are expected to reduce the deforestation of Aceh province's endangered Ulu Masen forest by 85 per cent, thereby bringing about a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

The 3.3 million credits to be generated annually by the project, which is supported by the charity Fauna and Flora International, the Australian company Carbon Conservation and the governor of Aceh, are intended to help finance the conservation of the forest's wildlife and bring employment to some of Indonesia's poorest rural communities.

It is expected that the project will generate $18.5 million a year.

The project is partly the brainchild of the province's governor, Irwandi Yusuf, who was on the side of Aceh's separatists at the time of the 2004 tsunami and broke out of jail as the tsunami hit.

He has since banned deforestation in the province, a radical step in Sumatra where illegal logging, with the connivance of the police and military, has been endemic.

The project is the first REDD project (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation) to be approved by the organisation responsible for overseeing the certification of such carbon projects, the Climate, Community and Biodiversity Alliance.

Mark Rose, chief executive officer of FFI, said: "We are very pleased our team in Aceh has received such a strong independent endorsement for their conservation field programme.

"The team works in difficult conditions, responding to many humanitarian and ecological challenges, post tsunami."

He said the breakthrough came when a $20 million multi-donor trust fund was set up for the preservation of the forest, which meant the provincial authorities recognised the importance of the forest to the local community, not least because it provided water for the 5 million inhabitants of Banda Aceh, Sumatra's most northern city.

The first carbon credits are expected to be sold in 2009. Before then FFI says that illegal logging still threatens the near-pristine ecosystem and its Sumatran tigers of which there are just 300-400 left in the wild.


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Lethal whale "research" programmes produce meat, not answers: WWF

WWF website 5 Mar 08;

Japan would do better whale research by not killing whales, said WWF on the eve of a key International Whaling Commission planning meeting.

WWF delegation head, International Species Programme Director Dr Susan Lieberman, called on Japan in particular to recognise that science had moved a long way since a provision allowing governments to issue lethal research permits was written into the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling (ICRW).

The 61 year old provision is the basis of Japan's so-called scientific whaling programme, which “produces meat but not answers,” Dr Lieberman said.

“At that time, killing whales was the only way to learn some of the most basic biological information, some of which was then used to set catch quotas,” Dr Lieberman said. “Today, much more plentiful and reliable information is available using the many better new ways of collecting whale data rather than much the same old ways of killing them.

“What sort of scientific enterprise is it that uses the most outdated methodologies to produce little published data, few insights into whales and negligible useful whale management information?”

For the International Whaling Commission Intersessional meeting, starting in London tomorrow (March 6), WWF is calling on Japan “to stop abusing the special whaling permit provision of the ICRW by conducting commercial whaling under the guise of research”.

“The Contracting Governments of the IWC must ensure that IWC-related research meets modern accepted scientific techniques, so that the IWC’s credibility on this issue is maintained,” Dr Lieberman said. “The continued abuses of Japan’s whaling programme are an affront to legitimate science.”

Look at non-whaling threats to whales

In its statement to the meeting, WWF is also urging contracting governments to “look more closely and consistently at the non-whaling threats to whales”.

Whales face general threats from habitat degradation and climate change, as well as more specific challenges such as being deafened or displaced by the operations of the oil and gas exploration and development industry, or being caught up and discarded as bycatch by the fishing industry.

“The greatest threat to many cetacean species is bycatch, with estimates showing that more than 300,000 whales and dolphins are killed in fishing gear each year,” Dr Lieberman said. “Only through swift and cooperative international action to reduce bycatch will some critically endangered cetacean populations be saved.”

WWF's new bycatch initiative is highlighting the existence of practical, innovative fishing gear designs to reduce bycatch.

Populations of nearly all the great whales remain at depressed levels, a legacy of the unsustainable whaling during the last two centuries.

As long-lived mammals with slow reproductive cycles whales inevitably take several decades or more to recover from population depletion while some populations still survive as a few hundred individuals at the brink of extinction.

WWF’s goal is to ensure that viable populations of all cetacean species occupy their historical range, and fulfill their role in maintaining the integrity of ocean ecosystems.


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What ails mangroves in Orissa sanctuary?

Manoj Kar, Kalinga Times 5 Mar 08;

Kendrapara (Orissa), March 5: The latest mangrove regeneration programme undertaken in Bhitarkanika national park to compensate the dwindling coastal forest cover has turned out to be an absolute fiasco.

There are no visible signs of mangrove regeneration activity in the core forest area. Prawn gheries have sprouted up on the land where the forest personnel claimed to have planted mangrove saplings not long back. The species died young as prawn cultivators ravaged the once lush green forestland, according to local forest protection groups.

Stung by criticism that forest officials promote and patronise unauthorised prawn farming, the national park authorities had embarked on the regeneration of mangroves in nearly 5,000 hectares of forestland sometime back. Those patches were under unauthorised occupation of prawn farmers. Ironically, things are back to square one.

The regenerated patches in Sasanpeta, Kansaradiha, Hetamundia, Sanatubi, Badatubi and Batighar under Mahakalpada forest blocks now wear denuded look.

For regeneration programme, the forest department spent Rs 26 lakh Central grants released by the union ministry of forest and environment. The conservation exercise was undertaken under management action plan for mangroves, said sources.

If the ground realities are any indication, the prawn mafias took to centre stage hardly a month after the mangroves were regenerated. Conservationists tend to believe that regeneration scheme that has
been extended to other deforested areas of Mahanadi deltaic region of the Bhitarkanika national park would meet the doomed fate.

With allegations of collusion of officials with prawn farms flying thick and fast, prospect of regenerated forest thriving long is remote. Writ of prawn farms runs in forest areas as national park officials turn blind eye to wanton destruction mangrove species along the luxuriant wetland.

Prawn farming has emerged as a potent money-spinning business in these parts. And this goes on unabated allegedly under the patronising hands of forest officials.

The mangrove regeneration scheme is being implemented half-heartedly. Besides there is absolute absence of watch and vigil on forest areas, observed sources.

Conceding the fact that similar exercise undertaken in past has not been entirely successful in checking the mangrove degradation, forest officials however denied that prawn mafias run parallel administration
within Bhitarkanika. There are specific pockets of the national park where prawn gheries have unlawfully sprouted up. Steps are being taken to demolish those in a phased manner, informed sources.

Bhitarkanika wildlife sanctuary presents contrasting paradoxes. Illegal human settlements coupled with alarming growth of prawn farming in the reserve forest areas have hit hard its fragile eco-system.

There are at least 410 villages within the site having more than two lakh human populations. Historically, migrants from neighbouring States, even from across the Bangladesh borders, have settled here destroying the mangroves in the process. The settlements that came up following the influx of migrants have in the meanwhile been declared as revenue villages by the State government more out of political compulsion.

The migrants served as secured vote banks for the ruling parties over the years. As a result, as many as 43 revenue villages continue to thrive in the core area causing irreparable damage to peripheral flora and fauna in Bhitarkanika ecosystem. The wasteland and pastureland that erroneously form part of revenue land are all encroached upon.


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Fur Industry Thriving Despite Campaigns

John Ruwitch, PlanetArk 5 Mar 08;

HONG KONG - Anti-fur campaigners have tried everything from impassioned appeals to pet lovers, gruesome videos, name-and-shame campaigns and adverts featuring nude stars proclaiming they'd rather go naked than sport a pelt.

But despite their best efforts, wrapping up in fur is a trend that has failed to go away.

"Without a doubt, there are more people wearing fur today than ever before," said Timothy Everest, a member of the Hong Kong Fur Federation.

Still, while industry insiders gush about growing sales and new frontiers, public relations remains the crucial battleground for a US$13.5 billion fur industry dogged by accusations of being inhumane and unnecessary.

In Hong Kong last week, 245 fur companies set up elaborate exhibits, some featuring their own mini-runways, at one of the industry's main trade shows of the year. It was the biggest show since the fur fair's inception in 1982.

Despite subtropical weather, Hong Kong inherited the fur tradition when Shanghai's world-renowned pelt craftsmen fled the Communists in the 1940s. It is now the world's biggest importer of farmed fur skins and the leading exporter of fur garments.

At Dennis Fong's expansive booth, gaggles of fur buyers from Russia, China and beyond crammed in to watch lithe Asian and European models strut the latest designs from the Isla brand of furs that he manages.

Fong, a third-generation producer of fur clothing, entered the family business around the beginning of the decade.

"That was a good time to come back because fur was coming back," said the 29-year-old.


TURNAROUND INDUSTRY

From its heyday in the early and middle part of the 20th century, the fur industry slumped and its iconic ankle-length mink coat started looking old. In the 1980s, it hit bottom.

"You could see from the late '80s that the realisation hit that unless we changed the way that we were marketing the product then there wasn't going to be the demand because the product was boring," said Everest.

Around the late 1970s and early 1980s, the annual global mink harvest, an industry benchmark, bottomed out at about 22 million, said Frank Zilberkweit, director of the London furrier Hockley.

But just when things looked their bleakest, a fur renaissance started.

"In the '90s, suddenly the fashion industry discovered fur," he said, speculating that designers probably saw it as a way to tap into freshly opened fast growing economies in places with strong fur traditions -- Russia and China.

"The first guy who really got into fur for the fashion industry was Jean Paul Gaultier," he said.

On Tuesday night in Paris, the French designer's fall 2008 collection showed in no uncertain terms that he was still into the medium. Runway models were draped in wild furs, some of which still had tails, ears, noses, even teeth.

Others, including Prada, Dolce & Gabbana and Dior, have also made fur a prominent feature of their collections.

Designs at the Hong Kong show ranged from the conservative to the imaginative, including wedding cake-layered dresses with puffy fur trim, ponchos with shaggy fur shoulders that resembled a thatched roof, and blood red sentry jackets of fur.

Now, the mink harvest is a record-beating 55 million -- and expanding, Zilberkweit said.

According to the International Fur Trade Association, retail sales of fur hit US $13.49 billion in 2006, growing 5.6 percent from the year before.

In mid-February, pelt prices reached record highs at auction in Seattle on the back of a cold winter, according to Everest.

The uses of fur have expanded, experts say, and growing sales of luxury goods worldwide has also helped fur sales. But the key factor in the growth trend has been the emergence of Russia and China as major fur markets.

Zilberkweit estimates that Russia accounts for about 40 percent of fur sales and China makes up about 30 percent.

CHINA WORRY

In the face of perennial criticism, the fur industry last year launched an initiative called "Origin Assured", or OA, a label designed to assure customers their fur was made from animals treated as well as possible under existing standards.

But critics say serious concerns remain, particularly when it comes to China, the world's biggest source.

The Humane Society of the United States in late December warned consumers to be on the lookout for real fur described as "faux fur" or "ecological fur", and named department stores like Saks-Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus and Bloomingdales. DNA tests showed some were in fact rabbit, raccoon and raccoon dog fur.

Reports have also emerged of cat and dog pelts from China being passed off as fur from other animals.

China has yet to qualify for the OA label.

Care For The Wild International, a UK-based animal welfare and conservation charity, did a survey in 2005 of several fur farms in China's Hebei province, near Beijing, and reported problems, including animals sometimes skinned alive.

"China's colossal fur industry routinely subjects animals to housing, husbandry, transport and slaughter practices that are unacceptable from a veterinary, animal welfare and moral point of view," the report said.

Despite the growth figures sited by industry insiders, Ashley Fruno, senior campaign coordinator with People For The Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) in Asia, says fur is passe.

"Now that people are becoming more compassionate, it's going out the window," she said. "I think if you just go out on the street and you talk to people about fur you'll definitely get mostly a negative reaction."

In January, demonstrators from PETA hopped onto a runway at Hong Kong Fashion Week with "Fur scum" and "Fur hurts" banners.

The group was not campaigning around the Hong Kong fur show last week, however, preferring to target mainstream designers rather than "a few people at a fur fair who are more interested in economics than ethics", Fruno said.

"Those people are very hard to convince when they're that dedicated that they are actually attending a fur fair."

Still, about three dozen large men in black suits, with black shirts, black ties and secret service-like earpieces patrolled the crowd at the fur fair's gala fashion show on opening night.

Asked about the threat of anti-fur guerrillas, one replied: "That is why we are here."

"The biggest challenge," said Herbert Wurker, president of the German Fur Association, "is the PR."

(Editing by Megan Goldin)


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UK firm plans vast resort on fragile coast in Greece

John Vidal, The Guardian 5 Mar 08;

A British property development company is planning five exclusive holiday villages, a string of "super luxury" hotels, three golf courses and a marina in one of the most remote and ecologically fragile areas of Greece.

The 7,000-bed development planned by Minoan Group on 10 square miles of the arid, windswept Sidero peninsula of north-eastern Crete would be one of the largest tourist developments in the Mediterranean. The £800m project is strongly backed by the Greek government, and the local monastery that owns the land.

But last night, international ecologists and archaeologists said the holiday development would do "immense and permanent damage to a part of Crete which is of European significance".

Dr Oliver Rackham, professor of historical ecology and master of Corpus Christi College at Cambridge University, who has written a book on the making of the Cretan landscape, said: "The development is grotesquely unsuited to the environment of this part of Greece. This is one of the most arid places in Europe. The development is unsustainable because of the huge amounts of water that will be needed.

"The developers propose desalination, but a large desalination factory will do further damage to the ecosystem: it will either cover a great area of land with solar collectors or will demand a large supply of energy, which is scarce in Greece."

The scheme, called Cave Sdero, was also condemned by Bartholomew 1, the Patriarch of the Orthodox church, who is a figurehead of the global environment movement. The patriarchy has long disputed jurisdiction with the Church of Greece over the monastery which owns the land where the development is planned.

"It will be a monster. We are very worried and have received complaints, but it does not come under our jurisdiction," said a spokeswoman for Bartholomew.

The company last night said its £2m environmental impact survey showed that any damage would be minimal.

"We will be building on less than 1% of the land," said Minoan's chairman, Christopher Egleton. "It will be the first fully sustainable tourist development. The intention is to be carbon neutral. The local community will benefit very significantly."

The project is backed by Forum for the Future, one of Britain's leading green thinktanks, which was set up by the government's sustainable development commissioner, Sir Jonathon Porritt.

"We have been there. It's a beautiful place," said Stephanie Draper, of the Forum, which accepts £10,000 a year from Minoan as a partner organisation. "This is an opportunity to get tourism right, provide jobs, and show you can have sustainable tourism. There is no investment in the area and at the moment the land is overgrazed.

"The company plans to build a desalination plant and the golf courses will be planted with salt-tolerant grass, and with local flora instead of grasses that require a lot of water."

But Rackham and others are not convinced by claims of sustainability.

"Here is an entire landscape of ancient terraces, fields, and check-dams," he said. "As nowhere else except on a few remote islets, one can see what the farmed countryside of Mediterranean antiquity looked. The whole peninsula ... is an archaeological site, with great potential for interpretation, and deserves to be protected as such."

Jennifer Moody, a researcher in the classics department of the University of Texas, said: "As far as we know there has been no archaeological impact assessment. The remains are delicate and will not survive building and earth-moving."

EcoCrete, a network of Cretan environmental organisations, said it had written to 11 ministries to try to stop the scheme to no avail.

"We have been very worried about the scale of the project," it said.


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Kenya's wildlife needs tourists to come back: U.N.

Reuters 5 Mar 08;

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Conservation projects to protect Kenya's rich wildlife, from its rhinos to whale sharks, are at risk if the country fails to attract tourists back after a post-election crisis, the United Nations said on Wednesday.

Kenya relies on its game parks to draw hundreds of thousands of tourists every year. But, the sector has been badly damaged by a wave of cancellations following ethnic clashes triggered by President Mwai Kibaki's disputed re-election in December.

The violence that killed more than 1,000 people prompted European tour operators to cancel chartered flights to the east African country, dealing a heavy blow to its tourism industry -- the leading foreign exchange earner in Kenya.

Funding for conservation projects has shrunk as a result of the slump in tourist numbers, conservation officials say.

"If we can't regenerate tourism then many of these environmental investments ... will either be severely reduced or collapse," said Achim Steiner, head of the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP), which is headquartered in Nairobi.

"Revenues to parks and reserves have plummeted putting at risk countless conservation initiatives carried out by the Kenya Wildlife Services (KWS) and others," he told reporters.

The KWS had to shelve the purchase of 200 vehicles used in anti-poaching and other conservation activities due to revenue fall-offs, Steiner said.

Kenya's tourism sector raked in nearly $1 billion last year, but has seen massive drop-offs in profits and numbers since television footage showed images of bloody street protests, burning and looting in the wake of the December 27 vote.

(Reporting by Lisa Ntungacimpaye; Writing by Jack Kimball; Editing by Stephen Weeks)


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Rising Food Prices May Help Farmers, Production - FAO

PlanetArk 5 Mar 08;

CAIRO - Food prices should rise for two more seasons, but a boost in farm income may spur production, especially in the Third World, a UN official said on Tuesday.

"It (food prices) will continue to rise for one or two seasons at least," Mohammad Saeid Noori-Naeeni, independent chairman of the Food and Agriculture Organisation Council, told Reuters.

Between January 2007 and January 2008, the FAO food price index increased 47 percent, mainly driven by soaring prices of cereal products and vegetable oils, which rose 62 percent and 85 percent respectively.

"We have to look to the rise as an opportunity. If you could pass through these increases to the farmers, then production will increase," Noori-Naeeni said on the sidelines of the FAO's 29th Regional Conference for the Near East.

"This could mean relaunching agriculture in developing countries through long-term public investments and programmes, catalysing private-sector investments in response to higher profitability," he added.

The FAO estimates that globally 862 million people were undernourished in the period from 2002 to 2004, of which 830 million were in developing countries, a situation that could be aggravated by recent unprecedented rises in food prices.

"Without increasing productivity, everybody will suffer and only a few will gain," Noori-Naeeni said.


UNSTABLE NEAR EAST

The production of cereals in the Near East increased to 180 million tonnes in the year 2005/6, 7 percent up from 2004/5 but the percentage of people hunger increased to 15 percent from 13 percent. It did not say when the years began.

"The situation remains unstable because of the highly uncertain climatic conditions," FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf told delegates from 32 countries meeting in Cairo.

According to the FAO, challenges for food production in the region also include water shortages, land degradation and bird flu.

"But increased revenues from oil exports could provide an excellent opportunity to boost public investment in agriculture," Diouf added.

Investment in agriculture, both domestic and foreign, remains low in most countries of the region, dropping 27 percent between 1995 and 2004 in countries, which do not export oil.

(Writing by Wael Gamal; editing by Michael Roddy)


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US industry trying to block smog cleanup

H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press Yahoo News 5 Mar 08;

Big industries are waging an intense lobbying effort to block new, tougher limits on air pollution that is blamed for hundreds of heart attacks, deaths and cases of asthma, bronchitis and other breathing problems.

The Environmental Protection Agency is to decide within weeks whether to reduce the allowable amount of ozone — commonly referred to as smog — in the air.

A tougher standard would require hundreds of counties across the country to find new ways to reduce smog-causing emissions of nitrogen oxides and chemical compounds from tailpipes and smokestacks.

Groups representing manufacturers, automakers, electric utilities, grocers and cement makers met with White House officials recently in a last-ditch effort to keep the health standard unchanged. They argued that tightening it would be costly and harm the economy in areas that will have to find additional air pollution controls.

Oil and chemical companies also have pressed their case for leaving the current requirements alone in meetings on Capitol Hill and with the Bush administration. A dozen senators and the Agriculture Department urged EPA not to tamper with the existing standard.

On the other side are health experts who conclude that tens of millions of people, particularly the elderly and small children, are still being harmed by poor air quality.

EPA said last summer that the current health standard — no more than 80 parts of ozone for every billion parts of air — does not provide needed protection against asthma, heart attacks and respiratory problems.

EPA has estimated a reduction to 70 parts per billion could result annually in 2,300 fewer nonfatal heart attacks; 48,000 fewer respiratory problems, acute bronchitis and asthma attacks; 7,600 fewer respiratory related hospital visits, and 890,000 fewer days when people miss work or school.

Under court order to review the standard, the EPA must decided by mid-March on what to do.

"The less pollution in the air, the fewer people are going to get sick, fewer children will have asthma attacks, fewer people are going to die," says Janice Nolen of the American Lung Association, which has argued along with almost every other health and medical group to tighten the smog standard issued in 1997.

The federal health standards set air quality benchmarks that states and local officials must strive to meet through various pollution reduction measures, or risk federal sanctions such as the loss of federal highway money. The law says the standard must be based on protecting public health and not cost, a position the Supreme Court has reinforced.

EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson has acknowledged the standard should be tightened, but he has been unwilling to go as far as health scientists say is needed to protect older Americans, children and the 20 million people that suffer from asthma.

The EPA's independent science advisory panel recommended a standard of between 60 and 70 parts per billion, as did a second EPA advisory board on children's health.

Both industry lobbyists and environmentalists say they believe Johnson has taken the view that the standard should be tightened to 75 parts per billion — an approach that doesn't satisfy either industry or health experts

"It's a political compromise," says Frank O'Donnell, president of Clean Air Watch, an advocacy group. Even so, he adds, "every major industry is ... putting the squeeze on" to get the White House to leave the current standard in place.

"The results vary but most studies show a steady reduction in the public health burden as the standard is tightened," said Jonathan Levy of the Harvard Center of Risk Analysis.

Levy co-authored a 2006 study that examined the health benefits of tougher smog restrictions in California. It found that tightening the ozone standard to 70 parts per billion would annually result in 270 fewer premature deaths, 280 fewer emergency room visits for asthma and 1,800 fewer hospital admissions for respiratory disease in the state — a reduction of 75 percent in all three categories.

Another study estimated 3,800 premature deaths would be avoided nationwide.

Johnson met shortly before Christmas with representatives from environmental and health groups, including the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Public Health Association. At the meeting, they echoed the views of 111 health scientists who last year told the EPA the ozone health standards needed to be lowered to between 60 and 70 parts per billion.

Industry groups argue that the science is inconclusive and that the need for a tighter standard has not been shown since 104 counties have yet to meet the current requirements. If the standard is lowered to 75 parts per billion, the number of counties in violation grows to nearly 400, and at 70 parts per billion to 533, according to the EPA.

That means states would be forced to clamp new emission controls on businesses, and motor vehicles to clean up the air.

"It could trigger layoffs nationwide, further eroding U.S. economic competitiveness," Sen. George Voinovich of economically stressed Ohio, and six other Republican senators recently wrote the EPA. More than a dozen senators have weighed in against any change, while 22 House members told the EPA it should abide by "overwhelming scientific evidence in favor of stronger smog standards."

EPA has put the annual cost of meeting a 75 parts per billion standard at $9.8 billion. A 70 parts per billion ozone standard would cost $22 billion annually. But the EPA notes that the costs of either could easily be offset or exceeded by reduced health care costs.

Manufacturing groups from Virginia and Wisconsin have asked their senators to intervene. National lobbying powerhouses such as the National Association of Manufacturers, the American Petroleum Institute, the American Chemistry Council and Alliance for Automobile Manufacturers have met with administration officials and lobbied Congress to keep the smog standard unchanged.

NAM Vice President Keith McCoy said his group told the White House Office of Management and Budget that the EPA was not considering the economic impact.

"Our position is that the existing standard ... should remain in place," said Daniel Riedinger, a spokesman for the Edison Electric Institute which represents investor-owned power companies and recently also took its case to the White House.

"Urge them to retain the current standard," Harry Berry, the county executive/judge in Hardin County, Ky., wrote to his senator, Republican leader Mitch McConnell. Berry warned tougher smog health requirements would be "another blow to the bottom line" for businesses in his area.

William Becker, executive director of the National Association of Clean Air Agencies representing the state and county officials who would have to enforce new air quality requirements, said his group isn't opposed to a tougher standard.

"It's going to make our job that much more daunting," Becker said, "but what trumps that ... is public health."


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