Asia's rainforests vanishing as timber, food demand surge: experts

Frank Zeller, Yahoo News 27 Apr 08;

Asia's rainforests are being rapidly destroyed, a trend accelerated by surging timber demand in booming China and India, and record food, energy and commodity prices, forest experts warn.

The loss of these biodiversity hot spots, much of it driven by the illegal timber trade and the growth of oil palm, biofuel and rubber plantations, is worsening global warming, species loss and poverty, they said.

Globally, tropical forest destruction "is a super crisis we are facing, it's an appalling crisis," said Oxford University's Professor Norman Myers, keynote speaker at the Asia-Pacific Forestry Week conference in Hanoi.

"It's one of the worst crises since we came out of our caves 10,000 years ago," Myers said at the five-day meeting of 500 foresters, researchers, state officials and activists held last week in the Vietnamese capital.

Over-logging in Southeast Asia caused 19 percent of global rainforest loss in 2005, Myers said, compared to cattle ranching -- once a leading cause, mainly in South America -- which now caused five percent of world losses.

The rapid growth of palm oil and other plantations accounted for 22 percent, and slash-and-burn farming, unsustainable as more poor people exploit fast-shrinking forests, caused 54 percent of rainforest destruction, he said.

Asia's forest cover, including tree plantations, in fact grew by three million hectares from 2000 to 2005 -- largely because of China's 1998 logging ban and afforestation -- said the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

"In contrast, forest loss persists at a very high rate in several countries," said an FAO report. "Indonesia, Cambodia, Myanmar, Australia and Papua New Guinea and a number of other countries have seen significant losses."

Ecologists stress that new forests in China, India and Vietnam are man-made plantations lacking high varieties of plant and animal species.

"Many plantations, in terms of biodiversity, are green concrete," said Peter Walpole, head of the non-profit Asia Forest Network.

Yet what environmentalists call "tree farms" are set to grow at the expense of natural forests, especially palm plantations, which produce oil used in products such as soap, chocolate and cosmetics as well as biodiesel.

Commercial crops "will be the most important factor contributing to deforestation in Asia-Pacific countries," said the FAO report, citing record prices for food grains, energy and commodities.

Demand for forest products is also surging in Asia's boom economies.

Imports to China, now the world's top furniture exporter, increased more than tenfold from 53 billion dollars in 1990 to 561 billion dollars in 2004.

India's imports of wood products, including paper, grew from about 750 million dollars in 1990 to 3.1 billion dollars in 2005, the FAO said.

Asia's boom economies are now importing timber from as far as Central Africa and South America, said FAO forestry economist C.T.S. Nair.

"In a way, they are exporting the problem to other countries, especially those where policies and institutions are extremely weak," he said.

The illegal timber trade, fuelled by poverty and corruption, is rife in much of Asia, where 78 percent of forests are state-owned and often managed by the armed forces, not the people who live in or near them, experts said.

"The history of logging in Southeast Asia has been under the auspices of the military and of political families," Walpole said. "If you look at how Cambodia has been logged, this cannot happen without military acknowledgement.

"Burma has been logged by Thai generals. And if you look at the corruption of forestry in the Philippines, it's tied in many areas during the Marcos years to military presence and control. It's still in many military families."

Precise data is rare in the world timber trade, but spot checks by environmental monitoring groups have revealed disturbing trends.

Vietnam was named as a major hub for illegally-logged timber from neighbouring Laos in a recent report by Britain's Environmental Investigation Agency and Indonesian group Telapak -- a claim Hanoi has strenuously denied.

"Indonesia has had an export ban on sawn timber since 2004, and yet countries are still accepting sawn timber from Indonesia," said Chen Hin Keong of TRAFFIC, which monitors the illegal trade in endangered flora and fauna.

"Malaysia, Singapore, China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, the UK, Germany, France, Italy, the US -- in big or small volumes, they are all accepting that."

Tropical timber is relatively cheap because key functions of forests -- clean air and water, and biodiversity -- are not factored into market prices, said Dr Daniel Murdiyarso of the Center for International Forestry Research.

"These services are underpriced or unpriced. It's a market failure."

Solutions are being debated -- including a universal timber certification system to rein in the illegal trade, and carbon credit schemes that would reward countries for preserving forests and offsetting pollution elsewhere.

But for now these are ideas, not realities, and the FAO report called support for forestry carbon offset schemes "disappointing" so far.


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Call to safeguard dugongs in Australia

Greg Roberts, The Australian 26 Apr 08;

ABORIGINAL leaders are calling for controls on indigenous hunting in response to mounting scientific evidence that the targeting of dugongs and turtles is not sustainable.

A new study suggests that dugongs in the Torres Strait and northern Great Barrier Reef are under threat because of hunting. Previous reports indicated that populations of green turtles in the same region had also been been sharply reduced.

The debate over indigenous hunting has been ignited by a move by Japan to accuse Canberra of hypocrisy for leading the charge against its whaling while condoning the harvesting of dugongs.

Modelling for a new study commissioned by the federal Environment Department's Marine and Tropical Sciences Research Facility was based on surveys of dugong populations over the past 20 years. The modelling concludes that the killing of more than 100 to 200 dugongs a year in the Torres Strait is not sustainable.

Previous surveys indicated between 1000 and 1200 dugongs were killed in the Torres Strait every year.

The new study estimates the dugong population in the Torres Strait and the northern Great Barrier Reef at 23,500 - about a quarter of the world population of the endangered sea mammal.

James Cook University dugong expert Helene Marsh, one of the study's authors, said scientific evidence suggested too many dugongs were being taken. "I consider that there is time to work with indigenous communities throughout northern Australia to develop community-based management of their dugong and turtle harvests," she said.


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Best of our wild blogs: 27 Apr 08


Sea turtle sighted at Pulau Hantu!
video clip of Betsy on the hantu blog

MORE about the Hantu coral spawning dive
on the career breaker blog

Star search
on Semakau and Cyrene on the career breaker blog

Urchins, sea cucumbers and other creatures of Cyrene Reef
on the wonderful creations blog

Semakau walk
another fabulous day out on the discovery blog and manta blog and tidechaser blog

White-bellied Sea Eagle learning to fish
wonderful action photography on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

TED Talks: Al Gore’s new thinking on the climate crisis
on the AsiaIsGreen blog


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NEA's campaign aims to reduce Singapore household electricity use by 10%

Channel NewsAsia 26 Apr 08;

SINGAPORE: Households consume about one-fifth of the electricity in Singapore and their total electricity use has gone up by almost four times in the last 20 years.

With rising energy prices worldwide, households' increasing electricity consumption is a cause of worry.

Environment and Water Resources Minister Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, said: "We have seen oil prices soaring beyond the US$115 a barrel mark. Despite the price hikes, the demand for energy from countries has not slowed down. Our electricity tariffs have been adjusted upwards for four quarters in a row due to higher fuel prices."

Dr Yaacob was speaking at the launch of the National Environment Agency's (NEA) launch of the 10% Energy Challenge on Saturday.

The aim of the NEA's challenge is to encourage more households to cut their energy consumption. Households will be eligible for a lucky draw if they reduce their energy bills by at least 10 per cent.

This is for the May to August period and the top prize is a fuel efficient hybrid car.

The NEA is confident an average 4-room HDB household can save more than S$100 a year by following simple energy saving tips. Meanwhile, a household on a landed property could save about S$400 a year.

Savings could be even higher for some households. A member of the public shared with the NEA how he used to pay over S$190 in utility bills for his 4-room flat. But when he started the habit of switching off his appliances at the power socket instead of leaving them on standby mode, he managed to reduce his monthly utility bill by S$50.

Households will start receiving energy efficiency information kits from about mid-May. The kits include tips on how to save electricity as well as stickers and magnets.

There is also a parallel Energy Challenge for schools - with awards for the top three schools whose students reduce their household energy bills by at least 10 per cent. So far, 41 primary schools have signed up for the school-wide challenge.

Other programmes under the Energy Efficient Singapore Masterplan launched last October are being drawn up for the industry sector - which used 43 per cent of total electricity in 2005. Buildings account for 31 per cent of energy use and transport another five percent.

The NEA is in the process of identifying the sectors for energy reduction and is collating data to determine suitable measures, indicators and targets for different sectors. - CNA/vm

Use 10% less energy, win a fuel-efficient car
Tania Tan, Straits Times 27 Apr 08;

Go ahead, live it up. But do it the green way.

A new national campaign, 10% Energy Challenge, encourages home owners to find a balance between enjoying creature comforts and reducing electricity usage.

'This means adjusting our lifestyles and habits to use less energy without having to lower our living standards and comfort levels,' said Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim.

Spearheaded by the National Environment Agency (NEA), the campaign's goal is to cut household electricity usage by 10 per cent.

To spark interest in the campaign, the NEA will conduct a lucky draw. The grand prize: a fuel-efficient hybrid car. Other prizes include energy-efficient appliances.

To qualify for the draw, households need to cut electricity usage by 10 per cent between next month and August.

The campaign was officially launched by Dr Yaacob yesterday at Suntec City.

Rising energy and food prices have been the result of climate change, caused in large part by the excessive use of fossil fuels, he noted.

NEA's drive is designed to not just reduce energy use but to also help consumers use electricity in a smarter, more cost-effective way.

Households will be getting 1.12 million booklets containing tips within the next few weeks.

'This will help stretch our dollars in the wake of rising prices of oil, food and other commodities,' Dr Yaacob said.

For a four-room HDB flat, cutting power usage by a tenth could help save more than $100 a year, he added.

Higher living standards have led to a proliferation of electrical appliances such as air-conditioners, computers and mobile phones - all of which require electricity.

The average Singaporean household used 6,820 gigawatt-hours (GWh) of power last year - nearly four times higher than the amount in 1995, said the NEA. One gigawatt-hour is equivalent to one million kilowatt-hours.

In most homes, air-conditioning and refrigeration take up the lion's share of electricity use, said Dr Yaacob.

A 10 per cent reduction could save more than 680GWh or up to $162 million off the nation's electricity bill.

'We do not expect Singaporeans to give up creature comforts like a car or air-conditioning,' said NEA chief executive officer Lee Yuen Hee. 'But we hope to show them that they can enjoy these things in a more efficient manner.'

SAVING ENERGY
How to reduce your monthly electricity bills:

# Use a fan instead of an air-conditioner. This could save about $600 annually.

# If you use an air-conditioner, set the temperature to 25 deg C or higher. Each degree increase helps save about $20 a year.

# Switch off home appliances, instead of leaving them on standby. This saves about $50 a year.

# Choose energy-efficient light bulbs. Using a 7W fluorescent lamp instead of a 40W incandescent bulb saves about $15 per bulb a year.

# Pick energy-efficient appliances. Since January, all air-conditioners and refrigerators must be labelled with energy-efficient stickers. A highly efficient four-tick air-conditioner saves about $350 annually, compared to a unit with just one tick.


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Brrr, why is it so cold in here?

Air-cons keep many buildings at temperatures below 25 deg C even as there's a call to conserve energy
Chen Meiyue, Straits Times 27 Apr 08;

If you get a case of the shivers in a cinema, chances are that you are not reacting to a horror movie but to the freezing air-conditioning.

Indeed, a Sunday Times check of 37 public places revealed that cinemas are among the coldest places here, even as there is a clamour today to save the earth and conserve resources.

And doing that can be as simple as setting the air-con at a higher temperature.

According to the Singapore Environment Council's general manager Yatin Premchand, one of the simplest ways to reduce carbon emissions is to simply turn up the thermostat.

This is a less drastic move than retrofitting an entire building with more eco-friendly systems.

'Raising temperatures also means that people will not have to dress up as snowmen to go watch a movie,' he said.

Setting the thermostat at 25 deg C is comfortable for most people, yet will not consume that much energy, said Singapore Power and the National Environment Agency (NEA) last month.

The Building Construction Authority puts the ideal temperature of an office at between 22.5 deg C and 25.5 deg C, though the NEA recently recommended that indoor temperatures be set at the higher end of this range.

Given that Singapore Power raised electricity tariffs by 5 per cent at the start of this month, opting to go less cold could also be a matter of dollars and sense.

The NEA has said that air-conditioning accounts for 40 per cent to 50 per cent of the electricity bill in commercial buildings.

Raising the temperature by just 1 deg C can save companies up to 3 per cent of air-conditioning bills.

This translates into $20 million to $26 million in annual savings if all companies here raise temperatures by 1 deg C - enough to pay for the yearly electricity bills of 33,000 four-room HDB flats.

A check at 37 air-conditioned places, from Changi Airport and cinemas to shopping malls, libraries, hospitals and polyclinics, found that 25 had temperatures below 25 deg C.

More than a third, or 56 out of 150, of the people interviewed at these places felt that the temperatures could be higher.

'Cinemas are way too cold and it's a waste of energy,' said Mr Lee Junior, 32. The entrepreneur and his wife keep sweaters in their car 'just in case'.

Nurse Esther Chow, 50, was comfortable with the temperature at Tan Tock Seng Hospital's walk-in clinic waiting area but said: 'People with flu might feel that it's too cold.'

Undergraduate Chen Yucheng, 24, grumbled: 'It's so troublesome. The weather outside is so hot but I still have to take a bulky sweater along to air-conditioned places.'

Some companies said that low temperatures are needed to keep sensitive materials in good condition.

The National Library Board said that raising temperatures too high would increase humidity levels and allow mould and fungus to grow and damage books.

In SingHealth polyclinics, temperatures are lower in areas where electronic equipment are kept and drugs are stored, to optimise storage and efficacy.

To conserve energy, the two bodies have adopted several measures, including adjusting thermostats according to the weather and number of visitors.

Cinema chain Golden Village said that the matter is out of its hands as many cinemas are sited in malls where the air-conditioning is centralised.

The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore said that the air-con at Changi Airport is set at 23.5 deg C, based on 'both our experience as well as feedback on the comfort level from our passengers'.

A CapitaLand Retail spokesman said that 'providing shoppers with a cool and comfortable ambient temperature is a key aspect of the entire shopping experience'.

Singapore Environment Council's Mr Yatin agrees that 'at the end of the day, it's all about comfort'.

'But if you think about it, rock-solid freezing cold is a kind of discomfort as well.'


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Fiscal fast, anyone?

Squirrel away money saved from forgoing lattes? Cook up a storm with leftovers? Suddenly, frugal is hip
Zuraidah Ibrahim, Straits Times 27 Apr 08;

Frugal is the new cool.

At least that's the impression one gets from following reports out of the United States and Britain. The sub-prime lending crisis, together with skyrocketing oil and food prices, are making some trendsetters in wealthy societies wonder: If you have to streamline your spending, why not make a virtue out of necessity and call it chic.

In rich countries, there is certainly a lot of easy-to-trim fat. In Britain, for example, wasted food apparently accounts for 40 per cent of household rubbish. The fact that someone bothered to tote that up and that the finding was reported in the media is itself a sign that the country's conscience is starting to be pricked.

Will this lead to a breed of supermarket shoppers who consider it cool to resist aisles and aisles of temptation and buy just enough food? Gosh, what a radical idea.

Perhaps the next icon of excess to be toppled will be the ubiquitous mineral water bottle. Consumers could finally decide to pay heed to scientific reports that say that the public water supply in developed countries is superior to bottled water - on top of being hugely cheaper. They could start insisting on their right to be served tap water at fancy restaurants, despite the disdain on their waiters' faces.

Already, there are blogs celebrating the triumphs of people who squirrel away money saved from forgoing lattes, cooking up a storm with leftovers, and trying their darndest to darn socks.

Frugality v market economy

The hip new term for this attitude is 'fiscal fasting'.

Old classics like The Frugal Housewife are being rediscovered as sources of inspiration for born-again savers. New books like The Ultimate Cheapskate's Road Map To True Riches capture the spirit of the times. Reverend Billy of the Church of Stop Shopping, who preaches on themes such as 'Stop the Shopacalypse', is another American figure who is making the most of the current mood.

It may make a lot of sense for an individual household to spend less. The Gross National Happiness index is based on the idea that increasing the output of goods and services does not necessarily make people happy.

Yet, the idea of disembarking from the consumer bandwagon is also strangely subversive.

You may decide rather virtuously that your present mobile phone will keep you happy for the next five years, and that you don't really need to take up that tempting offer to upgrade. The problem is that if everyone thinks like you, there will probably be a palpable dip in the country's economic growth.

Therefore, frugality is not exactly a welcome habit in a modern market economy. A standard prescription for a country on the brink of recession is for it to spend its way out of trouble. You may be healthier and happier if you stay home today, talking with your family or just meditating - but it's spending the afternoon at the mall that will contribute to the GNP (gross national product).

In the United States, people are reclaiming some of their pioneers' puritanical self-restraint because they can no longer afford to live beyond their means. For too long, American consumption has been funded on credit, approved and abetted by the financial system and its government. But high personal debt and a near-record low savings rate combined with the mortgage crisis and rising global prices are forcing a possible rethink.

But such a reaction is unlikely to become a long-term habit. Society simply will not allow it.

Resisting consumerism

One episode of the hit 1990s sitcom Seinfeld satirised the irresistible force that is consumerism. The iconoclastic Kramer decides that he has had enough of the endless stream of mail-order catalogues from retailers. He cancels his mail and campaigns against the postal service, not realising what he is up against. He is abducted and interrogated by the postmaster- general ('In addition to being a postmaster, I'm a general. And we both know, it's the job of a general to, by God, get things done.'). Kramer, successfully re-educated, meekly accepts his junk mail.

Besides, if you are sitting at the top of the ladder in this capitalist structure that we all subscribe to willingly or unwillingly, being frugal may appear to miss the whole point of your hardscrabble climb to the top. So it was that The New York Times ran an article last week - 'If they've got it, they flaunt it; New York's merely rich cut back, but the really rich keep spending' - detailing the lavish spending habits of the rich who consume away, like a group of four friends who went on a four-day weekend jaunt to Miami that cost them, oh, only US$50,000 (S$68,000).

As for the world's poor, the call for frugality is irrelevant to the point of being distasteful. They need to be given the chance to consume a lot more, not less.

The rich will always be with us, as will the poor. It is those sandwiched in between who will have to make adjustments. The rich will continue to shop for their Prada belts. The poor are unconcerned about accessories.

The middle class? Immersed in consumer culture but suddenly short of disposable income, they are the ones who will have to pacify themselves that it's not uncool to tighten their non-designer belts. Not a cinch, I'm afraid.


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'Famous' pets for adoption

They call it puppy love
Smuggled chihuahua, put up for adoption by AVA, draws 23 eager suitors
Samantha Eng, Straits Times 27 Apr 08;

Who wants to adopt a smuggled chihuahua? Twenty-three people did, said the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA).

The two-month-old male pooch's new owner got it for free, but it had cost the original owner more than $10,000.

On April 16, student Liu Liangwu, 21, was fined $10,000, the maximum penalty for importing an animal without a licence.

He had paid more than $600 for it in Johor and tried to smuggle it through the Woodlands Checkpoint on Dec 24 last year.

The dog was found when his car was searched.

The court ruled that he could not keep the puppy, and it was handed over to the AVA for quarantine.

AVA spokesman Goh Shih Yong told The Sunday Times last Friday that the pup was healthy, and had been microchipped and vaccinated for rabies.

When it was put up for adoption, 23 people expressed an interest. 'We placed them through a selection process to choose the best owner for the puppy,' Mr Goh said.

This included an interview and a check of the would-be owner's home before the dog was released.

It was adopted and licensed last Friday.

The AVA did not want to say who the pooch's new owner was.

On the severity of Liu's offence, the AVA said that rabies, which can start from an infected dog, is fatal to both humans and animals.

Said Mr Goh: 'You need only one infected dog smuggled into the country to cause an outbreak of rabies.'

Liu could not be reached for comment.

sameng@sph.com.sg

Former NKF chairman Richard Yong misses the dog he left behind when he fled Singapore

Ge Ge, I miss you.

The shih-tzu which belonged to former National Kidney Foundation (NKF) chairman Richard Yong has since been adopted by someone else.

Now, Yong, who was a fugitive from the law but has come back, hopes to contact Ge Ge's owner so he can say hello to his former pet.

He told The Sunday Times: 'Now that I'm out of prison, I really want to know where Ge Ge is. She was very close to me and my wife.'

Yong, 66, fled with his wife last May when he was declared a bankrupt for failing to pay nearly $1 million to NKF after losing a civil suit.

He was caught by Hong Kong police on July 4 last year and sent back.

He was sentenced to 15 months' jail in September. Due to good behaviour, he was released and has been placed on the Home Detention scheme since Jan 10 this year.

He is currently employed in the office of a Chinese restaurant.

Apart from cash, a car and property which he left behind when he fled, Ge Ge was found in his Cavenagh Gardens apartment, looked after by a maid.

About a month after Yong fled, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) went to the flat to pick up the dog. This was after the Filipino maid said she wanted to return home.

SPCA spokesman Deirdre Moss declined to reveal where the dog is now. 'All I can say is that it has already been adopted,' she said last week.

When contacted, an amiable Yong insisted that he never meant to abandon his dog of five years.

'When we left, we asked the maid to look after Ge Ge because we will be back,' he said.

He added he would dearly love to see Ge Ge, whose name means princess in Mandarin.

He said: 'If her current owners are good to her, it wouldn't be fair to ask for her back now.'

When asked whether he loved his dog, he replied: 'Of course I do.'

Samantha Eng

Did you adopt Ge Ge and would like Richard Yong to see her? Let us know by e-mailing suntimes@sph.com.sg and we will arrange a meeting

Quarantine needed for pets from most countries
Elysa Chen, New Paper 27 Apr 08;

ONLY a small number of people have been caught trying to smuggle in pets over the last three years, said the Agri-food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA). Most bring them in legally, said a spokesman.

Student Liu Liangwu, 21, was slapped with a $10,000 fine this month for trying to smuggle a two-month-old chihuahua puppy into Singapore from Johor last December.

AVA said that in each of the past three years, about 3,000 dogs and 800 cats were imported.

It costs close to $1,000 a month to quarantine a dog in an air-conditioned kennel, and around $600 a month if you opt for a non-air-conditioned kennel. Quarantine is mandatory if you bring in a dog or cat from most countries.

Mr Douglas Ng, 49, co-owner of Soo Kee Kennel, feels there are more pet imports now because pet owners are asking for animals bred by professionals overseas, or for breeds not readily available here.

The most commonly imported dogs include golden retrievers, labradors, cavalier king charles spaniels, shetland sheepdogs, yorkshire terriers, mini dachshunds and beagles.

Pet shops and animal import companies The New Paper spoke to said there was no need to smuggle animals into Singapore.

Liu's explanation for trying to smuggle the chihuahua was that he could not find one in Singapore.

But Mr Ng, who has kept a chihuahua, said the dogs are available in Singapore, though he conceded that 'if you want those as young as two months, it will be harder'.

He explained: 'When the puppies are that young, if they skip a meal, they get so weak they cannot stand up. That is why we have a regulation in Singapore that the dogs which are imported must be at least three months old.'

Although Mr Ng felt the $10,000 fine was steep, he felt it was justified, considering the seriousness of the offence.

He said: 'A $10,000 fine is a lot, but every country is very particular about the animals that go in and out of it. Dogs are not like bak kwa (barbecued pork), you can't just bring them in like that.'

Ms Germane Can, the daughter of the founder of Mitchville K-9 Kennels, an animal import/export company, said: 'We feel for the pets. If you really love the animal, spend the money and bring it in legally. You need to have commitment towards the animal. Don't buy a dog just because it's cute or it's cheap.'

Mitchville has been running for 25 years and imports on average 20 animals a month.

It charges $400 to $600 for import and export services.

PAINLESS PROCEDURE

Mrs Judith Gray, a British housewife who moved to Singapore with her husband in February, got the help of Mitchville to bring her pets over.

She said: 'It was quite painless, all I had to do was provide them with the documents they needed, like the certificates from the vets.'

She spent about $8,000 to bring in their three dogs from Bangkok where they had been living.

She admitted that they had thought of driving in through Malaysia with their dogs, but not because of the cost.

Mrs Gray said: 'We're so crazy about our animals, we sleep with them on our bed. When we realised that we would have to spend 30 days apart from them, we had a fleeting thought to smuggle them in.'

Then she added with a laugh: 'But of course, we dismissed it quickly because we didn’t want to spend time in Changi Prison!'


Most bring pets into Singapore legally: AVA
New Paper 27 Apr 08;

How to bring your cat or dog to S'pore
No quarantine necessary for dog or cat from Australia, New Zealand, UK or Ireland, if all veterinary regulations are complied with and animals are healthy on arrival
27 April 2008

# No quarantine necessary for dog or cat from Australia, New Zealand, UK or Ireland, if all veterinary regulations are complied with and animals are healthy on arrival

# Thirty days quarantine for dogs or cats from all other countries

# Book quarantine space at Sembawang Animal Quarantine Station

# Quarantine charges for non air-conditioned kennel/cattery - $643 per pet for 30 days

# $926.50 per pet for air-conditioned kennel/cattery

# Charges cover accommodation, transport, veterinary examination and rabies vaccination

# Owners need to reserve at least two months ahead

# AVA will confirm availability of quarantine space one month before date of arrival of pet

# Owner can apply for import permit at AVA website, www.ava.gov.sg

# Cost of permit - $50, valid for 30 days from date of issue

# For details, go to AVA website and see 'Pets - Personal' under 'Import, Export & Transshipment of Animals & Related Products'


Read more!

Millions Of Olive Ridley Hatchlings Emerge From Nests In Orissa

News Post India 26 Apr 08;

In what is one of the most breathtaking sights of nature, millions of Olive Ridley baby turtles broke out of their eggshells under the sand at one of their mass nesting ground in coastal Orissa.

After emerging from the nests in the Rushikulya river mouth, in the southern district of Ganjam, some 175 km from Bhubaneswar, the hatchlings started their journey towards the Bay of Bengal, forest officer Surendra Biswal told IANS.

Orissa is home to three mass nesting sites of the endangered Olive Ridley turtles, namely Nasi Islands of Gahirmatha beach in Kendrapada district, Devi river mouth in Puri district and the Rushikulya river mouth.

Gahirmatha is considered one of world's largest nesting sites with around 700,000-800,000 turtles laying eggs on the beach every year. However, no mass nesting has been reported from Gahirmatha and Devi river mouth so far this year.

'At least 170,000 turtles came to 4.2 km stretch of Rushikulya beach on March 4 for mass nesting and returned to the sea,' Biswal said.

The female turtles drag her great weight ashore, dig a nest with her back flippers, deposit about a hundred eggs, cover and conceal the nest before returning to the sea.

'The eggs incubate in the warm sand and the female turtles never visit the nest again to take care of the eggs or the hatchlings,' he said. A female turtle lays at least 120 to 150 eggs in one go.

'Hatchlings emerge from the eggs after 45-60 days. It is one of nature's rare phenomenon that babies grow without their mother,' he said.

It is believed that the Olive Ridley turtles return to the same beach to nest where they were hatched.

Mass hatchling here started Wednesday and all the baby turtles will go to the sea within a day or two. 'We have taken all care to ensure that the baby turtles go (to the sea) without any harm,' Biswal said.

'We have engaged at least 52 villagers and forest guards to protect the baby turtles.'

In the recent times, sea erosion has led to many turtles' nests being damaged. Predators like dogs, jackals and birds have taken their toll on the nesting of turtles. Mechanised trawlers along the coast also play a role in the massacre of thousands of these omnivorous sea turtles.

'We have removed all the boats from the sea near the nesting site for the smooth journey of turtles from their nests to the sea,' Biswal added.

'Like tigers and elephants, the Olive Ridley turtle is protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. They should be protected at any cost,' Biswajit Mohanty, coordinator of the turtle conservation group Operation Kachhapa, told IANS.

Turtle babies flood beach in Orissa
The Times of India 28 Apr 08;

RISHIKULYA (Orissa): About 150,000 baby turtles emerged from their shells and crawled out of the sandy shores of the Rishikulya beach in Orissa, one of the world's largest nesting grounds for Olive Ridley turtles.

"It is very heartening and delightful to see that nesting has happened this year and hatching has also occurred. Almost all babies have come out except those 30 per cent, which were washed away, by the water. They are going towards the sea," said Bishwajit Mohanty, Director of Operation Kachchap.

Hatching is the most crucial time for the tiny animals as many, unable to clear off the huge loads of sand from their dens, often die of suffocation or if they manage to reach land, are picked up by crows, eagles, jackals and stray dogs.

But in recent years, conservationists have come to their rescue and together with villagers and dozens of volunteers, many of them children, as well as the forest department, rescue and safely deliver the babies into the sea.

The conservationists have also put up a net to prohibit these young ones to crawl in upward direction and getting lost.

"I am coming here for the second time. I just saw a few turtles emerging and children are doing some very good work, collecting the turtles. Initially, there was no net to stop the turtles from going outside and getting lost. This is very good to keep the turtles safe, the baby hatchlings," said Deepani, a visitor from Gujarat.

Every year as winter rolls around, the endangered Olive Ridleys move in large groups to three major nesting sites along the Orissa coast before returning to the sea. Over a million turtles made their ritual trek to the nesting sites to dig sand pits and lay eggs in February.

According to wildlife officials, over 250,000 turtles make their annual trek to the nesting sites.

In 2004, over one million turtles came to the Orissa shores to digs and pits and lay eggs, the largest concentration being at Gahirmatha beach. Such large concentrations only occur at a few sites in the world.

The turtles are protected under Wildlife Protection Act, but conservationists say as many as 50,000 turtles have died in the hands of humans, either directly or indirectly over the past few years.

The Olive Ridley turtle, which can grow up to 75 cm in length, is found in tropical regions of the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian Oceans.


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Colossal squid out of the freezer

Richard Black, BBC News 26 Apr 08;

The biggest colossal squid ever landed comes out of the deep freeze over the next day and a half in New Zealand.

The Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni specimen, caught in February in Antarctic waters, is 10m (33ft) long and weighs over half a tonne.

The riddle for technicians at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa centre has been how to thaw the squid without any parts of its body starting to rot.

The thawing and subsequent dissection will feature in a live webcast.

The procedure begins about noon on Sunday in Wellington (midnight GMT).

"We estimate it will take about 36 hours to fully defrost," said Chris Paulin, projects and compliance manager at the Te Papa centre.

Big unknown

Interest in the dissection from the wider scientific community, never mind the public, is likely to be huge.

The colossal squid is remarkable for its size, but also for how rarely it has been sighted.

It was identified first in 1925 from two tentacles found in a sperm whale's stomach. These deep-diving toothed whales regularly do battle with Mesonychoteuthis and other giant cephalopods such as the giant squid of the Architeuthis genus.

Since 1925, only a few Mesonychoteuthis have been sighted, all in the seas around Antarctica.

Very little is known about how and where they live. The one certainty is that they are fearsome opponents, with big beaks and unique swivelling hooks on the club-like ends of their tentacles.

One of the first tasks is likely to be ascertaining the squid's gender.

This one is believed to be male; and females are thought to grow larger than males.

So if this one is a he, presumably there are even bigger and heavier shes somewhere in the cold Antarctic waters.

The specimen has been frozen in a fishing net inside a plastic big container.

"We have to remove the container around it, manoeuvre the frozen squid into the defrosting tank, then carefully remove the net as it defrosts," said Carol Diebel, Te Papa's natural environment director.

"It's a very delicate procedure."

Later in the week, scientists will give public lectures about their initial results.

Once thawed and examined, the squid will be embalmed and preserved.


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Punjab reaps a poisoned harvest

David Loyn, BBC News 26 Apr 08;

The governments of many poor nations are alarmed at the rise in food prices. There are even problems in the Indian region of Punjab, where science once seemed to have found answers for a hungry world.

The first thing Satpal Singh sees when he walks out of his bedroom door in the morning is a gleaming tractor, without a speck of mud on it.

It is given pride of place and washed down before being put away for the night in its garage built into the middle of his house. This is a sign of the wealth that has made this the richest farmland in India. In Mr Singh's front yard, half a dozen cows chew contentedly on a maize-based mix, processed in his own machine in the corner.

But behind this idyll serious questions are being asked about farming practices in Punjab, which have consequences for the looming crisis in world food supplies.

Pesticide fears

Before Mr Singh's father died young of cancer in 1992, none here suspected that the technology that had brought wealth to these farmlands in the 1970s might have a downside as well.

The new strains of seed and chemical pesticides and fertilisers, certainly brought high yields.

They called it the Green Revolution.



But today the food the cows eat and the milk they produce, along with the water the cows and Mr Singh's family drink, all show high levels of pesticide residue.

As well as being a successful farmer, he works part-time as a health co-ordinator in the village.

He took me to meet a group of farmers, who all spoke of health problems and knew of deaths they believed came from the use of pesticide sprays.

No protection

The problem here, as in many other places in the world, is that the benefit of high yields from new seed types was not long-lasting, and the pests kept ahead of the pesticides.

An old man, suffering from cancer, told me that in recent years he has had to spray round the clock to keep the pests off his wheat.

The sprays all have instructions demanding that they should only be used with face masks and protective clothing.

But the farm workers here do not use protective equipment, and they spray far more than the recommended amount.

The cause of cancer is always a contentious issue, but a new study from the Punjabi University at Patiala ruled out other potential factors like age, alcohol intake and smoking, concluding that the way the sprays are used is causing cancer.

Organic ignorance

The farmers told me that they wanted the same agricultural scientists who had given them the high yields of the 1970s to come up with something else.

They know that what they are doing now is unsustainable, because they are getting lower yields despite using more spray and paying more for fertiliser because of the high oil price.

None had heard of organic farming.

In neighbouring Pakistan, the local TV news carries interviews every night from flour mills and farms, as well as a daily check on the market price of flour.

The police have intervened to stop hoarding.

Ration cards have been issued, and the World Food Programme (WFP) talks about a crisis as the number of people who do not have enough to eat has risen to 77 million, half of the population of Pakistan.

The WFP describes the food price rise as a "tsunami" affecting the poorest in the world and there are many poorer countries than Pakistan.

The political consequences are already apparent in the troubled regions of the North West Frontier, where the Taleban and al-Qaeda have significant support.

They are more easily able to recruit by saying the government is failing to make affordable food available.

And on the other side of the border on a recent trip to Afghanistan, I heard the US-led occupation squarely blamed on the streets of Kabul for the high price of food.

Radical solution

High oil prices, drought, over-intensive farming leading to lower yields, increased food demand in India and China and the loss of land to biofuels have all played their part in ending the long period of cheap food that the world has enjoyed for the past 30 years.

One radical solution now being talked about is direct payment of subsidies to farmers.

Until recently Malawi was dependent on food aid.

Back in 2002, I remember going from village to village, walking through fields where stunted maize plants had failed to grow.

Children climbed a tree to show me the tiny indigestible hard fruits which were all they had to eat.

At that time Malawi was one of a number of southern African nations at the centre of a worldwide appeal for aid.

When it introduced a voucher scheme to provide cheap fertiliser to farmers, the big donors opposed it.

Hunger victory

Memories of corruption and belief in economic orthodoxy that allowed the market to decide prices had given subsidies a bad name.

But now international donors are starting to change their minds and back the scheme.

Malawi has turned the corner, its farms are producing food for domestic consumption as well as for export, and few go hungry.

It is a stark contrast to the picture in 2002. And maybe an example some countries currently experiencing food shortages could follow.


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