PUB wins grand prize in Golden World Awards for Excellence 2008

Channel NewsAsia 11 Jun 08;

SINGAPORE: PUB has won the grand prize in the Golden World Awards for Excellence 2008. It beat 52 other countries and was the sole winner from Singapore.

The event was organised by London-based International Public Relations Association (IPRA).

PUB's corporate communications programme, "From Bland to Glam: Water makes a splash in Singapore", also took the top spot in the corporate communications category.

In its communications campaign, PUB had sought to generate public interest in water issues and raise water consciousness. A mascot was also introduced to appeal to the young ones.- CNA/so


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Water-Thirsty Golf Courses Need to Go Green

Frank Deford, NPR 11 Jun 08;

I have always thought that golf courses are perhaps the finest collaborative work between God and man. Yes, only God can make a tree, but golf course architects can make trees seem prettier, and golf course superintendents can make the grass greener and the flowers brighter, so that even when you can't hit a fairway or sink a putt, it certainly is an awfully lovely place to be frustrated.

The only thing is, the whole experience, the whole sport, is utterly dependent on one thing: H2O ... water. And, of course, we don't have enough water anymore for all the people on the earth. And, of course, whereas we lack oil, there are other forms of energy, but when we lack water we simply get thirstier. And a golf course is a selfish creature.

There are now approximately 16,000 courses in the United States — about half the total in all the world — and if you laid them out together, they would be as large as Delaware. And that Delaware of golf courses uses water, lots of it. They call them "greens" for a reason, don't they?

Audubon International estimates that the average American course uses 312,000 gallons per day. In a place like Palm Springs, where 57 golf courses challenge the desert, each course eats up a million gallons a day. That is, each course each day in Palm Springs consumes as much water as an American family of four uses in four years.

Now, granted, it's easy to pick on golf. It's a rich man's game, and when we see its stewards, they're always in military blazers and they're stuffy and pompous. But a great many people in golf are catching on. Eleanor Sterling, the curator for a magnificent exhibit about the water crisis that's been at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, tells me: "There are opportunities for the sport to adapt, and there are signs that it is doing so."

In its May issue, Golf Digest devoted a huge, candid article by John Barton to the subject, in which the magazine states very frankly: "Golf will face a crisis over water." And then it outlines what must be done. It won't be easy. Golf Digest points out, for example, that an incredible 41 percent of golfers polled believe that global warming is a myth.

But among the 59 percent of the enlightened golfers, the problem is being addressed. Perhaps as many as 1,000 courses are using recycled or reclaimed water, and the United States Golf Association has made that mandatory for some areas of the Southwest. New grasses are being developed that require less moisture to thrive. Overseeding is being frowned upon. Courses are being returned more to their natural state, so grass will often have to lose some of its sheen.

You see, at the end of the day, for golf to go green and accommodate itself to the real world, it's simply going to have to be much more brown.


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Best of our wild blogs: 11 Jun 08


ICCS Organisers Workshop 2008
from News from the International Coastal Cleanup Singapore blog

All about our nudis
nudibranchs are beautiful and what is a nudibranch on the lazy lizard tales blog

Cyrene Reef photos
juvenile batfish, frogfish, stars, urchins and more on the nature spies blog

On Brave Shores
an ode to an ubin shore on the flying fish friends blog

Pulau Merambong: an island off Tuas
on the wildfilms blog

Naked in the news
on the adventures with the naked hermit crabs blog

Injured Purple Heron: Seven months on
on the bird ecology blog

Sophisticated architecture of Baya Weaver’s nest
on the bird ecology blog

Experts Ask: What Will Happen to Biodiversity When the World Becomes A Giant City? on the daily galaxy blog


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We should all go out on a limb

Today Online 11 Jun 08;

It’s time we speakup for the treesthat keep us cool
Prune trees so that they do not become top-heavy
Use of cars, morethan plastic bags, add to global warming

Letter from Mariann Maes
Letter from :Peter Syddall
Letter from :Vasathan


GABRIEL Tan’s account of his fight to save a 17-year-old mango tree in “Out on a limb” (June 6) has inspired me to be more courageous in my own fight against environmental “outlaws”, who sometimes include authorities ignorant of the impact of their actions.

Saving Gaia “one tree at a time” may sound cliched and insignificant, but a tree is able to cool and provide shade, and the older the tree, the more foliage it has to provide shade.

Apart from trees, which can be planted anywhere and everywhere without any harm to the environment, no other natural resource can benefit us in the same way.

The tree along Braddell Road that the Land Transport Authority cut down caused much furore among the public.

Its life was cut short because of a few accidents on the newly-revised route. Why should the tree be “punished” because of the recklessness of some drivers?

The same blame game is played out when heavy tree branches fall on pedestrians. Ignorant people might blame the tree as if it had maliciously caused harm.

Although the accidents are nobody’s fault, the tree will suffer just because it has no voice. And the authorities might cave in to public pressure and cut down the tree.

It is time for us to speak for the trees and for other creatures of Gaia. They have given us food, shelter, beauty and other things. Yet, we return the favour with an ungrateful hand.




THE mango tree some of us are trying to stop the management from felling is less than 1.5m from the fence at the back of my house. I am therefore closest to the tree and would likely be the first to suffer should anything untoward happen.

Hence, the owners of the property on which the tree is growing must maintain it by periodic pruning. This was done in the past. The tree has not been pruned for almost three years and is becoming top-heavy. But it seems strong and in no danger of falling.

This could change if it were allowed to grow without proper pruning, especially during the north-east monsoon period when we get strong winds and rain.

I strongly support Gabriel Tan’s appeal that the tree should not be felled but instead pruned. Trees should not be cut down unless they stand in the way of development (in which case replacement trees should be planted) or if a tree were unhealthy and thus unsafe. A pruned tree can continue growing without getting in anyone’s way. A felled tree is lost forever.



KUDOS to Gabriel Tan — a man who walks the talk, unlike others who blame global warming on plastic bags. Just the other day, a friend lamented how bakeries package each piece of pastry in individual plastic bags, saying that such liberal use of plastic will lead to global warming. The irony was he drove his SUV to the pastry shop when it was a mere 10-minute walk from his house.

The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reported that humans are adding carbon dioxide into the atmosphere at a faster rate than plants and oceans can absorb it.

And Singaporeans are not dealing with the problem adequately. Look at the number of cars we have and the lengths to which we go to curb traffic problems by building numerous gantries. Yet, we can still easily buy cars at zero-per-cent interest.

The equation is simple: To fight global warming, we need to change our lifestyle. One way is to minimise our greed — theactions from which are inadvertently heating up the earth. And this greed is embedded in the larger picture of progress.

Related links

You Can Help Gabriel Save a Tree

on the flying fish friends blog


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Local eco-groups now draw sponsors

Neo Chai Chin, Today Online 11 Jun 08
also carried on Channel NewsAsia 11 Jun 08

THE coffee-shop setting was typically Singaporean, but the idea hatched there by a group of Singaporeans was not. Deciding to come together to lead nature walks for the public, the 15 called themselves the Naked Hermit Crabs — after the fragile crustacean found on our shores at low tide.

“We were sitting at Seah Im food centre, when someone brought up the idea of forming a group. At the time, we were scattered all over: Some volunteering with universities, others with the National Parks Board (:NParks),” said one of the Crabs, trainee teacher Ivan Kwan, 26.

The Crabs turned one last week and celebrated by holding a Sentosa nature walk and a photo exhibition at the National Library.

Other eco-volunteer groups have surfaced in recent years, with interests as diverse as the environment they try to protect, from educating the apathetic to monitoring Singapore’s shorelife.

More significantly, they have moved further mainstream — even attracting corporate sponsors — and “the climate has now changed for eco-groups to be more constructive and productive”, said an eco-volunteer who declined to be named due to job sensitivities.

TeamSeagrass, for example, was formed in 2006 and monitors our sea grasses and other intertidal life. It is part of the international Seagrass-Watch initiative, and works with NParks.

The Environmental Challenge Organisation, or ECO Singapore, became active in 2005 and promotes an environmentally-sustainable lifestyle among youth.

As for the Crabs, its volunteers were paying for publicity material and transport fees out of their own pockets until eyewear manufacturer Transitions Optical stepped in last week — with a “five-figure sum” sponsorship.

This was even as Singapore celebrated World Environment Day last week with many instances of private-public-people sector collaborations. The ongoing RE-Live! carnival at Dhoby Ghaut, for example, is organised by ECO Singapore in partnership with groups like Nature Trekker and the Singapore Environment Council. It also has companies such as paper manufacturer Double A and gym equipment brand Aibi as sponsors.

In recent years, the Government has taken more to soliciting feedback from nature groups in making decisions. For example, before it opened landfill island Pulau Semakau for guided intertidal walks and nature-related activities in 2005, it invited nature groupsto do surveys and studies to help with the planning. Now home to a coral nursery, Pulau Semakau’s marine ecological system was cited by the Minister for National Development in his speech last month at the Convention on Biological Diversity in Bonn, Germany.

Eco groups are also drawing more volunteers — ECO Singapore’s numbers have grown from 13stake in 2005 to 112 now – and increasing awareness of little-known bio-diverse pockets that risk being destroyed through land reclamation or construction activities.

“A lot of the time, we don’t know what we have and that’s why we don’t get upset (when it’s lost),” said the eco volunteer.

The Crabs now have 20 active volunteers and organise monthly Chek Jawa tours as well as Sentosa walks eight times a year. “We’re not marine biologists or anything, we just want to share what’s available on our shores with others,” said Mr Kwan.

He recounted how an avid diver was amazed that a shrimp he had gone to Manado in Indonesia to photograph could be found in Changi’s shores.

The Crabs also hope to organise trips to the Cyrene Reef, home to vast seagrass meadows and coral reefs and only exposed during low tide. Lying between the petrochemical plants of Jurong Island and Pulau Bukom, it was there that the nature lovers discovered a sea star species new to Singapore — the Pentaceraster mammillatus.

Said Ms Wong Ley Kun, 46, a member of the Crabs who also volunteers with Team Seagrass: “The Government is aware that there can be a balance between conservation and development. I once took an architect to Chek Jawa, and he was amazed to see both wildlife at his feet and a plane taking off at a distance.”

Related articles

Sharing secrets of shore life: the Naked Hermit Crabs

Tiffany Fumiko Tay, Straits Times 7 Jun 08;

Links to more information


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Singapore drawing more non-profit groups

Numbers up sharply as Government woos them to set up base here
Theresa Tan, Straits Times 11 Jun 08;

'The NGOs that come here are very practical, so we are not too worried about activism.'

AFTER years of courting big businesses, Singapore is attracting international non-profit groups such as United Nations agencies and other non-governmental organisations (NGOs).

The number setting up here has doubled to more than 60 since 2005, with about 10 arriving over the past year.

They include Operation Smile, a medical group that helps children with facial deformities such as cleft palates, and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (Case), a group for professionals in communications, fund-raising, marketing and other fields.

Their causes range from fighting poverty and injustice (World Vision International), to offering consultancy services on philanthropy (Centre for Asian Philanthropy), and conservation (World Wide Fund for Nature).

Singapore is attractive to such groups because of its location, excellent infrastructure and large number of multinational companies (MNCs) based here.

The WWF, for instance, said the presence of thousands of MNCs here puts the organisation 'in a unique position to influence corporations and their sustainability practices'.

Said Mr Gary Loh, chairman of Operation Smile Singapore: 'Singapore has more than money to give. We have very strong medical expertise and facilities.'

To draw even more such groups, a one-stop office comprising different government agencies and led by the Economic Development Board was set up in February. Singapore also offers incentives such as tax exemptions.

The Government's push to woo these groups marks a change from the past when Singapore 'didn't know what to do with such groups', said EDB's director of new business group, Mr Jonathan Kua.

'It's not like we didn't welcome such organisations back then, but they were not our focus,' he said.

This changed as Singapore's focus on practical economic considerations widened in recent years.

'Our main goal in attracting such groups is not economic,' said Mr Kua. 'We want credibility as a world-class city. And as we develop, it's always the intangibles like quality of life, arts and civil society that attract people.'

Mr Gerard Ee, chairman of the National Kidney Foundation, said local charities will be able to learn from the international groups' global experience and best practices.

But there are direct benefits for Singaporeans as more such groups arrive - more jobs, for one.

The EDB hopes to attract at least 150 such groups by 2015, and that will create 2,500 jobs.

There will also be indirect spin-offs for the economy, such as spending by people who attend meetings organised here by these groups.

When asked about the fiery brand of activism that some groups are known for, Mr Kua said: 'The NGOs that come here are very practical, so we are not too worried about activism.'

Foreign NGOs: What good will they do?
Letter from Vinita Ramani Mohan, Straits Times Forum 14 Jun 08;

I REFER to Wednesday's article by Ms Theresa Tan, 'Singapore drawing more non-profit groups'. As a Singaporean who has volunteered and worked abroad with non-profits (NPs) and non-governmental organisations (NGOs), I applaud Economic Development Board (EDB) efforts to attract more non-profit groups to Singapore, but would like to offer a few comments.

Even if they are non-profit, I would not describe or associate some of the organisations Ms Tan features as, in EDB's Mr Jonathan Kua's words, 'civil society'. Civil society is often described as a sector of citizens and for citizens. The World Intellectual Property Organisation (Wipo), on the other hand, is a United Nations agency and has 184 member states. Further, as Ms Tan acknowledges, the Regional Disease Intervention Centre (Redic) was set up by the Singapore and United States governments. Neither is an NGO nor a grassroots initiative, both of which are strong features of a vibrant civil society.

Ms Tan writes that Singapore is attractive to international NPs and NGOs because of its 'location, excellent infrastructure and large number of MNCs'. I disagree. These are well-known (and publicised) hallmarks of Singapore's fantastic economic development which draw profit-driven MNCs, not NGOs. It has been my experience that such organisations also desire an environment that encourages citizens to question the public policies of the day, and participate in shaping them.

It is disingenuous to invite international 'civil society' in a bid to make Singapore a 'world-class city', but insist the NGOs that come to Singapore are 'practical'. Not only does this limit the very spirit civil society, which the London School of Economics defines as uncoerced non-government collective action around shared interests, purposes and values, but it begs the question: When is an NP 'practical' and when is it as 'activist'?

Suppose World Vision, a renowned faith-based organisation Ms Tan mentions, decides to act on the grievances of the disabled community in Singapore and proposes reforms the Singapore Government could introduce. Would it be deemed impermissible? I think such activism is noble and should be welcome. By contrast, Wipo and Redic's presence in Singapore hardly impacts on the average Singaporean. In fact, they do not even help to achieve the goals Mr Kua has set out for NPs - to lend Singapore civil society 'credibility' or promote 'intangibles... that attract people' to Singapore.

Amidst EDB's desire to give international NPs 'incentives such as tax exemptions', what is the plight of local NGOs? We have a good number of NGOs in Singapore that do excellent work and represent what civil society can and should be. Animal Concerns Research and Education Society (Acres) was set up in 2001 by a group of Singaporeans to raise awareness of the illegal trade in wildlife here. Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics (Home) was set up in 2004 to address the plight of foreign workers and migrants living and working in Singapore. Yet, funding and support for such NGOs remain minimal. Is EDB telling Singaporeans who want to be social activists in the name of positive change there is no room for them in a country that only woos 'practical' foreign NPs?

All this troubles me. Having spent time in Asian countries where civil society tangibly promotes social change, I sometimes feel I can accomplish far more abroad than in Singapore, where my ideas as a citizen are apparently not welcome unless they are 'practical'. The result of such an approach is that Singapore will continue to push passionate individuals away, and for that, we cannot be blamed as 'quitters'. Ultimately, a mature civil society is not just meant, as Ms Tan or Mr Kua suggests, 'to create jobs' or attract foreigners and tourists. It is meant to inspire Singaporeans to care; to take collective responsibility for communal or global problems.

Singapore, lead the way in non-profit groups
Letter to the Straits Times Forum 14 Jun 08;

AS A trustee of an India-based non-governmental organisation (NGO) serving the needs of the disabled and deprived, I welcome the initiative of the Singapore Government to attract international non-profit groups to operate and serve in Singapore. Certainly, more than any other nation in South-east Asia, Singapore is uniquely placed to offer a base for the non-profit organisations to serve the cause of humanity. Singapore evokes immediate confidence among people all over South-east Asia in view of its efficiency and administration and high standard of living achieved by fair management practices.

Having achieved this status, Singapore has a role to play and responsibility to fulfil to several developing nations in the region, including India.

In these countries, the problem is that vested interests often affect the functioning of NGOs. There is sometimes more emphasis on publicity and promotion than service.

This has created conditions where donors lose faith in the functioning of NGOs and hesitate to support them. Further, many NGOs do not take as much resources from promoters as they seek from others. Charity at the cost of others has become the central theme of at least some NGOs in countries like India.

Misuse of the NGO label for religious purposes is not uncommon.

The Singapore Government, while encouraging non-profit groups, should go further than merely viewing them in terms of economic and social benefits they bring to Singapore. An action plan and strategy should be worked out to go to the aid of the entire South-east Asian region, in which Singapore has the merit to emerge as a role model for its NGO policies and governance.

Even as I read the news in The Straits Times, I also read about T.T. Durai and his misadventure at the National Kidney Foundation. Perhaps this is a reflection that the Singapore Government could check only after the damage was done. Obviously, it reflects the fact that the Government has a few more lessons yet to learn.

As a trustee of an NGO from India, I hope the Singapore Government will provide the lead in facilitating and channelling the benefits of non-profit groups for the larger good of the South-east Asian population.

N.S. Venkataraman
Trustee
Nandini Voice for the Deprived
Chennai, India


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Malaysia keen to take over running of island lighthouse

Singapore manages the Pulau Pisang structure under an 1885 agreement
Carolyn Hong, Straits Times 11 Jun 08;

PUTRAJAYA - MALAYSIA is keen to take over the management of the lighthouse on Pulau Pisang from Singapore as the island belongs to Malaysia, says Foreign Minister Rais Yatim.

'If Singapore is amenable, we will suggest that it gives up the lighthouse as the island belongs to Malaysia. There is no point in Singapore managing the lighthouse.

'I will discuss with Mr George Yeo,' he told The Straits Times yesterday, referring to his Singapore counterpart.

He said the island, off the coast of Johor, was viable for development for tourism and fishing amenities.

The federal government, he said, was keen for Johor to take up the initiative as soon as possible, with some funding from federal agencies.

For instance, he said the Rural Development Ministry could help build shelters for fishermen and other amenities.

Under Malaysian law, islands and land issues are under the jurisdiction of state governments.

The lighthouse on Pulau Pisang is managed by Singapore under an agreement in 1885 between the ruler of Johor and the governor of the Straits Settlements.

The 154ha island has come under the spotlight following a decision by the International Court of Justice that Pedra Branca belongs to the Republic, while a pair of rocky outcrops called the Middle Rocks belong to Malaysia. Singapore administers the Horsburgh Lighthouse on Pedra Branca.

The Malaysian reception to the loss of Pedra Branca was initially calm and measured, but it soon became clear that Malaysians, in particular Johoreans, were upset at the loss of the island.

They blamed the government for neglecting the island for more than 100 years, allowing it to fall into the hands of Singapore. This soon grew into calls for Malaysia to assert its claim clearly to Pulau Pisang and other islands, over fears that they, too, might be lost.

Last Sunday, Johor MP Ahmad Maslan took a delegation of Umno members and the media to Pulau Pisang, located about 8km off the coast of Johor. His point was to put pressure on the government to develop the island to ensure that its sovereignty is never lost.

'We will not allow history to repeat itself. Losing Pedra Branca to Singapore is bad enough,' he said.

Dr Rais said the government was conducting studies on 100-plus islands in Malaysian territory that are not under dispute but need mapping.

Most of these islands are off the coast of Sabah, with the rest being in Sarawak, Johor, Malacca, Perak and Kedah.

'After what we learnt from Pedra Branca, which many Malaysians saw as a bitter pill, there is a surge of interest in wanting to ascertain our territories,' Dr Rais said.

He said he did not think the move by Malaysia to reclaim the lighthouse on Pulau Pisang, or to reclaim the waters around Middle Rocks, would hurt bilateral ties.

Malaysia said last week that it was considering a plan to merge the rocky outcrops.

Dr Rais said there had yet to be any progress on outstanding bilateral issues, including the price of water that Malaysia sells to Singapore, and the status of Malaysia's railway land in the Republic.

'During my last visit to Singapore, we had decided, without prejudice, to activate some parts of the Points of Agreement,' he said, referring to the agreement signed in 1990 on the railway land.

But further developments will be left to both heads of government to decide, he said.


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The truth about plastic bags: They are a menace to the environment

Letters from Faye Chiam (Ms), Straits Times Forum 11 Jun 08;

I READ with astonishment Mr Daniel Wang's misguided notions about plastic bags in his letter, 'Phasing out plastic bags: A dissenting voice' (June 9).

What is wrong with plastic bags? Plenty.

Made from polythene, a petroleum product, the bags may take as long as 1,000 years to degrade. In the meantime, many end up stuck in trees and rivers, killing birds and sea creatures that are unfortunate enough to ingest them or become entangled in them.

Non-biodegradability of plastic bags may be less of a problem in Singapore as our waste is incinerated, but incineration plants bring about environmental problems of their own, not least air pollution.

In the Philippines, for example, incinerators have been banned because of perceived health risks.

More importantly, incineration is an environmentally unsustainable method of treating waste. Contrary to Mr Wang's belief, burning does not make waste go away. Incineration can reduce the volume of incinerable waste, but the residue non-incinerable waste and incineration ash still need to be landfilled.

The National Environment Agency predicts that at the current rate, we will need a new incineration plant every five to seven years and a new landfill every 25 to 30 years.

As pointed out by Mr Wang, many households reuse plastic bags to bag their refuse. However, the sheer number of plastic bags we use suggests that much of it is excessive and unnecessary.

Every year, 4.5 million people in Singapore consume 2.5 billion plastic bags. That so few people can use so much plastic says a lot about our wasteful habits.

For all his erroneous views, though, Mr Wang is perhaps right about one thing - that the problem is not plastic bags. The problem is behavioural. The solution then is for us to change our behaviour and learn to refuse plastic bags that we do not need and use reusable bags instead.

Who says burning plastic does no harm?
Letter from Dell Marie Butler (Miss), Straits Times Forum 11 Jun 08;

MR DANIEL Wang's rejection of a ban on plastic bags (Phasing out plastic bags: A dissenting voice, June 9) reflects the deep-set misconceptions on the environment held by large sections of the Singaporean populace.

I question how the issue of non-biodegradability 'does not arise' simply because all of Singapore's domestic refuse is incinerated.

Mr Wang overlooks the very rationale for introducing and supporting the biodegradability of goods.

The fact of the matter is that incineration is incredibly pollutive; burning plastic is as damaging to the environment as burning a fossil fuel, since it is made of oil.

This is in itself argues for measures which would decrease the production of plastic bags in the first place. With spiralling oil prices threatening a spectre of hyperinflation, any move towards decreasing a reliance on oil is, I believe, reasonable, timely and necessary.

I would also like to raise issue with his claim that we should assess the situation from a Singaporean context, and not ban plastic bags simply because it has become 'fashionable' to do so.

How has Mr Wang come to the conclusion that other countries have banned plastic bags because it is 'fashionable'?

I believe he has confused substance with style. It is widely recognised that banning plastic bags is but a baby step to minimising waste and pollutive burning. But it is a step which several countries have already embraced.

As Mr Wang himself acknowledges, there are sacrifices which must be made and lifestyle alternatives to be found when plastic bags are banned. That several countries have yet chosen to tackle these challenges head-on suggests tenacity and reflects a top-down commitment to environmentalism and sustainable practice - not, as Mr Wang seems to suggest, a flippant pursuit of a transient trend.

Environmental degradation is not a seasonal trend; it is a clarion call to all societies to make fundamental changes.

Of course, it is important to address how Singaporeans can best adapt to the challenges which they must meet, as an oil crisis and environmental degradation beckons.

But Mr Wang would do well to keep in mind that it is the entire world which faces the portending crises. Greenhouse gases released by incineration threaten all inhabitants of our globe.

If Singaporeans are to truly step up to be citizens of the world, then they must begin to adopt the environment as citizens of the world.

Phasing out plastic bags: A dissenting voice
Letter from Daniel Wang, Straits Times Forum 9 Jun 08;

IT IS my view that many, including the Singapore Environment Council, have misunderstood this whole issue of plastic bags.

When environmentalists first objected to their use years ago, the issue with them was that they were non-biodegradable. Then, later, the issue became waste minimisation.

Both these issues are not applicable in Singapore's context.

First, 100 per cent of our domestic refuse is incinerated and so the question of non-biodegradability does not arise.

Will the burning of plastic bags harm our environment? The answer is - very unlikely, not at the very high temperatures that these bags and other domestic wastes are burned.

Second, on the issue of waste minimisation, many of us re-use the plastic bags that we get from supermarkets. We use them to line our kitchen bins and the wastepaper bins in our rooms.

The National Environment Agency has always reminded us to bag our kitchen waste before disposing it through the rubbish chutes. So, these plastic bags that we get from supermarkets come in very handy.

I agree, however, that small plastic bags, and those that are thicker, cannot be re-used to line bins and should not be offered by shops, where possible.

Let us sit back and re-examine the rationale behind calling for a ban on plastic bags. Let us not jump in and do something just because it is fashionable or what other countries in the world are doing. If we don't get any more plastic bags from supermarkets, how are we to bag our refuse?

Dependence on plastic bags in unsustainable
Letter from Yeo Chi Ming, Melbourne, Australia
Straits Times Forum 14 Jun 08;

I REFER to Mr Daniel Wang's letter on Monday, 'Phasing out plastic bags: A dissenting voice', and would like to point out some errors in his argument.

While it is true that 100 per cent of our waste is incinerated, it does not disappear into thin air after incineration. The waste is simply reduced in volume so it takes up less space at the landfill on Pulau Semakau, to lengthen the time to fill it up.

Mr Wang's assertion that burning waste, including plastic bags, does no harm to the environment is also false because burning plastic, at whatever temperature, releases harmful chemicals like dioxins that pose a risk not only to the environment, but also to our health.

While I do not favour an outright ban on plastic bags, for we need them to line our trash bins, I would argue that supermarkets and other retailers stop giving them out with purchases. I have been offered ridiculously small plastic bags which have no potential for re-use, just to hold cups of takeaway soya-bean milk (which I turned down).

My suggestion is to make plastic bags available only by buying them at a premium (and not a token sum), so people will buy only what they need. Retailers should be mandated to issue only biodegradable paper bags. And most important, the authorities should start a nationwide recycling and education campaign where Singaporeans must separate recyclables from other waste before disposal, as in many other developed countries.

I suggest anyone with an interest in this issue do a search online for the article, 'Trash and burn: Singapore's waste problem', which is available from several sources. Our current lifestyle and dependence on plastic bags is unsustainable, both to Singapore and to the earth as a whole.

Reusable bags not meant to completely replace plastic bags
Esther Tan, Projects Manager, Singapore Environment Council
Today Online 14 Jun 08;

I REFER to the letters “It’s all in the bags (June 4) and “Reusable bags still not as eco-friendly as recycled bags” (June 5). The Singapore Environment Council (SEC) thanks the writers for their views.

The aim of the Bring Your Own Bag Day (BYOBD) campaign was never to completely eliminate the use of plastic bags. Rather, the goal is to reduce the number of plastic bags tossed out each year.

This would include smaller plastic bags that have a lower rate of being reused. Currently, Singaporeans use 2.5 billion plastic bags a year, which works out to be roughly 600 per person, per year.

While there is probably a percentage of consumers like the letter writers, who only take enough plastic bags for their use, there is also a percentage of consumers who take more than what is needed.

Some shoppers make trips to the supermarket to buy groceries for an entire week and for them, a handful of reusable bags is not enough to carry their purchases. By making the reusable bag ubiquitous enough, there should not be any excuse for shoppers not to use them.

On the point that the Government should impose a plastic bag tax, the SEC feels it may not be a sustainable solution.

Continued education and awareness-raising may yield slower results but it will have a longer-lasting effect. Furthermore, unless a different way of collecting refuse can be implemented in public housing blocks, plastic bags will always be required to bag trash.

The SEC agrees that there is no need to buy reusable bags when one already has these bags at home. The concept of reducing waste should extend to all packaging and consumer products, not just plastic bags.

If one already has enough reusable bags at home, our advice is not to buy or collect any more. Consumers should use their own discretion to refuse reusable bags that are given for free. Excess reusable bags can also be given to other family members or friends. In this way, one can help spread the message to others.

We would also like to point out that the non-woven bags commonly sold at supermarkets are made from polypropylene (PP), which is technically a recyclable material. There is another type of shopping bag made from natural fibres such as jute or hemp. Bags made from 100-per-cent natural fibres can actually be used for composting.

Bags made from recycled material are not readily available in Singapore. Bags made from scrap (reusable) material such as tarpaulin are available but usually come at a premium price as these are marketed as exclusive fashion items.

All of these have the potential to be reused hundreds to thousands of times more than the average plastic bag and consumers can decide which will best suit their needs.

Why blame plastic bags? Fault lies in their careless use
Letter from Paul Chan, Straits Times Forum 16 Jun 08;

THE letter, 'Who says burning plastic does no harm?' (ST Online Forum, June 11), by Miss Dell Marie Butler smacks of gross exaggeration of one negative aspect of the ubiquitous plastic bag.

Before we condemn plastic bags further, let us review the good things about them.

They contribute to happy grocery shopping and have been good bin-liners and handy disposable bags for the past 50 years.

Plastic bags are one of the most energy- and material-efficient products. In terms of cost, hygiene, odour, weight, waterproofing, ruggedness and convenience, paper or fabric bags cannot hold a candle to it.

If people respect and treat plastic bags properly, drains and animals would not get choked up. It's the man that kills - not the gun.

It is more a question of education than shunning the product. Why blame the humble plastic bags?

Only 2 per cent of crude oil in the world is used to produce plastic bags. Eighty-five per cent of crude is burnt as fuel or used for heating.

The change to paper or biodegradable bags would not help reduce global warming because manufacturing 'bioplastic' materials produces more carbon dioxide and uses up more land and water resources.

Chopping down four times more trees to produce plastic- equivalent paper bags and burning them later may cause more greenhouse gases.

Supermarkets would do the society a great service if they encourage customers to reduce, re-use and recycle plastic bags.

No rationale for total ban on use of plastic bags
Reply from SEC, Straits Times Forum 16 Jun 08;

THE Singapore Environment Council appreciates the various views reflected in last Monday's letters, 'Phasing out plastic bags: A dissenting voice' and 'Outright ban better'.

Unlike other countries, the majority of Singaporean households require and reuse plastic bags to hold refuse before disposing it into rubbish chutes or bins. So, we do not see the rationale for a total ban on the use of plastic bags in Singapore.

Having said that, we do observe that some shoppers have the tendency to take more plastic bags than they need. In addition, a lot of the small-volume plastic bags are often used only once and not used to bag rubbish. As a result, plastic bags that are not reused are usually thrown away and this is a waste of resources.

In order to promote environmental consciousness, the Singapore Environment Council decided to initiate the weekly Bring Your Own Bag Day campaign, in partnership with major retailers and supermarkets. The aim is to reinforce the message that shoppers should take plastic bags only when needed and to remember to take along their own shopping bags.

In this way, everyone can help reduce wastage and conserve resources for future generations.

I would like to thank the writers for their interest in the subject.

Howard Shaw
Executive Director
Singapore Environment Council


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Making recycling a habit, Taiwan-style

Goh Sui Noi, Straits Times 11 Jun 08;

DURING my week in Taipei last month to cover President Ma Ying-jeou's inauguration, I carried in my shoulder bag - besides tape recorder, pen and notebook - a Family Mart plastic bag.

I had bought it on the first day I arrived to carry my purchases at the convenience store near my hotel. It cost only NT$2 (9 Singapore cents), but I did not want to be buying one every time I purchased something.

Carrying it around with me reminded me of the days when I was a correspondent in Taiwan. I had written about Mr Ma, then mayor of Taipei, carrying a plastic bag with him wherever he went. He would whip out his bag at every opportunity to promote his plan to have residents pay for garbage bags in order to encourage recycling.

This was how it worked: Residents would have to use regulation garbage bags, the prices of which were pegged to the cost of garbage disposal. But they could use other bags such as old shopping bags for separated recyclable trash. The purpose of the scheme was twofold: To reduce waste generation and to encourage recycling.

There were many complaints. There would be counterfeit bags, some said. There would be illegal dumping, it was inconvenient, houses were too small to accommodate separation bins and so on.

The biggest worry for Mr Ma and his supporters, though, was that the unpopular scheme would cost him his re-election as mayor. That did not happen.

The scheme was adopted in 2000. Mr Ma went on to win re-election in a landslide two years later, and the presidency this year. And Taipei expanded its waste reduction/recycling scheme to include food waste, and later required retail outlets to charge for plastic bags. It now also prohibits the use of plastic tableware at food outlets.

A Singaporean told me of his experience in Taipei at a seminar where participants ate lunch out of lunchboxes. After eating, he was about to throw his disposable lunchbox into a bin when he was stopped by a Taiwanese, who politely asked him to throw the leftover food into a separate food waste bin. He was impressed.

After Mr Ma was elected president, TV stations started playing old footage of him as mayor. One clip showed him using his personal pair of stainless steel chopsticks, which he carries with him everywhere he goes.

He is leading by example again as president. The thermostat at his presidential office is now set at 26 deg C to 28 deg C. Energy-saving lighting is used. Staff are required to use just enough lighting for work.

Indeed, there are 10 energy-conserving guidelines for presidential staff - including using the stairs rather than the lift, using fans rather than air-conditioners wherever possible and, for male staff, ditching the suit except for formal functions.

The message of conservation is everywhere in Taiwan - on billboards, TV, radio, you name it.

One day in a taxi, my attention was drawn to a woman's voice on the radio. She was hailing the advent of the bottled water for its convenience. But then she enumerated the costs of using plastic bottles.

The cost of manufacturing the bottle was several times more than the cost of the water it contains, she pointed out. The plastic is harmful to the human body if one is not careful, the bottles last for a long time and are harmful to the environment and so on. Her conclusion: It is better to carry your own reusable water bottle when you go out.

It was a short clip, but it was persuasive because it explained why one should not buy bottled water.

My sense is that the conservation and recycling message is not as ubiquitous in Singapore as it is in Taiwan. We do not make as concerted an effort to educate and change habits in this area.

As consumers of resources rather than producers - and since we plan to help others build eco-friendly cities - we should be doing much more to conserve and recycle.


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MediaCorp Gaia commercial to be tweaked

MediaCorp acts on divided reactions from viewers
Lin Yanqin, Today Online 11 Jun 08;

SOME gave it the thumbs-up for making the environment a talking point; others found the stark imagery objectionable.

Taking into account such feedback from viewers, MediaCorp will soon unveil a revised version of its controversial “Saving Gaia” television commercial.

Today understands the current version — first screened last week — will be taken off the air, and replaced with one that will take into account both the disagreeable and the well-received elements.

The core message, that the harm being inflicted on planet Earth amounts to destruction inflicted on future generations, will stay.The changes will focus mainly on the visual execution of the commercial.

The original showed a mannequin covered with tar, smoke and haze, and subsequently sawn with a chainsaw before dissolving into a real child’s face. This had been criticised by some viewers for being too violent, with its shock value distracting from the intended message.

But MediaCorp earlier said that fewer than 10 complaints had been received, and the commercial had also been praised by some viewers for drawing attention to the important issue of climate change.

Said a commentator on an environment news website, AsiaIsGreen.com : “I think the advertisement was a good one. It was very thought-provoking, and is sure to capture more attention than other more cliched ones.”

When contacted last night, ad creator Alan Seah from MediaCorp’s creative services department said he felt the gravity of the issue required a commercial that was “hard-hitting”. “I hope it will get people to think about the situation right now and stir them to do something,” he told Today.

Gruesome Gaia TV ad gets canned
Irate viewers write in to say commercial is too graphic for kids
Mak Mun San, Straits Times 14 Jun 08;

AFTER drawing flak for a television advertisement that viewers had described as too gruesome, MediaCorp has decided to replace the commercial.

The Saving Gaia advertisement, which was aired as part of the station's environmental awareness campaign, showed a chainsaw cutting open a boy mannequin, and tar and blood dripping from its head. The image then morphed into a real child's face, looking sad and disturbed. Gaia means Goddess of Earth in Greek.

Since MediaCorp started airing the advertisement on June 5, upset viewers have written in to the papers asking the commercial to be canned. People have also gone into Internet forums to slam the advertisement, calling it 'distasteful', 'scary' and 'shocking'.

Housewife Monica Chow, 45, e-mailed The Straits Times complaining of how her 11-year-old son suffered from nightmares for two nights after watching the 'horrifying scene' on television.

'Children aren't able to tell the difference between a mannequin and a real boy,' she said.

The Advertising Standards Authority of Singapore, which is the regulatory body of the local advertising industry, said that it has received a few complaints from members of the public about the advertisement.

Earlier this week, MediaCorp indicated that there were no plans to pull the plug on the commercial. Ms Florence Lian, its senior vice-president of marketing and creative services (News, Radio, Print), told Life! that MediaCorp wanted to convey the message that 'the current pollution and destruction we are wreaking on Mother Earth is something we are wreaking on ourselves, and our future generations'.

However, there appeared to be an about-turn and the station has since said that the commercial was taken off the air for tweaking on Tuesday 'after taking into account feedback from viewers'.

It would be replaced with a revised version, but the station did not say when it would be ready.

A not-inconvenient show
Letter from Gerald Ang, Today Online 16 Jun 08;

I REFER to “Provocative ads: Useful or frightful?” (June 13).

Such ads may shock, disgust or promote initiatives to go green. But their “primitive” approach does not show details — for example, the damage we have caused to Mother Earth.

Documentaries like An Inconvenient Truth by (former United States Vice-President) Al Gore spell out clear examples with pictures of deforestation, carbon emission leading to longer droughts, hotter weather, more powerful hurricanes, melting glaciers, rising sea levels and so on.

Screening ads, on the other hand, has nominal impact. Everyone would be better educated on saving Gaia by the screening of An Inconvenient Truth.

MediaCorp should consider airing this, and the Ministry of Education should have it shown to all students.


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Scientists find monkeys who know how to fish

Michael Casey, Associated Press Yahoo News 10 Jun 08;

Long-tailed macaque monkeys have a reputation for knowing how to find food — whether it be grabbing fruit from jungle trees or snatching a banana from a startled tourist. Now, researchers say they have discovered groups of the silver-haired monkeys in Indonesia that fish.

Groups of long-tailed macaques were observed four times over the past eight years scooping up small fish with their hands and eating them along rivers in East Kalimantan and North Sumatra provinces, according to researchers from The Nature Conservancy and the Great Ape Trust.

The species had been known to eat fruit and forage for crabs and insects, but never before fish from rivers.

"It's exciting that after such a long time you see new behavior," said Erik Meijaard, one of the authors of a study on fishing macaques that appeared in last month's International Journal of Primatology. "It's an indication of how little we know about the species."

Meijaard, a senior science adviser at The Nature Conservancy, said it was unclear what prompted the long-tailed macaques to go fishing. But he said it showed a side of the monkeys that is well-known to researchers — an ability to adapt to the changing environment and shifting food sources.

"They are a survivor species, which has the knowledge to cope with difficult conditions," Meijaard said Tuesday. "This behavior potentially symbolizes that ecological flexibility."

The other authors of the paper, which describes the fishing as "rare and isolated" behavior, are The Nature Conservancy volunteers Anne-Marie E. Stewart, Chris H. Gordon and Philippa Schroor, and Serge Wich of the Great Ape Trust.

Some other primates have exhibited fishing behavior, Meijaard wrote, including Japanese macaques, chacma baboons, olive baboons, chimpanzees and orangutans.

Agustin Fuentes, a University of Notre Dame anthropology professor who studies long-tailed macaques, or macaca fascicularis, on the Indonesian island of Bali and in Singapore, said he was "heartened" to see the finding published because such details can offer insight into the "complexity of these animals."

"It was not surprising to me because they are very adaptive," he said. "If you provide them with an opportunity to get something tasty, they will do their best to get it."

Fuentes, who is not connected with the published study, said he has seen similar behavior in Bali, where he has observed long-tailed macaques in flooded paddy fields foraging for frogs and crabs. He said it affirms his belief that their ability to thrive in urban and rural environments from Indonesia to northern Thailand could offer lessons for endangered species.

"We look at so many primate species not doing well. But at the same time, these macaques are doing very well," he said. "We should learn what they do successfully in relation to other species."

Still, Fuentes and Meijaard said further research was needed to understand the full significance of the behavior. Among the lingering questions are what prompted the monkeys to go fishing and how common it is among the species.

Long-tailed macaques were twice observed catching fish by The Nature Conservancy researchers in 2007, and Wich spotted them doing it two times in 1998 while studying orangutans.


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Dolphin stranding: Royal Navy was carrying out live firing exercises

Richard Savill, The Telegraph 10 Jun 08;

The Royal Navy was carrying out live-firing exercises just hours before 26 dolphins died in the biggest mass stranding of the species in Britain, it has been claimed.

Marine experts trying to find out why the pod of dolphins tried to beach themselves on the shores of Percuil river, near Portscatho, Cornwall, say they could have been panicked by an "underwater disturbance".

The dolphins were found dead early on Monday morning.

Falmouth Coastguard said that there had been "heavy" Royal Navy activity in the Falmouth Bay area and suggested it had continued past midday on Sunday.

A spokesman said: "There have been continual live-firing exercises up until yesterday [Monday] evening when the exercise was cancelled."

It is understood that the exercises have been going on for two to three weeks and were carried out day and night.

The British Divers Marine Life Rescue (BDMLR), which co-ordinated the rescue of several dolphins, said they received reports from the public that an explosion took place at sea over the weekend.

Such an explosion could have panicked the dolphins - who were away from their natural deep water habitat - and sent them up the river to shallow waters.

"It does not mean that the Navy is to blame, but it would be naive of us to ignore the activity that has been going on," said the BDMLR.

An MoD spokesman initially confirmed that live-firing exercises were taking place until midday on Sunday in Falmouth Bay, close to the entrance to the Percuil river. The exercises involved a submarine.

However, the MoD later issued a statement claiming that the last live firing by the Royal Navy in the area had actually taken place on Friday - 60 nautical miles from Falmouth.

"These live firings are routine training," the spokesman said.

The MoD also disclosed that a survey vessel was conducting trials using high definition sonar for sea bed mapping trials off the coast of Falmouth at the time of the dolphin incident.

However, the spokesman insisted: "It is considered extremely unlikely that this operation could have affected the mammals in any way."

Post-mortem examinations on some of the dead dolphins have yet to reveal any concrete evidence as to why the dolphins had swum up the river.

They appeared to have been well fed and there were no obvious signs of disease or poisoning. The tests are expected to take weeks or months to complete.

Other theories put forward yesterday included the possibility that the dolphins may have been trying to escape a killer whale or were seeking food.

The BDMLR chairman Alan Knight, said: "There is a possibility that these animals have been frightened by something which means they have panicked and beached themselves.

"The fact that they have beached in four separate sites is very unusual. It indicates to me that there is some kind of disturbance."

David Jarvis, also from the charity, said: "It could have been something to do with sonar or it could have been that there was a killer whale out there that frightened them."

Sarah Dolman, of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, said: "Sonar is the most plausible [reason] based on previous strandings around the world."


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Mystery Surrounds Mass Dolphin Stranding

Andrew Hough, PlanetArk 10 Jun 08;

LONDON - Tests on some of the 25 dolphins which died after Britain's biggest mass stranding in almost three decades showed they had been healthy, rescuers said on Tuesday, as mystery surrounded the beaching in a Cornish river.

The dolphins died after they swam up the Percuil River near Falmouth on Monday morning and were left stranded.

In what one rescuer called a "sea of carnage", marine experts, wildlife volunteers and vets battled all day to save the stricken dolphins.

Seven were saved and led back out to sea.

Investigators are exploring several possible causes, including the theory that the dolphins had become distressed by naval sonar equipment or were frightened by an unexplained explosion several residents reported hearing late on Sunday.

Claims the animals had moved inland to feed on fish, attracted by a large algae bloom caused by a recent bout of hot weather, were dismissed after no food was found in their stomachs. While confirming it had a "presence" in the area, the Royal Navy said no training or official activity had been conducted there since last Thursday.

A Navy spokesman also said officials had no knowledge of an explosion involving any vessels.

Despite residents contacting two separate conservation groups reporting hearing loud explosions, local police and the coastguard said they had no record of such an incident.

Autopsies carried out by the Institute of Zoology on Tuesday revealed the dolphins had been healthy, with no signs of illness or injury, officials said.

The national co-ordinator from the British Divers Marine Life Rescue charity, Trevor Weeks, told Reuters the tests did not reveal any clues to the incident.

"It was horrible," he said. "It was really distressing for some of the volunteers."

He said it was the largest mass stranding in Britain since 1981 when pilot whales beached on the east coast. More tests are being carried out on the dead dolphins in the coming days.

Why do dolphins beach en masse?
WHO, WHAT, WHY?
The Magazine answers...
BBC News 11 Jun 08;

Twenty-six dolphins have been found dead, having stranded themselves in shallow waters on the Cornish coast. Why do they beach themselves together?

A pod of 15 dolphins first became beached early on Monday morning, having swum up the river creek near Falmouth. Within a few hours, more than 70 of the animals were spotted in the same river as well as others nearby.

While rescuers are trying to send the surviving creatures back into deeper waters, post-mortems on seven of the dead dolphins have failed to reveal why they died. Further tests on the remaining 19 are due in coming days.

Meanwhile, several thousand miles away 100 whales have become trapped in a bay off Madagascar, with nearly 30 having died.

Sarah Dolman of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society says there are important differences, not only between dolphins and whales, but between different types of whale. They roughly divide thus:

* Toothed whales - a group which includes smaller whale species and dolphins. "They are those that echo-locate and feed on fish," says Ms Dolman.
* Bigger whales - a group which "feed on krill and have a very different social structure".

"Dolphin species are highly social," says Ms Dolman - the point being that they operate a flat hierarchy and don't shoal around a natural leader. Whales, however, have "matriarchal society".

This matters because it's much more common for larger whale species (such as those in Madagascar) to become beached together. Partly this is due to their matriarchal nature, so that when the leader becomes ill and heads towards shore, the others are likely to follow them, says Ms Dolman.

Increasingly though, pods of whales have been found stranded together not as a result of ill health but due to sonars - underwater radar. This is likely to have been the problem in Madagascar, where the beached whales were of the melon head species, which is particularly susceptible to noise, she says.

Dr Andrew Cunningham of the Institute of Zoology says that it's been proven recently that a number of the beachings of deeper diving whales have been linked to sonars. The animals become disorientated, and surface too quickly, developing a decompression sickness that prevents them from diving deeper again.

The case of the Cornwall dolphins is more perplexing, however.

"There's a lot of interest in this latest case in Cornwall because there hasn't been a mass stranding of dolphins since the use of sonar," he says. The last major stranding (of pilot whales which are in the same toothed whale group as dolphins) in the UK was in 1981, although there have been others elsewhere. So could it be a rare example of dolphins being disoriented by sonar?

"When it comes to dolphins, it's still not really understood."

There are several other theories about what happened in Cornwall, explains Dr Cunningham:

* one of the pod got into trouble and was followed by the others
* that they were chasing a shoal of fish and then couldn't get back into deeper water
* or perhaps that they were being chased themselves

As dolphins are known for being a very social species, it's often thought that a distress signal sent out by one, brings others nearby flocking to help. "They're like humans, in that if your house and family were under threat, you'd go and help them, rather than run the other way," says Ms Dolman.

So far, in the Cornwall case, the animals appear to have been healthy, which would imply that causes were human-related, but it will be days before all the post-mortems are completed.


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Fast fall of Mediterranean sharks

Richard Black, BBC News 10 Jun 08;

Sharks in the Mediterranean Sea have undergone a massive decline over the last two centuries, scientists have discovered from historical records.

Some species shrunk by more than 99% over the period, mainly due to fishing.

Researchers used fishermens' notes and archive records to plot population trends of five top predatory sharks.

The study, in the journal Conservation Biology, comes just weeks after a warning that half of the world's ocean-going sharks face extinction.

Sharks and their close relatives, the rays, are particularly vulnerable to over-fishing as they grow and reproduce slowly.

"There is a long history of fishing in the Mediterranean, especially coastal fishing," said study leader Francesco Ferretti from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada, who has been working in the Mediterranean with the Lenfest Ocean Program.

"And until recently, these species were not valuable - they were caught as bycatch by boats chasing important species such as tuna - so they were declining without anyone noticing," he told BBC News.

Shark traps

There are 47 species of shark found regularly in the Mediterranean, of which 20 are top predators.

Fishermen tended to regard them as pests, according to records amassed by the researchers.

For five of the 20 top predators, the records - from traditional tuna "traps", commercial boats and fishermen using rods and lines - were good enough to show that catches had been large enough to produce a substantial decline.

The hammerhead population, they conclude, has declined by more than 99.99% over the last 200 years. Records show hammerheads largely vanished from coastal waters around 1900; in the last 20 years they have barely been seen in pelagic zones either.

The blue shark and the two mackerel sharks have also apparently vanished from coastal waters. Threshers are occasionally still caught in tuna traps; even so, their numbers across the Mediterrannean have fallen by more than 99.99%.

For the rest of the 20 top predators, records were not comprehensive enough to plot a trend, though declines were evident. Francesco Ferretti suggests that may be because their decline began even earlier, when records were even more sparse.

Studies on historical populations are rare, he said; but when they do plot declines, that should lead to listing as a threatened species.

"This study will hopefully contribute to a greater threat status for hammerheads and blue sharks, and other assessments in the Mediterranean," he said.

Conservation limits

Conservationists have long campaigned for better protection for sharks and rays, which have not traditionally been considered by the organisations that regulate fisheries.

"Historically, they didn't have high economic value, and as resource priorities and management are linked with the economic value of fisheries, sharks have never been managed - they slipped under the radar," commented Rebecca Greenberg, a marine scientist with the conservation group Oceana.

"Now, many larger shark-catching nations are taking advantage of the fact that they're not regulated; and along with the negative image that many people have of sharks, that's led to the desperate situation we have today."

What worries conservation scientists most is that the disappearance of top predators from an ecosystem can produce unexpected changes.

The apparent rise in jellyfish numbers - documented in different regions of the oceans, including the Spanish coast of the Mediterranean - may be partly due to falling numbers of predators such as bluefin tuna and turtles.

Conservation groups believe a set of measures to protect sharks worldwide, but especially in the Mediterranean - the "most dangerous area in the world" for them, according to Rebecca Greenberg - is long overdue.

These would include the policing of bans on finning - which removes fins for the lucrative eastern cuisine market - measures to reduce bycatch, and the setting of regional and global catch limits.

Med Shark Numbers Down 97 Pct Over Two Centuries
PlanetArk 12 Jun 08;

ROME - The number of sharks in the Mediterranean has fallen by 97 percent in the last 200 years, putting the sea's ecological balance at risk, a report released on Wednesday said.


The report, by the Washington-based Lenfest Ocean Program, used records such as fishermen's logs, shark landings, museum specimens and visual sightings to estimate the number and size of the Mediterranean sharks over the last two centuries.

There was only enough data on five of the 20 big shark species present in the Mediterranean to be useful to the study -- the hammerhead, thresher, blue and two species of mackerel shark, which averaged a decline of 97 percent.

"It will have a major impact on the ecosystem because large predatory sharks are at the top of the food chain," said Francesco Ferretti, the report's lead author.

Losing the top of the food chain can mean smaller fish thrive and consume more of their prey, upsetting the ecological balance. "If we lose these sharks we are going to lose this important portion of the ecosystem functioning," said Ferretti.

A report last month by the International Union for Conservation of Nature found 11 kinds of shark faced extinction due to overfishing, partly caused by booming demand for shark fin soup in Asia.

Fishers from all over the world catch and trade sharks for their lucrative fins, often discarding their carcasses, the report said, noting Indonesia and Spain are among the top culprits.

Ferretti said the practice was not thought to be common in the Mediterranean due to the small numbers of sharks now present there. More of a problem was "by-catch" -- where sharks are caught in long-line fishing meant to snag tuna and swordfish.

"The Mediterranean has been fished since Roman times, it's a historical thing," said Ferretti. "But now (modern) fishing has put big impact on the shark population." (Reporting by Robin Pomeroy)

Sharks 'functionally extinct' in Mediterranean
Malcolm Moore, The Telegraph 12 Jun 08;

Sharks are now "functionally extinct" in the waters in the Mediterranean Sea, a historical study has shown.

Researchers used fishermens' notes and archives to show that numbers had declined by as much as 99 per cent in the last two centuries.

The study, in the journal Conservation Biology, comes just weeks after a warning that half of the world's ocean-going sharks face extinction.

The scientists who conducted the study said that 47 species of sharks live in the Mediterranean, but that many of them had not been seen for decades.

They added that other predators, such as whales, turtles and large fish such as tuna, "had declined similarly" and that the entire ecosystem of the Mediterranean was at risk. Sharks help control the populations of various fish and keep the food chain balanced.

"The loss of sharks in the Atlantic has resulted in unpredictable changes to the ecosystem. Given the decline in the Mediterranean, there is cause to be seriously concerned about the effect that this could have," said Francesco Ferretti, the head of the research team.

The team looked at the populations of hammerheads, blue sharks, thresher sharks and mackerel shark. "Many historical records show the Mediterranean had an abundance of large sharks, which were considered a pest by fishermen," said the report.

"Hammerhead sharks declined the fastest. In the early 1900s catches and sightings were regular, although not common. After 1963 no hammerheads were caught or seen in coastal areas. After 1995 we found no more records," it added.

The authors concluded that sharks have been either legally or illegally fished to extinction, as fishermen sought to get rid of them. Sharks are particularly vulnerable to fishing because they breed rarely and take a long time to grow to maturity.

Another report, from the World Conservation Union (IUCN) came to a similar conclusion recently and warned that the Mediterranean Sea is "one of the most dangerous places on earth for sharks and rays".


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Africa's Deforestation Twice World Rate - UN Atlas

Alister Doyle, PlanetArk 11 Jun 08;

OSLO - Africa is suffering deforestation at twice the world rate and the continent's few glaciers are shrinking fast, according to a UN atlas on Tuesday.

Satellite pictures, often taken three decades apart, showed expanding cities, pollution, deforestation and climate change were damaging the African environment despite glimmers of improvement in some areas.

"Africa is losing more than 4 million hectares (9.9 million acres) of forest every year -- twice the world's average deforestation rate," according to a statement by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) about the 400-page atlas, prepared for a meeting of African environment ministers in Johannesburg.

Four million hectares is roughly the size of Switzerland or slightly bigger than the US state of Maryland.

Photographs showed recent scars in forests in countries including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Nigeria and Rwanda. It said forest loss was a major concern in 35 countries in Africa.

And it showed that environmental change extended beyond the well-known shrinking of the snows on Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa's highest peak at 5,895 metres (19,340 ft), or the drying up of Lake Chad.

On the Ugandan border with Democratic Republic of Congo, for instance, glaciers on the Rwenzori Mountains where the highest peak is 5,109 metres shrank by half between 1987 and 2003, it said.


DARFUR

Trees and shrubs had been cut from the Jebel Marra foothills in Sudan, partly because of an influx of refugees from the conflict in Darfur.

"The Atlas ... clearly demonstrates the vulnerability of people in the region to forces often outside their control, including the shrinking of glaciers in Uganda and Tanzania and impacts on water supplies linked with climate change," UNEP head Achim Steiner said in a statement.

The atlas said 300 million people faced water scarcity and that areas in sub-Saharan Africa experiencing shortages were expected to increase by almost a third by 2050.

"Climate change is emerging as a driving force behind many of these problems," it said.

Almost 200 governments have agreed to work out a new UN treaty by the end of 2009 to slow climate change, blamed mainly on emissions of greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels.

But the atlas said there were signs of hope.

"There are many places across Africa where people have taken action -- where there are more trees than 30 years ago, where wetlands have sprung back and where land degradation has been countered," Steiner said.

Among examples, the report showed that action to prevent over-grazing had helped a national park in south-eastern Tunisia. A project to expand wetlands in Mauritania was also helping to control flooding and improve livelihoods. For Reuters latest environment blogs click on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/ (Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Atlas shows vanishing landscape
Martin Plaut, BBC News 10 Jun 08;

A new atlas published by the UN charts Africa's rapidly changing environmental landscape from disappearing glaciers in Uganda to a vanishing lake in Mali.

Comparing photographs from the present day and 30 years ago, it shows how economic development, climate change and conflict have all taken their toll.

The atlas from the UN Environment Programme surveys every African nation.

There are also examples of things changing for the better, like in Niger where trees are being replanted.

Yellow spider webs

In nearly 400 pages of glossy colour photographs the atlas documents the degradation of a once pristine continent.

Before and after images chart the devastating impact humans have had on their environment.

Roads driven through the Democratic Republic of Congo's rainforests spread a yellow spider webs across the landscape, as trees are hacked down.

The UN estimates Africa is losing four million hectares of forest a year - twice the global average.

Rising populations mean that almost every environment is now under pressure.

But much of the environmental damage in Africa is being brought about by global climate change.

Africa only produces 4% of the world's carbon dioxide.

Yet Marion Cheatle of the UN Environment Programme says Africa will suffer disproportionately from the results of climate change.

"They are bearing the brunt of this change, which is a very unfair situation, if you think about it."

Across all of Africa the impact of human activity is clear - whether in the newly irrigated areas created by the waters of the Nile, turning huge areas of the desert around Egypt's lake Nasser green, or the urban sprawl of Dakar, across the Cap Vert peninsula in Senegal.

But there also are in examples of change being reversed as in Niger's Tahouah province. Trees - once cut down at will - are now nurtured and cared for by local people.

The photographs clearly show an arid region being slowly brought back to life, over a period of 30 years.

For Ms Cheatle it is proof that degradation can be reversed.

"Gradually that tree population has gone up 10 to 20 times.

"It shows that good management and careful management of resources there can turn around the situation in a relatively short period of time."


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Drilling Caused Indonesian Mud Volcano - Report

PlanetArk 11 Jun 08;

WASHINGTON - Drilling of a gas exploration well, and not an earthquake, set off a volcano that has been spewing boiling mud for two years and has displaced more than 50,000 people on the Indonesian island of Java, experts said on Monday.

Records kept by oil and gas company Lapindo Brantas during the drilling of a gas exploration well called Banjar-Panji-1 show specific incidents that could have triggered the disaster, the international team of experts said.

"We are more certain than ever that the Lusi mud volcano is an unnatural disaster and was triggered by drilling the Banjar-Panji-1 well," said Richard Davies, a professor of earth sciences at Britain's Durham University.

"We show that the day before the mud volcano started, there was a huge 'kick' in the well, which is an influx of fluid and gas into the wellbore," Davies said in a statement.

"We show that after the kick, the pressure in the well went beyond a critical level. This resulted in the leakage of the fluid from the well and the rock formations to the surface -- a so-called underground blowout. This fluid picked up mud during its ascent, and Lusi was born."

The team of British, American, Indonesian and Australian scientists, writing in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters, said this pressurized fluid fractured the surrounding rock. Mud spurted out of cracks instead of the wellhead.

"There is not a hope on Earth they are going to stop it now," said the University of California Berkeley's Michael Manga, who worked on the study.

"You can plug up a hole, but if you try to plug a crack, stuff just flows around the plug, or the crack gets bigger. The well now has no effect on the erupting mud, it was just the trigger that initiated it."


MILLIONS IN DAMAGE

In addition to the evacuations, Lusi has caused millions of dollars in damage since it erupted in May 2006. It now covers more than 2.5 square miles (6.48 sq km) and the mud is flowing at a rate of 100,000 cubic metres (3.53 million cu ft) a day.

The mining company and some experts had argued that the cause was the 6.3 magnitude Yogyakarta earthquake and its aftershocks that shook the island two days before the eruption.

That quake, centered 160 miles (250 km) from the mud volcano, killed 6,000 people and left 1.5 million homeless.

Manga and Berkeley graduate student Maria Brumm tested this idea but found the change in pressure underground due to the earthquake would have been far too small to cause the mud volcano.

"We have known for hundreds of years that earthquakes can trigger eruptions. In this case, the earthquake was simply too small and too far away," Manga said.

A mud volcano is usually a naturally occurring phenomenon created when a mix of mud, water and gas forms underground and is forced to the surface. There are a few thousand on earth.

PT Energi Mega Persada indirectly controls Lapindo, which holds a 50 percent stake in the Brantas block where the mud originated. PT Medco Energi International Tbk holds a 32 percent stake and Australia-based Santos Ltd the rest.

Indonesia's government has ordered Lapindo to pay 3.8 trillion rupiah (US$406 million) in compensation to the victims and to cover the damage. (US$1 = 9,355 rupiah (Reporting by Maggie Fox; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Indonesian firm denies drilling caused mud volcano
Olivia Rondonuwu, Reuters 12 Jun 08;

JAKARTA (Reuters) - A volcano that started spewing hot mud in Indonesia two years ago displacing more than 50,000 people was triggered by tectonic activity, experts working for the energy firm blamed by some for the disaster said on Thursday.

The comments contrast with the view of an international team of experts who said on Monday that drilling for a gas exploration well, and not an earthquake, set off the volcano in East Java.

A geologist and drilling expert working for oil and gas firm Lapindo Brantas said that the international team, led by Richard Davies of Britain's Durham University, had based their findings on the wrong data and assumptions.

"Experts opinion, Davies and others, that concluded that the burst came from the drilling well is based on a study that used the wrong data and assumption," Edy Sutriono, drilling expert at Lapindo, told a news conference.

The international team had said records kept by Lapindo during the drilling of the gas exploration well called Banjar-Panji-1 showed an underground blowout that could have triggered the disaster.

But Bambang Istadi, a geologist at Lapindo, said tectonic activity had caused an old escarpment to crack and become the channel for the mud to flow.

The company and some experts have argued that the mud flow was caused by a 6.3 magnitude earthquake in Yogyakarta and its aftershocks that happened two days before the eruption.

That quake, centred 160 miles from the mud volcano, killed 6,000 people and left 1.5 million homeless.

Richard Davies told Reuters on Thursday that the well was being drilled next to a mud volcano at the same time it erupted.

The hot noxious mud began spewing near the gas exploration site in Sidoarjo, in East Java, on May 29.

"I mean, it's just I'm sorry, there's just too much evidence now to propose that this isn't due to the well," he added, noting there would be a public debate with Lapindo experts on the issue in late October this year in Cape Town, South Africa.

The mud, which is flowing at a rate of more than 100,000 cubic metres a day, has displaced more than 50,000 people and covered more than 2.5 square miles.

A mud volcano is usually a naturally occurring phenomenon created when a mix of mud, water and gas forms underground and is forced to the surface. There are a few thousand on earth.

PT Energi Mega Persada indirectly controls Lapindo, which holds a 50 percent stake in the Brantas block where the mud originated. PT Medco Energi International Tbk holds a 32 percent stake and Australia-based Santos Ltd the rest.

The situation has also become a major embarrassment for the government since Energi is owned by the Bakrie Group, controlled by the family of chief social welfare minister, Aburizal Bakrie.

Indonesia's government has ordered Lapindo to pay 3.8 trillion rupiah ($408.1 million) in compensation to the victims and to cover the damage.

($1=9311 Rupiah)

(Editing by Ed Davies)


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Pest threatens Brazil's Sao Paulo cane fields

Reuters 10 Jun 08;

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A new pest in Brazil's largest sugar cane growing state, Sao Paulo, could cause annual crop losses of up to $245 million, if it spreads as expected, a leading sugar cane research center said on Tuesday.

The giant cane borer (Telchin licus), which is common in Brazil's northeastern states, was spotted for the first time in Sao Paulo last July, in the Limeira area and "has disseminated," the Sugar Cane Technology Center said.

"As it is a new plague in the center-south, combative methods have not yet been developed," said Enrico De Beni Arrigoni, technological research coordinator at the CTC.

"Chemical treatments have not shown any positive results," he said, adding that in the Northeast, where the plague was identified for the first time in 1927, the only solution was to catch the insects manually in the cane fields.

Sao Paulo accounts for about 60 percent of the national sugar cane crop and has the world's highest productivity. The current crop is estimated at around 340 million to 350 million tonnes.

The insect larvae can reach up to 8 centimeters (3 inches) and reduces cane yields significantly, Arrigoni said. The larvae bore holes, causing damage to the cane.

"After the infestations in the Limeira region, CTC draws a worrying picture for the ethanol and sugar sector in Sao Paulo," CTC said in a statement.

Considering the planted area of around 4 million hectares (10 million acres) in the state, CTC projects crop losses could reach 400 million reais ($245 million) per year "just in Sao Paulo."

"We do not know when the plague will arrive through the whole region, but there's no way of impeding its spread. We don't know if this would be fast," Arrigoni said by telephone.

One branch of the studies to combat the giant cane borer is a genetically modified variety of sugar cane.

Arrigoni said the cane pest is restricted to Brazil and Guiana.

CTC is sponsored by 180 ethanol and sugar mills in Brazil's center-south.

(Reporting by Inae Riveras; Editing by Reese Ewing and Walter Bagley)


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Peasants: our best chance of feeding the world

These objects of contempt are now our best chance of feeding the world
Peasants are detested by both communists and capitalists - but when it comes to productivity a small farm is unbeatable

George Monbiot, The Guardian 10 Jun 08;

I suggest you sit down before you read this. Robert Mugabe is right. At last week's global food summit he was the only leader to speak of "the importance of land in agricultural production and food security". Countries should follow Zimbabwe's lead, he said, in democratising ownership.

Of course the old bastard has done just the opposite. He has evicted his opponents and given land to his supporters. He has failed to support the new settlements with credit or expertise, with the result that farming in Zimbabwe has collapsed. The country was in desperate need of land reform when Mugabe became president. It remains in desperate need of land reform today.

But he is right in theory. Though the rich world's governments won't hear it, the issue of whether or not the world will be fed is partly a function of ownership.

This reflects an unexpected discovery. It was first made in 1962 by the Nobel economist Amartya Sen, and has since been confirmed by dozens of studies. There is an inverse relationship between the size of farms and the amount of crops they produce per hectare. The smaller they are, the greater the yield.

In some cases, the difference is enormous. A recent study of farming in Turkey, for example, found that farms of less than one hectare are 20 times as productive as farms of more than 10 hectares. Sen's observation has been tested in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Malaysia, Thailand, Java, the Philippines, Brazil, Colombia and Paraguay. It appears to hold almost everywhere.

The finding would be surprising in any industry, as we have come to associate efficiency with scale. In farming it seems particularly odd, because small producers are less likely to own machinery, less likely to have capital or access to credit, and less likely to know about the latest techniques.

There's a good deal of controversy about why this relationship exists. Some researchers argued that it was the result of a statistical artefact: fertile soils support higher populations than barren lands, so farm size could be a result of productivity, rather than the other way around. But further studies have shown that the inverse relationship holds across an area of fertile land. Moreover, it works even in countries such as Brazil, where the biggest farmers have grabbed the best land.

The most plausible explanation is that small farmers use more labour per hectare than big farmers. Their workforce largely consists of members of their own families, which means that labour costs are lower than on large farms (they don't have to spend money recruiting or supervising workers), while the quality of the work is higher. With more labour, farmers can cultivate their land more intensively: they spend more time terracing and building irrigation systems; they sow again immediately after the harvest; and they might grow several crops in the same field.

In the early days of the green revolution, this relationship seemed to go into reverse: the bigger farms, with access to credit, were able to invest in new varieties and boost their yields. But as the new varieties have spread to smaller farmers, the inverse relationship has reasserted itself. If governments are serious about feeding the world, they should be breaking up large landholdings, redistributing them to the poor and concentrating their research and their funding on supporting small farms.

There are plenty of other reasons for defending small farmers in poor countries. The economic miracles in South Korea, Taiwan and Japan arose from their land reform programmes. Peasant farmers used the cash they made to build small businesses. The same thing seems to have happened in China, though it was delayed for 40 years by collectivisation and the Great Leap Backwards: the economic benefits of the redistribution that began in 1949 were not felt until the early 80s. Growth based on small farms tends to be more equitable than growth built around capital-intensive industries. Though their land is used intensively, the total ecological impact of smallholdings is lower. When small farms are bought up by big ones, the displaced workers move into new land to try to scratch out a living. I once followed evicted peasants from the Brazilian state of Maranhão 2,000 miles across the Amazon to the land of the Yanomami people, then watched them rip it apart.

But the prejudice against small farmers is unchallengeable. It gives rise to the oddest insult in the English language: when you call someone a peasant, you are accusing them of being self-reliant and productive. Peasants are detested by capitalists and communists alike. Both have sought to seize peasants' land, and have a powerful vested interest in demeaning and demonising them. In its profile of Turkey, the country whose small farmers are 20 times more productive than its large ones, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation states that, as a result of small landholdings, "farm output ... remains low". The OECD states: "Stopping land fragmentation ... and consolidating the highly fragmented land is indispensable for raising agricultural productivity." Neither body provides any supporting evidence. A rootless, half-starved labouring class suits capital very well.

Like Mugabe, the donor countries and the big international bodies loudly demand that small farmers be supported, while quietly shafting them. Last week's Rome food summit agreed "to help farmers, particularly small-scale producers, increase production and integrate with local, regional, and international markets". But when, earlier this year, the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge proposed a means of doing just this, the US, Australia and Canada refused to endorse it as it offended big business, while the United Kingdom remains the only country that won't reveal whether or not it supports the study.

Big business is killing small farming. By extending intellectual property rights over every aspect of production, and by developing plants that either won't breed true or don't reproduce at all, big business ensures that only those with access to capital can cultivate. As it captures both the wholesale and retail markets, it seeks to reduce its transaction costs by engaging only with major sellers. If you think that supermarkets are giving farmers in the UK a hard time, you should see what they are doing to growers in the poor world. As developing countries sweep away street markets and hawkers' stalls and replace them with superstores and glossy malls, the most productive farmers lose their customers and are forced to sell up. The rich nations support this process by demanding access for their companies. Their agricultural subsidies still help their own large farmers to compete unfairly with the small producers of the poor world.

This leads to an interesting conclusion. For many years, well-meaning liberals have supported the fair trade movement because of the benefits it delivers directly to the people it buys from. But the structure of the global food market is changing so rapidly that fair trade is now becoming one of the few means by which small farmers in poor nations might survive. A shift from small to large farms will cause a major decline in global production, just as food supplies become tight. Fair trade might now be necessary not only as a means of redistributing income, but also to feed the world.


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