Crackdowns on wildlife trade on the rise in South-East Asia

Earth times 19 Mar 08;

Bangkok - Recent crackdowns on illegal trade in endangered species has demonstrated a growing level of cooperation among South-East Asian authorities to protect the region's biodiversity, the ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN) claimed Wednesday. According to ASEAN-WEN, a cross-border enforcement network that has been in operation since 2005, there were five major crackdowns on illicit trade in endangered species this month in South-East Asia.

"Indonesian officials, fresh from an intensive three week ASEAN-WEN Network Investigation Course in Bogor, West Java, led the way with major busts that will send a clear message to other wildlife traffickers in the region," said ASEAN-WEN in a statement.

On March 3 Indonesian Police intercepted a shipment of 3,500 Green Turtles eggs being smuggled by motorboat on a river in Derawan Island, East Kalimantan.

"Responding to a tipoff, a police officer and trainee from the ASEAN-WEN training course made the seizure," said the network.

The Green Turtle is listed on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species and is protected under CITES Appendix I.

ASEAN-WEN was first suggested at the 13th Conference of the Parties of the Convention on the International Trade of Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES) in October 2004, and launched by ASEAN member countries on December 1, 2005 at an official meeting in Bangkok.

The network provides training to law enforcement agencies in the ASEAN region, and facilitates information sharing in cracking down on the regional wildlife trade.

Other ASEAN-WEN successes this month included Indonesian Customs halting a shipment of 23,000 dried seahorses destined for South Korea on March 10, Vietnam's intercepting 17 tons pangolins being smuggled from Indonesia to China on March 6, the Philippines Department of Environment and Natural Resources raid on pet shops in Pasay City's Cartimar market, confiscating 94 protected species on March 10, and Thai Authorities' detention of a Russian man when they found 20 live baby slow loris packed in cardboard boxes in his baggage, as well as 25 fly river turtles and 30 small monitor lizards, on March 14.

The Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.


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Extinct seal tells of once-teeming Caribbean reefs

Yahoo News 18 Mar 08;

Several hundred years ago, the coral reefs of the Caribbean had up to six times more fish than they have today, according to a study published Wednesday.

The estimate is made by US scientists poring over the fate of the Caribbean monk seal, a fish-loving mammal driven to extinction in 1952.

Historical records from the 17th and 18th century show there were huge numbers of monk seals, distributed among 13 colonies across the Caribbean.

They were so plentiful that some ships' maps of the West Indies even noted particularly dense locations of seals.

Alas for Monachus tropicalis, colonisation of the West Indies unleashed unbridled hunting, the bounty being seal oil that was used to grease machinery in sugar plantations.

Towards the end of the 19th century, the seals were reduced to a final redoubt of a few atolls -- and their worst enemy became natural history museums and private collectors keen for monk seal skeletons.

In one disastrous episode, a 1911 expedition to Mexico by natural-history enthusiasts killed 200 seals, leaving just a handful alive, and driving the depleted population further towards extinction.

In a study published on Wednesday in the British journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, oceanographers Loren McClenachan and Andrew Cooper perform a heroic act of biostatistics in recreating the life and sad demise of the seal.

They calculate that, before the massacre, between 233,000 and 338,000 monk seals lived in the Caribbean. Such a huge population could only survive, of course, provided there was a huge supply of food.

At a rough estimate, each adult seal would eat 245 kilos (539 pounds) of fish per year, and a juvenile seal 50 kilos, say McClenachan and Cooper.

"The biomass of free fish required to sustained the estimated population of historical monk seals is four to six times greater than the average Caribbean reef, which exceeds that found on the most pristine Caribbean coral reef today and is in the same range of the most pristine reefs" in the remote Pacific, their paper says.

The study gives a crucial pointer about the pace of degradation of Caribbean coral reefs, where the biggest problem has been overfishing.

"Realistic construction of these past ecosystems is critical to understanding the profound and long-lasting effect of human hunting on the functioning of coral reef systems," they write.

Extinction of the monk seal also had a huge knock-on effect across the Caribbean's food web. Removal of a major predator allowed some species of fish to expand at the expense of others, eventually transforming the picture of biodiversity.


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Cambodia opens Asia's first bear preservation centre

Yahoo News 19 Mar 08;

Wildlife conservationists in Cambodia on Wednesday opened Asia's first centre to preserve local bear populations, under severe threat from poachers and exotic pet traders.

The Bear Discovery Centre hopes to promote awareness of the plight of Asia's bears, said Mary Hutton, chairwoman and founder of the Australia-based Free the Bears Fund Inc (FTB).

"It is so important because not so many bears are left in the wild," Hutton told AFP, saying their population was declining, although it is impossible to know how many bears remain.

The Asiatic black bear and Sun bear, both found throughout the region, are considered vulnerable according to the World Conservation Union's Red List of threatened species.

"There are not as many as there should be, and the Sun bears are on their way to becoming an endangered species," Hutton said, adding that there are currently 88 bears at Cambodia's Phnom Tamao Zoo, where the centre is based.

According to the FTB, which says it has rescued more than 100 bears from the wildlife trade in Cambodia, the animals are hunted in large numbers throughout Southeast Asia to feed growing demand for their parts to be used in restaurants.

More than 14,000 bears are also thought to be kept on farms in China and Vietnam where their bile is extracted and used for traditional medicine.

"This is a cruel and unnecessary practice, which should be replaced by modern medicine," FTB said.

In other cases, adult bears are killed so that poachers can capture their cubs to sell to the exotic pet market, Hutton said.

A similar centre is expected to open in Vietnam later this year in a bid to expand conservation efforts, she added.

Bears are only one among many species of animals that have been decimated by Asia's wildlife trafficking, which is fueled in large part by China's massive appetite for exotic meats and other animal parts.


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Wolf returns to central France

Yahoo News 18 Mar 08;

The grey wolf has started returning to France's Massif Central mountains, almost a century after it was wiped out a from the region, experts believe.

France's wolves were eradicated in the 1920s, but lone animals started crossing back into the French Alps from Italy in the 1990s, and there are signs they are now venturing deeper inland.

Two hikers photographed a large dog-like animal wandering in the town of Lavigerie, in the central Cantal region, on January 20.

The National Office of Hunting and Wildlife confirmed on Monday it was a male grey wolf after carrying out tests on the animal's prints and excrement.

Wolf sightings have been reported in the Cantal in the past. In 1997 a wolf was run over by a car in Lavigerie and DNA tests later showed it was genetically linked to the Italian wolf.

Wolf populations have rebounded in central and eastern European countries and in recent years have reappeared in Germany and Switzerland as well as France.

But in the Alps, the reappearance of the wolf -- which roamed across 90 percent of France until the 18th century -- has sparked a sometimes fierce debate between livestock owners and environmentalists.


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Best of our wild blogs: 19 Mar 08


The Joy of (Marine) Sex
an upcoming talk by Dr Dan on 24 Mar (Mon) on the habitatnews blog, more about Dr Dan on the wildfilms blog

A review of Once Upon A Tree episode 5
another blistering fast and indepth review on the ashira blog

Some interesting perspectives of Singapore
about shores and shorebirds and urban development in Singapore and everyone is downstream from someone else (after an introduction to NeWater) on Dr Stan's blog

Shopping to Save the Earth?
analysis on Hell Hath No Fury Like Nature Scorned

What’s NXT?
examination of a really stupid product from Story of Stuff blog

Reef talk by Ron Yeo
on the tidechaser blog

Drongo nests
on the bird ecology blog

On the budak blog
Geckos and three crabs


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Singapore coffee shops wire up to keep birds out

Ho Lian-Yi, The New Paper 19 Mar 08;

A National Environment Agency (NEA) spokesman said: 'Like any wild animals, some birds may carry diseases. Therefore for hygiene reasons, it is important to ensure that they do not come into contact with the food we eat.'

BIRDS - scourge of coffee shops everywhere.

Leave any plate unwatched and it's not long before the feathered pests flutter down, poking hungrily at the food.

As one customer, 47-year-old security guard Abdul Majib, put it: 'The cleaner hasn't come, the birds come already.' Shoo them away all you want, but all they do is flutter to a not-too-distant spot, where they watch, and wait.

At least two coffee shops in Bishan have had enough, and have taken steps to keep them out.

One is GM Food Centre, on the second-storey of the Bishan bus interchange.

Go up the staircase and you'll find the whole coffee shop surrounded by a mesh, except for the entry from the staircase.

And there, a mock-up hawk, suspended by strings, acts as a scarecrow.

Clever, but not clever enough for bird brains, as The New Paper observed when a small sparrow nonchalantly zipped past the fake hawk, and out of the coffee shop.

One server, setting down drinks, said in Mandarin: 'At first, with the hawk, they wouldn't dare. But now they know it's not real, they aren't afraid anymore!'

In addition to nets and fake predators, they have also hung CDs from the ceiling.

Ms Ng Ong Kiaw, 48, the coffee shop supervisor, said the glare from the shiny CDs keeps birds away.

The net, which was installed 'two or three years ago', also serves to keep children in.

'It's not very safe to be on the second-storey with no barriers,' she said in Mandarin, referring to the low parapet. The shop is open, with no windows.

But is it effective to keep out the birds?

Very, she said.

There are far fewer birds now, and those that make it through are small ones.

A nearby S11 coffee shop at Block 504, Bishan Street 12, has come up with a similar idea, putting up a string fence at the side facing an open field, where many birds congregate.

According to a server there, the fence was put up about a year ago.

Another server said it was quite effective, especially at stopping bigger birds.

One vendor said that in the past, the birds would leave droppings, which can affect business.

'Some customers will say, eh, why so many birds,' she said.

One customer, Mr Lee Ah Mong, 52, a taxi driver, said there used to be a lot of birds there in the past, but he added that it's quite a common problem in coffee shops.

He has seen birds swooping and eating unattended food when the diner walked away to get drinks.

Mr Shaik Alhady, a 57-year-old retiree who was playing Sudoku while sipping tea at the coffee shop, said he has no problems with birds.

'Small birds are harmless,' he said.

But that may not always be true. A National Environment Agency (NEA) spokesman said: 'Like any wild animals, some birds may carry diseases. Therefore for hygiene reasons, it is important to ensure that they do not come into contact with the food we eat.'

Last year, NEA received 39 complaints of birds in coffee shops, a slight improvement from 42 in 2006.

NOT MAJOR PROBLEM

However, it is not a major problem here, the spokesman said.

'Coffee shop operators are advised and reminded from time to time to practise good waste management, such as removing food scraps promptly so as not to attract birds as well as other pests to their eateries.'

Said Mr Goh Shih Yong, spokesman for the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA): 'Good housekeeping, covered refuse bins and quick removal of leftover food at tables would help to reduce the problem of birds at coffee shops.'

There is no danger of getting bird flu from coffee shops, Mr Goh said. Singapore is currently free from bird flu. AVA has taken steps to prevent infected birds from being imported here.

But it shouldn't be up to coffee shop operators alone to keep the birds at bay.

Mr Philip Yip, a 60-year-old part-time teacher, said customers should also play their part.

'If they return the plates themselves, the problem is solved,' he said.


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Singapore ideal for innovations to tackle climate change

Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 19 Mar 08;

SINGAPORE is an ideal centre to produce the kind of radical innovation needed to ensure that greenhouse gases can be cut to combat climate change, without undermining economic growth.

That is the view of a visiting United States environmental and economics expert.

Global emissions shot up by about 40 per cent each year between 1990 and 2007, so radical technology breakthroughs are needed to stem this growth, said Dr Peter Englert, professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

Currently, emissions reductions are difficult as most common technologies 'are close to the physical limit of energy efficiency', he said.

For countries to achieve a high level of innovation, a skilled and highly educated workforce with good research institutions, the availability of high-risk investment capital and a high quality of life is needed.

This makes Singapore an ideal centre for innovation with the 'necessary conditions', said Dr Englert at an Institute of Southeast Asian Studies seminar on climate change issues.

Singapore's recent move - announced in last month's Budget - to incentivise businesses with tax allowances and deductions for research and development is 'on the right track', he said.

But a mix of economic drivers, including further measures such as a carbon tax, will be needed to push companies towards radical innovation, he added.

Three areas that need technological breakthroughs are the energy, transportation and building industries, he said.

It has been estimated that if up to 70 per cent of new investment goes into radical innovation, the resulting economic growth will be 1.5 to three times that from normal innovation.


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Rooftop greening cools Pasir Ris Park

Business Times 19 Mar 08;

THE new 2.9-hectare Pasir Ris Park extension, toured by the media yesterday, features plants growing on the roofs of its open interpretive centre and toilet block.

Rooftop vegetation reduces surface and ambient air temperatures by as much as 31 deg C and 4.2 deg C respectively, reducing energy demand for cooling purposes, as highlighted in the 2002 Handbook on Skyrise Greening in Singapore, published by the National Parks Board (NParks) and also available on the NParks website.

While the energy cost savings from greening of accessible roofs are insufficient to offset the accompanying increase in maintenance costs, the handbook found, extensive turfing of inaccessible roofs brings life cycle cost savings of 8.5 per cent. Within 10 years, a green inaccessible roof would save enough in energy costs to cover the initial cost of greening.

Hence, current research focuses on the types of plants that are suitable for inaccessible roofs, said NParks staff.


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Cycling – a green, healthy solution to Singapore's traffic woes

Letter from Patricia Chee, Today Online 19 Mar 08;

I refer to "The politics of sidewalks" (March 15-16). There seems to be growing demand for bicycle lanes in Singapore, yet urban planners do not seem to be heeding these calls.

Cycling offers several benefits. It can help ease our transportation woes and help reduce global warming and improve our health.

It will also help us save money by countering the effects of rising oil prices.

Kudos to Members of Parliament Teo Ser Luck and Irene Ng for raising this issue recently in Parliament.

I think our urban planners should walk around more often. They could, for example, go to Bedok MRT station, and see for themselves, the large numbers of bicycles chained to any available guard rail and tree.

They should also ride a bicycle along the East Coast Park and feel the wind blowing in their faces. This is far more enjoyable than being squeezed with other commuters in air-conditioned "comfort".

Some major cities are already pushing bicycles as an alternative means of transport.

Paris, Barcelona, Geneva, Stockholm, Oslo and Vienna offer bicycles for rent as they try to reduce the number of cars in big cities, improve air quality and provide a fun alternative to trains.

In Paris and Barcelona thousands have bought low-cost annual passes to rent bicycles from hundreds of stations located throughout the cities.

Organisers of the 2012 London Olympics are considering a ban on the use of cars at all the Games' major venues, meaning spectators would have to walk, cycle or use public transport.

Singapore should consider these creative approaches to solving traffic congestion instead of tweaking ERPs and COEs.

We can't share the pavement
Today Online 19 Mar 08;

Letter from Jason Chiam Chiah Sern, Redhill
Letter from K W Wong, Tampines
Letter from EDMOND NG CHOON CHAI, Sembawang
Letter from LAI YEW CHAN, Tampines
Letter from Yeow Mei Sin, Upper Bukit Timah

No matter what rules are introduced, the attitudes of pedestrians and cyclists will determine if they can share Singapore's pavements.

How many times have pedestrians been guilty of walking on clearly designated cycling paths along the East Coast Park when they have their own footpaths? I know I have.

I have lived in Tampines for almost 20 years and worked in Tampines Central for three years. I walk to and from my office every day.

I have often seen cyclists riding through crowded bus stops instead of cycling around them. They assume pedestrians will give way if they ring their bells. This is extremely inconsiderate and dangerous.

Cyclists also ride along the corridors or walkways of HDB blocks. I once witnessed a near-collision when a cyclist sped around a blind corner.

I regularly use the footpath from Tampines Central to Tampines Street 71. I have seen as many as four cyclists riding abreast along the footpath at high speeds, forcing pedestrians onto the grass to avoid being hit.

I have also encountered inconsiderate cyclists talking on their mobile phones while riding. Some ride in a zig-zag manner, which is especially dangerous for the elderly, children and pregnant women.

There is a neighbourhood centre in Tampines Avenue 3, which has several schools nearby. It is common to see hordes of cyclists on the pavement there.

I hope that decision-makers walk around Tampines to assess how dangerous the situation really is for pedestrians.

I have yet to see a single cyclist push their bike if the situation calls for it. They just ring their bells instead.

I concur with Ravi Veloo, that it would be almost impossible for pedestrians and cyclists to share the pavement.

A cyclist recently rode into my arm as I stretched to press the button at a traffic light. This is not my first unpleasant encounter with cyclists.

On another occasion, a cyclist knocked one of the grocery bags I was carrying out of my hand. He did not apologise or even help to pick up the bag.

Pedestrians encounter cyclists every day on the pavement. It is intimidating to be confronted by two cyclists — riding abreast on the pavement — when neither of them want to give way.

I have yet to see a cyclist dismount and push his bicycle along the pavement.

I feel it is unrealistic to make it legal for cyclists to use the pavement, based on the Tampines studies.

If the authorities want an accurate study of more representative situations faced by most pedestrians, I suggest the road from Sembawang MRT station to Admiralty, where the pavements are not as wide as those in Tampines.

The pilot study at Tampines has been augmented by public education. However, would this undo the deep-seated roots of inconsiderate or rash behaviour?

Cyclists on the pavement may be more careless as they are less likely to be seriously injured if they collide with pedestrians than with vehicles on the road.

My own experience as a Tampines resident bears this out. I often have to look behind me whenever I walk along the pavement, as many cyclists are unconcerned about whizzing past pedestrians without warning.

The police's assurances of taking action against reckless cyclists is cold comfort. Should pedestrians have to wait for cyclists to be reckless before they are booked?

There should have been a comprehensive law — enacted in tandem with the Tampines study — that encompasses major and minor offences when cycling on pavement.

We should not tolerate inconsiderate riding on the pavement, any more than we do not condone inconsiderate driving on the roads.

Ravi Veloo has highlighted a key issue: Why should a stretch of pavement in Tampines be used as the sample for the rest of Singapore?

If the Tampines study leads to a ruling that allows cyclists to share the pavement with pedestrians, this would create a less conducive living environment in Singapore.

Why has the study been confined to just one stretch of pavement in Tampines? Why not conduct a more in-depth survey?

As a regular user of the East Coast Park, I feel many cyclists are unsociable. Many prefer to ride on the pavement meant for pedestrians. Many of these errant cyclists ring their bells to warn pedestrians, then speed off laughing.

On several occasions, I even witnessed speeding cyclists almost knock down elderly or very young pedestrians who were in their way.

Signs on overhead bridges and underpasses stating that cycling is strictly prohibited are often defaced by vandals.

Ravi Veloo is correct in saying that our pavements are usually too narrow for cyclists and pedestrians. I often accompany my 83-year-old mother on her morning walks. She uses a walking stick and is understandably slow. I walk alongside her and hold her arm to give her confidence.

But the sight of an elderly lady holding a walking stick hardly deters cyclists from ringing their bells rudely to warn her to move aside. I have been so irritated that I have taken to yelling at these cyclists. Instead of apologising, they snigger and ride away, leaving my poor mother quite shaken.

Cyclists should be given their own road lanes to ride in. Errant cyclists should also be penalised.

Like Ravi Veloo, I am also curious why Rule 28 of the Road Traffic Rules exists but is hardly enforced.

Related articles

Is there a place for cyclists in Singapore transport system?

Li Xueying, Straits Times 7 Mar 08;

More bicycle parking facilities at MRT stations, bus interchanges
Channel NewsAsia 18 Feb 08;


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Singapore Land Transport Authority funds more R&D

Leong Wee Keat, Today Online 19 Mar 08;

A $50-million Land Transport Innovation Fund to promote research and development efforts was launched by Transport Minister Raymond Lim yesterday. While this will bolster collaboration on innovative projects between the Land Transport Authority (LTA) and its partners, commuters and transport users here, too, stand to benefit.

Take for instance the Ez-Link card, one of the 50 projects initiated thus far by the LTA with industry partners. It gave consumers the ease and convenience of using one card to make e-payments for their everyday needs.

Under the new scheme, a proposed project must support LTA's vision for a people-centred land transport system, in order to get funding. Applications must also be from a Singapore-based organisation, with disbursements capped at $1 million per project and up to a year's trial period.

"LTA aims to encourage its partners and suppliers to come forth with innovative ideas and actively participate in shaping Singapore's land transport development for the future," said Mr Lim at the inaugural Land Transport Excellence Awards, at which 14 individuals and organisations were honoured.

SMRT, which won the most customer friendly transport award, told Today it has not made a decision whether to appeal the $387,176 fine imposed by the LTA for January's seven-hour disruption in train services between Tanah Merah and Pasir Ris MRT stations.

SMRT has until Monday to decide.

LTA launches S$50m fund to promote innovation in transport sector
Channel NewsAsia 19 Mar 08;

A S$50 million fund has been set up to promote innovation in the transport sector.

Transport Minister Raymond Lim launched the new fund at the inaugural Land Transport Excellence Awards on Tuesday evening.

Last year, real-time bus arrival information screens were installed at Orchard Road to take the guesswork out of commuting. It is one of 50 innovative projects initiated by the Land Transport Authority (LTA) with industry partners to make travelling more convenient.

Now the LTA wants to further build on such partnerships with the launch of the S$50 million Land Transport Innovation Fund.

Mr Lim said: "This fund will strengthen LTA's collaborative efforts with its local and overseas partners, tap on their innovation capabilities, and catalyse Singapore's pursuit of innovation excellence in the delivery of land transport.

"LTA aims to encourage its partners and suppliers to come forth with innovative ideas and actively participate in shaping Singapore's land transport development for the future."

Innovation was recognised at the first Land Transport Excellence Awards ceremony. Sixty projects were submitted for consideration.

Categories included "Most Eco-friendly Transport", which went to SMART Taxi for its fleet of cabs which run on compressed natural gas.

Diverting the Geylang River and soft marine clay were two problems Sembawang Engineers and Constructors faced when building the Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway (KPE).

However, the company still managed to build the stretch of KPE from the Nicoll Highway to the PIE on time and without compromising on quality or safety. The challenging work earned Sembawang Engineers and Constructors the "Best Managed Project Award".

Two individuals were also recognised for their contributions to developing the transport sector.

The "Distinguished Contribution Award" was presented to Mr Fock Siew Wah, who was Chairman of the LTA from 1995 to 2002.

He encouraged LTA to use technology to improve traffic systems and customer service. Such initiatives included Electronic Road Pricing, the first congestion management tool of its kind in the world.

Dr Michael Fam, Chairman of the Mass Rapid Transit Corporation from 1983 to 1991, received the Special Contribution Award. He led the team that completed the North-South Line, ahead of schedule and well within budget. - CNA/ch


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Winner of the Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize helped make Newater a reality

$300,000 prize for his water innovation
Winner of the Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize helped make Newater a reality
Tania Tan, Straits Times 19 Mar 08;

HE SET out to mimic the workings of the human cell, where the walls act as filters, separating nutrients from waste.

Applying that idea to water treatment, Dr Andrew Benedek came up with membranes which make dirty water clean.

His work has revolutionised water treatment, providing a cheaper, safer and more effective way to purify water than using chemicals.

For that, Dr Benedek was named the inaugural winner of the Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize yesterday.

'Words fail to describe how delighted I am at this honour,' said the 64-year-old Canadian chemical engineer via a live video feed from San Diego, in the United States, where he now lives.

He will be presented the $300,000 prize in June during the Singapore International Water Week - when more than 100 government leaders and industry players will discuss solutions to the world's water woes.

Dr Benedek, a past winner of the Stockholm Water Prize, the water industry's equivalent of the Nobel Prize, said that the Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize was 'by far the greatest accolade I've received'.

He added: 'Singapore is at the forefront of water technology, which makes this one of the highest honours.'

His more than 30 years of research in membranes has spawned an entire industry. Today, more than 15 million cu m of water are treated daily with membranes worldwide, with that figure growing by 20 per cent annually.

Dr Benedek's research also made the development of Newater a reality, said PUB chief executive Khoo Teng Chye, who was on hand to make the announcement yesterday.

Dr Benedek, a father of four, beat out a field of 39 other nominees from 15 countries, said Mr Khoo.

The intensive selection process involved two committees headed by PUB chairman Tan Gee Paw and chairman of the National Research Foundation Tony Tan, respectively.

In a 2002 interview with Canadian business magazine Corporate Knights, the son of a shoemaker recounted how he 'really wanted to make a difference in the world' by addressing potential water shortage problems caused by rapid urbanisation and pollution.

'I really thought that these problems could best be solved by membranes,' he had said.

After fleeing to Canada from his home in Budapest during the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, Dr Benedek later studied chemical engineering and began his research in waste water treatment.

In 1980, he founded Zenon Environmental - a company devoted to bringing membrane technology for water treatment to the world.

Zenon became one of the world's largest membrane developers, with estimated sales of C$250 million (S$346 million) in 2006. It was sold that year to US-based GE Water.

Dr Benedek has since shifted his research focus to converting waste into fuel, although he still hopes that others will continue to address the world's water problems.

His wish: that membrane technology will one day allow the creation of a cheap portable water purification unit that can be used in villages.

'I'm still very excited about what membranes can do and their potential to change the world,' he said.

Even polluted water can be made clean with membranes
Straits Times 19 Mar 08;

PICKED as the first winner of the Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize, Dr Andrew Benedek will receive $300,000, a gold medallion and an award certificate at a ceremony to be held during the Singapore International Water Week in June.

This is an excerpt from his citation for the prize:

'Dr Andrew Benedek was the man who revolutionised conventional water treatment. As a result of his pioneering work in membranes, he showed how water can be treated to drinking standards, even (water) that comes from highly polluted sources.

'Utilities in the United States, Europe, Japan, Australia and Singapore have incorporated the use of his membranes in their water treatment processes. Other countries, such as China, India and those in the Middle East and South America, have followed suit. The wider usage has led to lower prices of membranes which make them affordable for more countries to adopt in water treatment as well.

'Dr Benedek's outstanding innovation in membranes has provided sustainable water solutions to the world. His contribution has benefited humanity and, for that, Dr Benedek has the honour of being the first recipient of the prestigious Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize.'

Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize awarded to Dr Andrew Benedek
Channel NewsAsia 18 Mar 08;

SINGAPORE: A Canadian water technology expert has been selected as the inaugural winner of the prestigious Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize.

Dr Andrew Benedek has helped to solve the world's water woes by pioneering a low-pressure membrane technology to produce drinking water from just about any water source.

This has opened up new possibilities, especially in areas that do not have access to clean water.

For his various contributions in solving the world's water problems, Dr Benedek is awarded the S$300,000 inaugural Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize.

The Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize is an international award recognising an individual or organisation for outstanding contributions in water management.

Speaking via video conference, Dr Benedek said he hopes his membrane technology can benefit remote parts of the world.

"I'm hoping that in the next decade, we'll be able to have what Singapore has done on the large scale – to recycle water in small Asian villages and in areas which are short of water," he said.

According to the UN Population Fund, more than 3.3 billion people will live in an urban environment by 2008. This is likely to rise to five billion by 2030.

In Asia alone, the urban population will double to 2.6 billion between 2000 and 2030. This trend will put great pressure on the need for drinking water and Dr Benedek's discovery is expected to benefit future generations.

The panel of judges for the Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize said that Dr Benedek was chosen because his revolutionary water treatment method stood out among 39 international nominations from 15 countries. His technology was also instrumental in helping Singapore in its development of NEWater.

His low-pressure membrane technology is used in the pre-treatment stage of churning out recycled water in the ultra-filtration process.

Its use is also preferred over conventional water purification technologies as it is cost effective, resulting in lower operating costs and greater ease of operation.

Moreover, widespread use of low-pressure membranes has made the technology even more affordable – a boon to small towns and villages in dire need of clean potable water.

Besides Singapore, utility providers in the US, Europe, China, India, the Middle East, South America, Japan and Australia have also incorporated Dr Benedek's membranes into their water treatment processes.

Khoo Teng Chye, Chief Executive of PUB, said: "It has been critical in solving our water problem... and I believe this is something that will be increasingly important throughout the cities of the world, throughout the cities of Asia and even in small villages."

Dr Benedek, who is based in the US, will receive his prize as well as a gold medallion and award certificate during the Singapore International Water Week in June.- CNA/so

Canadian scientist is first winner of LKY Water Prize
Matthew Phan, Business Times 19 Mar 08;

A CANADIAN was yesterday named inaugural recipient of the $300,000 Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize, to be awarded during the Singapore International Water Week in June. Andrew Benedek's pioneering work in low-pressure membranes has allowed even highly polluted used water to be treated to drinking standards.

Many countries are benefiting from his work, with utilities around the world - including the Public Utilities Board in Singapore - using his membranes in their designs.

Low-pressure membranes 'will continue to become more and more cost- effective, reliable and space-efficient', just like computers and telecommunications devices have, Dr Benedek said. 'I'm hoping that in the next decade, it will happen in small Asian villages - to recycle water and make water available even where it is scarce.'

Ironically, the 64-year- old founder of Zenon Environmental, a provider of water treatment systems since sold to GE in June 2006, has moved on to tackle non-water issues - in particular, global warming and clean energy.

After work on monitoring global warming in the oceans, Dr Benedek now focuses on finding ways to make fuel from waste.

'Energy is an economic problem and an environmental problem, but also a security problem,' he said.

Besides sitting on the boards of various businesses and organisations, Dr Benedek is managing director of UTS BiogasTechnik, a German pioneer in biogas generation from waste.

'I didn't want to enter any kind of business or research that was competing with the company I sold to GE, so I started getting back to basic research,' said the scientist, who earned a PhD in chemical engineering from the University of Washington, Seattle, in 1970.

He had studied the same subject for his bachelor's degree at McGill University in Canada, then joined the petrochemical industry briefly. But the stint showed him the effect of pollution on the environment, and he decided to specialise in the field for his post-graduate work.


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Tiny Mexican porpoise near extinct from fish nets

Tomas Sarmiento, Yahoo News 18 Mar 08;

The vaquita, a tiny stubby-nosed porpoise found only in Mexico's Sea of Cortez, is on the brink of extinction as more die each year in fishing nets than are being born, biologists say.

A drop in vaquita numbers to as few as 150 from around 600 at the start of the decade could see the famously shy animal go the same way as the Chinese river dolphin, which was declared all but extinct in 2006.

"The urgency now is to prevent the vaquita becoming extinct," Omar Vidal, the WWF conservation group's director in Mexico, told Reuters in San Felipe, a fishing town in the upper Gulf of California, or Sea of Cortez, where the vaquitas live.

"The latest studies suggest that we have perhaps one or two years for that," said Vidal, one of a team that has been battling to preserve the species for over 10 years.

The world's smallest porpoise, growing to a maximum of 5 feet long and gray in color, vaquitas are so timid that they are hardly ever sighted.

They shun the showy acrobatics of other porpoises, and when they come up for air they poke their odd-looking faces, with their black-circled eyes and beak, above the surface for just a second or two before diving quietly back below.

Identified only 50 years ago when some skulls were found, vaquitas are tracked using underwater microphones to pick up the high frequency clicks they use to communicate.

TANGLED IN FISHING NETS

The drop in numbers suggests they are getting tangled in fishing nets at a faster rate than they can reproduce.

Female vaquitas only produce young once every two years and the genetic pool is now too small for effective breeding.

Meanwhile mesh gillnets used to catch sea bass, mackerel, shrimp and sharks also trap and drown air-breathing vaquitas, whose name is Spanish for "little cow."

The government is trying to persuade some fishermen to ditch their nets and start conservation-based tourism businesses, like boat trips to see marine life.

But one person in four in the area lives off fishing and few want to give up a trade where a small fishing boat can haul in 441 pounds (200 kg) of blue shrimp, worth thousands of dollars to the export market, in a single day.

"We've been fishermen all our lives. It's what we do," said Tomas Ceballos, 51, talking over the top of a government official trying to promote a scheme of financial incentives to start tourism projects.

Conservationists are also trying to get fishermen to switch to new nets that are less likely to trap vaquita.

Jose Campoy, head of a marine reserve set up in 1993 to protect endangered species in the area, said one vaquita death a year in nets was too many for the struggling species.

Environment Minister Juan Elvira Quesada said the government would spend $10 million this year on protecting the vaquita. "Every day that goes by is a lost day," he said.

(Writing by Catherine Bremer, editing by Sandra Maler)


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Sea lions at a US dam sentenced to death

Joseph B. Frazier, Associated Press Yahoo News 19 Mar 08;

Traps, pyrotechnics and beanbags shot at sea lions have failed to deter the annual springtime feast of threatened salmon at a Columbia River dam, so federal authorities gave some of them a death sentence on Tuesday.

The National Marine Fisheries Service authorized Oregon and Washington officials to first attempt to catch the sea lions that arrive at the base of the Bonneville Dam and hold them 48 hours to see whether an aquarium, zoo or similar facility will take them. Otherwise, they could be euthanized, along with those that avoid trapping.

About 60 of the California sea lions, identified by branding, scars or other markings, were deemed the worst offenders and qualify for "immediate removal."

One, branded C404, became something of a celebrity because of his ability to work his way into the fish ladders of the dam, and even into the window where upriver-bound salmon are counted to determine the size of later runs. Many sea lions have been coming to the dams for years.

Fidelia Andy, chairwoman of the Columbia Intertribal fish Commission, said the order "was the right decision at the right time" and asked for "the public's patience and support while management activities proceed."

The ruling followed three meetings of a task force comprising commercial and sport fishermen, treaty tribes and animal rights interests.

But John Balzar, spokesman for the Humane Society of the United States, said the idea that sea lions must be killed to save salmon was "entirely bogus."

He said fishermen catch three times as many salmon as the sea lions eat, and Oregon and Washington have proposed higher fishing quotas. Federal estimates are that hydroelectric dams in the Columbia system kill nearly 60 percent of juvenile salmon headed downriver, he said.

The plan to shoot sea lions, he said, coincides with estimates that this year's spring chinook run will be one of the biggest in decades.

Sea lions are protected under the 1972 Marine Mammals Protection Act. An amendment permits the killing of sea lions if Columbia River states get federal permission. Oregon and Washington asked for the permission in 2006, and Idaho offered its support.

Such permission has been granted only once before — in the 1990s for sea lions in the Ballard Locks in Puget Sound in Washington, where five animals were identified as offenders that drastically diminished a steelhead run that has yet to recover.

Three were taken in by an aquatic park before they were killed. The fate of the two others has not been made public.

Sea lion populations have soared since they and other marine mammals were covered under the 1972 act. They numbered about 1,000 in the 1930s, when they were hunted and used, among other purposes, for dog food. They are thought to number about 240,000 today.

Sharon Young with the Humane Society of the United States said Tuesday the group is studying the documents to decide whether to challenge the order in court.

The order applies to sea lions observed eating salmon or steelhead below the dam between Jan. 1 and May 31. The authorization is valid until June 30, 2012, and can be extended for five years. It can be revoked by the National Marine Fisheries Service on 72 hours notice.

U.S. to let states kill sea lions to save salmon
Teresa Carson, Reuters 18 Mar 08;

PORTLAND, Oregon (Reuters) - Washington and Oregon can start killing sea lions that feed on migrating salmon to help preserve dwindling U.S. Pacific Northwest salmon populations, a federal agency said on Tuesday.

The National Marine Fisheries Service granted permission to the states to target as many as 85 sea lions a year near the Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River. Oregon's Department of Fish and Wildlife said removal will start after April 1.

Salmon-gobbling pinnipeds have been a problem in West Coast waters for over a decade and at Bonneville Dam for about five years. About 100 California sea lions make the 150-mile (240-km) trip upriver to feast on spawning salmon channeling into the dam's fish ladders, according to Oregon.

Authorities have tried to deter the sea lions by installing physical barriers and driving them off with rubber bullets, firecrackers and other noise-makers with little success.

Only sea lions seen gobbling salmon during between January 1 and May 31 can be killed, according to the order. Before sea lions are killed, they must be trapped and held for 48 hours while fisheries managers try to find them a home at a zoo or aquarium.

There is a provision, however, that allows sea lions to be shot in the water if the animals are not easily captured. The decision raised the ire of one animal protection group.

"This is a waste of money, time and lives and diverts attention from the real problems the fish face," Sharon Young, marine issues field director for The Humane Society of the United States said. The HSUS supports "non-lethal harassment" of sea lions at Bonneville Dam.

The decision comes just in time for the peak of the spring salmon run in April and May. Washington, Oregon and Idaho were required to ask permission because the sea lions are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

A male sea lion, which can reach 1,000 pounds (454 kg), consumes about 30 pounds (13.6 kg) or five to seven fish a day. The National Marine Fisheries Service estimates that the sea lions ate nearly 4,000 salmon last year, which accounted for about 5 percent of the spring salmon run.

About one-third of the salmon eaten are endangered, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

State and federal governments have spent billions trying to protect the once abundant fish and fishery managers have also proposed a virtual shutdown of salmon fishing this year in California and Oregon coastal waters.

(Editing by Daisuke Wakabayashi and Eric Walsh)


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Rabbit fever hits Thailand

Today Online 19 Mar 08;

BANGKOK — There is an emerging disease in Thailand – rabbit fever or tularemia, The Bangkok Post reported yesterday.

The director-general of the Disease Control Department, Mr Thawat Sundarachan, said the first victim was a 37-year-old woman who died in Kui Buri district, south of the capital, in October last year. Dr Thawat said the woman had been suffering from cancer, and that the cancer might have made her too weak to fight the disease.

The Thai government has dismissed concerns about an outbreak and urged the public not to panic over the news of the woman's death.

The woman reportedly kept many rabbits in her house and could have been infected by Francisella tularensis, the bacterium that causes the disease, through inhaling the breath or coming into contact with the bodily secretions of her infected pets.

Rabbit fever is a disease borne by rodents and rabbits that is typically found in North America and Europe.

The Bangkok Post reported that humans could also be infected by eating the meat of infected animals and by being bitten by fleas from infected animals.

Dr Thawat was quoted by the newspaper as saying rabbit fever could be cured with antibiotics only if patients see the doctor soon enough. Symptoms of the disease include fever, diarrhoea or swollen lymph nodes.

There is no threat of human-to-human transmission, Dr Thawat said.

Thailand has asked its Livestock Development Department to test animals randomly nationwide, and educate both the public and doctors on the disease as it is not covered in local medical textbooks.

When contacted by Today, Mr Goh Shih Yong, the assistant director of corporate communications for Singapore's Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority (AVA), said: "The disease has not been detected by AVA in animals in Singapore."


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Bird flu in Indonesia could mutate into human form: UN

Today Online 19 Mar 08;

ROME — The bird flu situation is "critical" in Indonesia, where the virus could mutate and cause a human pandemic, the United Nations food agency warned yesterday.

"The prevalence of avian influenza in Indonesia remains serious despite national and international containment efforts," the Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said in a statement.

The FAO's chief veterinary officer, Mr Joseph Domenech, said he was "deeply concerned that the high level of virus circulation in birds in the country could create conditions for the virus to mutate and to finally cause a human influenza pandemic."

H5N1 is endemic across nearly all of the sprawling archipelago nation, and of the total 105 human deaths reported there, 11 have occurred this year alone.

"The human mortality rate from bird flu in Indonesia is the highest in the world, and there will be more human cases if we do not focus more on containing the disease at source in animals," Mr Domenech said.

"Indonesia is facing an uphill battle against a virus that is difficult to contain," the statement said, urging improved surveillance and control measures.

"We have also observed that new H5N1 avian influenza virus strains have recently emerged, creating the possibility that vaccines currently in use may not be fully protecting poultry against the disease," Mr Domenech warned. — AFP

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Towards a competitive power market in Singapore

Business Times 18 Mar 08;

HUANENG'S clinching of Tuas Power (TP) after a hotly-contested sale last Friday is a precursor to several other upcoming developments which should reinforce the power sector here.

They mark important milestones in the liberalisation of Singapore's electricity and gas markets. The $4.2 billion purchase of TP by Huaneng, China's largest power producer, is significant in that it is the first time a major power station here - previously always state-owned - has passed into private hands.

In TP's case, the genco will now be 100 per cent Chinese-owned. The government's earlier argument for opening the genco sale to foreign investors was that no one can walk off with a power station. Besides, Huaneng, from all the indications, intends to be a long-term power player here. Temasek Holdings' divestment of PowerSeraya and Tuas Power is up next, with the entire exercise to be completed by mid-2009.

Why is the genco divestment important? Together, the three account for over 80 per cent of Singapore's electricity generating capacity. So private ownership - with new capital injections for expansions - will hopefully spark off even keener competition (than already exists) among the trio. TP and PowerSeraya, for instance, plan to build new cogeneration plants on Jurong Island to supply other utilities, like steam and cooling water, to industries there.

Will privatisation result in lower electricity bills? Realistically, there is unlikely to be cheaper electricity, at least not in the short-term - no thanks to the relentless climb in oil prices. (This impacts also current piped gas supplies from both Indonesia and Malaysia, as the gas contracts are pegged to oil prices.) Nevertheless, competition - including from smaller players like SembCorp and KepCorp - should at least help ensure tariff increases are kept relatively modest and in check.

The impact of the genco divestment will perhaps be more apparent in the medium to longer-term, when expansion projects or upgradings by the new owners - with experience in other technologies, like say coal, or with access to cheaper fuels because of economies of scale - result in greater operating efficiency. Temasek has said as much - that TP will benefit from the experience and resources that Huaneng brings. Next month, Singapore will also pick a sole buyer or aggregator for liquefied natural gas (LNG), imports of which will start here in 2012. LNG will then supplement both imported fuel oil and piped natural gas.

This will help stem power outages arising from any disruptions in piped gas deliveries, as has happened before. Besides, Indonesia and Malaysia will want to keep some of their gas for their own future needs. Finally, to ensure the gas market operates competitively and freely, the Energy Market Authority is also putting the final touches to a gas network code here - expected to be ready around July - governing players' market behaviour.

By then, all earlier snags - like new players' inability to access incumbents' gas pipelines - should have been ironed out for a truly competitive power market here.


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Dubai to join 'Earth Hour' blackout

Yahoo News 18 Mar 08;

The Gulf city state of Dubai is to join two dozen cities around the world later this month in turning off the lights for one hour to raise awareness about global warming.

"Dubai is the first Arab city to declare its support for Earth Hour" slated for March 29, said a statement on Tuesday by sponsors of the move in Dubai, one of the seven members of the United Arab Emirates.

The UAE has the world's largest ecological footprint, meaning it consumes the most natural resources per capita, according to a 2004 report by the conservation group WWF that measures the environmental sustainability of a state.

Residents in Dubai were urged to switch off all non-essential lights for one hour at 8:00 pm local time (1600 GMT) on the day "to send a message around the world that we have the power to take action against global warming."

They were also asked to turn off non-essential appliances "to show how people working together ... can make a difference."

The "Earth Hour" initiative, which is managed by WWF, started in Australia's biggest city Sydney last year when an estimated 2.2 million people flicked the switch.

Organiser Andy Ridley said in February that Sydney's 60-minutes of darkness generated huge interest around the world and 23 other cities had signed up to be part of the 2008 event. They include five more cities in Australia and four in each of the United States, Canada and Denmark.

The initiative in Dubai, which has more than 1.3 million residents, will be led by government conglomerate Dubai Holding and the Dubai Water and Electricity Authority.

You CAN make a difference

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Arctic Ice Returns, Thin and Tentative

Andrea Thompson, LiveScience.com Yahoo News 18 Mar 08;

Arctic ice has reformed rapidly this winter after a record summer low, but it still covers less of the Arctic Ocean than it did in previous decades, NASA scientists announced today in an update of the states of Arctic and Antarctic sea ice.

March is the month where Arctic sea ice traditionally hits its highest extent after the Northern Hemisphere winter and Antarctic sea ice reaches its lowest extent. NASA satellites have monitored sea ice coverage over both poles for nearly 40 years.

Arctic sea ice reached a record low this past summer, with 23 percent less sea ice cover than the previous record low and 39 percent less than the average amount that has previously spanned the Arctic Ocean in the summer months.

This extraordinarily high melt opened the fabled Northwest Passage and spurred scientists' worries about whether the Arctic ice had reached a tipping point, where melting begins to spiral out of control.

NASA's satellite observations showed that while this winter's ice extent didn't dip below previous records, it was still well below the average amount seen in the past.

Antarctic sea ice has largely remained stable over the years of NASA's observations. The Antarctic has little long-term sea ice and a different climate and weather regime than the Arctic.

Ice ages

The area of ocean covered by sea ice isn't the only factor in the "health" of the Arctic ice.

Arctic sea ice comes in two types: older, thicker perennial ice that has survived at least one summer melt season and younger, thinner seasonal ice that forms in the winter and melts again in the summer.

Seasonal ice melts more easily because it is thin and salty, and so "it's flexible and crushable and more susceptible to winds and currents," said Seelye Martin of NASA's Cryospheric Sciences Program.

Colder temperatures in parts of the Arctic increased the amount of thin, seasonal ice that formed this winter. So while Arctic sea ice was dominated by multiyear, perennial ice in past decades , it is mostly now younger, newly-formed ice.

The amount of older, perennial sea ice has substantially decreased over the past few years, and "has reached an all-time minimum," Martin said. This low is in part due to the substantial 2007 summer melt, attributed in part to climate change.

Future of the Arctic

What these colder temperatures and the slightly higher winter extent this year will mean come summer is uncertain. But because the majority of the ice is young and thin, it would be more susceptible to summer melt.

Whether any perennial sea ice will recover is also uncertain, but "it's not likely that the perennial ice cover will recover [to where it was in the past] in the near future," said Josefino Comiso of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

Some of the seasonal ice could become perennial sea ice if summer conditions are cooler than normal this year, Meier noted, as some of the seasonal ice has formed higher north than ever before.

But, "one cold summer is not going to do it, one cold winter is not going to do it," Meier said. Numerous years of colder temperatures would be needed to restore the Arctic sea ice to where it was in the 1980s, and that is not likely to happen with the increasing levels of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, he added.

Arctic sea ice builds, but vulnerable
Seth Borenstein, Associated Press Yahoo News 18 Mar 08;

Critical Arctic sea ice this winter made a tenuous partial recovery from last summer's record melt, federal scientists said Tuesday. But that's an illusion, like a Hollywood movie set, scientist Walter Meier of the National Snow and Ice Data Center said. The ice is very thin and vulnerable to heavy melting again this summer.

Overall, Arctic sea ice has shrunk precipitously in the past decade and scientists blame global warming caused by humans.

Last summer, Arctic ice shrank to an area that was 27 percent smaller than the previous record. This winter, it recovered to a maximum of 5.8 million square miles, up 4 percent and the most since 2003, NASA ice scientist Josefino Comiso said. It is still a bit below the long-term average level for this time of year.

"What's going on underneath the surface is really the key thing," Meier said in an interview following a news conference. What's happening is not enough freezing.

Summer Arctic sea ice is important because it's intricately connected to weather conditions elsewhere on the globe. It affects wind patterns, temperatures farther south and even the Gulf Stream, acting as a sort of refrigerator for the globe, according to scientists.

"What happens there, matters here," said Waleed Abdalati, chief ice scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "Climate for the period of human record has depended on the ice being there."

Viewing the Arctic from space via NASA satellites might make you think the Arctic ice cover is on its way back.

But more than 70 percent of that sea ice is new, thin and salty, having formed only since September, Comiso said. The more important ice is perennial sea ice that lasts through the summer, and that ice has hit record low levels.

Compared to the 1980s, the Arctic has lost more than half of its perennial sea ice and three-quarters of its "tough as nails" sea ice that is six years or older, Meier said. The amount of lost old sea ice is twice the area of the state of Texas, he said.

On top of that, a change in Arctic atmospheric pressure this winter is pushing a large amount of the valuable older ice out of the Arctic to melt, Meier said.

That means next summer when temperatures warm, expect lots of melting, the scientists said.

"We're in for a world of hurt this summer," ice center senior scientist Mark Serreze told The Associated Press. Depending on the weather, there could be as much melting this year as last, maybe more, Serreze and Meier said.

At the South Pole, in Antarctica, sea ice seems stable, even slightly above normal, the scientists reported. However, ice levels in Antarctica always are quite different from the Arctic and aren't as connected to the world's weather.

Thickest, oldest Arctic ice is melting

Deborah Zabarenko, Yahoo News 18 Mar 08;

The thickest, oldest and toughest sea ice around the North Pole is melting, a bad sign for the future of the Arctic ice cap, NASA satellite data showed on Tuesday.

"Thickness is an indicator of long-term health of sea ice, and that's not looking good at the moment," Walt Meier of the National Snow and Ice Data Center told reporters in a telephone briefing.

This adds to the litany of disturbing news about Arctic sea ice, which has been retreating over the last three decades, especially last year, when it ebbed to its lowest level.

Scientists have said the trend is spurred by human-generated climate change.

Melting Arctic ice does not raise sea levels as the melting of glaciers on Greenland or Antarctica could, but it does contribute to global warming when reflective white ice is replaced by dark water that absorbs the sun's heat.

Using satellites that measure how much ice covers water in the Arctic and Antarctic, Meier and other climate scientists found a steep drop in the amount of perennial ice -- the hardy, thick ice that is over a year old -- in the north.

The oldest Arctic ice that has survived six years or more is the toughest, and even that shrank dramatically, Meier and the other scientists said.

OLD ICE "TOUGH AS NAILS"

Some 965,300 square miles of perennial ice have been lost -- about one and a half times the area of Alaska -- a 50 percent decrease between February 2007 and February 2008, Meier said.

The oldest "tough as nails" perennial ice has decreased by about 75 percent this year, losing 579,200 square miles (1.5 million sq kms, or about twice the area of Texas, he said.

This doesn't mean the Arctic is open water during the winter, but it does mean that in many areas, the stronger perennial ice is being replaced by younger, frailer new ice that is more easily disturbed by wind and warm sea temperatures.

"It's like looking at a Hollywood set," Meier said of an Arctic largely covered with younger ice. "It may look OK but if you could see behind you'd see ... it's just empty. And what we're seeing with the ice cover is it's becoming more and more empty underneath the ice cover."

Perennial ice is also vulnerable to a recurring pattern of swirling winds and currents known as the Arctic oscillation, which ejects the old ice out of the zone around the pole and aims it south where warmer waters will melt it.

The scientists also analyzed satellite data for Antarctica but found less dramatic change there.

This was attributed to the difference in the two polar regions. The Arctic is an ocean surrounded by land while the Antarctic is a continent surrounded by ocean.

However, the scientists noted sharp warming on the Antarctic Peninsula, which stretches northward from the southern continent toward South America.


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Freak Winter Weather: Fluke or Fuel in Warming Debate?

James Owen
National Geographic News 18 Mar 08;

Freak winter weather has struck almost every area of the Northern Hemisphere with bizarre extremes in recent months.

Snow fell on usually sweltering Baghdad and paralyzed central China, while the season barely registered in Scandinavia, where some countries have seen the warmest winter in centuries.

The unusual season seems to be the result of a "perfect storm" of weather patterns occurring at once, experts say.

But what does this mean for the debate about global warming?

Balmy Arctic, Snowy Middle East

Meteorologists in Sweden this month reported the country's mildest winter since record-keeping began in 1756.

Neighboring Finland also registered its warmest winter on record, with average temperatures about 9 degrees Fahrenheit (5 degrees Celsius) higher than average. And Arctic Norway is heading for its mildest winter since monitoring started more than a century ago.

Meanwhile, in the United Kingdom, bluebell flowers bloomed in February for the first time, according to London's Natural History Museum. The plant usually flowers in April and May.

But elsewhere in the Northern Hemisphere, the winter has been notable for its severity.

Snowstorms paralyzed central China in January. At least 60 lives were lost and some 5.8 million people were left stranded at train stations nationwide (see photos of China's blizzard).

Blizzards also hit the Middle East the same month, blanketing the region in rarely seen snow. Many residents of Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, saw their first snowfall, according to reports.

Swaths of North America, meanwhile, suffered their heaviest snow since the 1960s.

Last month, much of the northeastern United States was buried under 2 feet (0.6 meters) of snow. New York's Central Park saw its biggest single snowfall—26.9 inches (68 centimeters)—since records started in the 1860s.

These chilly events appear to be supported by the latest global climate data.

Climate research centers including the U.K.'s Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research, and the Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, noted an average drop in global air temperature of 1.15 degrees Fahrenheit (0.64 degree Celsius) over the past year.

Are skeptics of climate change seizing on this season as evidence that global warming might not be happening?

Global Warming Skeptics Respond

Well-known global warming doubter Robert Balling, a climatologist at Arizona State University, is guarded in his response to the unusual weather.

"While the trend is surprising, given no volcanic eruption [occurred to block sunlight and cause a global cool-down], I doubt the trend is statistically significant at this time," he commented.

"We both know that if we had seen a jump upward [in temperature], the global warming advocates would have had a field day," he added. "I find the skeptics to be far more cautious."

Fellow skeptic John Christy, of the Earth System Science Center at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, is indeed cautious.

The drop in global average temperature between January 2007 and January 2008 is most likely due to a shift from a minor El Niño warming event to a substantial La Niña cooling event, Christy said in an email.

La Niña is a natural weather system linked to unusually cool sea temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. El Niño, which has the reverse climatic effect, is characterized by much warmer Pacific temperatures.

The two alternating phases are usually separated by periods of one to three years, but the current switch occurred without an interval, accounting for the steep temperature swing, Christy explained.

"Regional weather conditions have large variability from year to year, especially in the northern hemisphere winter," he said.

"There is likely a small amount of the La Niña effect in the weather patterns in the northern latitudes, but a good bit is more likely [due to] the natural variations," Christy added.

"Someone, somewhere experiences a record high or low almost every winter."

The debate over human-caused global warming deals not with year-to-year variations but with slower changes occurring over decades, he said.

"Overall the global temperature trends we find are at the lowest warming rates among all of the projections by the array of models used in the [UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports]," Christy added.

Temperature Swing

As for the balmy conditions experienced in northern Europe, these are likely due to the influence of the North Atlantic Ocean, according to Simon Boxall of the National Oceanography Centre in the U.K.

Known as the North Atlantic Oscillation, the weather system is controlled by pressure systems over Iceland in the north and the Azores islands, west of Portugal, in the south.

"At the moment we've got relatively strong low-pressure systems over Iceland and highs over the Azores," Boxall said.

"That effectively channels [warmer] water over to northwest Europe," he said. "It also tends to draw in warmer, drier air from the sub-Sahara [region of Africa]."

The contrasting weather extremes in Europe and North America this winter "are not an indication of climate change," he said.

"Taking one year's worth of data as proving climate change either way is scientifically extremely dodgy," Boxall added.

But, he said, "I don't think there are any scientists working on studies of how climate is changing today who refute the fact that the climate as a whole is getting warmer."


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