South Korean oil spill 'killing' marine life - report

iol.com 13 Mar 08

Seoul - South Korea's worst oil spill has devastated marine life, halving the number of sea plants and mollusks found off the western coast, a government report said on Thursday.

The oil leak also threatened the underwater food chain, endangering fish and sea birds, the Environment Ministry report said.

Surveys following the spill in December 2007 showed mollusk populations had plunged to 56 creatures of five species per square metre from 133 creatures of eight species as mussels were found to have been considerably contaminated by remnants of crude oil.

The density of seaweeds per square metre fell 43 percent from February 2007 and phyllospadix iwatensis, a seagrass, also declined 47 percent.

"Because seagrasses and seaweeds make up the lowest part of the ocean food chain, there are risks of second-hand contamination of fish and birds that are at the top of the food pyramid," the report said.

The surveys, the first since the oil spill, were carried out in order to set up plans to restore damaged beaches and sea farms.

Hong Kong-registered supertanker Hebei Spirit spilled 10 900 tons of crude after it was rammed by a Samsung Heavy Industries barge in rough seas off Taean county on December 7.

Scores of marine farms and kilometres of beaches were devastated and three people in Taean, about 110 kilometres southwest of Seoul, killed themselves in frustration over delays in compensation.

Five people - the skippers of the barge and of the two tugs, and the tanker's captain and chief officer - are on trial on charges of negligence and violating anti-pollution laws.

Samsung Heavy Industries and Hebei Shipping, a Hong Kong corporation which owns the tanker, have also been charged with violating anti-pollution laws.


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In Chicago, a secret garden cools a concrete jungle

Regan Doherty, Yahoo News 13 Mar 08;

Nestled atop Chicago's neoclassical city hall lies a secret garden hidden to all but those peering out of the windows of neighboring office towers.

Dozens more dot the rooftops of shops, restaurants, businesses and city-owned buildings in a patchwork of green aimed at cooling the concrete jungle.

Some four million square feet (370,000 square meters) of rooftop gardens have been planted on public and private buildings in the seven years since the first plants were placed atop city hall as part of a broader effort to reduce the Windy City's carbon footprint.

Inspired by similar programs in Europe, Chicago now has one of the most extensive rooftop garden programs in the world.

Corporate America is joining the trend and planting gardens atop a Chicago McDonald's restaurant as well as an Apple store, while other smaller businesses and landowners are converting to green roofs with the help of city grants.

"Chicago is at the head of the pack," said Amy Malik, regional director of the nonprofit group International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives.

Concrete surfaces -- especially those coated with dark tar -- both absorb and radiate heat which significantly increases a building's heating and cooling costs and contributes to raising urban air temperatures.

The cooling impact of the gardens is dramatic.

Thermal images taken of the city hall rooftop on a cloudy summer day found it was the same temperature as the air: 74 degrees F (22 degrees C). The black tar roof next door was a scalding 152 degrees F.

-- Benefits are 'more than just aesthetic' --

---------------------------------------------

"There are more than just aesthetic benefits," said Chicago's Environment Commissioner Suzanne Malec-McKenna.

In addition to helping cool buildings, the plants also filter the air, reducing pollution and improving surrounding air quality.

The rooftops also "stress sewers less by gathering rain water and using it," and a green roof can also extend the life of a roof by protecting from the elements beating down on it, Malec-McKenna said in an interview.

Authorities do not generally open the 36 city-owned rooftop gardens to the public because of safety concerns.

But more than three dozen species of birds gather amid the 20,000 plants on the city hall garden alone.

It is a 20,000-square-foot oasis perched on top of an 11-story building in the heart of the central business district which hosts more than 150 species of plants, including purple comb flower, juniper and crabapple trees, bittersweet vine and sedum, a succulent, cactus-like plant ideal for green roofs because of its high tolerance for extreme temperatures and minimal need for water.

And honey from the beehives kept in two of the city gardens is sold to raise money for after-school programs.

"A market has been built around this," Malec-McKenna said. "The economics of building green roofs have gotten much better. Now we have more than two dozen contractors across the Chicago region who know how to do this."

Organic grocery store owner Paula Companio received a 5,000-dollar grant from the city in 2006 to grow produce on her roof which she hopes to eventually sell in her store below.

The 1,500-square-foot garden covers half of the roof on top of True Nature Foods and produces a small crop of onions, potatoes, herbs and tomatoes.

Companio estimates that her building has been 15 to 20 percent warmer in the winter, and "noticeably" cooler in the summer since the garden was planted.

"The experience became such a community project - everyone asked about it," she told AFP. "It showed people it's possible that they can do it too."


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Plastic bags killing Queensland’s turtles

University of Queensland 13 Mar 08;

A group of University of Queensland researchers are urging Queenslanders to avoid littering the state's marine environment during the upcoming Easter holiday weekend.

Led by Dr Kathy Townsend, Manager of Research and Education at UQ's Moreton Bay Research Station, the group found that marine rubbish was the leading cause of sea turtle deaths in 2007.

“In 2007, we attended to 30 marine turtle strandings,” Dr Townsend said.

“Of these, 23 percent were caused by the ingestion of marine rubbish.

“This is almost double the number for 2006 in which marine rubbish accounted for 12 percent of the strandings.”

Dr Townsend said, regardless of its size, marine rubbish posed a serious threat to sea turtles.

“A green turtle hatchling, six centimetres in length, washed up on North Stradbroke and died due to gut perforation through the ingestion of plastic marine rubbish,” she said.

“Its gut contained plastic bags, soft and hard plastic, and fishing line. The piece that killed the baby turtle was only about half the size of a fingernail.

“Another turtle, a sub-adult, died with a gut full of plastic bags, the largest of which was over 30 centimetres long.”

Sea turtles are particularly susceptible to the effects of marine rubbish due to the internal structure of their throats and die a slow and painful death.

“Sea turtles have downward facing spines in their throats which literally prevent them from regurgitating,” Dr Townsend said.

“The plastic gets trapped in the gut, preventing food from going down and the spines prevent it from coming back up.

“The trapped food decomposes, leaking gases into the body cavity and causing the animal to float.

“The turtle then slowly starves to death or succumbs to other secondary life threatening conditions such as boat strike.”

Boat strikes have traditionally been the greatest cause of marine turtle strandings but, according to the group's findings, accounted for only 17 percent in 2007.

“Plastic bags do kill and the recent federal initiative of a plastic bag levee is a step in the right direction towards helping address this problem,” Dr Townsend said.


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Best of our wild blogs: 13 Mar 08


The Fivebar Swordtail
butterfly of the month on the butterflies of singapore blog

Javan Mynah chick
feeding and what happens after on the bird ecology blog

Climate change and peat land loss
YouTube clip and links on the budak blog

Sea star mass death in the UK

based on media report on the cj project blog


The Clean Tech Revolution

a book review on the AsiaIsGreen blog


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Dolphin Therapy Smells Fishy

Christopher Wanjek, LiveScience Bad Medicine Columnist
Yahoo News 12 Mar 08;

For some physically and mentally handicapped children, swimming with dolphins is a dream come true. That dream is shared by a multi-million dollar industry that provides so-called dolphin-assisted therapy for a few thousand dollars per session.

For the dolphins, the interactions with humans tend to be a nightmare.

Yet while laboratory animal are at least poked and prodded for some good for humankind, interacting with dolphins provides no long-term human health benefits and is largely an unproven therapy that can cheat patients out of real treatment, according to two recent studies.

Reason for depression

Dolphin-assisted therapy emerged in the 1970s as a possible treatment for depression and later as a means to help children with autism and other mental and physicals disorders. It is a therapy founded on good intentions.

One of the earliest advocates was John Lilly, the notorious California counterculture M.D. who, after heavy doses of LSD, claimed to communicate with dolphins - and aliens, for that matter. Although Lilly hoped the slaughter of whales would end once humans understood how smart the creatures were, his work has inadvertently nurtured a feel-good, international industry that indirectly supports the violent harvesting of dolphins from the wild - which, outside of U.S. law, can kill dolphins in the process and forces the survivors into captivity, where they are fed a diet of dead fish and must frolic before an audience thrice daily to the tune of "R-O-C-K in the USA."

Anecdotal evidence abounds on the Internet of dolphins making children feel better. Only one peer-reviewed study, however, from 2005, supports dolphin-assisted therapy, and this was a weak study at that. Published in the British Medical Journal, the study documented 25 adults with mild depression who were flown to Honduras for two weeks to either enjoy the beaches and play with dolphins, or just enjoy the beaches.

Remarkably, all the patients felt less depressed, but the 13 patients who played with dolphins were slightly less depressed than the 12 patients stuck with just a free vacation.

Fishy studies

Admittedly, it is tough to pull off a classic, placebo-controlled study on dolphin-assisted therapy. Patients tend to know whether they are swimming with dolphins or, say, squid dressed like dolphins. If they can't tell the difference, then there's no fixing their depression.

Nevertheless, this was the strongest study in favor of dolphin-assisted therapy, according to a review by Anna Baverstock and Fiona Finlay of the Community Child Health Department in Bath, England, in a paper to be published in the Archives of Disease in Childhood, now available online.

Baverstock and Finlay conducted the review because a mother was seeking medical support for her son, and they needed to determine whether swimming with dolphins had any health benefits for children with cerebral palsy. The answer was no, or at best, dolphins were as equally effective at making children feel better as puppies, warm beaches or clowns.

Similarly, in September 2007 in the journal of the International Society for Anthrozoology, Lori Marino and Scott Lilienfeld of Emory University analyzed five studies supporting the use of dolphin-assisted therapy and found major methodological flaws in each one. The studies were either too small, prone to some obvious bias, or offered no long-term perspective.

Squeaking by

Two legitimate studies, however, provide some evidence that dolphins can affect human health, in theory. The more recent one comes from a Japanese group, published in the Journal of Veterinary Medical Science in 2006. The scientists found that dolphins increase their vocalizations when interacting with people and that this form of sonar, called echolocation, can penetrate the human body.

This complements work by a German group, published in the Journal of Theoretical Biology in 2003, which found that echolocation could have an effect on biological tissue under some circumstances if repeated over several days or weeks. Just what the effect would be is unclear and, nevertheless, 80 percent of the dolphin-therapy sessions the scientists analyzed didn't reach this level of interaction.

As the obscure journal titles might reveal, this is all fringe science. It may be that we are merely charmed by the dolphin's Joker-like smile, which of course isn't a smile but rather the natural shape of its mouth that fools us into thinking they like us.

Links

Dolphin Exporter Wants To Export Live Dolphins to Singapore

Pacific Magazine 18 Feb 08;

SUFFERING, NOT SMILING: The Truth About Captive Dolphins
on the Acres website

Follow Thai government's lead - release dolphins at Sentosa back into the wild
Letter from Acres, Straits Times Forum Online 25 Feb 06

Boycott the dolphin parks
Jonathan Owen, The Independent 2 Jul 06

How are dolphins captured?
Captured Dolphin With Four Fins Spotlights Controversial Hunt
John Roach, National Geographic News 14 Nov 06


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Growing gardens on walls in Singapore

By Design: Green is the new black
Business Times 13 Mar 08;

ARTHUR SIM meets landscape designer Chang Huaiyan, who wants to grow gardens on walls

A FAMOUS frog once said: 'It's not easy being green.' Which explains why even though we live in the tropics - where more than 90 per cent of the world's plant species can be found - so few of us have green fingers.

OK, the frog may have been talking about his skin colour, but anyone who has ever owned a dying money plant will know his pain.

Not Chang Huaiyan though.

Not satisfied with being able to turn the most barren patches of earth into veritable mini-Edens, Mr Chang, a landscape designer, now wants to grow gardens on walls too.

'We are currently making small steps by studying vertical green systems and growing trees in the air without soil by means of aeroponics,' reveals Mr Chang, founder of landscape consultancy Salad Dressing.

'We believe the current technology advancement will allow for a possibility of understanding bio-buildings - like humans who can survive with an artificial heart, buildings can be half-plant too, like a cyborg,' he explains.

It is difficult to doubt a man with such conviction. And looking at what he has done with his own home and office, it's clear Mr Chang understands both plants and architecture well.

He set up his office and home with some friends after graduating from the National University of Singapore (NUS) with a master's in architecture.

And it was in this small house in Telok Kurau that he experimented with landscaping.

'My definition of a garden is a man-made space that reminds one of nature,' says Mr Chang, who was mentored at NUS by celebrity landscape designer Michael White.

Mr Chang's definition of landscaping is certainly open to interpretation, and in the Telok Kurau house, he takes the liberty of including a wooden hut with recycled roof tiles and rough-plastered walls for the sole purpose of forming an idyllic backdrop to other landscape elements in the garden.

'I always believe the garden is not just for plants but for people too,' he adds.

The garden was designed as a procession of 'layers of experience' so there is quite a lot packed into it.

One passes through a timber curtain gate, over meandering stepping stones, across a lily pond and into a courtyard before entering the house.

Along the way, there are plants like the tall sterculia, bismarckia noblilis and the mussaenda aurorae - 'for its generous white blooms that reflect the light of a full moon'.

Mr Chang also dots his garden landscape with works of art as a counterpoint to nature, and because it has a 'catalytic effect on the imagination'.

Perhaps what is more remarkable about the landscaping is how it has been designed with the house such that while there are never really any plants in the house, they are nevertheless always there.

He uses a simple interface: 'I decorated the interiors with objects collected on my travels through the tropics - and these are usually objects that celebrate the tropical landscape.'

In the living room, a small strip of garden is made grander with the addition of yellow bamboo, which also has a subtle architectural quality. Mr Chang cannot bear to leave a surface untouched, so he also inscribed a poem on this section of the garden wall.

The kitchen, which faces a shaded wall is the perfect place for ferns and orchids, while the backyard becomes an outdoor gallery of sorts for his collection of black-hued plants like tacca chantrieri and the simpler black-stemmed yam.

While it may seem that Mr Chang appears to have found his own, 'little piece of Eden', readers will be sad to learn that the house, along with the rest on the street, recently succumbed to en bloc fever.

Mr Chang has since moved to a small apartment, and the plants that could travel (together with a chunk of wall with a mural painted by him) moved to an off-beat, one-storey office on the fringe of the CBD.

Here, in between securing contracts to design the grounds of condominiums like One North, Oasis Garden and Newton Meadows, Mr Chang once again works his green magic, attracting monitor lizards, jungle fowl and snakes to his little oasis, just minutes from Shenton Way.


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MacRitchie Reservoir park facelift stalled

Contractor went bust, new tender to be called
Loh Chee Kong, Today Online 13 Mar 08;

THE wait for shower facilities and more carpark spaces at MacRitchie Reservoir — the first phase of which was scheduled for completion by the end of this month — has just gotten longer.

According to the PUB, the construction work for the $5-million makeover would be delayed for at least another nine months after the construction work on the carpark "has virtually stopped in the last two months".

The contractor, Wacon Construction, is understood to be undergoing financial difficulties due to the rising costs of raw materials including sand. It is facing several lawsuits from creditors.

First announced in October 2006 as part of the PUB's Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters programme to spruce up Singapore's waterways, the project would equip MacRitchie with new features, including shower facilities, a designated warm-up area and a two-storey carpark that would double the number of parking lots.

PUB's director for best sourcing Moh Wung Hee said it has terminated the contract with Wacon and would be calling for a new tender by the end of the month. Mr Moh added that the PUB "aims to complete the construction of the carpark by the end of the year and the amenities centre by next October".

In 2003, the tendering system for public projects was tightened after a couple of Housing and Development Board projects — an upgrading project in Marine Terrace and the building of flats in Sengkang — were stalled.

Among the new rules introduced then was the empowerment of the Building and Construction Authority to audit the financial status of contractors more frequently, to act as an early-warning system against contractors in danger of insolvency.

Sprucing up of reservoir park halted
Melissa Kok, Straits Times 14 Mar 08;

MacRitchie makeover project delayed by at least 9 months as contractor goes bust; PUB to call for new tender this month

NATURE lovers and fitness buffs may have to wait at least nine more months before they can enjoy some of the new visitor-friendly facilities at the MacRitchie Reservoir.

A $5 million MacRitchie spruce-up, the first phase of which was slated for completion this month, came to a stop when the contractor - Wacon Construction & Trading - went bust.

The project is the brainchild of the National Parks Board and PUB, the national water agency.

According to PUB's director of best sourcing, Mr Moh Wung Hee, construction work came to a virtual halt two months ago. Mr Moh said the PUB has since terminated its contract with the company for failing 'to make satisfactory progress on the project'.

The upgrade was part of PUB's Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters (ABC) programme to spruce up Singapore's reservoirs and rivers.

It was meant to provide MacRitchie with new features such as shower facilities, a specially designated warm-up area and a two-storey carpark that would double the number of lots.

In the meantime, PUB said it will be calling for a new tender this month to find a replacement contractor. It aims to complete construction of the carpark by the end of this year, while the other new amenities are expected to be up and running by next October.

When contacted by The Straits Times, MrOng Say Kiat, who is managing director of Wacon Construction, declined to talk about the MacRitchie project, but blamed rising operation costs as the main reason for his company's financial troubles.

He said: 'My company had to fold because of the price increase in raw materials, especially sand.'

Sighing, Mr Ong added that it was 'a heartache' to see the company that he had built collapse.

He declined to reveal how much debt his company was in, or if there were other projects that had also been put on hold.

However, The Straits Times understands that several companies have taken legal action against Wacon Construction this year for slightly over $1 million in money that they said was owed to them.

Three other companies are also taking Wacon Construction to court for alleged debts amounting to more than $83,000.

Back at MacRitchie, some regulars were disappointed when told of the delay.

Mr Bernd Nordhausen, 46, who jogs at MacRitchie regularly, said he was annoyed as the delay would mean that the problem of finding a parking lot, especially on weekends, would continue longer than expected.

'A bigger carpark is desperately needed. It has already been about 14 months since the upgrading began. That's just too excessive,' he said.

Another regular jogger, Mr Surinder Singh, 50, said of the delay: 'It has caused a lot of inconvenience because everyone was looking forward to the facilities, especially the showers. Now it's, 'Oh, suddenly stop!''

But Mr Singh conceded that unforeseen circumstances cannot be helped.

'Hopefully we can expect quick action from PUB,' he said.


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Fishball prices increase 20% due to rising cost of raw ingredients

Channel NewsAsia 12 Mar 08;

Retailers said the price hikes have been caused by the dip in supplies of frozen fish from countries such as Thailand and Indonesia.

SINGAPORE: Retailers said the prices of fishballs have risen by 20 per cent since last July due to rising cost of raw ingredients.

The retail price of Foochow fishballs, for example, has gone up to from S$7 to S$9 per kilogramme.

Prices of five-spice ngoh hiang (meat roll) have also risen by 25 per cent, from S$2.60 to S$3.00 per kilogramme, over the same period.

Retailers said the price hikes have been caused by the dip in supplies of frozen fish from countries such as Thailand and Indonesia.

Fisheries in those countries have been affected by bad weather.

Even though retailers in Singapore have started looking for cheaper sources of ingredients, they said the prices of fishballs are expected to climb further in the later half of the year. - CNA/ac


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Lowly streams play big role in fighting pollution

Julie Steenhuysen, Reuters 12 Mar 08;

CHICAGO (Reuters) - A meandering stream appears to play a powerful role in filtering out pollutants like nitrogen, and understanding this role could help prevent oxygen-depleting blooms of algae that threaten fish and shellfish downstream, researchers said on Wednesday.

The research was part of a project to determine whether rivers actively process pollutants and remove them from the ecosystem, or simply act as drain pipes that flush polluted waters into lakes or out to sea.

"They are most definitely processors," said Stephen Hamilton, an aquatic ecologist at Michigan State University in Lansing, who led one of several teams studying the problem.

The study, which appears in the journal Nature, looked at how 72 streams across eight regions in the United States and Puerto Rico neutralize nitrogen.

"There is a remarkable amount of processing that takes place," Hamilton said in a telephone interview. "We were able to see how streams vary in that nitrogen processing."

If overloaded, however, they found the streams were less efficient at removing the nitrogen that enters the stream through agricultural runoff, acid rain and human waste.

Too much nitrogen in the water can cause excessive growth of algae and aquatic plants in lakes and coastal marine waters, which deplete oxygen stores, killing fish and other marine life. Such so-called "dead zones" already are seen in the Chesapeake Bay, the Gulf of Mexico and the Baltic Sea.

NOT SO LAZY RIVER

To measure this clean-up effort, the researchers added a small amount of a harmless, radioactive isotope of nitrogen into the streams. This acted as a tracer, allowing the researchers to track its path.

Hamilton's team stationed itself in the headwaters of the Kalamazoo River, dribbled the tracer into the water, then field workers took samples as it made its way downstream for a distance of about 3,000 feet.

"Most of the nitrogen we found in a stream was taken up by the stream organisms in a fairly short distance downstream," he said.

The nitrogen was gobbled up by tiny organisms such as algae, fungi and bacteria. But, a large portion of it was permanently pulled from the streams by a process known as denitrification, which converts nitrate to nitrogen gas that escapes into the atmosphere.

"We were able to quantify the fate of how much nitrogen goes into each of these potential pathways," he said.

"That allows us to understand how some streams do better than others and that opens up the possibility of understanding how we can manage streams to promote denitrification or importantly, how we are managing them to discourage it," he said.

Hamilton said the trick is to allowing lazy, meandering rivers to do their job instead of diverting them into straight drainage ditches that act more like water pipes and less like filters.

"We've been very industrious and successful in draining vast amounts of wetland. We've re-engineered our streams to conduct the water and any nutrients in the water out as fast as possible," he said.

"We think it's fair to say as a group there are a lot of ways we could do that better."

(Editing by Maggie Fox and David Wiessler)


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Rare Reptiles' Mass Die-Off Due to Poison-Induced Gout

Paroma Basu, National Geographic News 12 Mar 08;

Invasive fish carrying industrial chemicals likely triggered the recent die-off of 110 critically endangered reptiles known as gharials in a central Indian river sanctuary, scientists announced last week.

Since December officials have found the crocodile-like animals washed ashore dead along the banks of the largely pristine Chambal River, one of the few unpolluted rivers in India.

But the bulk of reptile fatalities occurred along a 22-mile (35-kilometer) stretch near the Chambal's confluence with the Yamuna, considered to be of the dirtiest rivers in the world.

Researchers therefore think an unidentified substance might be seeping into the Chambal and affecting the gharials' food supply.

Autopsies of the animals revealed evidence that they perished from gout, a painful metabolic disease, after ingesting polluted fish.

"Gharials that are already infected with the toxin will continue to die," said Ravi Singh, secretary general and CEO of the India branch of WWF.

The international conservation group is coordinating efforts by the government, other animal-welfare groups, veterinarians, and state departments to conduct an investigation and contain the crisis.

"If this mass die-off has truly stemmed from ongoing pressures on the habitat, people should know that there's no short-term fix."

Kidney Lesions

Conservation groups say that no more than 1,400 gharials are left in the wild, living in pockets of India and Nepal.

More than 300 of these individuals live in the National Chambal Sanctuary along the Chambal River, which contains the largest of the world's three breeding populations.

When the reptiles began to wash up dead in December, post-mortem examinations revealed chemical-laced lesions on the animals' kidneys.

These lesions probably caused the onset of debilitating gout, said Paolo Martelli, one of four veterinarians with the World Conservation Union sent in to examine the dead reptiles.

Gout is painful inflammation caused by a buildup of microscopic crystals of uric acid in the joints. Kidneys normally remove most uric acid from the blood.

The doctors also found surprising amounts of fat in the animals' tissues, Martelli added, which could be explained by the growing abundance of a cichlid fish from Africa known as tilapia in Indian rivers.

The species was introduced in the region a few years ago to boost Indian aquaculture. It has since grown so plentiful that gharials now feed on it almost exclusively.

As tilapia move from polluted rivers into the Chambal, they ingest and store chemicals in their tissues. Gharials eating the abundant fish therefore accumulate even larger amounts of potentially harmful substances in their body fat.

"Cold winter temperatures coupled with excess food could have also made the [cold-blooded] gharials more susceptible to the toxin," said Martelli, who is based in Hong Kong.

"As the temperatures warm up, the animals will improve. But next winter may again be a delicate time for the gharials."

Two Indian laboratories are still trying to determine exactly what kind of chemical is to blame.

Experts think that the agent is either an industrial chemical being released into the Yamuna by a new facility or one that was used by an older plant that shut down and illegally dumped all its waste in the river.

Related articles

Dozens of rare gharials die in India

Biswajeet Banerjee, Associated Press Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;

More deaths of rare Indian gharials
BBC News 4 Jan 08;

Mass deaths of rare crocodiles in India
BBC News 15 Dec 07;


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NUS prof works out the cost of turning Singapore's car population hybrid

If cars go hybrid, the math holds up
Matthew Phan, Business Times 13 Mar 08;

(SINGAPORE) Converting Singapore's entire car population gradually to hybrid vehicles could cost the nation over $600 million a year, after factoring in both the premium paid for hybrid vehicles as well as the fuel savings, according to a study by Prof S K Chou of the National University of Singapore (NUS).

However, this assumes steady petrol prices at about $1.90 per litre, or 2006 levels.

An annual price increase of 4 per cent a year would make the shift to hybrid cars both 'environmentally and financially beneficial', Prof Chou, who is from NUS's mechanical engineering department, said yesterday at a clean energy roundtable.

Singapore had nearly 800,000 vehicles on the road in 2006, of which some 470,000 are cars or station wagons, according to a statistical report from the Land Transport Authority (LTA) last year.

Prof Chou's study assumed that each car travelled about 21,000 kilometres a year - the average amount measured by the LTA in 2006 - and that to convert a regular car to a hybrid car would cost its owner a $5,000 per year premium.

The present value of the costs over time of converting all cars to hybrid vehicles by 2020 would range from about $600 million to $650 million, depending on the discount rate used, Prof Chou said.

The cost falls if the rate of adoption of hybrid vehicles is slowed.

It also falls into negative territory if increases in petrol prices are assumed, and turns into a financial benefit if petrol prices rise 4 or more per cent a year, Prof Chou explained.

The key question is: what is the financially neutral position, where the fuel cost savings offset the premium paid for a hybrid car?

The study concluded that, assuming petrol price increases of 2 per cent a year, a car owner could afford a premium of up to US$4,810 per year for a hybrid vehicle, and remain indifferent, said Prof Chou.

In 2007, Singapore had over 1,000 green vehicles, including hybrids, vehicles running on biodiesel blends or CNG, and electric cars, according to Ho Cheng Hoon, deputy director of policy at the National Environment Agency, who was also at the roundtable.

'Much of this was in the last two years,' he pointed out.

Through its $20 million Innovation for Environmental Sustainability fund, the government will help fund private sector clean fuel projects, like CNG (compressed natural gas) stations in Mandai and Serangoon, said Mr Ho.

It also wants all taxis and 40 per cent of buses to comply with Euro IV emission regulations by 2014.

Clean Energy Roundtable discusses dilemmas faced by transport sector
Channel NewsAsia 12 Mar 08;

SINGAPORE : The transport sector contributes to 19 percent of CO2 emissions in Singapore.

Car drivers are among the biggest culprits - the energy they consume is 9 times that of a bus passenger and 12 times that of a train passenger.

The National Environment Agency (NEA) said demand for green cars has only taken off in the last two years, helped along by soaring oil prices.

There are currently over 1,000 hybrid vehicles and just under 500 CNG (Compressed Natural Gas) vehicles, and the focus remains on incentives to help people go green.

Experts said legislation could help speed up the process.

Ho Cheng Hoon, Deputy Director of Policy at NEA, speaking at the Clean Energy Roundtable on Wednesday, said: "Legislation may speed up the process but it may not change the behaviour.

"The premise of the green vehicle rebate is to narrow the gap sufficiently for people to consider green vehicles seriously. The Green Vehicle Rebate is not a way for the government to pay people to be green, but just to help people think carefully about how they can be green."

Industry players are looking at workable options. For instance, car manufacturer BMW has presented its 7 Series hydrogen car at the forum. The car's only emission is water, when powered by liquefied hydrogen.

"I think we have to prepare, that we can do this, know what the issues from the technology are and potential of this technology," said Michael Meurer, head of BMW's Clean Energy Programme.

But such green options are far from being an option for the masses yet. BMW reckoned it will be at least a decade before such hydrogen cars can be commercially available. - CNA /ls


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Subsidies not prudent for renewable energy in Singapore

Reply from MTI, Straits TImes Forum 13 Mar 08;

IN HIS letter, 'Vital to pursue renewable energy policy' last Friday, Mr Tan Tze Kiang says the Government should subsidise alternative energy, in particular solar power.

Mr Tan claims solar power is 'almost free', and yet he also says there are 'relatively heavy start-up costs' which should be subsidised. The fact is that solar power costs two to three times as much as electricity generated through conventional means.

This is precisely due to the high upfront cost of installing solar panels, which has to be included in the cost of solar power generated over the useful life of these panels. A subsidy will distort the energy market by artificially lowering the cost of solar energy and encouraging its consumption relative to other forms of unsubsidised energy.

Further, if the Government were to adopt Mr Tan's suggestion, heavy subsidies will be required to encourage the wider adoption of solar power. It is neither a prudent use of public funds nor is it sustainable in the long run.

We agree it is important to develop renewable energy as part of our overall national energy policy. Our main thrust is to invest in research and development (R&D) as new technologies can help lower the cost of alternative energy sources and accelerate their adoption. For example, the National Research Foundation has committed $170 million to R&D in solar technologies.

The newly announced $20 million Solar Capability Scheme will build capabilities in the design and system integration of solar panels for new buildings which attain a certain level of Green Mark standard. This and other schemes aim to grow the alternative-energy industry into an important part of our economy.

Mr Tan asks why we emphasise economic growth as a response to the uncertain global energy outlook. It is because economic growth underpins our energy security by ensuring that Singapore continues to have the resources to procure energy - conventional or renewable - for our needs from global markets.

Lim Bee Khim (Ms)
Director, Corporate Communications
Ministry of Trade and Industry


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Toxic or harmless? Jatropha debate rages

Matthew Phan, Business Times 13 Mar 08;

(SINGAPORE) The toxicity of jatropha, a shrub touted as a potential source of biodiesel, poses challenges in terms of handling its oil processed, an expert said yesterday. Others disagreed.

Jatropha oil is "very toxic", Chevron's regional products technology manager for Asia-Pacific, Greg Engeler said at a Clean Energy Roundtable organised by the Singapore Environment Council and supported by Chevron.

"The health and safety issues associated with working at a plant are significant", he said.

However, other industry players contacted by BT yesterday disagreed. Peter Cheng, chief executive of Van Der Horst Biodiesel, which is aiming to plant over 150,000 hectares of jatropha to feed two large scale biodiesel plants, said the jatropha seeds and oil have "very little toxin content" and "even if swallowed in large quantities will cause diarrhoea but is not enough to kill".

Mr Cheng also said the emissions from burning jatropha biodiesel are non-toxic, as the toxins are destroyed by the combustion process. Nor is the oil poisonous to touch, he said.

The truth could be somewhere in between.

Jatropha oil contains "phorbol esters", a type of compound that in animal experiments has been found to incite cancer, according to Dr Hong Yan, director of Plant Biotechnology at the Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory (TLL).

The oil can irritate the skin on first contact, but is not immediately hazardous; however, "long term exposure might increase health hazards", he said.

It is a potential concern that has not yet become as problem, as no one has yet built a large scale jatropha biodiesel processing plant, said Dr Hong.

So, humans involved in jatropha oil pressing or biodiesel processing who come into direct skin contact with the oil over a long-term could face health hazards.

However, "there is no problem if there is no direct contact", and "it is still possible to build jatropha plants, you just need to be aware and exercise care and diligence", said the scientist, who spearheads jatropha research in Singapore, including a 1.7-ha experimental farm.

TLL is attempting to develop non-toxic strains of jatropha, said Dr Hong.

One approach, using traditional breeding techniques, could help produce a strain with far lower toxin content within two to three years, he said.

But TLL is also banking on mid to long term success with genetic engineering. "Sometimes toxins are necessary for the plant to defend itself against insects.

Ideally, you specifically knock out toxins in the seeds, but not the rest of the plant, so you get what you want with minimal effect on other agronomic characteristics", he said.

Meanwhile, Chevron is investing in research of third-generation biofuels from algae and wood, said Mr Engeler.

But it is still very early stages, as the calorie-rich oil produced by the algae is highly diluted by the water in which they breed, and requires large amounts of energy to extract, he said.


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Experts fear deadly fungus in south Asia wheatfields

Yahoo News 12 Mar 08;

A wheat-killing fungus has spread from Africa to Iran and may already be in Pakistan, which depends crucially on wheat to feed its population, New Scientist magazine says.

The killer pathogen, known as Ug99, emerged in Uganda in 1999, spread to Kenya in 2001, to Ethiopia in 2003 and then leapt to Yemen, its spores blown by Cyclone Gonu in June 2007.

The fungus has now been found in Iran "and may already be in Pakistan," the British weekly says in next Saturday's issue.

"If so, this is extremely bad news, as Pakistan is not only critically reliant on its wheat crop, it is also the gateway to the Asian breadbasket, including the vital Punjab region."

Experts have been meeting in Syria this week to decide emergency measures to track the progress of Ug99 and to try to brake its progress, such as by spraying fungicide or stopping farmers from planting wheat in the spores' path.

Canada and the United States, worried that Ug99 could hit their own breadbaskets, are pumping money into breeding programmes that will boost Ug99-resistant genes in wheat.

However, such programmes usually take at least five years to come up with disease-resistant strains which are crossed with wheat varieties that can adapt to local climate conditions, and then grow enough seeds to replant fields threatened by the fungus, the report said.

"People will start starving if Ug99 cuts harvests enough to push up grain prices," the report quoted Rick Ward of CIMMYT, the corn and wheat breeding institute in Mexico that played a key role in the Green Revolution, as saying.


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Asia shows way to fight dengue as global spread looms

Tan Ee Lyn, Yahoo News 12 Mar 08;

Clarissa Poon was one of an estimated 50 million people who contracted mosquito-borne dengue fever last year. She spent an agonizing week on a drip in a Bangkok hospital as she battled the potentially deadly disease.

"There was not a single moment when I wasn't aching everywhere, dizzy and nauseous. I was so weak I couldn't even stand," said Poon, who caught the illness during a family holiday at a beach resort in Thailand.

"My kids were very worried because the mother of one of their friends died," she added.

From Africa to Asia to Latin America, around 2.5 billion people live in areas that are at risk of dengue fever, a viral disease spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito. There is no vaccine or drugs to treat the illness which killed an estimated 22,000 people last year, most of them children.

Due to international travel and climate change, the Aedes aegypti mosquito's habitat is spreading.

In January, health officials warned that the disease was poised to move across the United States. It has been spreading aggressively in Latin America and the Caribbean, reaching epidemic levels last year.

Dengue is endemic in Southeast Asia where a tropical climate and monsoon rains provide ideal conditions.

Strategies developed in places such as Singapore might provide vital information for other countries seeking to combat the virus and the mosquitoes that spread it. Family doctors in Singapore look out for patients with suspicious symptoms. When cases are confirmed, researchers try to nail down the specific dengue virus subtype, of which there are four, and the location of the outbreak.

"You need to monitor what (subtype) is going around ... You want to limit the damage, the fatalities," the World Health Organisation's advisor in Asia, John Ehrenberg, told Reuters.

While dengue and malaria share geographical patterns, dengue is more dangerous because its mosquito carriers thrive indoors. Mosquitoes that carry malaria are rarely found in urban areas.

Dengue fever is endemic in more than 100 countries in Africa, the Americas, eastern Mediterranean, Southeast Asia and western Pacific. Of the 50 million people who contract the disease every year, about one percent get potentially deadly severe dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), which requires hospitalization.

There is no cure or vaccination for dengue fever. Sufferers such as Poon, face an increased likelihood of developing DHF if they contract the disease again, which is not uncommon for those living in the tropics where the mosquito carriers flourish.

NO STOPPING IT?

International travel has made the spread of dengue inevitable, experts say.

"There is always a risk for the borders ... In central America, you have a lot of people moving up north," Ehrenberg said. "There is a risk of people moving in with dengue."

Ehrenberg says there is little to stop dengue from spreading. He compares it to West Nile virus which appeared in New York in 1999 and then spread across the United States, Canada and Mexico. West Nile killed 98 people in the United States last year.

"As you can see with West Nile virus, there is hardly anything you can do to control its spread in the U.S. It's all over the place now. There's always the risk of introducing, when the climatic conditions are right," Ehrenberg said.

Both dengue and West Nile are spread by mosquitoes.

"It's a neglected disease because no one pays attention in between outbreaks, except in places like Singapore, where there is very good surveillance," Ehrenberg said.

In Singapore, health workers aggressively control breeding sites by regularly spraying pesticides in parks and gardens. Government inspectors fine people for allowing water to build up in flower pots which is a favorite breeding site.

Singapore reported 14,000 dengue cases in 2005, but that fell to 3,597 cases in the first half of 2007, according to the

WHO.

With 42,456 cases in 2006 and 45,893 in 2005, Thailand figures near the top of the dengue list. Fanned out across the country are 500,000 volunteers who educate villagers on mosquito control, chiefly by removing stagnant pools of water.

Kitti Pramathphol, head of Thailand's dengue control, said more inspections would be made to remove potential breeding sites before the rainy season in June and July, when the disease peaks.

"Its eggs can hide in crevices and survive for a year without water in tropical climates and in normal temperatures. Once there is rain or water, they will hatch into larvae," he said.

Compared to its cousin, the Culex mosquito, the Aedes aegypti is considered a weaker species.

"It is slender and has thin wings. Culex likes to breed in drain water, but Aedes will die in such dirty water. It likes rain water, relatively clean water," Pramathpol said.

"It is usually indoors and has problems surviving outdoors," Pramathphol said, adding that another strategy was to trap it indoors with insecticide-laced curtains.

Drugmaker Novartis AG has designed a drug which it hopes can combat all four dengue viruses.

"If the safety is acceptable, we hope to go into human testing, hopefully next year," Paul Herrling, head of corporate research, said in a telephone interview.

(Editing by Megan Goldin)


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Mayor orders chicken cull in Makassar following bird flu outbreak

Antara 12 Mar 08;

Makassar, South Sulawesi (ANTARA News) - Makassar Mayor Ilham Arief Sirajuddin has ordered the culling of poultry living within a radius of one kilometer from a bird flu outbreak at the cisity`s IDI complex in Antang.

"This is to follow up on the discovery of bird flu infection in the area last week," Mayor Sirajuddin said here on Wednesday.

The culling was needed to curb the bird flu outbreak following the sudden deaths of tens of chickens in the Antang area, Makassar, last week. A Makassar resident was also believed to have been infected with the H5N1 avian influenza (AI) virus.

The patient, identified as Ririn (12 years old), is currently being treated intensively at Wahidin Sudirohusodo Regional Public Hospital, Makassar.

"We have received a patient who has symptoms of bird flu. However, we cannot yet confirm it yet because we need to examine samples of her blood first," Dr Kadir, medical director of Wahidin Hospital, said.

Two to three days were needed to get the results of laboratory tests on the patient`s blood sample, he said.

According to data of the Indonesian Health Ministry recently, AI has so far infected a total of 129 people in Indonesia of whom 105 have died. Indonesia`s AI mortality rate is the highest in the world. (*)


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HK closes all primary schools as flu claims three lives

Six outbreaks at schools, a hospital and a nursing home since March 6
Caryn Yeo, Straits Times 13 Mar 08;

ALL kindergartens and primary schools in Hong Kong have been ordered closed for two weeks from today, after three children died from what has been described as influenza-like symptoms.

The move, announced late yesterday, followed a decision earlier in the day to shut one school where several pupils fell ill and one boy died on Tuesday.

In separate cases, a two-year-old boy died last month and a three-year-old girl died last week, also after developing flu symptoms.

Hong Kong has been hit by a flu outbreak that has landed many in hospital or seeking treatment. Reports said health officials have confirmed at least six outbreaks at schools, a hospital and a nursing home for the elderly since March 6.

News of the latest death clearly left many Hong Kongers anxious, bringing to mind memories of the 2003 Sars nightmare.

Adults and children were seen going out wearing face masks yesterday, just as they did during Sars, which left almost 300 dead in Hong Kong and spread to other countries, including Singapore.

The Hong Kong government said a team of experts will investigate the recent deaths and assess the risk of the new outbreak.

It will be headed by Hong Kong University microbiology professor Yuen Kwok Yung, one of the key investigators during the Sars outbreak.

The closure of schools is the first since Sars and was announced by Secretary for Food and Health York Chow.

'We will monitor the incident on a day-to-day basis to see what the trend is,' he said, pledging to reveal any findings as soon as possible.

It was the death of seven-year-old Law Ho-ming on Tuesday that prompted fears that the outbreak had worsened. He was admitted to hospital last week in a semi-conscious state.

Five other pupils from the school are in hospital with similar symptoms, but were reported to be in stable condition.

Their school was the first to be shut yesterday, as the authorities pondered whether to bring forward the Easter holidays and close other schools.

Centre for Health Protection controller Thomas Tsang told reporters that he was 'very concerned' about the deaths.

Samples from the children had tested positive for influenza A, he said. No link has been made yet between the deaths, officials said.

Even before the government decision to close schools last night, some parents and schools in the territory of seven million were not taking chances.

A spokesman for Tsing Yi Kindergarten told The Straits Times that it had decided to close as a number of pupils and staff had developed flu symptoms.

The YL Public Middle School Alumni Association Primary School also decided to close as a precaution.

'Last week, we had 32 students apply for sick leave, and the number of students applying... jumped to 85 on Tuesday and 99 on Wednesday,' vice-principal Chan Chi Hung was quoted by the South China Morning Post as saying.

Mrs Anne Chue, mother of a two-year-old boy and a three-year-old girl, told The Straits Times that she has been keeping her children home from kindergarten since Tuesday.

'After Sars, most parents are taking all the precautions they can,' she said.

In Singapore, a Health Ministry spokesman said the ministry had been in contact with the public health authorities in Hong Kong.

The spokesman said: 'We understand that the Hong Kong authorities have determined that the illness is due to influenza and the strain isolated is one of the circulating human seasonal influenza strains (A/H3).

'Our ongoing influenza surveillance in Singapore has not shown any unusual increase so far.'

Hong Kong shuts schools amid flu outbreak
Channel NewsAsia 13 Mar 08;

HONG KONG : Hong Kong education and health officials on Wednesday ordered all primary schools and kindergartens to close for two weeks amid a flu outbreak.

In an announcement posted on its website, the Hong Kong Education Bureau said: "All kindergartens, kindergartens-cum-child care centres, primary schools and special schools will begin the Easter holiday from March 13 to March 28."

Health secretary York Chow said the move was a precautionary measure against the spread of influenza in schools, according to the Government Information Service (GIS).

The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) received reports of outbreaks of flu-like illness affecting 23 schools involving a total of 184 people on Wednesday, GIS said.

A CHP spokesman said the illnesses could be caused by flu or other respiratory viruses.

GIS said laboratory tests on a seven-year-old boy who died after suffering respiratory and neurological symptoms showed positive results for influenza A (H1N1).

Initial tests on a three-year-old boy currently in a stable condition in hospital also showed positive results for the same strain.

Recent flu cases had caused anxiety and pressure among both parents and school management as to whether to allow children to attend schools, especially where there was an outbreak of the virus, Chow said.

"As the Easter holiday is only a week away, we decided to ask all the primary schools, kindergartens and nursery schools to take an early break for two weeks," Chow told reporters, according to GIS.

"This is both a precautionary as well as an administrative decision. During the break, schools will be thoroughly cleansed and the two-week period is two times of the incubation period for the virus," Chow added.

"We hope the break would minimise the chance of infection for these young children so that they can have a clean and healthy environment when they return after the holidays."

He said there was no indication that the virus was more virulent than the usual flu virus but said scientists would continue to investigate.

The decision to close the schools was made at a meeting of health, education and hospital authority officials. - AFP/de


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Singapore NUS-MIT research team to study bird flu virus

Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 13 Mar 08;

RESEARCHERS in Singapore are poised to become front- line troops in the battle against the bird flu virus.

Scientists at a joint research laboratory here are expected to start probing the lethal H5N1 virus in May, to determine what could turn it from an occasional human killer into a pandemic.

The researchers are part of a team from the National University of Singapore and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the United States.

Their work will build on a recent MIT discovery which found that the bird flu virus has little trouble latching onto cell structures in the lungs, but has a harder time grasping similar structures in the nose and throat.

The report, published in the journal Nature, provides hints as to why the virus does not seem to jump from person to person, said Professor Ram Sasisekharan, who led the MIT team and is also driving influenza research at a lab here.

'Perhaps this is one of the reasons why the virus cannot be transmitted easily from one person to another when we cough or sneeze,' he said.

The finding supports evidence that the only humans to contract the disease were exposed to infected animals.

'For someone to get infected by the bird flu virus, it is likely that there is a close physical contact with another infected person, or he has handled infected birds,' he said.

The MIT team also announced last month a discovery that the deadly flu virus that swept across the world in 1918, killing at least 50 million people, was perfectly designed to latch onto the cell structures of the nose and throat.

Scientists here see the finding as a useful clue that could help fight or prevent a future pandemic.

Prof Ram, a biological engineer, plans to divide his time between Boston and Singapore from this year. While here, he will oversee an NUS-based lab looking into influenza.

The Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology's infectious disease team of 50 researchers was launched last July and is led by Professor Chen Jianzhu, an MIT immunologist.

Researchers at his lab will work with local teams led by NUS virologists, Professor Vincent Chow and Associate Professor Paul Thambyah, at the National University Hospital.

Prof Thambyah, the head of the NUH medicine department's infectious diseases division, said: 'The research has a lot of implications for surveillance of influenza viruses as we try to determine which virus is going to be able to make the successful transition to be able to infect humans easily.'

Work being done here will include developing new drugs to block the entry of the virus into cells, as well as new treatments, he said.

In the meantime, the authorities remain vigilant against a bird flu strike.

While the finding shed some light on how the virus worked, Singapore should not let down its guard, said Associate Professor Raymond Lin, head of the Health Ministry's national health laboratory in the communicable diseases division.

'When there will be a flu pandemic, which virus will cause it, and how severe it will be - these cannot be predicted in advance,' he said.


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