Hong Kong airport project seen threatening rare dolphins

Reuters 27 Mar 08;

HONG KONG (Reuters) - A population of rare Chinese white dolphins in Hong Kong's coastal waters may be threatened by several upcoming construction projects including a proposed new airport runway, a dolphin conservation group has warned.

Around 200 Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins -- commonly called Chinese white dolphins -- survive in Hong Kong's western waters near the Chek Lap Kok international airport on Lantau island.

While the resident population of these pink-hued cetaceans has remained steady over the past decade, the Hong Kong Dolphin Conservation Society says pressure to expand capacity at Hong Kong's bustling aviation hub posed a serious threat.


"The proposed third runway is quite close to some important habitats so that will further bring some disturbance to the dolphin population," said Samuel Hung, the group's chairman.

Besides extensive reclamation for the runway, Hong Kong plans other major engineering projects in prime dolphin habitat, including a monumental 30-kilometre (19-mile) bridge link to neighboring Macau and a new town project on Lantau.

"There is already a lot of development pressure in that area and it poses a great threat to the dolphins so I think if there's an additional project, that will be quite a disaster for the dolphins," said Hung, who has researched the creatures for years.

The Hong Kong dolphins which form part of a 1,300-strong estuarine population at the mouth of the Pearl River, are also at risk from heavy marine traffic, overfishing and pollution.

(Reporting by James Pomfret; Editing by Alistair Scrutton)


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Asia must reverse massive deforestation: U.N.

Krittivas Mukherjee, Reuters 27 Mar 08;

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Parts of Asia are losing more than 28,000 square kilometers (10,800 square miles) of forest every year, a trend that must to be reversed immediately to fight climate change, a United Nations report said on Thursday.

Deforestation accounts for about 20 percent of global greenhouse gases -- trees soak up carbon dioxide when they grow and release it when they rot or are burnt.

A U.N. climate conference in Bali last year agreed to launch pilot projects to grant poor countries credits for slowing deforestation under a new long-term climate pact beyond 2012.

With 28,000 sq km of forests disappearing every year, South and Southeast Asia nations were among the most vulnerable to climate change, the report from the U.N.'s Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific said.

"If these trends continue, land-use emissions are likely to increase until 2050; much damage will already have been done by the time they start to recede," it said. "Reversing deforestation is thus critical."

Experts say reversing the trend would also help reduce the impact of soil erosion and drought, protect against floods and increase bio-diversity, and thus food security.

The report said governments in Asia and the Pacific were likely to face "eco-refugees" from their own countries and elsewhere in the region, seeking shelter from short term and long term environmental catastrophes.

"These refugees are likely to head to cities and towns, so government needs to plan for this influx both in the short term and long term." it said. "A regional food bank is one measure that countries can adopt for mutual assistance."

The report said it was unfair to expect developing countries to sacrifice growth to cut emissions, but it was also imperative to include them in all mitigating efforts.

"The solution is invest in carbon-reducing technologies," it said.

But the cost of returning greenhouse gas emissions to present levels by 2030 would be about $200 billion annually, the U.N says, through measures such as investing in energy efficiency and low-carbon renewable energy.

The report suggested top polluters such as China and India could held other developing countries in their region develop more practical and affordable green technologies.

"The countries of the region, whatever measure they undertake, need to develop policies that reduce greenhouse gas emissions," it said.

(Editing by Alex Richardson)


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Warning on plastic's toxic threat

David Shukman, BBC, 27 Mar 08

Plastic waste in the oceans poses a potentially devastating long-term toxic threat to the food chain, according to marine scientists.

Studies suggest billions of microscopic plastic fragments drifting underwater are concentrating pollutants like DDT.

Most attention has focused on dangers that visible items of plastic waste pose to seabirds and other wildlife.

But researchers are warning that the risk of hidden contamination could be more serious.

Dr Richard Thompson of the University of Plymouth has investigated how plastic degrades in the water and how tiny marine organisms, such as barnacles and sand-hoppers, respond.

He told the BBC: "We know that plastics in the marine environment will accumulate and concentrate toxic chemicals from the surrounding seawater and you can get concentrations several thousand times greater than in the surrounding water on the surface of the plastic.

"Now there's the potential for those chemicals to be released to those marine organisms if they then eat the plastic."

'Magnets for poison'

Once inside an organism, the risk is that the toxins may then be transferred into the organism itself.

"There are different conditions in the gut environment compared to surrounding sea water and so the conditions that cause those chemicals to accumulate on the surface of the plastic may well be reversed - leading to a release of those chemicals when the plastic is eaten."

According to Dr Thompson, the plastic particles "act as magnets for poisons in the ocean".

In an experiment involving plastic carrier bags immersed off a jetty in Plymouth harbour, he is assessing the time taken for them to fragment.

n related projects, he and colleagues have also added plastic powder to aquarium sediment to establish how much is ingested by marine life. Research on stretches of shoreline has shown that, at the microscopic level, plastic pollution is far worse than feared.

In a typical sample of sand, one-quarter of the total weight may be composed of plastic particles.

Studies have found that plastic traces have been identified on all seven continents.

Here on Midway, Matt Brown of the US Fish and Wildlife Service echoes the warnings of a long-term threat from plastic waste.

"The thing that's most worrisome about the plastic is its tenaciousness, its durability. It's not going to go away in my lifetime or my children's lifetimes.

"The plastic washing up on the beach today… if people don't take it away it'll still be here when my grandchildren walk these beaches."


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Two retention ponds to be built to alleviate Johor flood woes

The Star 27 Mar 08;

Ong said the floods had been occurring for the past 20 years but became a serious issue in the last 10 years due to development projects as the basic infrastructure could not handle the water flow.

JOHOR BARU: Two retention ponds and a water diversion system will be built to help alleviate the flood problems in Kulai.

Kulai MP Datuk Seri Ong Ka Ting said these were among the immediate measures to be taken to resolve the floods issue plaguing residents of Batu 21 in Kulai for the past 10 years.

The latest floods on Monday affected some 72 businesses and homes, particularly in Taman Nam Tat here, and caused substantial losses.

The retention ponds are to slow the water flow.

“The first retention pond will handle 50% of the water and is expected to be completed by July this year while the second one will handle the remaining half. This is still in the planning stages” he said, adding that the Drainage and Irrigation Department would implement the projects.

Ong, who visited the flood-hit areas yesterday, said the first retention pond cost about RM2.64mil, while the cost of the second one, which would be larger, had not been determined.

The MCA president said the Public Works Department and Kulai Municipal Council would clean drains in the area to ensure that rubbish did not block the water flow.

“We will also ask Tenaga Nasional Berhad to handle the problems caused by the company’s cables which are blocking some of the drains.

“I will have a meeting with TNB and other agencies on Monday to discuss the matter further,” he said.

He stressed that the cooperation of the relevant agencies was vital to solve the problem.

Ong said the floods had been occurring for the past 20 years but became a serious issue in the last 10 years due to development projects as the basic infrastructure could not handle the water flow.

“The floods has caused a lot of hardship for businesses and a lot of financial loss,” he said.

He added that he would work hard with agencies to come up with further ways to improve the drainage system.


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Best of our wild blogs: 27 Mar 08


31 Mar - 1 Apr: Code Blue features our reefs at NUS
a special event on the singapore celebrates our reefs blog

Semakau with Dr Dan and Commonwealth Youths
another glorious day out led by the naked hermit crabs on the nature scouters blog and wildfilms blog and the adventures with the naked hermit crabs blog photos and guestbook sketches, and leafmonkey blog and Dr Stan's Singapore blog.

Honorary Naked Hermit Crab: Prof Dan Rittschof
on the adventures with the naked hermit crabs blog

Seagrasses: I Am a Dugong Ambassador Part 2
on the flying fish friends blog

Dredging and works near Cyrene Reef
on the wildfilms blog

Earth Hour Singapore 2008
what's it all about and what you CAN do to support it on the metroblogging singapore blog. Also on the blooooooooooo blog.

TurnOFFyourLIGHTS
on the nature scouter blog

Jane Goodall Institute in Singapore
on the Asia is Green blog

Feeding fledglings
in the rain on the bird ecology blog

The House Crow
on the manta blog


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Can nothing make Singaporeans happy?

BHUTAN The happiest people on Earth have no cars, no condos, no luxuries &no worries

Ng Tze Yong in Bhutan, The New Paper 27 Mar 08;

WE know the textbook story.

1819. Singapore.

'We were just a small fishing village.'

And then - The Miracle.

Two centuries of blitzkrieg development later, Singapore is now a dream come true, a beacon that others follow.

But now too, Singaporeans seem to be yearning for a return to village life.

Or, at least, for the intangibles village life offers - homeliness, freedom, the simple joy of being truly alive.

Every year, thousands of Singaporeans travel to Third World countries and return smitten by lives less comfortable, yet somehow more seductive.

This romance never leaves. It lingers at the back of our minds, always waiting to push forward through the barrage of cares.

This search for That Missing Something forms the psyche of the Singaporean youth at one point or another. Usually, it stays well into adulthood.

It's not something unique to Singapore, but I'd say it's more pronounced.

Here, the search is deeper, the yearning more agonising but somehow, also less successful.

In this dream of the what-could-be, Bhutan is the Holy Grail of sorts.

When the Singapore International Foundation (SIF) called to invite The New Paper on a trip to cover its community projects in Bhutan, my first thoughts were: What's wrong with Shangri-La?

Like most Singaporeans, I knew the country only as a paradise on earth.

The country fascinates, because if Singapore (first-class city but ranked the most unhappy of all Asian countries) is the country with everything and nothing, then Bhutan is the country with nothing but everything.

Because what else can we say we have, when we have lost happiness?

Authentic Happiness, a book by Dr Martin Seligman and recently cited by Minister in the Prime Minister's Office, Mr Lim Boon Heng, details the way to find it again.

The book sets out a three-pronged path.

1) Enjoy a pleasurable life - eating, shopping, reading (yes, even smoking, if it gives you pleasure).

2) Enjoy a good life - having a passionate pursuit, such as work or hobby.

3) Enjoy a meaningful life - doing something that goes beyond the self, such as charity or politics.

But Bhutan's GNH (Gross National Happiness) philosophy doesn't seem to fit into any of these categories.

Life in a mountain village six hours by foot from the nearest road isn't pleasurable, unless you find that a trifle inconvenience to the pleasure of living amid nature.

Passionate pursuits while eking out a subsistence lifestyle?

And charity when you're poor yourself?

In the end, the Bhutanese brand of happiness may be its own.

The country, one of the least developed in the world, says it's happy.

But it is like a man who says he loves his hut but doesn't know what it's like to live in a condo.

Does it make his happiness any less authentic, any less valid?

Or does the question matter at all?

It might not.

But knowledge of the luxuries that money can buy does impede happiness, because the knowledge tempts and distracts.

That's why - at the end of the day - it might be harder for a Singaporean than for a Bhutanese to be happy.

WHAT IF...

Which brings us back to square one.

Man, why didn't Sir Stamford Raffles think of the GNH?

Left alone as a fishing village, would we be happier today?

It's not as audacious a question as it sounds.

Not when you see how the world is looking on with envy and amazement when the Bhutanese decided the world can go its way, and Bhutan would go its own.

And not when the GNH experiment is proving that happiness does not always have to be an airy-fairy idea, but one that can form the foundation of a political philosophy.

Still, ultimately, the GNH is an untested idea. Will it work?

In the search for mankind's biggest prize, there will be many who will be only too glad to see Bhutan falter.

But succeed or fail, there is something no one can take away from Bhutan.

It takes guts to be happy, because true happiness requires sacrifices.

And this little country is proving to the world it has the guts.


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Tuas Power may build $2b coal-fired plant

Ronnie Lim, Business Times 27 Mar 08;

(SINGAPORE) Tuas Power is looking at building a $2 billion coal-fired plant - the first here - its president and CEO Lim Kong Puay told The Business Times. For this, it will tap on new owner China Huaneng Group's experience with the fuel.

As part of a plan to re-power its current steam plants, Tuas Power is also studying another option, which is to convert them to natural gas-fired plants.

Separately, the power generating company, or genco, plans to invest in a cogeneration plant on Jurong Island, which will supply steam and cooling water to petrochemical plants there, as well as produce electricity.

Speaking to BT after Huaneng completed its $4.2 billion purchase of Tuas Power earlier this week, Mr Lim said: 'It's business as usual.' The genco's name remains unchanged and the current Singapore management has been asked to continue running the company. But Huaneng officials will sit on Tuas Power's board, which meets next month for the first time since the purchase.

But what is clearly different is the company's plan to consider coal-firing. Singapore gencos looked at the option several years ago, but it has not resurfaced until now.

Still, the move is not surprising as Tuas Power, which produces about 26 per cent of Singapore's electricity, has to brace itself for keener competition from bigger rivals Senoko Power and PowerSeraya, especially once they are also sold to new owners with deep pockets, not unlike Huaneng.

Besides, Huaneng, China's largest coal-fuelled power producer, has expertise in techniques to reduce emissions, such as using enclosed storage to minimise pollution. It also recently joined an international coalition of power utility and coal companies which plans to design and build the world's first zero-emission, coal-fuelled power plant.

With a total licensed capacity of 2,670 megawatts (MW), Tuas Power now operates 1,460 MW of combined cycle gas turbines (CCGT) which use natural gas to produce electricity more efficiently and economically than conventional steam plants.

As standby capacity, Tuas Power also has 1,200 MW available from two 600 MW steam plants - and it is these which it is now looking to convert to either two CCGT units with a total capacity of 800 MW, or two 500 MW coal-firing units giving a total capacity of 1,000 MW.

'The coal-firing option would probably cost around $2 billion. By comparison, going the CCGT route would involve about $700-800 million of capital investment,' Mr Lim said. 'But coal-firing overall is cheaper than gas. While it involves higher capital costs, it will result in lower operating costs.'

Huaneng, which has installed generating capacity of more than 71,000 MW in China - eight times the combined 9,070 MW of the three biggest generators here - has considerable experience and expertise in coal-firing.

But ahead of the plan to re-power its steam plants, Tuas Power intends to proceed with a cogeneration (cogen) plant on Jurong Island first, although Mr Lim declined to go into details.

He disclosed the cogen plan to BT last September, after news of rival PowerSeraya's plan to go big on cogen by building some 1,550 MW of new cogen capacity by 2010.

Industry sources say that, typically, cogen plants should comprise at least 200 MW of electricity generating capacity and another 200 MW of steam capacity, and can cost as least $400 million to build.

'It's still early days though. We expect to decide on the plant investment some time this year,' Mr Lim said.

Separately, TPGS Green Energy - a 75-25 joint venture between Tuas Power and gas importer Gas Supply Pte Ltd - said on Tuesday that it had signed up titanium dioxide producer Ishihara Sangyo Kaisha (ISK) to use its small cogen plants.

The $20 million combined heat and power project, involving two 5 MW cogen plants at ISK's Tuas plant, is TPGS's third, after it installed cogen plants at Tuas pharmaceutical giants Schering-Plough and Pfizer.


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The Forest Stewardship Council has 'failed the world's forests' say critics

Jeremy Hance, mongabay.com 26 Mar 08;

Timber certification body under attack from environmentalists for slipping standards

Both of the reports emerged after face-saving efforts by the FSC in Indonesia where an inquiry by The Wall Street Journal last year prompted the organization to effectively revoke certification for a Singapore-based Asia Pulp & Paper Co. (APP) project on the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has come under increasingly harsh criticisms from a variety of environmental organizations. The FSC is an international not-for-profit organization that certifies wood products: its stamp of approval is meant to create confidence that the wood was harvested in an environmentally-sustainable and socially-responsible manner.

For years the FSC stamp has been imperative for concerned consumers in purchasing wood products.

Yet amid growing troubles for the FSC, recent attacks from environmental organizations like World Rainforest Movement and Ecological Internet are putting the organization's credibility into question.

Last week the World Rainforest Movement released a scathing press release calling a decision by the FSC to certify eucalyptus plantations in Brazil its "death certificate."

The eucalyptus plantations are owned by Veracel, a partnership between Aracruz Celulose of Brazil and Stora Enso of Sweden-Finland, which has a shaky environmental record.

The press release alleges that Veracel "has a very well known record of harmful actions, including violating local communities' rights over land, to environmental pollution, water depletion and ecosystem destruction."

World Rainforest Movement's greatest concern, however, is that by certifying Veracel's eucalyptus plantations, the FSC is stating that large-scale monoculture plantations are environmentally sound, socially responsible, and beneficial to local people.

Whereas research has shown that monoculture plantations support little biodiversity, result in CO2 emissions relative to natural forests, and undermine the efforts of local people to manage forests in a sustainable manner.

In calling this decision the FSC's "death certificate" the World Rainforest Movement asserts that "the certification of Veracel is not an isolated fact, but the last piece in a chain of failures."

As this press release emerged, the FSC was already under criticism by another environmental organization, Ecological Internet.

In early March Ecological Internet began a campaign stating that the FSC's support for logging old-growth forests was completely at odds with its purpose. The campaign targets some of the world's most influential environmental and well-respected NGOs, asking them to withdraw their support from the FSC. These include Greenpeace, WWF, Rainforest Action Network, NRDC, Forest Ethics, Friends of the Earth and the Rainforest Alliance.

Ecological Internet claims that, much like supporting monoculture plantations, the support of ancient forest logging diminishes biodiversity, causes net carbon losses, and harms the forest's ecology.

"It has become evident to environmentalists in the know that FSC has become an obstacle to ending ancient forest destruction, addressing climate change and biodiversity loss, and promoting desirable ecologically based practices in regenerating and planted forests," Ecological Internet founder Dr. Glen Barry told mongabay.com.

"The organization is plagued with conflicts of interest, poor quality assurance mechanisms, and generally has failed the world's forests. As such, we are in the uncomfortable position of protesting greenwashing NGO FSC supporters, who are finding it quite difficult to acknowledge they have been critical in creating and maintaining the FSC myth."

Dr. Barry's criticism of NGOs that support the FSC has touched off sharp debates within and without these organizations.

The situation has become so tense that the Rainforest Alliance—usually a group that does the pro-forest campaigns—recently faced environmental protesters at a 'Green Leaders' cocktail party for their support of the FSC and old-growth logging.

The Rainforest Alliance has said they will join in a debate regarding their support of old-growth logging.

Both of the reports emerged after face-saving efforts by the FSC in Indonesia where an inquiry by The Wall Street Journal last year prompted the organization to effectively revoke certification for a Singapore-based Asia Pulp & Paper Co. (APP) project on the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

The admission, which environmentalists said showed the FSC had relaxed its certification standards to the point at which APP could qualify for the eco-label despite a poor environmental record, threatened to undermine the credibility of its labeling scheme.

A report released this week by the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and Telepak on illegal logging in Southeast Asia has provided further trouble for the FSC.

The report uncovered that corporations are getting away with lying about certification. Furniture companies YourPriceFurniture.com and Kybotech Ltd. both claimed that all their products were FSC certified when the claim was patently untrue. Both companies sell wood furniture that has never received FSC certification.

According to the report, Kybotech Ltd. when pressed admitted that "certain furniture sets were not actually certified."

Such reports of FSC's difficulties—both globally and locally—are not being ignored. In what may be the beginning of a large-scale abandonment of the FSC, last Tuesday the Swedish Society for Nature Conservation (SSNC) withdrew its long-time support of the FSC.

In a statement the SSNC said that the "FSC functions badly in Sweden. The standard is weak, the lack of observance is substantial and the forest companies will to improve FSC is weak."

Sweden is not alone. Certification practices in the FSC in Ireland and the US have come under increased scrutiny, causing outcry amid many local environmental groups. Last year Norway went as far as banning use of all certified wood products in public buildings.

While its future seems increasingly precarious, the FSC still possesses widespread support from large environmental global players. Further no one has yet proposed a viable replacement for the should the organization does not survive rising criticism

In the meantime consumers are left increasingly in the dark when trying to purchase environmentally-sustainable and socially-responsible wood products.

Caught in an environmental Catch-22, eco-conscious consumers who want to avoid supporting large-scale monoculture plantations and old-growth logging, seem forced to avoid both FSC certified and non-certified furniture.

The FSC did not reply to Mongabay's request for comment.


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Bats Perish, and No One Knows Why

Tina Kelley, New York Times 25 Mar 08;

Al Hicks was standing outside an old mine in the Adirondacks, the largest bat hibernaculum, or winter resting place, in New York State.

It was broad daylight in the middle of winter, and bats flew out of the mine about one a minute. Some had fallen to the ground where they flailed around on the snow like tiny wind-broken umbrellas, using the thumbs at the top joint of their wings to gain their balance.

All would be dead by nightfall. Mr. Hicks, a mammal specialist with the state’s Environmental Conservation Department, said: “Bats don’t fly in the daytime, and bats don’t fly in the winter. Every bat you see out here is a ‘dead bat flying,’ so to speak.”

They have plenty of company. In what is one of the worst calamities to hit bat populations in the United States, on average 90 percent of the hibernating bats in four caves and mines in New York have died since last winter.

Wildlife biologists fear a significant die-off in about 15 caves and mines in New York, as well as at sites in Massachusetts and Vermont. Whatever is killing the bats leaves them unusually thin and, in some cases, dotted with a white fungus. Bat experts fear that what they call White Nose Syndrome may spell doom for several species that keep insect pests under control.

Researchers have yet to determine whether the bats are being killed by a virus, bacteria, toxin, environmental hazard, metabolic disorder or fungus. Some have been found with pneumonia, but that and the fungus are believed to be secondary symptoms.

“This is probably one of the strangest and most puzzling problems we have had with bats,” said Paul Cryan, a bat ecologist with the United States Geological Survey. “It’s really startling that we’ve not come up with a smoking gun yet.”

Merlin Tuttle, the president of Bat Conservation International, an education and research group in Austin, Tex., said: “So far as we can tell at this point, this may be the most serious threat to North American bats we’ve experienced in recorded history. “It definitely warrants immediate and careful attention.”

This month, Mr. Hicks took a team from the Environmental Conservation Department into the hibernaculum that has sheltered 200,000 bats in past years, mostly little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) and federally endangered Indiana bats (Myotis sodalis), with the world’s second largest concentration of small-footed bats (Myotis leibii).

He asked that the mine location not be published, for fear that visitors could spread the syndrome or harm the bats or themselves.

Other visitors do not need directions. The day before, Mr. Hicks saw eight hawks circling the parking lot of another mine, waiting to kill and eat the bats that flew out.

In a dank galley of the mine, Mr. Hicks asked everyone to count how many out of 100 bats had white noses. About half the bats in one galley did. They would be dead by April, he said.

Mr. Hicks, who was the first person to begin studying the deaths, said more than 10 laboratories were trying to solve the mystery.

In January 2007, a cave explorer reported an unusual number of bats flying near the entrance of a cavern near Albany. In March and April, thousands of dead bats were found in three other mines and caves. In one case, half the dead or living bats had the fungus.

One cave had 15,584 bats in 2005, 6,735 in 2007 and an estimated 1,500 this winter. Another went from 1,329 bats in 2006 to 38 this winter. Some biologists fear that 250,000 bats could die this year.

Since September, when hibernation began, dead or dying bats have been found at 15 sites in New York. Most of them had been visited by people who had been at the original four sites last winter, leading researchers to suspect that humans could transmit the problem.

Details on the problem in neighboring states are sketchier. “In the Berkshires in Massachusetts, we are getting reports of dying/dead bats in areas where we do not have known bat hibernacula, so we may have more sites than we will ever be able to identify,” said Susi von Oettingen, an endangered species biologist with the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.

In Vermont, Scott Darling, a wildlife biologist with the Fish and Wildlife Department, said: “The last tally that I have is approximately 20 sites in New York, 4 in Vermont and 2 in Massachusetts. We only have estimates of the numbers of bats in the affected sites — more or less 500,000. It is impossible for us to count the dead bats, as many have flown away from the caves and died — we have over 90 reports from citizens across Vermont — as well as many are still dying.”

People are not believed to be susceptible to the affliction. But New Jersey, New York and Vermont have advised everyone to stay out of all caverns that might have bats. Visitors to affected caves and mines are asked to decontaminate all clothing, boots, ropes and other gear, as well as the car trunks that transport them.

One affected mine is the winter home to a third of the Indiana bats between Virginia and Maine. These pink-nosed bats, two inches long and weighing a quarter-ounce, are particularly social and cluster together as tightly as 300 a square foot.

“It’s ironic, until last year most of my time was spent trying to delist it,” or take it off the endangered species list, Mr. Hicks said, after the state’s Indiana bat population grew, to 52,000 from 1,500 in the 1960s.

“It’s very scary and a little overwhelming from a biologist’s perspective,” Ms. von Oettingen said. “If we can’t contain it, we’re going to see extinctions of listed species, and some of species that are not even listed.”

Neighbors of mines and caves in the region have notified state wildlife officials of many affected sites when they have noticed bats dead in the snow, latched onto houses or even flying in a recent snowstorm.

Biologists are concerned that if the bats are being killed by something contagious either in the caves or elsewhere, it could spread rapidly, because bats can migrate hundreds of miles in any direction to their summer homes, known as maternity roosts. At those sites, females usually give birth to one pup a year, an added challenge for dropping populations.

Nursing females can eat up to half their weight in insects a day, Mr. Hicks said.

Researchers from institutions like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the United States Geological Survey’s National Wildlife Health Center, Boston University, the New York State Health Department and even Disney’s Animal World are addressing the problem. Some are considering trying to feed underweight wild bats to help them survive the remaining weeks before spring. Some are putting temperature sensors on bats to monitor how often they wake up, and others are making thermal images of hibernating bats.

Other researchers want to know whether recently introduced pesticides, including those released to stop West Nile virus, may be contributing to the problem, either through a toxin or by greatly reducing the bat’s food source.

Dr. Thomas H. Kunz, a biology professor at Boston University, said the body composition of the bats would also be studied, partly to determine the ratio of white to brown fat. Of particular interest is the brown fat between the shoulder blades, known to assist the bats in warming up when they begin to leave deep hibernation in April.

“It appears the white nose bats do not have enough fat, either brown or white, to arouse,” Dr. Kunz said. “They’re dying in situ and do not have the ability to arouse from their deep torpor.”

His researchers’ cameras have shown that bats in the caves that do wake up when disturbed take hours longer to do so, as was the case in the Adirondack mine. He also notes that if females become too emaciated, they will not have the hormonal reactions necessary to ovulate and reproduce.

In searching for a cause of the syndrome, researchers are hampered by the lack of baseline knowledge about habits like how much bats should weigh in the fall, where they hibernate and even how many bats live in the region.

“We’re going to learn an awful lot about bats in a comprehensive way that very few animal species have been looked at,” said Dr. Elizabeth Buckles, an assistant professor at Cornell who coordinates bat research efforts. “That’s good. But it’s unfortunate it has to be under these circumstances.”

The die-offs are big enough that they may have economic effects. A study of Brazilian free-tailed bats in southwestern Texas found that their presence saved cotton farmers a sixth to an eighth of the cash value of their crops by consuming insect pests.

“Logic dictates when you are potentially losing as many as a half a million bats in this region, there are going to be ramifications for insect abundance in the coming summer,” Mr. Darling, the Vermont wildlife biologist, said.

As Mr. Hicks traveled deeper in the cave, the concentrations of bats hanging from the ceiling increased. They hung like fruit, generally so still that they appeared dead. In some tightly packed groups, just individual noses or elbows peeked through. A few bats had a wing around their nearest cavemates. Their white bellies mostly faced downhill. When they awoke, they made high squeaks, like someone sucking a tooth.

The mine floors were not covered with carcasses, Mr. Hicks said, because raccoons come in and feed on them. Raccoon scat dotted the rocks along the trail left by their footprints.

In the six hours in the cave taking samples, nose counts and photographs, Mr. Hicks said that for him trying for the perfect picture was a form of therapy. “It’s just that I know I’m never going to see these guys again,” he said. “We’re the last to see this concentration of bats in our lifetime.”


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Singapore on the verge of outbreak of hand, foot and mouth disease

HFMD: 585 hit, childcare centres on alert
Salma Khalik, Straits Times 27 Mar 08;

WITH Singapore on the verge of a possible outbreak of hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD), kindergartens and childcare centres across the island are on full alert.

Centres that have already seen children fall ill with the disease are checking their charges for telltale signs, such as mouth ulcers and red blisters.

An official from NTUC Childcare, which runs 39 centres, said temperatures are being taken up to twice a day in an attempt to halt the spread of the disease.

HFMD causes fever, sore throat, sores, ulcers in the mouth, and rashes on the palms, soles and buttocks. But complications can occur and the disease does kill, although very rarely. There is no medicine or vaccine for it.

The measures come as Health Ministry figures show Singapore on the cusp of a HFMD outbreak, the first since last June.

The ministry's latest weekly bulletin said 585 people came down with the virus last week, up from 409 the previous week. The increase coincides with the reopening of school after the week-long March break.

Although the disease has been cropping up at childcare centres, preschools and primary schools, the Health Ministry said none had been asked to close their doors.

The disease is endemic and outbreaks occur regularly. It affects mostly very young children, although adults can catch the virus. It is transmitted through bodily fluids like saliva.

The best way to prevent its spread, say doctors, is to wash your hands before eating and after going to the toilet, and to cover the mouth when coughing or sneezing.

The enterovirus which causes the disease has been particularly active this year, infecting 50 per cent more people than last year over the same period. So far, 3,721 people have caught the virus this year.

The last time the weekly infection figure was this high was during the seven-week outbreak in May and June last year.

NTUC Childcare has seen several children contract the disease. Aside from checking the children, it also disinfects mattresses before and after the kids take their naps.

Parents of a child suspected of having the disease are told to take the kid home. The child has to be certified infection-free by a doctor before he is allowed back at the centre, said an official.

One toddler who caught the virus was 20-month-old Sean. He was infected by his uncle, said his mother, Madam Daphne Chan, yesterday. He continued the chain and passed the virus to his mother, who ended up with a week's sick leave earlier this month.

Madam Chan said she had to keep Sean home for about 10 days and get a doctor to certify that he was no longer infectious, before he could return to the childcare centre. No other child there has caught the disease.


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HK to re-open primary schools as fears of flu outbreak subside

Channel NewsAsia 27 Mar 08;

HONG KONG: Primary schools in Hong Kong are set to re-open next Monday after a temporary closure because of a flu crisis.

Many children became ill and three of them died earlier this month, sparking fears of a virulent flu outbreak in the territory. It prompted the government to close primary schools early for the Easter break on 13 March.

Since then, the Centre of Health Protection has not recorded a significant upward trend in infections and concluded that the flu strain has not mutated. However, health authorities warned that the peak flu season is not over yet.

The education ministry will be issuing new guidelines to all schools to maintain hygiene standards and closely monitor sick leave records.

Children who are not well have been told to stay at home and to return to schools only after they have recovered.

The education minister did not rule out further closures and defended the earlier closure of schools to safeguard public interest.

Michael Suen, Hong Kong Education Secretary, said: "Depending on the severity of the situation, we are making a very prudent move to ensure that school children are protected. I don't think this would be a very frequent occurrence, it will happen very rarely and it is incumbent on us to take effective precautionary measure."- CNA/so


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Asia's first anti-bird flu facility opens in Bangkok

Channel NewsAsia 26 Mar 08;

BANGKOK: Asia's first anti-bird flu facility has opened in Bangkok to help fight any new avian influenza outbreaks in the region.

In Bangkok, the first of three worldwide anti-bird flu stockpiles is fully operational. It is ready to counter new occurrences of the disease with rapid response emergency kits.

A total of 45,000 pieces of personal protective equipment, 440 decontamination kits, ten laboratory specimen kits and four training packs worth over half a million US dollars will be stored in a warehouse near Suvarnabhumi Airport.

He Change Chui, Assistant Director General, Food and Agricultural Organisation, said: "The very purpose of this centre is to deliver equipment, commodities in the shortest time possible. In a few hours, Bangkok can reach anywhere."

US Ambassador to Thailand, Mr Eric John, inaugurated the Regional Distribution Centre, which is partly sponsored by United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

Oliver Carduner, Director of USAID RDMA, said: "We're able to mobilise these life-saving commodities within 24 hours of the order. Previously when they were based in the United States, depending on the method of shipment, it could take as long as two to three weeks to transport them."

The deadly H5N1 virus remains a grave threat around the region because of the large chicken and duck populations, with new outbreaks reported from the Laos border earlier this year.

Seventeen Thais have died from the disease since 2003 and Vietnam has reported five deaths so far this year.

Though the number of human deaths has declined since last year, scientists fear the virus could mutate and jump from human to human, sparking a global pandemic.- CNA/so


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Ducks, people, paddy fields and bird flu

Study finds key factors behind bird flu outbreaks
Will Dunham, Yahoo News 26 Mar 08;

Ducks, people and rice paddies are the primary forces driving outbreaks of avian influenza in Thailand and Vietnam, and the number of chickens is less pivotal, scientists said on Wednesday.

U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization experts and others looked at three waves of H5N1 bird flu in Thailand and Vietnam in 2004 and 2005. The virus has killed 236 people in 12 countries since 2003.

They used computer modeling to study how various factors were involved in the spread of the virus, including the numbers of ducks, geese and chickens, human population size, rice cultivation and local geography.

Even though Thailand and Vietnam addressed the outbreaks in different ways, the researchers found that the numbers of ducks and people, and the extent of rice cultivation were the most important contributing factors underpinning the outbreaks.

"This provides better insight on where and when the H5N1 risk is highest, so it's possible to better pinpoint where to look for the virus or where to expect flare-up of disease and also when to expect it," Jan Slingenbergh, senior veterinary officer for the Food and Agriculture Organization, said in a telephone interview.

"It helps to better target the interventions," he added.

Monitoring duck populations for the H5N1 virus and tracking rice farming by satellite are the optimal ways to predict an outbreak's distribution, the researchers said. They added that their model also can be extended to Laos and Cambodia, where there are similar land use patterns.

Avian influenza has been closely linked to chickens in the past, but the study found the number of chickens to be less important as a predictor.

The findings were published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"In the past in Vietnam, there have been major (bird) vaccination exercises countrywide, which is an enormous effort in terms of logistics and time and effort and staff requirements," Slingenbergh said.

"And there is fatigue, also, among the farmers and veterinarians. And if it's now possible to better time and localize the efforts, that is a major efficiency achievement."

The researchers said there are close ties between duck grazing patterns and rice cropping intensity. They said ducks feed mainly on leftover rice grains in harvested paddy fields, so free-ranging ducks may go to many different sites following rice harvest patterns.

The H5N1 avian flu virus has swept through flocks of poultry in Asia and sometimes in Africa and Europe. It has infected 373 people in 14 countries and killed 236 of them since 2003. Experts fear the virus may change just enough to pass easily from person to person, sparking a deadly pandemic.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)


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Scorned trash pickers become global environmental force

Jack Chang, McClatchy Newspapers 24 Mar 08;

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — As the world scrambles to save dwindling resources and halt global warming, a long-scorned population is becoming the latest hope in the environmental battle.

The unsung heroes are the impoverished trash pickers who fill the streets of countless cities around the developing world, searching garbage for cardboard, plastic bags and other treasure that can be sold and recycled.

Every day, they rescue hundreds of thousands of tons of material from streets and trash dumps that get reprocessed into all kinds of products. That not only cuts back on the resources used by industries but also lightens the load on dumps that are quickly reaching capacity.

Despite their contributions, trash pickers have long suffered harassment from local governments and derision from neighbors, who often consider them vagrants or even criminals. Such attitudes, however, are changing, trash pickers said, and they're increasingly being seen as foot soldiers in the global warming battle.

"We're the only ones doing this work," said Cristian Robles, a trash picker who scours the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires for recyclables. "If we didn't do it, nobody else would."

As in Buenos Aires, government-run recycling programs are rare in most of the developing world, meaning valuable materials that could be reused end up rotting at local dumps if trash pickers don't get to them.

At an estimated 15 million people worldwide, trash pickers make up about 1 percent of the global urban population, and their impact is enormous, said Martin Medina, a U.S.-based waste management expert who wrote "The World's Scavengers," a book about the population.

Brazil, for example, claims the world's highest aluminum recycling rate, at nearly 90 percent — not because of official initiatives, but thanks to the country's estimated 500,000 trash pickers, Medina said. By comparison, only about half of the aluminum used in the United States is recycled, despite the proliferation of city-run recycling programs. In total, Brazilian trash pickers salvage about 33,000 tons of recyclables a day.

In Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous country, trash pickers recycle a third of all garbage, Medina said.

Trash pickers also reduce emissions of methane produced by rotting garbage in open-air dumps. That's no small contribution, considering methane wreaks more than 20 times the global-warming damage than carbon dioxide does.

"Environmentally, they're having a big effect," Medina said. "But they're not getting the support of governments. The entire system is based around economics, and people only turn to this when they have no other choice. Unemployment and layoffs are what's pushing many people into doing it."

That's the reality in a trash-strewn neighborhood of General San Martin, Argentina, a suburb of Buenos Aires, where almost all of the neighborhood's 60,000 residents earn their living through trash picking and recycling. Several said they started after Argentina's economy collapsed about seven years ago, pitching more than half of the country's population into poverty.

Argentina's economy has since bounced back, but poverty still plagues more than 20 percent of Argentines. As a result, many in the neighborhood still survive by recycling trash, which earns them about $220 a month. Medina estimates the activity generates about $170 million a year in Buenos Aires alone.

"It's always better to find other work, but there are no jobs, and we have to do what we know how to do," said 23-year-old Roberto Daniel Quiroz, who's been a trash picker since age 17.

Many of the recyclers in General San Martin suffer ailments related to the unsanitary work, such as infected cuts, gastrointestinal bacteria and conjunctivitis. They're also regularly harassed by police and city officials in Buenos Aires, where many trash pickers go to find the most valuable recyclables.

Adding to their woes, a local transport company recently stopped running a train that had hauled trash pickers and their finds between Buenos Aires and its poorest suburbs, where most of the pickers live. They were left stranded in the city, with some camping out in Buenos Aires' nicest neighborhoods in protest.

That sparked outrage from neighbors such as shop owner Osvaldo Carro, who's helped lead a campaign to block the construction of a recycling center in his middle-class part of town.

He said trash pickers often tear open garbage bags on the street, take what they want and leave detritus strewn across the sidewalk. One picker even threatened him with a broken bottle after he complained, he said.

"They bring with them all their pack of problems," Carro said. "If you give them a hectare of land to work, they wouldn't do it."

To Juan Pablo Piccardo, the city's environment and public spaces minister, the trash pickers are performing a public service even if they upset some residents. He said the city would like to "reintegrate" them into society by teaching them other skills, such as cooking or construction.

"The society has a debt to these people," Piccardo said. "We know a lot of neighbors are disturbed, but these people are working."

To trash-picker advocates such as Jorge Pinheiro of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, such conflicts could be avoided if governments stopped harassing trash pickers and instead helped them professionalize their operations.

That's already happened in some countries, such as Brazil, where the federal government officially recognized trash picking as a legal profession five years ago and provided some labor protections. Most other countries, however, still prohibit the activity.

Earlier this month, hundreds of trash pickers from 40 countries met in Bogota, Colombia, for the field's first ever worldwide convention. At the top of the agenda was how to win jobs in professional, city-run recycling programs that are beginning to appear around the world.

"This question is changing with more awareness of global warming, which has made more people value the work," Pinheiro said. "We've been seeing more governments working with them rather than fighting them."

That's happened in Duque de Caxias, Brazil, a poor suburb of Rio de Janeiro, where a 100 person-strong recyclers cooperative salvages about 165 tons of material every month from a nearby landfill.

Up until a year ago, the cooperative had separated the garbage at the landfill itself, often under the blazing sun and in dangerous conditions, while surrounded by 3,000 other scavengers also searching for recyclables.

That changed when the city government and state-run energy company Petrobras pitched in to build the cooperative a modern facility near the landfill where its members could work under an awning, with bathrooms and a kitchen on hand. The cooperative's two trucks haul in tons of garbage from the landfill every day for members to sort through.

Each worker earns on average more than $700 a month, which is three times Brazil's minimum wage and about the country's median income. The cooperative keeps close track of how much it's recycling and posts monthly reports on an office bulletin board.

Lately, its biggest moneymakers are white computer paper, PET plastic bottles and cardboard. It sells the material either to intermediaries or directly to factories eager to use the much cheaper recycled product.

"We're not ashamed to say what we do," said Sebastiao Carlos dos Santos, 29, who started trash picking at age 14. "We're not collectors of trash. We're collectors of recyclable materials, and we're saving the environment."


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Food Safety in Singapore as it diversifies imports

Food Safety: Need for more vigilance
As Singapore diversifies imports, more investment needed to fund overseas inspections

Gregory Dalziel and Ng Sue Chia, Today Online 27 Mar 08;

Fears of a contamination of the food supply by terrorist groups have grown over the past 15 years. The United States, through international agreements, is spearheading the drive for nations to focus on "food defence" to mitigate such threats.

But an ongoing study by the Centre of Excellence for National Security (Cens) suggests this concern and the approach taken may not apply to the Singapore context, and may even blind decision-makers to more pressing threats to or divert limited resources from Singapore's food supply.

The US government defines food defence as "protecting the nation's food supply from deliberate or intentional acts of contamination or tampering", largely framed around bio-terrorist threats.

In the literature regarding the bioterrorist threat to food supply, there is widespread belief that terrorists can easily replicate the large-scale impact of previous food safety breakdowns or the outbreak of zoonotic diseases — any disease that can be transmitted from animals to humans.

Yet, the Cens study suggests that this is not the case: Such terrorist attacks remain sparse and when they do occur, their impact is minimal.

The vast majority of incidents are criminal in nature, committed by individuals against those with which they had close daily contact and occur either in the home or workplace, or where food was sold directly to the consumer (stores, restaurants, food stalls and so on).

The literature on food defence is also predominantly concerned with the physical security of food and agriculture production and processing facilities.

But attacks against food or water production facilities have generally occurred in conflict regions, and the attacks have been conventional (using explosives and bullets).

Where food products have been tampered in production facilities, the historical weapon of choice has been physical contaminants (metal and glass objects).

The use of biological agents for the deliberate contamination of food is rare, and in most cases perpetrated by discontented, highly-trained medical professionals.

Cens has found only nine incidents over the last 70 years that the centre could confirm using open sources. One of the worst of these incidents occurred in 1964 in Japan, in which Dr Mitsuru Suzuki killed four co-workers and injured 200 others at a hospital using salmonella typhi.

Why China has experienced a rash of fairly-high-profile and highly-fatal criminal food poisoning incidents over the last 10 years is possibly due to contaminates such as highly-toxic rodenticides.

Pesticides or insecticides are most often found in heavily-agricultural regions in which such materials are necessary and easily available, legally or on the black market.

Thallium is another chemical compound often used in food poisoning incidents. While thallium causes excruciating death and is the weapon of choice by some states for assassinations, its effects are localised and targeted.

It is important to note that food defence, security and safety are concerned with different issues.

Food security was defined in 1996 at the World Food Summit as existing "when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life".

Food safety refers to ensuring that food, at all points along the food chain, is kept safe for consumption to reduce food borne diseases.

Since deliberate, devastating attacks on food supply is uncommon, what does this mean for Singapore?

While the capability and intent of terrorist groups to attack the food supply here is unclear, the Cens study does suggest that based on historical precedence, an attack is unlikely. But to ensure good food safety practices and standards are maintained, continued close private or government cooperation is necessary.

As for ensuring food security, it is very important, given Singapore's small agricultural base and the high reliance on food imports.

Increasing demand from India and China as well as the global trend of diverting resources towards bio-fuel production will have an impact on the price of food staples.

Hence, the Agri-food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore's (AVA) policy of diversifying food imports and its zonal approach to maintain supplies from regions affected by zoonotic diseases should be maintained.

Singapore has an enviable record in food safety in the region and worldwide. Its response to food safety breakdowns, evidenced by the rapid response of the AVA and the health ministry to the PrimaDeli incident, is exemplary.

The AVA monitors imports coming into Singapore and inspects facilities overseas.

However, as Singapore diversifies its food imports to guarantee food security, more investment may be needed in funding overseas inspections and in its monitoring and detection capabilities of imports.

The writers are associate research fellows at Cens in the S Rajaratnam School of International Studies at the Nanyang Technological University and conduct research on homeland defence matters. This is an edited version of the commentary printed by the school.


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Trash, Mafia linked to cheese woes

South Korea, Japan suspend buffalo mozzarella imports

Today Online 27 Mar 08;

ROME — Italian health officials planned a crisis meeting yesterday amid a sharp drop in sales of the country's famed buffalo mozzarella cheese (picture) after raised levels of the carcinogen dioxin were found in milk used to make it.

South Korea and Japan suspended imports of buffalo mozzarella after 66 buffalo herds were quarantined because of higher than normal levels of dioxin in the milk.

In a statement announcing the meeting, Agriculture Minister Paolo De Castro denounced "a negative campaign that risks having an important economic and social impact on all products from Campania", the region where most of the cheese is made. "Security is a priority and inspections in recent days show it," he said.

Most health experts quoted by local media have said that the raised levels do not constitute a danger to health, but sales have already fallen by 30 to 35 per cent in Italy, according to the organisation that oversees the product. Mr De Castro said the government had begun negotiating with the Japanese, South Korean and European Union authorities over the issue.

Officials have said the contamination is likely linked to the region's chronic waste disposal problems, which saw thousands of tonnes of rubbish left undisposed of in past months. The Mafia have a lucrative involvement in landfill sites, which are used to illegally dump toxic waste from the north of the country.

But Mr De Castro rejected that explanation in an interview with Corriere Della Sera published on Wednesday. Italy produces 33,000 tonnes of mozzarella per year. Eighty per cent is made in Campania, Italy's poorest region. Naples is the region's main city. Sixteen per cent of all buffalo mozzarella is exported, with Japan importing 329 tonnes per year and South Korea 10 tonnes.

Last week an environmental official said: "Of course we don't know for sure scientifically, but the high rate of dioxin is most likely linked to what the buffaloes ate." He said the buffalo "grazed in areas where we know that toxic waste has been dumped in recent years." — AFP

AVA stops sale of Italian buffalo mozzarella cheese
Channel NewsAsia 27 Mar 08;

SINGAPORE : The Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) has stopped all sales of Italian buffalo mozzarella cheese in Singapore.

This precautionary move came following reports of unusually high levels of toxic chemical dioxin detected in the milk used to produce the cheese in some Italian farms.

About 106 kilogrammes of the cheese was last imported into Singapore on January 6 this year.

AVA is currently conducting lab tests to determine whether such cheese sold here have been affected.

Japan and South Korea are the only other two countries to have suspended the import of the cheese. - CNA /ls

Sales of Italian mozzarella cheese halted amid dioxin fears
Judith Tan, Straits Times 29 Mar 08;

SINGAPORE has stopped all sales of Italian mozzarella cheese made from buffalo milk after high levels of a potentially deadly chemical were found in it.

No one here has become sick from the chemical, called dioxin, and the ban is a precautionary move, said the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA).

The embargo follows an announcement on Wednesday by Italian officials that they had discovered 'moderately' high levels of dioxin in 25 mozzarella factories. There are fears that the buffalos had eaten grass contaminated with dioxin.

The chemical, can cause skin diseases, cancer, severe weight loss, liver problems, kidney problems, birth defects, reduced resistance to infections and death.

About 106kg of mozzarella cheese was last imported into Singapore on Jan6 this year. But it is not known if the batch imported was contaminated with dioxin, said the AVA.

'The amount of Italian buffalo mozzarella cheese imported was negligible,' said an AVA spokesman. The authority will withhold the sale of all Italian buffalo mozzarella cheese pending lab tests to determine if the cheese has been contaminated.


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Fighting Poverty: Agriculture needs another revolution

Noeleen Heyzer, Straits Times 27 mar 08;

IN THE last decade, developing economies in Asia and the Pacific doubled in size, growing over 7 per cent on average. This growth has garnered much attention and plaudits. Yet, 641 million of the world's poorest - nearly two-thirds of the global total - live in the Asia-Pacific region.

Other statistics are equally shocking. Ninety-seven million children remain underweight. Four million children die before reaching the age of five. Some 566 million people living in rural areas have no access to clean water. And less than a third of rural inhabitants have access to basic sanitation.

These fault-lines question the sustainability and validity of the current development paradigm, which leaves millions of people trapped in extreme poverty when so much wealth has been generated in such a short time. Most of the poor are in the rural sector and agriculture is their main livelihood. And this is where the problem lies.

The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (Escap) has carried out research which shows that persistent poverty and widening inequality in the region are the result of decades of neglect of agriculture. The analysis - contained in Escap's Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2008, launched today - shows that growth strategies and economic policies in the region have systematically overlooked the agricultural sector. And this despite the fact that agriculture is the main livelihood of the poor and still provides employment for 60 per cent of the region's working population.

The tremendous potential of the agricultural sector to reduce poverty has been weakened by unfavourable macroeconomic policies. These led to high and variable interest rates and inflation in the 1980s; the erosion of public services such as agricultural extension services; the failure of agricultural credit policies; and the massive scaling down of public investment in irrigation and rural infrastructure. The list goes on.

Official Development Assistance (ODA) has shown a similar disregard for the sector. From 1983 to 1987 and 1998 to 2000, ODA for agriculture fell by 57 per cent to an annual average of US$5.1 billion (S$7 billion). Lending for agriculture by multilateral lending agencies, such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, trended downwards.

As a result, growth and productivity in agriculture have stalled. Alongside this, the decline in poverty has been slowing down. Our analysis also shows that the role of agriculture in creating jobs is diminishing in some sub-regions. In East Asia, South-east Asia and the Pacific, agriculture generates fewer new jobs these days.

In China, for example, half of the decline in poverty occurred in the first half of the 1980s when agriculture was given priority. We see this pattern repeat itself time and time again. When agricultural development was placed high on the agenda, poverty declined rapidly in Vietnam, Thailand, Bangladesh and many other countries.

The neglect of agriculture has put enormous pressure on farmers. Low yields, high input prices and low market prices for agricultural produce have led to a vicious circle of low income and stagnation. Massive scaling down of public services, particularly in irrigation and agricultural extension services, has dealt a blow. The distress in rural areas is reflected in rising farm indebtedness and suicides. The figures are tragic and astounding: In India alone, almost 87,000 farmers committed suicide between 2001 and 2005.

Unless the neglect of agriculture is addressed, poverty will not be reduced significantly in the region, and inequalities will widen further. In turn, this will jeopardise the economic prospects and the social cohesion of our communities.

Our survey shows that improving agricultural labour productivity could have a profound impact on poverty reduction. For example, raising the region's average agricultural labour productivity to the level seen in Thailand would take 218 million people - a third of the region's poor - out of poverty. India, China, Bangladesh and Indonesia would gain the most.

Large gains in reducing poverty are also possible through the comprehensive liberalisation of global agricultural trade, with the potential to take another 48 million people out of poverty. Our research also shows that raising productivity in agriculture will reduce income inequality significantly.

If more reasons were needed for our call to focus on agriculture, then one need only look at the rising food prices that are being felt across the region. With the demand for biofuel apparently unstoppable, the region needs a renewed and urgent effort to revive its agricultural sector to increase food production and stop food prices from spiralling even further.

The strategy required to make agriculture economically, socially and ecologically viable is straightforward: Quite simply, agriculture needs another revolution.

Increasing agricultural productivity should be at the centre of this approach. It is crucial that the sector's productivity is improved through increased investment in research and development, human capital, extension services, irrigation and rural infrastructure. Land tenure systems need to be revamped, where necessary. The rural poor need to be better connected to cities and markets. Macroeconomic policies, credit instruments and crop insurance need to be made farmer-friendly. In short, agriculture should be treated as a high-value-added, diversified, marketable sector - not a charity case.

Given its natural limitations, agriculture alone cannot take the region's 641 million poor people out of poverty. Therefore, a gradual transition from agriculture should complement productivity improvements - by empowering the poor, particularly women, with the skills to tap labour market opportunities and by promoting rural non-farm activities and regional growth centres.

The region's agriculture sector faces serious challenges. Without the political will to revive the sector, it will only worsen. Governments have the opportunity now to help more than 200 million people in our region escape the shackles of poverty. This opportunity should not be missed.

The writer is undersecretary-general of the United Nations and executive secretary of the UN's Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.


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Rice in Asia; shortages and sharp price rises expected

The Philippines: Price of rice could jump 60 per cent
A shortage in summer is expected to push up rice prices, forcing govt to import staple grain
Alastair McIndoe, Straits Times 27 Mar 08;

MANILA - PHILIPPINE farmers yesterday warned of soaring rice prices, a result of a shortage in supply that is taking place locally and worldwide.

The shrinking global stocks of the staple grain have also prompted the Philippine government to sign a deal with Vietnam to import more rice to boost the country's reserves.

The National Rice Farmers Council said a shortage in the lean July to September period could trigger a 60 per cent rise in the price of rice - the country's staple food - based on current average prices.

'The traders will definitely take advantage of the limited supply,' said Mr Jimmy Tadeo, the group's chairman.

The government has assured Filipinos that rice buffer stocks will hold out, but has acknowledged that rice prices are set to rise further.

As well as the tight global supply of rice and rising demand, upward pressure on prices is coming from higher oil and fertiliser costs.

Rice prices in Vietnam and Thailand, among the world's top exporters, have fetched up to US$500 (S$690) a metric tonne, a 25 per cent jump in the last month.

The Philippines consumes close to 12 million metric tonnes of rice a year. Most of it is grown domestically and production has been rising.

But wastage and the loss of rice lands have created a recurrent shortfall of around 10 to 15 per cent, which must be met by imports.

Vietnam yesterday agreed to supply the Philippines with 1.5 million metric tonnes of rice this year, a sizeable increase on an earlier commitment. The Philippines now plans to import up to 2.2 million metric tonnes this year, higher than earlier projections.

Not surprisingly, the scramble for imports has put rice self-sufficiency firmly on the front burner.

President Gloria Arroyo made this one of her economic goals when she came to power in 2001. But only one president, Mr Ferdinand Marcos, has succeeded, and then only briefly, in the late 1970s.

Dr Leocadio Sebastian, executive director of the Philippine Rice Research Institute, believes that coming close to self-sufficiency is possible, even within the term of the current administration, which ends in mid-2010.

'We have to increase production yields, which are below Vietnam and Indonesia, and invest more in irrigation systems, seeds and cropmanagement technologies,' he said.

One lawmaker has urged the administration to tap two cashed-up farm funds making up to S$760 million available this year.

Recovering post-harvest rice losses caused, among other things, by poor storage facilities could alone offset imports, according to the International Rice Research Institute.

Against the backdrop of rising prices, a steady supply of the subsidised rice sold by the National Food Authority (NFA), the state's rice-purchasing agency, will be crucial for Filipinos with low incomes.

The NFA spends millions of dollars a year buying rice at market prices and selling it more cheaply. Its rice costs 18.25 pesos (S$0.60) a kilogramme, a third less than some local and imported grains.

President Arroyo on Tuesday announced a crackdown on hoarders and profiteers buying subsidised NFA rice and then selling it at higher prices in public markets.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS

Indonesia: Govt mulls over plan to curb exports
Straits Times 27 Mar 08;

JAKARTA - INDONESIA is considering a policy to discourage rice exports and keep prices stable to secure enough supply of the staple grain for the country's 235 million people.

The plan emerged amid fears that an expanding price gap between domestic and global markets could encourage local rice producers to sell heavily to export markets, cutting domestic supplies.

Rice is priced between US$516 (S$710) and US$653 per tonne in local markets, lower than export prices of US$618-US$745 per tonne.

Indonesian farmers may harvest 61 million tonnes of unhusked rice this year, 5 per cent more than last year, because of favourable weather and increasing use of hybrid seeds.

'The condition is quite worrying, because domestic prices fell on higher output, while international prices are high,' said Agriculture Minister Anton Apriyantono.

'This may lead to overseas shipments.'

The government is balancing the needs of farmers to profit from rising prices and the supply of the grain that makes up an essential part of the diet for some 235 million people, with half of them living under US$2 a day.

Indonesia last year supplemented its local rice output with purchases from overseas to meet demand for the commodity.

Jakarta recently gave approval to state-run logistics agency Bilog to import up to 1.5 million tonnes of rice to secure domestic supplies.

BLOOMBERG, XINHUA

Thailand: Food aid to 140,000 refugees to be cut
Straits Times 27 Mar 08;

BANGKOK - SOARING rice prices on world markets and a battered US dollar are forcing cuts in already meagre food aid to more than 140,000 refugees who have fled Myanmar into Thailand, aid agency officials said yesterday.

'This rice price is just killing us,' said Mr Jack Dunford, head of a consortium providing food, shelter and other aid to ethnic minority refugees along the Thai-Myanmar border.

Most have fled from a brutal, decades-long campaign by the Myanmar military against Karen and other ethnic minority rebels.

They are housed in a string of camps along the frontier.

With a 50 per cent increase in rice prices in the past two months and sliding US dollar against the Thai baht, Mr Dunford, executive director of the Thailand Burma Border Consortium, said he would need to make up a budgetary shortfall of US$5.8 million (S$8 million) to keep up the already inadequate level of food rations.

Together with distributions of building supplies, soap and mosquito nets, those rations were cut earlier after a drop in donor funding.

If the gap is not filled, refugees could be issued with just 12kg of rice a month and no other food items - less than half their daily protein and calorie needs, he said. Nursery school feeding and health projects would have to be cut back or terminated.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cambodia: Hun Sen bans rice exports for 2 months
Straits Times 27 Mar 08;

PHNOM PENH - CAMBODIAN Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday banned rice exports in a bid to halt spiralling prices, which have reached highs of nearly US$1 (S$1.39) a kilogramme, up from US$0.40.

'Cambodia will halt the export of rice for two months,' he said.

'It is a temporary measure...but it is to ensure food security.'

He also appealed to Cambodians to be calm over the increasing prices of goods, especially that of rice, and blamed soaring rice prices on dishonest merchants out to inflate their profits, the Mekong Times newspaper reported.

The PM ordered a probe of rice merchants in Kandal, Kompong Thom and Kompong Cham provinces and asked the authorities as well as rice stall owners to report any irregularities.

He also ordered the Ministry of Commerce to put all rice mills across the country into operation in a bid to ensure that consumers would have enough supply of local rice.

XINHUA, ASSOCIATED PRESS


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Argentine strike threatens world food supplies

Farmers' protests put exports from the key agricultural country at risk
Straits Times 27 Mar 08;

BUENOS AIRES - A NATIONWIDE strike by Argentina's farmers and ranchers is raising fears that it would affect world food supplies and prices.

South America's second-largest economy after Brazil is a leading exporter of soya beans, beef and wheat.

In a first sign of trouble, soya bean prices have shot up and shipments to China, a major importer, have been disrupted.

The strike began on March 13 after the government announced new sliding-scale increases in export taxes.

Soya bean taxes, for example, were raised from 35 per cent to up to 45 per cent, with smaller increases on corn and other farm products.

The government hopes to replenish its coffers through the taxes on the back of soaring grain exports and commodity prices.

President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner's refusal to negotiate with farmers and ranchers has fuelled their ire, sparking large, pot-banging protests across Argentine cities for the first time in years.

She argued that the agricultural industry remained one of the country's most profitable despite the export tax increases, imposed at a time of surging global demand for Argentina's key exports of corn, wheat, soya beans and beef.

Protester Hector Bernardino, who was among the 5,000 who thronged the main plaza in Buenos Aires into the early hours of yesterday, said: 'This is a pretty ugly wake-up alarm for the government after just a few months in power.'

Outside the President's residence, protesters banged on the shuttered gates, shouting 'Argentina! Argentina! Cristina, resign!'

Mrs Kirchner won last year's polls and took office in December, succeeding her husband Nestor de Kirchner.

The pot-banging protests are called 'cacerolazos' - Spanish for the kinds of demonstrations used to bring down ill-fated former leaders during a 2001-2002 economic meltdown.

Protest organisers declared that the strike would continue 'indefinitely'.

The farmers' strike has forced several suppliers of soya beans and soya oil to halt shipments to China, the world's top importer, prompting worries of a possible shortage in May.

Singapore is unlikely to be affected because Argentina is not a major source of imports, the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority told The Straits Times yesterday.

Just over 3,000 tonnes of food - including seafood, fruit and beef - came in from Argentina, comprising a small fraction of total imports.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, REUTERS


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Shell, Virent work on green gasoline alternative

Tom Bergin, Reuters 26 Mar 08;

LONDON (Reuters) - Oil company Royal Dutch Shell Plc and U.S. bioscience firm Virent Energy Systems are to research a gasoline alternative from non-food crops that would reduce CO2 emissions without driving up food prices.

Shell said in a statement that unlike ethanol, currently the main biofuel alternative to gasoline, the fuel it and Virent aim to develop will be able to run in existing vehicles without the need to modify their engines.

Today's gasoline engines can usually only run on a small amounts of ethanol blended with gasoline -- typically 5 percent. Much higher percentages can be used with modification.

The project follows a trend of major oil companies, including San Ramon, California-based Chevron and London-based BP, investing in plans to produce motor fuels from crops.

The companies are mainly focusing on second-generation biofuels, which will be produced from non-food crops which can be grown on land not suitable for wheat or sugar cane.

Environmentalists critical of the oil companies say the investments, which are at most around 1 percent of the companies' total capital expenditure, are public-relations stunts aimed detracting attention from the environmental damage caused by producing and burning hydrocarbons.

Shell and Virent did not disclose the amount they are investing in the project and gave no targets for achieving commercial production of the new fuel.

Last May, Shell and Madison, Wisconsin-based Virent announced a partnership to develop processes to manufacture hydrogen from biomass, using the same technology which the partners hope will now produce "biogasoline".

Graeme Sweeney, executive vice president, future fuels and CO2 at Shell, told reporters on a media call that the collaboration on hydrogen was still active.

(Editing by Quentin Bryar)


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U.N.'s Pachauri urges caution in biofuel use

Ingrid Melander, Reuters 26 Mar 08;

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The world must take care when developing biofuels to avoid perverse environmental effects and higher food prices, Nobel Peace Prize winner and climate change scientist Rajendra Pachauri said on Wednesday.

Speaking at the European Parliament, he questioned whether the United States' policy of converting corn (maize) into ethanol for use as a transport fuel would reduce the emission of greenhouse gases blamed for global warming.

Controversy has grown over using food crops to make biofuels as an alternative to fossil fuels. Some environmentalists and politicians say it has raised food prices, distorted government budgets and led to deforestation in southeast Asia and Brazil.

"We should be very, very careful about coming up with biofuel solutions that have major impact on production of food grains and may have an implication for overall food security," Pachauri, chairman of the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, told a news conference.

"Questions do arise about what is being done in North America, for instance to convert corn into sugar then into biofuels, into ethanol," he said.

The United States is the world's biggest producer of biofuels, derived mostly from corn.

"Several questions have arisen on even the emissions implication of that route, and the fact that this has clearly raised prices of corn," said Pachauri, whose panel shared the Nobel prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore last year.

Scientists say some kinds of biofuel generate as much carbon dioxide (CO2) as the fossil fuels they replace.

Supporters, however, say biofuels are the only renewable alternative to fossil fuels and do generally result in greenhouse gas emission savings.

Pachauri, in Brussels for talks with European Union lawmakers, said it was crucial to look at other ways of producing biofuels, including investing strongly in research and development to convert cellulosic material into liquid fuels, as well as using agricultural residues.

EU leaders pledged last year to increase the proportion of biofuels used in petrol- and diesel-consuming land transport to 10 percent by 2020, but concern that this is pushing up food prices has led the bloc to say it may reconsider its strategy.

Pachauri declined to comment on this specific target but said the EU should regularly seek feedback on its impact and review it if necessary.

"I think we have to set up a system by which we get a proper feedback and evaluate it on a regular basis," he told Reuters.

Earlier this month EU leaders pledged to pass laws within 12 months to implement ambitious goals for combating climate change, including slashing greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent by 2020 and increasing the share of renewable energy.

Pachauri commended the 27-nation bloc's efforts, saying it had taken a much needed leadership role on climate change.

Asked if countries applying strict emissions curbs to fight climate change should tax imports from countries which do not, Pachauri said he hoped this would not be necessary.

The outcome of a U.N. conference in Copenhagen next year meant to adopt a new climate change treaty would be instrumental in that regard, he said.

(Editing by Tim Pearce)


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Diverting food products to make biofuels is foolish: Indian finance chief

Yahoo News 26 Mar 08;

Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram on Wednesday criticised countries like the US for diverting farm products to produce biofuels, saying this had led to soaring global food prices.

While growing demand was one reason for skyrocketing food prices, the use of agricultural products to make biofuels was another cause, he told a public lecture organised by the Lee Kuan Yew School Public Policy in Singapore.

"It has been estimated that nearly 20 percent of corn grown in the United States is diverted for producing biofuels," he said in his speech to academics, students and diplomats.

"As citizens of the world, we ought to be concerned about the foolishness of growing food and diverting it into fuel."

Chidambaram slammed the "lopsided priorities of certain countries" that produce fuel at a cheaper cost to meet the transport needs of a certain section of their population even if it leads to higher food prices elsewhere.

The price of many food commodities has soared worldwide to record levels over the last year due to booming demand in fast-growing Asian countries as well as the increased use of biofuels.

Present-generation biofuels are derived from food crops such as corn, sugar cane and soybeans.

Biofuels were initially viewed as an environmentally-friendly alternative with no geopolitical risk compared with dirty fossil fuels, but they are now under attack as some unintended consequences emerge.

Speaking at a forum after his speech, the Indian finance chief said countries producing large quantities of food should sell it to the rest of the world at reasonable prices.

"But a very insular selfish approach encourages them to convert food into fuel. I think it is the most foolish thing that humanity can do," he said.

"There are non-food items that can be produced to make biofuels... To convert corn to fuel... I think it's outrageous and it must be condemned."

Chidambaram, who spoke on the challenge of sustaining economic growth amid global uncertainty, said the relentless rise in food and commodity prices have put an "enormous problem" on developing countries.

The price of oil, for example, has risen from 34 US dollars a barrel in 2004 to more than 110 US dollars a barrel recently, he said.

Urea, a fertilizer, cost only 175 dollars per metric tonne in 2004, rising to 288 dollars in April 2007 and 370 dollars as of January this year, he said, adding that the prices of metals and minerals have also risen sharply.

Palm oil cost 471 dollars per metric tonne in 2004, rising to 1,177 dollars by February 2008, he said.

He said organisations such as the Group of 20 biggest economies and the Group of Seven industrialised countries should get together and agree on a band for oil prices to either rise or fall.

"If we are serious about ending poverty, the place to start is to make food and fuel available at reasonable prices," he said.

Referring to the global financial turmoil, Chidambaram said the crisis in risky US home mortgages that triggered the turbulence was due to poor regulation and lax supervision.

"If this had happened in developing countries, we would have been lectured on the virtues of bankruptcy," he said in an apparent dig at the bailout of US financial institutions hit by the turmoil.

"Since this is happening in developed countries, no one pauses to ask whether all the old arguments are not being made to stand on their head."

US biofuel policies 'outrageous'
Today Online 27 Mar 08;

INDIA'S finance minister said yesterday it was "outrageous" for countries like the United States to be turning food into biofuels at the cost of feeding the world's poor, who are already hit by the current surge in oil and food prices.

Mr P Chidambaram said developing economies were shouldering an "enormous burden" from the relentless rise in prices of food and commodities. Some countries like India subsidise food and fuel.

Speaking at a lecture at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore, Mr Chidambaram said the situation was worsened by the diversion of food to produce biofuels in some countries, citing the US as an example, where he said it was estimated nearly 20 per cent of corn goes to making biofuels.

"It is a sign of the lopsided priorities of certain countries that they will resort to measures that will produce fuel at a cheaper cost … even while a larger proportion of the world's population is deprived of food at reasonable prices or, as in the case of some countries, deprived of food altogether," Mr Chidambaram said. "I think it is outrageous and it must be condemned."

Corn, soybeans, sugar cane and other crops are seen as sources of clean and cheap biofuels. This means less grain is available for human consumption, driving up prices for basic foodstuffs. — AP


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British fishing industry turning green, says watchdog

· UK fleets rise to meet ecological standards
· Greenpeace says flaws in labelling scheme remain

Severin Carrell, The Guardian 26 Mar 08;

Britain's fishing industry is in line to become one of the greenest in the world, with a record number of fleets to be awarded coveted "eco-labels" for their catches of haddock, dover sole, herring and prawns.

The Marine Stewardship Council, which oversees the best-known environmental scheme for fisheries, said several of the UK's largest fleets were on course to join its labelling scheme, proving their environmental credentials .

By next year, the council estimates 275,000 tonnes of fish such as mackerel, haddock and sea bass caught by British trawlers will carry its trademark blue eco-label, making it possible for takeaways and supermarkets to begin selling "green" fish and chips and eco-labelled scampi.

At present, the only eco-labelled fisheries in British waters are small, niche industries catching seafood such as dover sole - one of the most threatened fish in British waters - langoustines and cockles, which currently account for just 4,580 tonnes each year.

The industry's drive towards environmental accreditation marks a profound shift in attitude after decades of open conflict with green campaigners over plunging fish stocks and illegal landings, particularly in the North Sea. It requires fisheries to agree to strict catch levels, protecting young and spawning stock, cutting the "by-catch" of non-target species and using only the correct fishing nets.

In parallel with the MSC programme, the Sea Fish Industry Authority has persuaded 437 UK trawlers - roughly 60% of the British fleet - to join a "responsible fishing" scheme similar to the red tractor quality mark used by farmers, although its environmental standards are weaker.

Trawlermen have come under intense pressure to take part in conservation schemes from companies such as Young's, the UK's largest seafood supplier, and supermarkets. Britain's biggest retailers, particularly Asda and Morrisons, have faced embarrassing campaigns of direct action, led by Greenpeace, over their sale of fish from depleted seas, and supermarkets are now competing to become the UK's greenest fishmonger, dropping threatened species such as skate, dover sole and swordfish from their counters.

Asda has pledged that by 2012, all its fish will be MSC-certified, while Sainsbury's has promised to double its range of eco-labelled seafood. Waitrose and Marks & Spencer already have very strict seafood policies, and ban unsustainable British-caught fish from their shelves. As a result, sales of eco-labelled fish in British shops jumped by 15% last year, to £110m.

Mike Parker, the deputy chief executive of Young's, which produces four-fifths of the eco-labelled fish sold in the UK, said that if these much larger fleets passed the MSC's assessment, up to half of all the wild-caught fish caught by British trawlers would become eco-friendly.

"That's highly significant," he said. "That would make the UK the most significant eco-fish market in the world."

The MSC's biggest coup has been to persuade two of Britain's largest fisheries - the Scottish fleets which catch roughly 200,000 tonnes of mackerel and herring in the North Sea and north Atlantic - to apply for its eco-label.

Several major prawn fisheries - now the industry's most valuable catch - have also applied. North Sea cod may follow after several Norwegian fleets applied to join the MSC, although Young's refuses to stock North Sea cod because it believes the fish is still far too threatened.

Currently, nearly all eco-labelled fish sold in the UK is shipped or flown into Britain from abroad, often from fisheries near Alaska, New Zealand and South Africa which have been criticised by Greenpeace. It accuses the MSC of being too lax, ignoring significant problems with "by-catch", where high volumes of other fish species are caught, and overlooking the damage caused by trawling on fragile seabeds. Greenpeace broadly supports the MSC, but is worried that the North Sea is still too threatened to allow its fish to be branded as eco-friendly.

Yet Robin Howes, chief executive of the MSC, said he believed the UK industry had reached a tipping point. He added: "I think sustainability has become part and parcel of the market. There's an awful lot of people in the industry who recognise the practices of the past aren't sustainable, and that that threatens their livelihoods."

Howes insisted the MSC was tougher than Greenpeace admits. He said the controversial hoki fishery in New Zealand had recently had its quota cut in half, while the council had refused to pass some fisheries, including one North Sea lobster fishery.


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