Best of our wild blogs: 30 Mar 08


Wild Animals of Singapore book launch
a fabulous book on the wildfilms blog

Nature Watch features our reefs and shores
a gorgeous issue packed with photos and stories of our marine heritage on the singapore celebrates our reefs blog

Chek Jawa boardwalk with OBS
a great team with fabulous observations on the naked hermit crabs blog and wildfilms blog and wonderful thoughts shared on the adventures with the naked hermit crab blog

Courtship of the Black-naped oriole
amazing photos on the bird ecology blog

Exploring Marina East
a marshland with dragonflies on the tidechaser blog and mountain and sea blog

Three Posies
stunning little creatures on the butterflies of singapore blog


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Singapore noodle hawkers feel pinch as cost of flour goes up and up and up

Shree Ann Mathavan, The New Paper 30 Mar 08;

30 March 2008

YOU can no longer get the famous bak chor mee (minced pork noodles) at Fengshan Market and Food Centre in Bedok North for $2

Mr Sim Chee Huat, 56, co-owner of the stall, said only the $2.50 and $3 versions are now available.

The reason the price of noodles has jumped about 50 per cent this month, from $1.30 to $2 per kg.

Mr Sim said the business, which typically sells 400 to 500 bowls a day, saw a 10 per cent drop in profit after he stopped selling the $2 version.

He sighed: 'It's hard to make a living because the noodle prices keep jumping and jumping.'

Mr Sim explained he had to strike off the $2 option, because he would be running at a loss otherwise.

The cost of each bowl of his noodles, excluding labour, is about $1.30, he said.

Still, he plans to resist raising prices again, despite the upward trend of noodle prices.

'If we keep increasing prices, people won't want to come anymore,' he said with a sigh.

INCREASE AGAIN

But his noodle supplier has already warned him that prices will increase again next month - although he's not certain yet by how much.

Which means profit margins aren't likely to improve any time soon, Mr Sim noted glumly.

Noodle costs are linked to climbing wheat prices, which is also pushing up the prices of other flour-based products like bread.

Mr Png Geo Lian, 70, chairman of the Association of Chinese Wheat Flour Merchants of Singapore, said the price of flour has increased four times since September last year.

This is due to a world-wide wheat shortage, he said.

According to him, a 25kg bag of flour cost $20.40 early last year, but now it costs $35, a 75 per cent increase.

This paints a bleak scenario for Mr Lim Yu Gee, 64, who sells Hokkien mee in the same food centre as Mr Sim.

He has had to increase the price of his noodles from $2.50 to $3 because of rising costs.

The increase saw his business drop by about 30 per cent, he said.

Now, Mr Lim sells about a hundred odd plates of noodles each day.

Each month, his profits hover around $900.

He feels there should be price controls to help small-time businesses like his.

Moreover as Mr Lim pointed out: 'This is a hawker centre, it's not a very high-class setting, so people won't be willing to pay very much.'

Still, if the price of noodles keeps climbing, he said he will have to increase prices again.

'I have to eat, I have to make money - if not I will close shop,' he said.

While some hawkers might have made price adjustments, others, like the bak chor mee stall at Seng Huat Eating House on North Bridge Road, don't have any plans to do so - yet.

Hawker Tan Kim Hock, 47, said the price of noodles at the stall has been maintained at $3, during the three years he has worked there.

Perhaps, what helps is the volume of business.

On any given day, the stall sells 'at least 500 bowls of noodles'.

Mr Tan explained: 'We have business, but we still worry that if we raise prices, our customers may not want to come back.'

Mrs Loo Siok Hwa, 30, a worker at Parklane Zha Yun Tun Mee House in Sunshine Plazaon Bencoolen Street said her shop increased the price of a plate of noodles by 50 cents to $3.50 last year.

Business then dropped by about 10 per cent to about 200 plates of noodles daily.

She summed up the hawkers' predicament by saying in Mandarin: 'We increase by 50 cents and customers complain a lot.

'If we increase again, we will be finished.'

And what do customers have to say?

Miss Frances Wu, 27, an administrator, said that if the hawker fare is good, it warrants going back.

She said: 'We still have to eat. I won't stop patronising the hawkers just because there's a slight increase.'

However, she added: 'If hawker food increases to $3, I think that's still acceptable, but if it goes up to $4, then perhaps not.'


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Adequate rice supply, so no fear of shortage in Singapore: Iswaran

Singapore gets its rice from various countries, so if one source is affected, there are alternatives
By Nur Dianah Suhaimi, Straits Times 30 Mar 08;

SINGAPOREANS need not worry about that next bowl of rice despite export cutbacks amid a global shortage and demand spike.

The country's rice supply is adequate, said Minister of State for Trade and Industry S. Iswaran last night.

Importers have enough in their inventories to ensure that there is no disruption in supply.

Singapore gets its rice from various countries. This ensures that if one source is affected, there will be alternatives.

Singaporeans 'should not be unduly concerned...The main thing for us is to just carry on with life as normal', Mr Iswaran told reporters at a lighting demonstration for the Formula One night race near the Padang.

His assurance came after the country's largest supermarket chain, FairPrice, upped prices of rice for three of its house brands on Friday. It has held back on raising prices since the middle of last year when the goods and services tax (GST) went up.

Recent global grain prices have shot up by 30 per cent but FairPrice is increasing its rice prices only by 10 to 15 per cent.

Its managing director, Mr Seah Kian Peng, said it was able to moderate price rises because it imports directly from producer countries, thus eliminating middleman costs. It has also set aside sufficient stock for national emergencies and was able to draw on this.

The Dairy Farm Group, which owns the Cold Storage supermarket chain, told The Sunday Times it is also working with suppliers to ensure an adequate rice supply.

Mr Iswaran said the Government will not impose price controls as these will hurt importers.

The Minister of State, who will be promoted to the senior grade on Tuesday, noted that if there are sharp price adjustments, 'we should have measures in place'' to help, especially those in the lower-income group.

He said growth dividends - the first instalment will be paid next week and the second in October - and the second instalment of the GST offsets in the middle of the year should help many lower-income families cope.

'And if there is a need for help beyond that, we also have specific measures...We should be able to help most, if not all, Singaporeans meet any kind of short-term increase in prices.'


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Swop & Save: Singapore teens taking up barter

Teens are taking to the old-fashioned practice of barter by trading unwanted items online
Alex Liam, Straits Times 30 Mar 08;

WE MAY be living in a 'throwaway' world but the Internet has helped revive an old-fashioned practice, even among the young: barter.

YouSwop, a Singapore-based website set up in August last year to allow people to swop things they did not want for something else, is proving to be a hit.

The website has been gaining popularity, with some 6,000 members joining in just the past six months. Teenagers make up 35 per cent of the crowd.

Membership is free.

'This idea works because people want to barter away things they bought on impulse which others might find more useful,' says Mr Patrick Lim, 32, co-founder and manager of the website.

Members put up notices informing others about items they want to swop. The site is popular because of its flexibility: There can be a direct swop between two parties.

Or, a member can 'sell' an item to someone else for You-

Swop dollars (YS$). The value of any item is up to the seller.

The virtual credit earned can then be used to buy other items on the 'swopping board'.

The actual exchange of items takes place through postal delivery or a direct meeting at a location agreeable to both parties. Postage charges are usually borne by the seller.

Young adults and teenagers who spoke to The Sunday Times like the website.

Ms Ivy Tan, 21, is one such fan. The undergraduate from Nanyang Technological University usually swops clothes, vouchers and books for bags and collectibles.

She joined YouSwop in January, after a friend told her about the site.

'It's novel, and the fact that it's virtually cashless helps me to keep tabs on my spending. I get a fresh supply of items I want to use without shelling out any cash,' she says.

The swopping facility has since evolved to include contests in which members can win movie tickets.

Members like this feature too.

'This site totally feeds my need for a great bargain,' Ivy says with a laugh.

Another member who is fast becoming a regular YouSwop user is 16-year-old Hazel Tan. The Methodist Girls' Secondary student joined the website in December last year.

She admits that she is a shopper who buys things 'on impulse' quite often.

Hazel feels that the concept of passing on unwanted but still useful items to someone else is sensible.

'Just throwing away such items is wasteful. Giving them to those who want or need them makes sense.

'Besides, doing this earns me credits to get other items I want, which is good for people with limited cash like me,' she says.

The website even has a feedback system which allows people to find out who are the reliable swoppers.

Site manager Mr Lim, a business consultant, admits that he had not expected YouSwop to become so successful.

He had started it with two friends simply as a nifty way to get rid of excess goods on their hands.

However, they soon realised it was a great way of helping the green movement - as the website's popularity increased, mainly by word of mouth.

'It became clear that we were doing something similar to recycling, basically helping the environment while leaving everyone satisfied,' he says.

Mr Lim hopes that the young people who use his website will one day bring swopping to a greater level.

He says with a grin: 'In future, these young people will influence others about swopping. It might become a popular culture, even a norm.'

Still, the swopping website has its share of problems.

There have been cases, for example, where one person has not kept to his part of the bargain in the swop. Mr Lim and his ever vigilant team will then swoop in to mediate.

Besides YouSwop, another site, sgfreecycle.com, works on a different model - no barter trade is involved here.

Members dispose of items they no longer want. Other members indicate their interest on a first come, first served basis.

Teen stuff takes up a significant proportion of items on offer on this website, ranging from Playstation games to arcade tokens.

University student Lim MayAnn, 27, managed to satisfy her craving for her favourite movies through the website.

'I was thinking of watching old movies like A Time To Kill, but I didn't want to have to spend money and go around hunting for them,' she says.

'So when someone said he was giving his copy away, I headed down to his place in Bishan, which is pretty near my home in Upper Thomson, to collect the movie.'

An online check revealed that there are more websites which offer teens in Singapore the chance to swop items.

They include Swapace and Bookmooch, with the former offering quirky items such as a pet spider and hair-styling clay and the latter focusing on books.


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Aquarium furniture: fish tanks in Singapore

Water world
Fish tanks are no longer the rectangular glass affairs of the past. Now, they come in the form of coffee tables, bar counters and slim, wall-mounted ones
Sandra Leong, Straits Times 30 Mar 08;

But the somewhat worrying news for fish lovers is that some customers are not enthusiastic aquarists and are just charmed by the unique aesthetics of the products.

SINGAPOREAN real estate agent Nancy Hawkes wanted an aquarium in her Sentosa Cove condominium to house her beloved arowana fish. Her Irish husband, Mr Noel Hawkes, who is vice-president of hotel planning of the Resorts World at Sentosa integrated resort on the island, would have nothing of that sort.

Pointing to the unobstructed sea view from the balcony of the master bedroom, he tells LifeStyle in mock despair: 'She wanted to put a fish tank right in the middle of this. I said, that is not happening.'

The couple finally compromised: an aquarium cum bar counter that now sits pretty in the corner of the balcony.

This piece of 'aquarium furniture' is a glass fish tank with a two-tier counter top where bottles of wine and champagne can be displayed.

Says Mr Hawkes, 55: 'My wife is the fish woman. I'm the wine man. With this, I'm happy, she's happy. The fish is happy.'

Adds 49-year-old Mrs Hawkes: 'We often sit here at night and have wine while looking out at the sky and sea.'

If you think fish tanks are bulky, algae-infested glass boxes best hidden in the kitchen or backyard of the house, well, you probably haven't been keeping up with the tide of things.

From fishy bar counters like the Hawkes' to coffee table aquariums to slimmer-than-slim wall-mounted ones that resemble plasma televisions, novel fish tanks are winning over house- proud Singaporeans.

Custom built to blend in with a home's interior, they are popping up anywhere from humble HDB flats to luxe landed properties, giving the long-time hobby of fish-keeping a glossy new spin.

Apart from adding a splash of fengshui - fish are traditionally seen as harbingers of wealth - and marine-inspired decor to one's abode, another apparent attraction of such 'designer' aquariums is that they are easy to maintain.

Depending on a customer's preference, the tanks can be sold as a package, complete with a self-sustainable ecosystem of aquatic plants and fish.

Owners need only feed their fish, top up the water level once or twice a month and check occasionally to see if the tank's filters and pumps are working.

In general, marine tanks, which house fish found in salt water, are a little harder to upkeep than freshwater tanks as their environments are harder to mimic.

Expect however to fork out well into the thousands for these conversation pieces. The Hawkes, for instance, paid $8,000 for their bar counter aquarium. And depending on size and sophistication, a novelty tank could cost anything from $1,000 to $30,000, according to LifeStyle's checks with aquarium specialists.

There are as many as 10 such businesses in Singapore catering to a mix of homes and commercial properties, say industry players.

The majority set up shop over the past five years, an indication that demand, while small, is certainly burgeoning.

The impetus behind this growing interest, explains co-owner of Atlantis Aquatic Design Tan Lye Hee, is that with Singaporeans becoming more design-savvy, few want a fish tank that 'sticks out like a sore thumb'.

Mr Tan, a former interior designer who saw potential in the market, registered Atlantis in 2002 and calls himself one of the local pioneers in aquarium design. He has incorporated aquariums into partitions, feature walls and storage cabinets.

Demand, he says, has increased steadily by about 5 to 10 per cent each year since the company was founded.

He has had customers as young as 15. Secondary 3 student Nigel Lim 'earned' a $3,000 fish tank cum storage cabinet from his father, a technical executive in a luxury car company, when he scored well in his Primary School Leaving Examination three years ago.

The tank also acts as a partition in the family's five-room HDB flat, dividing the living room from the main corridor.

Michael Aquatic Design's Michael Lee, a former financial planner and avid fish lover, set up his company about three years ago with his first product: a coffee table aquarium.

Doing his own carpentry work, he had designed a prototype of this - similar to the bar counter at the Hawkes' apartment except lower in height - which he displayed at a furniture exhibition at Park Mall. To his surprise, a passer-by bought the piece for $2,500.

Besides the coffee table and bar counter designs, he also has television consoles and dining tables - all with aquariums within - in his showroom. His coffee table aquarium is the best-seller, with over 100 sets sold since 2004.

'It's an evolution of a hobby,' he reasons. 'Just like TV sets, we went from black-and-white to colour to plasma. The same for fish tanks.'

Singaporean sales coordinator Lynn Weegenhausen, 48, walked past Mr Lee's shop in Park Mall when she was renovating her condominium apartment last July. She spotted one of his coffee table designs and immediately imagined the $3,500 piece taking centrestage in her living room.

'It's so relaxing to have this. When I come home after a day's work, I lie down next to the tank and look at the fish for a few hours,' she says.

Over at Aquatic Style, over 3,000 pieces of a slim, wall-mounted fish tank designed to resemble a picture frame have flown off the shelves since the product was launched in 2002, says owner Jackson Tan.

Its selling point: The tank is 14 cm thick.

One of his customers, lecturer Rebecca Chan, 43, who bought a 1.5m-long wall-mounted tank for her five-room HDB flat for $1,200, says her purchase gives her a 'sense of well-being'.

'Look,' she says. 'I don't even have a TV in my living room.'

Other names in the high-end aquarium design business include The Glass Box in Bukit Timah Shopping Centre, Aquatechnic in Kallang, Geo Aquatic Design in Clifford Centre and Bio Aquaristik at Tampines Mall.

But the somewhat worrying news for fish lovers is that some customers are not enthusiastic aquarists and are just charmed by the unique aesthetics of the products.

Despite the hassle-free design of such tanks, The Glass Box's co-owner Kelvin Lim has seen owners 'overfeed their fish by more than 10 times' before learning the tricks and tools of keeping fish.

But there are others like Mrs Weegenhausen who eventually fall in love with their fish and become hobbyists. She says: 'When I first got the tank, I had only goldfish. Now I have 59 fish, including torpedos, tetras and skeleton fish.'

And then there's the question of whether some designs - like the coffee table and super-slim tanks - are gimmicky and cruel to the fish.

Asks engineer Wilfred Tan, who has two 'normal' tanks of freshwater fish in his five-room HDB flat: 'I wonder if the fish in the coffee table get scared whenever someone slams a cup down on its surface, or if those in the slim wall tanks feel claustrophobic.'

To this, Michael Aquatic Design's Mr Lee says he believes the fish get used to the shock after some time. Likening the situation to people who live next to an MRT track, he adds: 'After a while, you don't notice the noise.'

Mr Jackson Tan says: 'Fish usually don't have a sense of space so it doesn't matter how big the tank is. After all, you also put fighting fish in jars, right?'


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Singapore power hikes: Low-income families to feel pinch most

Unlike middle-income earners, they have fewer options to cut energy use as they use basic appliances
Mavis Toh & Jamie Ee Wen Wei, Straits Times 30 Mar 08;

THE air-conditioner is the top energy guzzler in the home. But while middle-income earners can reduce the usage of such power-hungry appliances to cope with rising electricity bills, there is less room for low-income earners to do so since they are already using very basic appliances.

This is the view of Madam Halimah Yacob, an MP for Jurong GRC, when The Sunday Times spoke to her and other MPs about the impact on households of electricity tariffs going up this week. 'What they are using now is already so basic, you can't ask them to cut any more,' said Madam Halimah.

From Tuesday, electricity will cost 23.88 cents per kilowatt-hour (kwh) for the next three months. This is a rise of about 5 per cent from the 22.62 cents per kwh charged this quarter.

A family living in a four-room HDB flat, using an average of 355kwh a month, will pay $85 monthly, or $12 more.

The MPs, noting that the tariff hike follows a string of increases in food and transport costs, said the lower-income group will feel the pinch most.

As Madam Halimah said: 'For families operating on a very tight budget, every cent counts.'

With the higher cost of living, the MPs said an average of three residents weekly seek their help for unpaid power bills.

Mr Charles Chong, an MP for Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC, has also observed a slight increase in the number of cases where people are unable to cope with inflation. 'In the past, we had one case or even none. Now, with costs going up, we can get up to five cases a week,' he said.

MPs say they will help residents who run into arrears to negotiate instalment payment plans with Singapore Power. Vouchers are also available to help them pay their bills.

Electricity tariffs are reviewed quarterly and revised mainly according to fluctuations in fuel-oil prices. The latest adjustment has pushed the rate to its highest level in eight years.

The National Environment Agency said that besides the air-conditioner, the other energy guzzlers in a typical home are the refrigerator, lighting items, water heater and computer. Its advice: Set the thermostat as high as comfortably possible, use one large refrigerator instead of two small ones, and use fluorescent tubes instead of the regular bulb.

Marketing manager Leonard Chia, 45, whose family of four live in a three-bedroom condominium unit, is already figuring out how to reduce his power bill ahead of the tariff hike.

Since January, his monthly power bill has been $300. It usually hovers around $250. He will disconnect one of the two fridges in the kitchen and stuff all the food into one. As for the five-bulb lamp in his living room, it will be replaced with a lamp with a single energy-saving bulb.

But the MPs noted there are also Singaporeans - including those who do not earn much - who are unwilling to adjust their habits.

Housewife Lam Sow Xing, 45, thinks her monthly bill of $250 is too high but finds it hard to trim it. She lives in a five-room flat in

Sengkang with her husband and two teenage children.

They have three air-conditioners, four TV sets and two computers. Each of these is used for up to 10 hours a day.

'When the kids are at home, the TV sets and computers are on,' she said. 'And my husband can't live without the air-con.'

Ms Lee Bee Wah, an MP for Ang Mo Kio GRC, said she has come across families living in four-room flats and complaining of a $400 power bill. 'They keep all the air-cons on all night, have a plasma TV set and a big fridge. And they say they can't sleep without the air-con,' she said.

North West District Mayor Teo Ho Pin reminded Singaporeans to choose appliances that meet their needs. 'Ask yourself, do you really need a big fridge?' he said. But he added that habits take time and discipline to change.

Meanwhile, town councils and private estates are in a hurry to manage rising costs.

North West District, for instance, is looking at using solar energy to light up the parks and landscaped areas.

A 699-unit condominium in Choa Chu Kang has gone for energy-saving bulbs, and shorter operating hours for water features and motion-detector lights.

How one family of five is cutting back on power consumption
Jamie Ee Wen Wei, Straits Times 30 Mar 08;

THEIR utility bill was over $300, twice that of the national average for a four-room HDB flat.

So when electricity tariffs began to inch up last year, Madam Siti Aminah Bakar, 34, came up with an action plan.

Every day, the clerk, who lives in Pasir Ris with her building manager husband and three children, would check the reading on the electricity meter.

To keep their bill under $300, their power consumption should not exceed 35kwh each day.

They replaced a window-unit air-con in the master bedroom with an energy-efficient multi-split unit.

They now set the air-con on timer mode - it cuts off at 5am. They switch it on only at 11pm.

The water heater in the bathroom is used only between 5.30am and 8am daily.

They do not shower at night.

Other measures adopted include doing the laundry when the machine has a full load, and limiting ironing to work clothes.

'We don't iron T-shirts or bedsheets. I know some families even iron their underwear,' said Madam Siti.

But they have kept some creature comforts, such as three TV sets to watch different programmes. Each is switched on for up to nine hours a day.

Two desktop computers - one for work and one for the children - are used for four hours a day.

'If you want the comfort and convenience, you just have to pay for it,' she said.

Six energy-guzzling appliances
Straits Times 30 Mar 08;

AIR-CONDITIONERS

Energy consumed: A single split-unit air-con consumes about 252kwh a month if used for seven hours every day.

Cost: $60.18 a month

How to save energy:

# Consider a multi-split system if you require more than one room to be cooled.

# Ensure that the unit is the right capacity to match the amount of cooling required.

# Clean the air-con filter regularly and have the unit inspected annually. Poorly maintained equipment can waste a lot of energy.

# Set the thermostat at 25 deg C. It is a comfortable temperature for most, yet will not consume that much energy.


REFRIGERATORS

Energy consumed: A 300 litre frost-free unit will consume about 115kwh a month if switched on year round.

Cost: $27.51 a month

How to save energy:

# Choose a model with an energy-saver switch which will allow you to determine the setting that provides maximum energy savings without causing condensation.

# Adjust the thermostat to the recommended settings.

# Allow hot food to cool before putting it in the fridge and cover all food and liquids to prevent moisture from being released. Moisture increases the amount of energy that will be used during the fridge's defrosting cycle.

# Do not open the door unnecessarily as the cool air will escape.


WATER HEATERS

Energy consumed: A 1,000 watt instantaneous or tankless unit uses 60kwh if used for a total of two hours daily.

Cost: $14.33 a month

How to save energy:

# Use an instantaneous water heater instead of one with a storage tank. The former provides hot water only when needed.

# If you prefer a storage water heater, choose one with a capacity of 23 litres to 27 litres, which is enough for a family of four to six. The bigger the capacity, the more energy consumed.

# Switch on the storage water heater just 20 minutes before taking a bath. Switch it off after that.


WASHING MACHINES

Energy consumed: A 450 watt unit without heater consumes 13.5kwh if used for an hour each day.

Cost: $3.22 a month

How to save energy:

# Wash a full load of laundry each time.

# Don't use hot water to wash clothes as heating up the water sucks up more energy. If you must have hot water, using cold water during the rinse cycle will cut energy use by half.

# Do not put too much detergent to avoid having to wash or rinse the load again.

# Pre-soak or use a soak cycle when washing heavily soiled items to avoid two washings.


TELEVISION SETS

Energy consumed: A 26-inch conventional TV set consumes about 30kwh a month if used for five hours a day.

Cost: $7.16 a month

How to save energy:

# When watching television, keep the lights in the room low. This saves electricity and reduces glare from your screen.

# Switch off the set when not in use, including the main switch.

# Choose a conventional CRT TV set instead of a plasma set. The latter consumes about four times more energy.

# Alternatively, choose an LCD set instead of a plasma set as it consumes less energy.


COMPUTERS

Energy consumed: A 300 watt unit - about the maximum power of a 24-inch iMac - consumes about 36kwh a month if used for four hours a day.

Cost: $8.60 a month

How to save energy:

# Set the power to automatically go into sleep or stand-by mode after 15 minutes or so of inactivity.

# Switch off the computer when not in use for long periods. This applies to the main switch too.

# Use liquid crystal display (LCD) monitors as they consume half to two-thirds what cathode-ray tube (CRT) monitors do.

# A laptop uses up to 50 per cent less energy than a desktop.

SOURCE: SINGAPORE POWER AND NATIONAL ENVIRONMENT AGENCY


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Earth Hour blackout highlights global warming

Madeleine Coorey, Yahoo News 29 Mar 08;

Australia's largest city was shrouded in darkness on Saturday night as it launched a worldwide campaign stretching from Sydney to San Francisco to highlight global warming.

Sydney was the first major metropolis to mark Saturday's 'Earth Hour', a self-imposed 60-minute black-out, with the lights on landmark buildings, corporate skyscrapers, businesses and homes switched off from 8:00 pm (0900 GMT).

From there the initiative, which aims to engage the community in combatting global warming, will see lights dimmed or turned off at 8:00 pm local time in Asian cities such as Bangkok and Manila, before spreading further to Europe and the Americas. Tel Aviv marked the event on March 27 for religious reasons.

'Earth Hour' founder Andy Ridley, who has said up to 30 million people could participate this year, said he was amazed at how far the initiative had spread since it was launched by environmental group WWF in Sydney a year ago.

"When we first talked about it, right at the beginning, our dream was to come up with something that made sense to a lot of people to do," he told AFP.

"And what seems to have happened is that it does seem to make sense to a lot of people to do it."

'Earth Hour' encourages governments, companies and homeowners to voluntarily switch off power to non-essential appliances for one hour to illustrate how, by working together, people can make a difference by using less energy, thereby producing fewer greenhouse gas emissions.

About 2.2 million people are estimated to have participated in the 2007 Sydney event which left the city's iconic harbourside Opera House and nearby Harbour Bridge bathed in moonlight as restaurant diners ate by candlelight and company logos on office buildings were dimmed.

'Earth Hour' Australia chief executive Greg Bourne said with 370 cities, towns and local governments across 35 countries taking part, he expected tens of millions of people to participate in 2008.

"I'm putting my neck on the line but my hope is that we top 100 million people," he said.

He said 'Earth Hour' carried "a message of hope and optimism... (that) we, the citizens of the world, are prepared to take action and we want to defeat climate change."

At 8:00 pm, Sydney's Harbour Bridge and Opera House dimmed as the floodlights were turned off, leaving only security lighting on. Elsewhere in the central business district, office lights were turned off.

Twenty-six cities around the world are officially signed on to turn off their lights on Saturday night, including Chicago and Atlanta in the US and the Irish capital Dublin, but hundreds more towns and local governments are expected to be involved in the 60-minute shutdown.

In Bangkok, the lights on some of the Thai capital's most famous landmarks, including the riverside Temple of the Dawn, the Rama 8 Cable Bridge across the Chao Phraya River and the main boulevard in the city's historic core will be turned off.

Sawaeng Tankam, 50, a motorcycle taxi driver, said authorities should expand the campaign to more areas.

"Why do they switch off the lights only in a few areas? That doesn't do enough to save energy. They should do this in every district in the city or even better, in every province," he said.

Some people in the Thai capital said they didn't know about the campaign.

"Switch off the lights? Where?" said Prapunpong Kaewyaem, 28, a vendor selling brass statues on Rajdamri Road, one of the thoroughfares set to turn off its street lamps.

Others voiced concern about the city plunging into darkness.

"I don't like it. This doesn't help anything. It is going to be dark," said Supoj Jaidee, a self-employed 30 year old.

Meanwhile in Manila, several major thoroughfares will go dark as street lights and billboards are switched off on the designated hour, Philippine Energy Secretary Angelo Reyes said.

Cities involved in 'Earth Hour' include Aalborg, Aarhus, Adelaide, Atlanta, Bangkok, Brisbane, Canberra, Chicago, Christchurch, Copenhagen, Darwin, Dublin, Hobart, Manila, Melbourne, Montreal, Odense, Ottawa, Perth, Phoenix, San Francisco, Suva, Sydney, Tel Aviv, Toronto and Vancouver.

Sydney goes dark for Earth Hour
Tanalee Smith, Associated Press Yahoo News 29 Mar 08;

Sydney's iconic Opera House and Harbour Bridge went dark Saturday night as the world's first major city turned off its lights for this year's Earth Hour, a global campaign to raise awareness of climate change.

A lightning show was the brightest part of Sydney's skyline during Earth Hour, which began at 8 p.m. when the lights were turned off at the city's landmarks. Most businesses and homes were already dark as Sydney residents embraced their second annual Earth Hour with candlelight dinners, beach bonfires and even a green-powered outdoor movie.

"This provides an extraordinary symbol and an indication that we can be part of the solution" to global warming, Australian Environment Minister Peter Garrett told Sky News television, standing across the harbor from the dark silhouette of the Opera House.

Garrett said government offices and national monuments around the country participated in Earth Hour.

"We're not only talking the talk, we're walking the walk," he said as the hour ended. "Whatever your view is about the magnitude of the problem ... we can save money by using energy wisely and efficiently, and that gives us the added bonus of reduced greenhouse gas emissions."

During the one-hour event, Sydney was noticeably darker, though it was not a complete blackout. The business district was mostly dark; organizers said 250 of the 350 commercial buildings there had pledged to shut off their lights completely, and 94 of the top 100 companies on the Australian stock exchange were also participating.

The number of participants was not immediately available but organizers were hoping to beat last year's debut, when 2.2 million people and more than 2,000 businesses shut off lights and appliances, resulting in a 10.2 percent reduction in carbon emissions during that hour.

"I'm putting my neck on the line but my hope is that we top 100 million people," Earth Hour Australia chief executive Greg Bourne said.

The effect of last year's Earth Hour was infectious. This year 26 major world cities and more than 300 other cities and towns have signed up to participate.

New Zealand and Fiji kicked off the event this year. In Christchurch, New Zealand, more than 100 businesses and thousands of homes were plunged into darkness, computers and televisions were switched off and dinners delayed for the hour from 8 to 9 p.m. Suva, Fiji, in the same time zone, also turned off its lights.

Auckland's Langham Hotel switched from electric lights to candles as it joined the effort to reduce the use of electricity, which when generated creates greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.

Australians had their own unique ways to mark the blackout as the clock struck 8 across the nation; one bar was offering free beers to customers who arrived with a black balloon to signify their carbon footprint; staff at beach bar donned solar-powered caps; a bed and breakfast offered candlelight cooking lessons; a children's hospital hosted a pajama party for its patients.

Following Australia, lights will go out in major Asian cities including Manila and Bangkok before moving to Europe and North America as the clock ticks on. One of the last major cities to participate will be San Francisco — home to the soon-to-be dimmed Golden Gate Bridge.

Organizers see the event as a way to encourage the world to conserve energy. While all lights in participating cities are unlikely to be cut, it is the symbolic darkening of monuments, businesses and individual homes they are most eagerly anticipating.

Even popular search engine Google put its support behind Earth Hour, with a completely black page and the words: "We've turned the lights out. Now it's your turn."

"Earth Hour is a call to action," Sydney's Lord Mayor Clover Moore said at the official launch ceremony. "People have now responded and it's time to introduce some significant long-term changes."

Australians have embraced Earth Hour and other environmental initiatives. The nation of around 21 million people is ranked as the world's worst greenhouse gas emitter per capita, largely because of its heavy reliance on coal-fired power stations. New Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has made the environment one of his priorities, signing the Kyoto Protocol on fighting global warming soon after taking office late last year.

Switch off, save planet message goes global
Michael Perry and Jeremy Lovell, Reuters 29 Mar 08;

SYDNEY/LONDON (Reuters) - People switched off lights around the world on Saturday, dimming buildings, hotels, restaurants and bars to show concern at global warming.

Up to 30 million people were expected to have switched off their lights for 60 minutes by the time "Earth Hour" -- which started in Suva in Fiji and Christchurch in New Zealand -- has completed its cycle westwards against the sun.

More than 380 towns and cities and 3,500 businesses in 35 countries signed up for the campaign that is in its second year after it began in 2007 in Sydney alone.

"Earth Hour shows that everyday people are prepared to pull together to find a solution to climate change. It can be done," said James Leape of WWF International which was running the campaign.

Lights at Sydney's Opera House and Harbour Bridge were switched off and Australians held candle-lit beach parties, played poker by candle light and floated candles down rivers.

In Bangkok some of the city's business districts, shopping malls and billboards went dark, although street lights stayed on. One major hotel invited guests to dine by candle light and reported brisk business.

In Copenhagen, the Tivoli and the Royal Palace and the opera darkened for an hour, along with many street lights.

"In the central square a lot of people were standing looking at the stars," said Ida Thuesen, spokeswoman for WWF Denmark. "It's not often you can see the stars in a city."

In Norway, at the Kvitfjell ski resort that was host of the 1994 Winter Olympic downhill, some late-season parties were held by candle light as heavy snow fell outside.

BRIGHTON BLACKOUT

In Britain, 26 town and city councils signed up to switch off non-essential lights as did several historic buildings including Prince Charles' private residence Highgrove House, London City Hall, Winchester Cathedral and the Government Communication Headquarters radio monitoring station.

The south coast town of Brighton turned off the lights on its pier and pavilion to mark the event.

The British arm of Internet search engine Google turned its home page black and added the message: "We've turned the lights out. Now it's your turn."

Floodlights went out at landmarks in Budapest, including its castle, cathedral and parliament.

The movement will now cross the Atlantic to the United States and Canada,

San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, Chicago's Sears Tower and Soldier Field Stadium football ground, as well as the 553-metre (1,815 ft) CN Tower in Toronto were due to be plunged into darkness. The lights at Niagara Falls were also to go out.

Buildings account for about one-third of the carbon emissions that scientists say will boost global average temperatures by between 1.4 and 4.0 degrees Celsius this century bringing floods and famines and putting millions of lives at risk.

Organizers of Earth Hour said that while switching off a light for one hour would have little impact on carbon emissions, the fact that so many people were taking part showed how much interest and concern at the climate crisis had taken hold.

(Additional reporting by James Thornhill in Sydney, Chisa Fujioka in Tokyo, Ploy Chitsomboon in Bangkok and Alister Doyle in Oslo; Editing by Giles Elgood)

Cities switch off lights for Earth Hour
Caryn Rousseau, Associated Press Yahoo News 30 Mar 08;

From the Sydney Opera House to Rome's Colosseum to the Sears Tower's famous antennas in Chicago, floodlit icons of civilization went dark Saturday for Earth Hour, a worldwide campaign to highlight the threat of climate change.

The environmental group WWF urged governments, businesses and households to turn back to candle power for at least 60 minutes starting at 8 p.m. wherever they were.

The campaign began last year in Australia, and traveled this year from the South Pacific to Europe to North America in cadence with the setting of the sun.

"What's amazing is that it's transcending political boundaries and happening in places like China, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea," said Andy Ridley, executive director of Earth Hour. "It really seems to have resonated with anybody and everybody."

Earth Hour officials hoped 100 million people would turn off their nonessential lights and electronic goods for the hour. Electricity plants produce greenhouse gases that fuel climate change.

In Chicago, lights on more than 200 downtown buildings were dimmed Saturday night, including the stripe of white light around the top of the John Hancock Center. The red-and-white marquee outside Wrigley Field also went dark.

"There's a widespread belief that somehow people in the United States don't understand that this is a problem that we're lazy and wedded to our lifestyles. (Earth Hour) demonstrates that that is wrong," Richard Moss, a member of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the climate change vice president for WWF, said in Chicago on Saturday.

Workers in Phoenix turned out the lights in all downtown city-owned buildings for one hour. Darkened restaurants glowed with candlelight in San Francisco while the Golden Gate Bridge, Coit Tower and other landmarks extinguished lights for an hour.

New Zealand and Fiji were first out of the starting blocks this year. And in Sydney, Australia — where an estimated 2.2 million observed the blackout last year — the city's two architectural icons, the Opera House and Harbour Bridge, faded to black against a dramatic backdrop of a lightning storm.

Lights also went out at the famed Wat Arun Buddhist temple in Bangkok, Thailand; shopping and cultural centers in Manila, Philippines; several castles in Sweden and Denmark; the parliament building in Budapest, Hungary; a string of landmarks in Warsaw, Poland; and both London City Hall and Canterbury Cathedral in England.

Greece, an hour ahead of most of Europe, was the first on the continent to mark Earth Hour. On the isle of Aegina, near Athens, much of its population marched by candlelight to the port. Parts of Athens itself, including the floodlit city hall, also turned to black.

In Ireland, where environmentalists are part of the coalition government, lights-out orders went out for scores of government buildings, bridges and monuments in more than a dozen cities and towns.

But the international banks and brokerages of Dublin's financial district blazed away with light, illuminating floor after empty floor of desks and idling computers.

"The banks should have embraced this wholeheartedly and they didn't. But it's a start. Maybe next year," said Cathy Flanagan, an Earth Hour organizer in Dublin.

Ireland's more than 7,000 pubs elected not to take part — in part because of the risk that Saturday night revelers could end up smashing glasses, falling down stairs, or setting themselves on fire with candles.

Likewise, much of Europe — including France, Germany, Spain and European Union institutions — planned nothing to mark Earth Hour.

Internet search engine Google lent its support to Earth Hour by blackening its normally white home page and challenging visitors: "We've turned the lights out. Now it's your turn."

Tens of millions switch off worldwide for 'Earth Hour': organisers
Madeleine Coorey Yahoo News 30 Mar 08;

Tens of millions of people switched off lightbulbs this weekend as part of a global campaign to throw the spotlight on climate change, organisers of the Australian-led 'Earth Hour' initiative said.

From Sydney to Asia, Europe, Canada and the US, "many tens of millions" of people flicked the switch on Saturday night, plunging cities, towns and homes into darkness, chief of environmental group WWF-Australia Greg Bourne said.

The event, which was first held in Sydney last year, saw the lights dimmed in major cities at 8:00 pm local time, with skyscrapers, public monuments and private homes plunged into darkness.

Bourne said the response from around the world had been astounding.

While 26 cities are officially signed up for 'Earth Hour', Bourne said the campaign had already stretched well beyond that and that the intention was for the voluntary, 60-minute blackout to be even bigger in 2009.

"In pretty much every country in the world, someone has signed up. Whether it be one, two, three or 3,000 individuals," he told AFP.

"Basically every continent including Antarctica had some involvement and what I think will happen next year is that we will get deeper and deeper involvement in Asia, in Russia.

"We're pretty certain, that when we do it next year, China will become very much more involved," he added.

Earth Hour organisers asked governments, businesses and individuals to switch off the power for one hour on Saturday to save energy and thereby produce fewer greenhouse gases.

Bourne said the campaign was less about making a real reduction in energy usage, and more about increasing public awareness about energy efficiency.

He said indications were that the event had been a success in not only Sydney, where the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House faded into relative darkness, but around the world.

"We had 2.2 million last year; I reckon by the time we finally count it up, we will have about 100 million people involved around the world," he said.

Energy Australia, which supplies much of Sydney's electricity, said a drop of about 8.4 percent in energy usage had been recorded in the city during the hour, equivalent to 1.6 million light bulbs being switched off.

A national poll of some 3,400 people taken on Saturday and Sunday indicated that 58 percent of people living in major Australian cities had participated in the event by switching off lights or other appliances.

Meanwhile power consumption in Christchurch, the only New Zealand city participating in the global event, plummeted nearly 13 percent during the voluntary switch-off, figures released Sunday showed.

In Ireland, the initiative was led in the capital by the Dublin City Council, which turned off all non-street lighting on 13 of the 14 bridges in the city. It also turned off all the lights in City Hall and civic buildings.

Cities involved in 'Earth Hour' include Aalborg, Aarhus, Adelaide, Atlanta, Bangkok, Brisbane, Canberra, Chicago, Christchurch, Copenhagen, Darwin, Dublin, Hobart, Manila, Melbourne, Montreal, Odense, Ottawa, Perth, Phoenix, San Francisco, Suva, Sydney, Tel Aviv, Toronto and Vancouver.


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In Singapore: Earth Hour gets lukewarm response

Only 3,500 of 10,000 homes approached were open to it, but some businesses did their part
Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 30 Mar 08;

LIGHTS out at 8pm, please, for the 'green hour'.

This was the earnest message from 330 student volunteers who went a-knocking at 10,000 Hougang households yesterday.

As it turned out, however, the response was lukewarm.

The youth were participating in the first annual global Earth Hour - to get as many people worldwide as possible to switch their lights off for an hour when the clock struck eight.

The students, from three schools, fanned out from Punggol Community Club in Hougang at 6pm.

But president of Eco-Singapore, Mr Wilson Ang, 26, whose non-profit organisation organised the activities in the area, said the students found that not many in the 80 blocks were receptive.

'We estimate that of the 10,000 homes we went to, 3,500 were open to it,' he said.

Damai Secondary School student Fariz Hazri, 15, said that only about one in 10 people opened their doors to him.

'After I convinced them I wasn't selling anything, I spoke to them for a minute to ask them to join in switching off lights as part of the anti-global warming message,' he said.

His schoolmate, Tan Wei Lin, 16, said: 'The elderly were the ones who seemed most receptive to the idea. They smiled and nodded a lot.'

A check by The Sunday Times found most households in the area still well lit at 8.30pm. One couple said while lights-out was a good idea, it had slipped their minds.

Tutor Gwen Lee, 32, said the concept was new to her, but thought the idea was a good one.

'I'd heard of Earth Day, but not Earth Hour,' she said.

Mr Raymond Lim, 59, an industrial relations officer who was at home with his mother and daughter, did not like having his house in darkness. But he said he engaged in other environmentally friendly practices.

'We switch off the lights when we leave a room, we recycle paper and use cloth which we can wash instead of tissues which you just throw away,' he said.

Elsewhere in Singapore, the results were mixed too.

At least 18 schools across the island had already worked to raise awareness about Earth Hour last week. Serangoon Secondary School had students switch lights off for an hour last Friday, from 11am.

When the bell went on Friday, about 120 students and staff at Raffles Girls' School (Secondary) had signed a pledge to switch off all electrical devices at home.

The Marina skyline was dimmed somewhat when office towers, hotels and some shopping centres switched off their lights for an hour from 8pm.

Among the buildings in the city's commercial and retail heart that went dimmer were Singapore landmarks such as the Suntec convention centre and Raffles City Singapore, which shut off its facade lighting, as well as NTUC Building and Capital Tower.

Four Seasons Hotel and the Earth Bar in Rowell Road offered candle-lit dinners. But most shops and restaurants carried on business as usual.

The 20 or so involved corporations are estimated to have saved at least 6,800kwh in lighting, enough power to pay for electricity bills in a four-room flat for about a year.

Philips Electronics Singapore said it saved 850kwh by switching off lighting throughout its Toa Payoh complex, except for safety lights. This was equivalent to over two months of power for a four-room flat.

Globally, about 287,000 people and 20,000 businesses signed up for Earth Hour 2008.

The first Earth Hour was initiated last March in Australia. It was organised by World Wildlife Fund for Nature.

Singaporeans join global Earth Hour effort to spread climate change message
Channel NewsAsia 30 Mar 08;

SINGAPORE : Singapore is playing its part in a global effort to curb climate change.

Businesses here have been switching off the lights in their buildings for an hour between 8pm and 9pm.

The event called Earth Hour was held for the first time in Sydney last year. 2.2 million people and more than 2,000 business people took part.

Singapore companies like CapitaLand are flicking the switch at nine of its buildings such as Capital Tower and Raffles City.

But the worldwide effort is not just for the big players.

In Punggol, youngsters got involved too. More than 300 students visited thousands of homes to urge residents to turn off their lights and join an Earth Hour event at Punggol Community Club.

"They are still not very clear about global warming. But when we go and talk to them about this and sell the idea to them, many are really willing to go forward and help," said one youth volunteer.

Other schools, colleges and businesses in Singapore have also signed up to turn off their lights. Other cities like Melbourne and Chicago are also part of the global effort. - CNA /ls


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NEW Publication: Nature Watch issue on our reefs and shores

The latest issue of Nature Watch, a magazine of the Nature Society (Singapore) is all about our reefs and shores. It's packed with articles and gorgeous photos about all aspects of our marine heritage.
More about the issue on the Singapore Celebrates our Reefs blog


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