It's spawning season for Hawaii's key coral species

Annual event critical to future survival of reefs, UH scientists report
Lynda Arakawa, The Honolulu Advertiser 7 Jul 08;

July is an eventful month for coral researchers like Robert Richmond.

It's the most productive time of the year for the spawning of two of Hawai'i's major corals, resulting in countless coral larvae that will become the valuable reefs of the future.

"This is the big spawning event of the year for them," said Richmond, research professor at the University of Hawai'i's Kewalo Marine Laboratory.

"Coral spawning events like the ones we're experiencing this month are the key to the future of Hawai'i corals. This is the replenishment phase. Just like any other living population, they are animals that are dying every year, and they need to be replaced by new individuals."

The coral Montipora capitata began spawning Wednesday night, with scientists expecting countless coral larvae — each a fraction of a millimeter — to drift around looking for a place to settle. The coral Porites compressa is expected to begin spawning later this month. Both are among the major contributors to coral communities in Hawai'i, Richmond said.

It's a critical time, especially considering the stresses and threats that coral reefs in Hawai'i and elsewhere are under.

Land-based runoff and sediment, as well as alien invasive species, are serious threats to corals in Hawai'i. Other stresses include overfishing and ocean debris. Scientists also say global climate change, which can contribute to coral bleaching, is another potential threat.

Coral reefs, sometimes called the rainforests of the sea, are home to thousands of marine plants and animals, and are a valuable part of Hawai'i's culture. They protect shores from erosion and are critical to the state's marine tourism industry.

Coral researchers this month will closely watch the reproduction process for these two corals out in the field as well as in laboratories. For some, it means putting in late hours — M. capitata and P. compressa spawn at night, with the event tied to the lunar cycle, Richmond said.

The coral M. capitata is hermaphroditic, so it releases both eggs and sperm, which float to the water's surface. They interact with other eggs and sperm from different coral colonies, and if conditions are right, fertilization will take place and coral larvae will develop, Richmond said.

P. compressa has separate sexes, so the females will release eggs while the males will release sperm, he said.

The coral larvae will drift around the ocean for a few days to a couple of weeks before settling on the ocean floor. Young corals can usually reproduce after three years and grow large enough to provide habitat for fish after three to four years, Richmond said.

Water quality is a key factor along the reproduction process. A rainstorm, for example, can cause freshwater runoff, which severely cuts the coral fertilization rate, Richmond said. Sediments and invasive algae can make it difficult for coral larvae to find a good place to settle and grow.

Only a fraction of the eggs that are released are fertilized, make it to the larval stage, find a place to settle and survive the first year, he said.

Richmond said he recently advised contractors for the military on Guam about spawning events there so they could plan their dredging operations around it.

"What happens (in Hawai'i) this month is really going to be critical for the next year and the next few years for corals here," Richmond said.


Read more!

NDP inconsistent in go-green policy

Letter from K. Ignatius Guo, Straits Times Forum 7 Jul 08;

I APPLAUD this year's National Day Parade (NDP) message: Let's Go Green. The article last Friday ('Packaging the fun - in an eco-friendly way') on the organiser's attempt to make use of recycled materials in NDP goodie bags was inspiring. However, on a closer look at rehearsals conducted weekly, there is still a long way before the organiser can claim the parade is truly green.

As an investment specialist focusing on green technology, carbon credit and other alternative energy themes with a global investment banking group in the Marina Bay area, I have had the opportunity to observe the handling of recyclables in the Millenia Walk vicinity on two consecutive Saturdays. I was disappointed there was no concerted effort to harness the many opportunities to recycle.

While bright blue bins were provided to dispose of recyclables in the waste disposal area, they were under-used. In fact, at meal times, workers, soldiers, participants and members of the public freely discarded empty and half-empty water bottles, clear plastic covers and other re-useable materials in the green waste bins provided. It was also depressing to see these recyclable materials collected with food waste, so contaminating them and making them non-recyclable, let alone re-useable.

Furthermore, the appointed recycler on the ground seemed to focus entirely on collecting and safekeeping papers and carton boxes that were discarded each time. I wonder if they were serious recycling professionals or just savvy rag-and-bone men.

Singapore, having ratified the Kyoto Protocol in 2006, has since held several world events and seminars on climate change, renewable energy, water resource and environment management. It is a regional leader that champions recycling as part of the national environment strategy and one of the first movers in renewable energy R&D, carbon market development and green technology investment.

The awkward display of uninformed recycling practice by the very people who prepare for the nation's birthday cast a shadow on Singapore's sincerity and commitment to this very effort.


Read more!

Best of our wild blogs: 7 Jul 08


A happy day at Changi!
a positive encounter on the manta blog part 1 and part 2 and wildfilms blog

Nature Trails Singapore: Bukit Batok Nature Reserve
on the Seen This Scene That blog

Changi
another trip on the urban forest blog

Semakau walk
on the urban forest blog and the discovery blog part 1 and part 2 and tidechaser blog

White-winged Tern
Breeding, non-breeding and transitional plumages on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog


Read more!

Giant clams 'secure for another generation' after Philippine re-seeding

WWF website 7 Jul 08;

Re-seeding programmes on over 50 reefs are securing the survival of the giant clam for at least another generation, according to WWF-Philippines.

The clams, the world’s largest bivalve mollusks and the star of lurid but mostly imaginary literary and cinematic depictions of trapped divers, can live for over a century. They have been known to exceed 1.4 metres in length and weigh in at over 260 kilograms.

Once common throughout Philippine reefs, excessive hunting for the food, pet and curio trade all but depleted the wild giant clam population by the mid-1980s, prompting the IUCN to classify them as vulnerable.

An attempt to restore natural clam populations is now being spearheaded by Dr. Suzanne Mingoa-Licuanan of the University of the Philippines Marine Science Institute in partnership with WWF-Philippines.

“Several species of laboratory-raised giant clams have been re-seeded in over 50 reefs nationwide, significantly bolstering wild stocks and ensuring their survival for at least another generation,” said WWF Project Manager Paolo Pagaduan.

By way of example, a fresh batch of 40 true giant clams (Tridacna gigas) wrapped in watertight plastic bags made the journey last month from rearing laboratories in the west of the country down the coast to their new homes in Batangas province on Santelmo Reef, a prized snorkeling site being restored with the help of WWF and a nearby ecotourism development.

With an average length of 36 centimetres and weighing almost 10 kilograms, each of the 40 clams was painstakingly but successfully laid to rest – alive of course – in
pre-designated nooks and crannies. Some 102 clams were planted in the same area last November and another 35 are being grown for transplanting in coming months.

“When we planted the first batch last November, all clam mantles were pale ochre. Now, each clam shows off electric hues of blue and violet – an indicator that the area is conducive to clam growth,” said Pagaduan.

“It is hoped that baby clam recruits will eventually appear to seed outlying areas in Batangas.”

Giant clams are an integral part of the reef, serving as nurseries for a host of fish and invertebrate species including damsels, gobies and tiny commensal crustaceans such as shrimp.

Sedentary organisms like sponges, tunicates, corals and algae find giant clam shells perfect substrates for attachment. Giant clams also act as filter feeders, sifting planktonic debris from the water for food thereby improving overall water quality.


Read more!

Is enough being done to ensure a sustainable quality of life in Singapore?

Managing energy, water resources
Business Times 7 Jul 08;

Is enough being done to ensure a sustainable quality of life in Singapore in the areas of energy and water use, and urban development? How can cities share best practices in these crucial areas?

Paul Peeters
CEO
Philips Asean

SINGAPORE is very active in the efficient use of energy resources but more can and needs to be done. The use of energy efficient lighting is a case in point. By adopting new energy efficient lighting technology, Asia could achieve a 40 per cent savings in energy output annually. Thailand and the Philippines have set national targets to switch to energy efficient lighting by 2010 and 2012 respectively. Australia and New Zealand have taken the bold move to ban energy inefficient lighting products.

Cities can also collaborate with companies. An example is the trial run of Philips' new energy-saving LED street lights in Amsterdam. The installation of the LED lamps is part of Amsterdam's new environment plan to investigate new energy sources and cut energy use throughout the city. With expected reduction of energy consumption in the test area by 51 per cent, the results of this trial will determine whether the city decides to continue with the technology.

Lim Soon Hock
Managing Director
PLAN-B ICAG Pte Ltd

IN the area of water use, Singapore has done an outstanding job in converting adversity into an economic asset. We are now not only less dependent on others for water, but are recognised for our achievements in recycling water. Newater is without doubt our single greatest breakthrough in ensuring a sustainable quality of life for Singaporeans, for many generations to come.

Singapore has no oil or any fossil fuel, nor access to hydro-power or wind power to generate energy economically, so achieving a sustainable quality of life comes at a price. Singaporeans and businesses will have to develop the discipline to conserve energy, and hope that other countries will do likewise. This will help drive the oil price down to an acceptable level so we would not have any major disruption to our quality of life, which can happen should the oil price spiral out of control.

Singapore scores top marks in urban development. It has always been well planned, with continuous reviews and enhancements to keep up with the times. The URA's recently released draft Master Plan aims to further transform our garden city into a more attractive place to live, work and play.

Although there has been much angst from the public recently on news of more ERP gantries and higher ERP charges, until our authorities come up with other effective measures, ERP appears to be the only workable solution to prevent massive traffic jams which could cause unpleasant glitches in our quality of life. We all do have a choice, and the choice here is obvious.

There are many ways in which cities can share best practices in these crucial areas, especially relating to water, but whichever approach is chosen, it must be free from any political motive. The sharing must be driven by a desire to improve the quality of life of our fellowmen, predicated on the common understanding that when that happens, everyone benefits. In this regard, Singapore has been exemplary in setting up two institutes, one for water policy research and the other to study urban development. While we continue to live by the philosophy that no one owes us a living, we are willing to share.

Hans-Dieter Bott
Managing Director
Siemens Pte Ltd

ONE area of sustainable development that Singapore has excelled in, is water.

Developing a sustainable water supply was a challenge that Singapore has successfully addressed in recent years. Today, Singapore is an excellent role model for the growing number of mega-cities in the world that are facing the same challenge. Its commitment to advance water science, even to the extent of collaborating with and providing grants to the private sector to develop and test-bed water-related technologies, is commendable. Siemens is a beneficiary of one of such grants, having just received last week a grant from the Environment and Water Industry Development Council to develop an innovative seawater desalination technology, which can cut energy consumption by at least 50 per cent.

In terms of best practice sharing, perhaps the most effective way of convincing cities around the world to invest in sustainable infrastructure is to show them the economic benefits of such investments.

Last week, Siemens released a study on sustainable infrastructure in London, which showed a comprehensive analysis of the costs and potential of greenhouse gas abatement technologies in a city. By investing less than one per cent of London's total economic output in currently available technologies, the city could reduce more than 40 per cent, or around 20 megatonnes of CO2 emission, by 2025. And about two-thirds of the identified levers would pay for themselves, largely by reducing energy costs.

Charles Reed
CEO
DOCOMO interTouch

TECHNOLOGY is a key factor that will continue to enable progress in the areas of energy, water use and urban development. Over the past decade, Singapore has successfully stayed at the forefront of technology in developing these areas by investing significantly in research and development. Various initiatives such as the new institutions for water policy research and urban development are complemented by the sustained efforts of the Land Transport Authority (LTA) and National Environmental Agency (NEA) to introduce new and better environmental policies.

I agree with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong that there is room for further progress. Besides educating the public on the importance of energy, water use and urban development, the government should continue to work with both public and private sectors to explore innovative ways in leveraging technology to advance the development in these areas.

As global consumption of resources including fuel, food and water, continues to increase, countries around the world must work closely to address this trend. A large-scale event such as the International Water Week is an example of a strategic platform created for global leaders to convene and discuss important issues and concerns of resources on a macro level.

Tan Kok Leong
Principal
TKL Consulting

SINGAPORE has done more than its fair share in ensuring a sustainable quality of life in the areas of energy and water through the creation of Newater, sophisticated urban planning and greenery. Its additional effort to seek future solutions through the Institute of Water Policy and Centre for Liveable Cities deserves further commendation.

Research would help to expand the water industry, improve results in efficiency and conservation and air quality, explore use of clean energy and recommend better water management systems.

The Centre for Liveable Cities would promote best practices on urban development through expertise from both local and overseas, public and private sectors.

Lars Ronning
President, Asia Pacific (excluding China and Japan)
Tandberg

THE price rise in energy is driven in part by global demand, and that demand has been growing faster than supply in recent years. The corollary is how a small loss of output can lead to a big price jump. That gives alternatives a real opening. Already, PM Lee Hsien Loong has reiterated the need to look again at clean energy such as wind and solar power.

The three to four decades of improvements in alternative energy have made wind, solar power and high-tech batteries attractive. A caveat, though, is cost. One reason why green power costs much more than fossil fuels stems from how existing forms of renewable energy rely on subsidies or other forms of special treatment for their viability.

What Singapore can do nonetheless is to follow in the footsteps of DuPont and Shell by sponsoring both academic researchers and firms with bright ideas. Innovation will improve the yielding of biofuels from crops and manufacturing processes. Brazil and the US are world leaders in this field. Another practice, and one that may raise a few eyebrows, is to tax oil companies to finance schemes to help the poor cope with rising energy prices. Countries such as Italy, the UK and US count among those who have done so.

Eric Hoh
Vice-President, Asia South Region
Global Account, Asia Pacific and Japan Geography
Symantec

PRIME Minister Lee Hsien Loong has called for Singapore to adopt incentives to avoid energy over-consumption, and to use energy economically. Enterprises too, need to do their part in reducing their carbon footprint, and there are many ways that they can utilise technology to go green, while being more energy-efficient. For example, businesses running large data centres can consider virtualisation to consolidate their servers and storage hardware. This will maximise storage use, reduce the number of physical servers, and eliminate duplicate data. Even SMBs can play a role by doing something as simple as power management - turn off their PCs, monitors, printers and other office equipment when not in use.

Here at Symantec, we are also committed to minimising our environmental footprint by conserving natural resources - we sell about a third of our consumer products online to avoid packaging altogether. We believe in embracing our technologies to implement green practices in our own data centres, helping us reduce our energy and carbon footprint.

Tan Teng Cheong
General Manager
Dell Singapore & Brunei

SINGAPORE'S consciousness in this area is improving as efforts such as ‘Bring Your Own Bag' (BYOB) day at supermarkets, Newater and recycling efforts are observable evidence of what's happening here.

Dell is also contributing to this effort. We have announced and are on track to be carbon neutral before the end of this year. We are also fully committed to design and produce energy-efficient products, that will emit less heat (reducing the need for cooling, thus using less energy) while improving cost savings for our customers. Most importantly, we are seeing more and more customers focusing and basing their buying decision on 'Green IT', a trend/practice that Dell will continue to foster.

Besides reducing the environmental impact from our hardware, we are working directly with our customers on programmes such as 'Plant A Tree For Me' and free PC recycling. We are also putting tons of effort on the social networking front and one of the most successful efforts is our ReGeneration blog (www.regeneration.org), where people from all walks of life can contribute and share concepts, thoughts, tips, and so on, and allowing Dell and its partners to adopt some of the great ideas in future products and services.

Matt Beath
Chief Executive Officer
Talent2 International - Singapore

THE Singapore government has taken proactive, well documented steps to create a sustainable living environment including the recent commitment of funding to the institutes for Water Policy and Urban Development. Organisations such as the NEA, Sustainable Energy Association of Singapore and the Economic Development Board have been proactive, with the latter in particular incentivising R&D by attracting renewable energy companies to invest in Singapore operations. Furthermore, Singapore has developed a world class public transport system, a crucial ingredient in developing sustainable cities.

Despite the positive steps taken, Singapore should be doing a lot more. After the recent positive step of acceding to the Kyoto Protocol it was quite perplexing to read that Tuas Power is looking at building a $2 billion coal-fired power plant in Singapore. Just a single 1000MW coal-fired power plant will add five to six million tonnes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year. Other anomalies that exist include more fuel efficient diesel cars attracting a 'special tax' from the LTA.

We need to remember that it is not just up to the government to take action, every individual has to do his part.

A sustainable community is one that believes today's growth must not be achieved at tomorrow's expense - if we are really serious we would be assessing all alternatives before building a coal-fired power plant here.

Wee Piew
CEO
HG Metal Manufacturing Ltd

FOR a small city-state like Singapore, maximising the use of limited water and land resources is critical to our long-term survival. Â In terms of water use, Singapore has done well. Political tension over water issues with Malaysia in the past has probably spurred Singapore to become successful in managing water use and to strive for self-sufficiency.

Cleaning up our waterways like the Kallang river and converting Marina Bay into a reservoir, serve to both increase our water supply and enhance the living environment. Â The latest draft Master Plan by the Urban Redevelopment Authority URA) to develop Jurong Lake District and Paya Lebar also reflects Singapore's long-term urban development planning that will create new living areas where one can work and play.

In terms of energy use, however, I feel that more can be done to tap solar energy. Singapore lies in the tropics and enjoys sunshine all year round. Yet not enough is being done to encourage more R&D into transforming this 'free' source of energy into a viable energy alternative. Also, we should expand energy conservation education to a wider public, especially in schools, on a consistent basis rather than at a time when oil prices are high.

Albert Loo
General Manager, Asean/South Asia
Lexmark International

SINGAPORE has clearly become one of the world's model countries in terms of how it has transformed itself from being a third- to first-world country, in such a short time. Such speedy development comes hand-in-hand with sustainability issues. The Singapore government, together with institutions in the private and public sector, has made a concerted effort to deal with it.

As with all initiatives, there's a need to continually evaluate best practices to ensure that measures and frameworks evolve with the times. Likewise at Lexmark, we continually evaluate our business practices by balancing the economic, environmental and social needs of our world today without compromising the opportunities of future generations.

Cities with successful sustainability initiatives can share best practices and case studies. Singapore is itself a good case study. With its forward-looking sustainability policies, I've no doubt that other cities can learn from it; and future generations can reap the long-term benefits of sustainability.

Liu Chunlin
CEO
K&C Protective Technologies Pte Ltd

I THINK of one thing we should continue to build on and one thing we need to address.

The striking first impression of Singapore to visitors and to citizens returning from abroad is our lush greenery. It is a refreshing and welcoming aspect of our urban life that we take for granted. We should continue to build on that.

While we have addressed our water, energy, transportation, waste, pollution and other urban development needs, I can't help but be reminded of our vulnerability.

This to me is the greatest concern we need to address. We need then to build robustness into our system, just as Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew has reminded us in the political succession realm. Examples of what I mean about resilience or minimising our vulnerability would be using water and energy carefully, diversifying our sources of energy, continuing to reduce and manage waste, ensuring our infrastructure keeps pace with the demand, and so on.

And since our company is into security and protective design for infrastructure and buildings, I can't help but be reminded of how vulnerable a city is to things like pandemic flu and terrorism. We need to build in robustness in terms of protection of infrastructure and buildings complemented by emergency response capability and a strong social, economic and psychological defence.

Quite often, cities copy other cities in their physical features. But each city is different. Hence, an important point is sharing the software. This requires leaders and practitioners who are multi-talented so that the complexities of city development are understood and applied with wisdom to the specifics of a particular city.

Carol Fong
CEO
CIMB-GK Securities

IN five decades, Singapore has become an economically developed country. Have we done enough? My answer would be that we can definitely do more. It is timely to focus on sustainable development to ensure a good quality of life for everyone, now and in the future. Everyone has a contribution to make because the economy, environment and social well-being are interdependent. Singapore can take the lead by developing a set of 'headline' indicators to monitor progress in energy, water and urban development. These indicators should be able to communicate important trends and provide benchmarks region-wide. They can also be used to raise awareness and educate the public on what it needs to do.

Pramod Ratwani
President & CEO
Consilium Software Inc

IN today's busy life we take for granted uninterrupted energy supply and clean water every time we turn on the tap. Singapore is known as an air-conditioned equatorial island where it is common to keep a jacket handy in the office. Existing office developments in Singapore should be encouraged to become more energy efficient. Singapore should take a look at Abu Dhabi which is investing billions of its oil and gas profits to turn itself into the world leader in renewable energy.

A commitment to clean energy and a holistic approach is required to convert Singapore into an eco-city with a goal of achieving zero waste and zero carbon for all new developments, which would be be powered entirely by renewable energy. This is a challenging goal that will take time to fulfil but one must work towards it for the betterment of the future generation. We need to do more to conserve scarce resources and follow best practices along with other developed cities.

Sam Yap
Group Executive Chairman
Cherie Hearts Child Development Pte Ltd

SINGAPORE is ahead of the game in water management, having ventured into advanced technologies such as Newater and desalination. Crucially, Singaporeans are acutely aware of the nation's limitations in water resources and are committed to sustainability in this area.

However, we may not be doing enough in terms of energy sustainability, as evident in our high dependency on oil and low rate of adoption of alternative energy sources such as solar power. This makes us vulnerable to fluctuations in oil prices, which will only go up as the scarce resource is depleted in future. Clearly, more needs to be done in adopting alternative energy sources and getting Singaporeans in tune with energy conservation efforts.


Read more!

PA Water-Venture centre opens at Sembawang Beach

Channel NewsAsia 6 Jul 08;

SINGAPORE: A new People's Association (PA) water sports club has opened in Sembawang, giving residents in the north of Singapore a taste of seasports.

Anyone can take part in the activities at the new Water-Venture centre at Sembawang Beach, which include kayaking, windsurfing, sailing and wakeboarding.

If you can't swim, facilitators will make sure you have your personal flotation device (PFD) strapped on.

But knowing how to swim is a must, if you are signing up for a certified course.

Calvin Christian, Head of Business Development at PA Water-Venture, said: "We do a swim test for all our certified courses, with the aid of a personal flotation device, over a distance of 50 metres.

"What we look out for is people who are confident in the water, able to tread water, swim around comfortably with the PFD on, especially when they're doing the capsize drills. They have to be comfortable before we actually continue the course with them."

This is the eighth People's Association seasports club in Singapore. The PA seasports clubs have about 18,000 participants each year.

At the Sembawang Beach, there are red buoys that demarcate the limits of all water activities. If anyone were to stray beyond them, the centre's patrol boats will guide them back to safety.

All water activities take place within the line of sight of facilitators and should there be trouble out at sea, patrol boats only need a few minutes to get to the incident site.- CNA/so

Silent Dragons in Sembawang
Straits Times 7 Jul 08;

THEY have named themselves the Silent Dragons, but the 30 members of this dragon boat team are far from uncommunicative.

Eight team members are hearing-impaired, but the whole team knows sign language.

They often come an hour before training sessions to practise signing, said the team's co-instructor Lau Kim Lan, 38.

'We wanted to bring these two communities together using dragon boating as a platform,' she said.

Besides their usual training grounds at the Kallang Basin and Seletar Reservoir, the Silent Dragons now have a new place to paddle, with the opening of the People's Association's(PA) latest water sports centre in Sembawang.

Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan and Law Minister K. Shanmugam, both MPs for Sembawang GRC, joined 1,500 Sembawang residents at the opening of the Water-Venture outlet yesterday.

Measuring about 7,000 sq m, it is the eighth such centre managed by the PA and will have facilities for sports like kayaking and sailing.

It is the biggest centre of its kind. There are plans for other services, like wakeboarding classes.

It is expected to cater to about 500 Sembawang residents, said its assistant manager Sylvester Sim.

The Silent Dragons, who performed paddling displays at the opening, are excited about this possible new training ground.

'We're very interested in doing some kayaking exercises here that will help with our dragon boating skills as well,' said Ms Lau.

HONG XINYI


Read more!

'Invasive' humans threaten U.S. coral reefs

Dan Vergano, USA Today 7 Jul 08;

Half of all U.S. coral reefs, the center of marine life in the Pacific and Caribbean oceans, are either in poor or fair condition, a federal agency warns today.

The report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration places much of the blame on human activities and warns of further oceanwide decline.

Reefs closer to cities were found to suffer poorer health, damaged by trash, overfishing and pollution.

"Human impacts are making the big difference," says NOAA's Timothy Keeney, co-chair of the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force. "Humans are the most invasive species of all."

Released today at the International Coral Reef Symposium in Fort Lauderdale, the report looks at the 15 federally administered shallow-water reef preserves in the Pacific and Caribbean. Among the findings:

• Caribbean reefs were blasted in 2005 by hurricanes, disease and bleaching that killed 90% of all corals in some locations. Bleaching is a loss of color often attributed in part to global warming.

• Seafood species numbers are in poor condition at both Caribbean and Pacific reefs.

"Coral reefs are beautiful, but they are also tremendous economic resources," says NOAA marine biologist Jenny Waddell. Healthy reefs benefit tourism, fisheries and serve as coastal storm breaks, she says.

Coral reefs are living creatures made from the hardened shells of tiny polyps. They cover only 1% of the world's surface but play an outsize role in the oceans, serving as nurseries for young fish, centers of diversity for species and the underpinnings of some islands. Two once-common Caribbean species, elkhorn and staghorn coral, are now threatened.

The report is based on survey responses from reef managers, as well as reports from 270 scientists, Waddell says.

"We may be reaching a tipping point for coral reefs from changes in climate and overfishing, says NOAA's Mark Monaco. "But that doesn't mean we can give up."

NOAA report: US coral reefs in severe decline
Biran Skoloff, Associated Press Yahoo News 7 Jul 08;

Almost half the coral reef ecosystems in United States territory are in poor or fair condition, mostly because of rising ocean temperatures, according to a government report released Monday.

The reefs discussed in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration report serve as breeding grounds for many of the world's seafood species and act as indicators of overall ocean health.

"They are a major indicator of something that could go wrong with the environment," said Timothy Keeney, NOAA's deputy assistant secretary for oceans and atmosphere.

Keeney said 25 percent of all marine species need coral reefs to live and grow, while 40 percent of the fish caught commercially use reefs to breed.

"If we lose the reefs, you lose a very significant and important habitat," Keeney said.

Since NOAA's last report in 2005, the Caribbean region has lost at least 50 percent of its corals, largely because sea temperatures have risen, Keeney said.

Elkhorn and staghorn corals have also been listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, the first corals ever to receive such protections based on rapid declines.

The 569-page report took 18 months to complete with input from 270 federal, state and university scientists. It documented 15 ecosystems in U.S. states and territories, including the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Florida, Hawaii, American Samoa and Guam. It was released at the 11th International Coral Reef Symposium in Fort Lauderdale.

The report's authors noted it was the first detailed NOAA study to go beyond anecdotal evidence and patchy science to provide conclusive data that the nation's coral reefs are in trouble.

"We can actually document these declines now," said Jenny Waddell, coeditor of the study and a NOAA marine biologist.

The report found that coral bleaching caused largely by rising sea temperatures is a major factor. Carbon dioxide released by burning fossil fuels is absorbed by the oceans, making the waters more acidic and corrosive on corals.

Land-based pollution, such as sewage, beach erosion, coastal development and overfishing also are to blame.

The study does not make recommendations, but simply serves as what its authors deem a "call to action" for state governments and Caribbean countries.

Keeney sees corals as "a sentinel species of the planet," and calls them "the rain forests of the sea." Beyond their importance as breeding grounds for fish, reefs could hold cures for diseases.

He said there are also positive signs that people are beginning to understand "the value of coral reefs to our economy."

Kenney argues the report adds another layer of scientific certainty that man-made climate change is stressing the nation's oceans and could ultimately have huge economic and social impacts if its effects are not reversed.

"There's no question that ... man-made actions are the major cause for these losses and stresses on the reefs," Keeney said.

Dave Allison, a senior campaign director for the advocacy group Oceana, said the entire world's coral reefs "border on disaster."

"All the world's coral reefs are being stressed by both short-term and long-term human impacts," Allison said. "We've known about the human impact on corals for decades. It's just that the combination of problems confronting the corals have never come together in such a perfect storm."

NOAA report: http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2008/20080707_coral.html

Caribbean coral reefs only 25 percent healthy: report
Juan Castro Olivera, Yahoo News 8 Jul 08;

Global warming and pollution are decimating coral reefs around the world, with only 25 percent in good health in the Caribbean Sea, US experts warned Tuesday.

In other areas of the world such as the Pacific basin, nearly 70 percent of the coral reefs are either thriving or in good condition, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said in a report.

NOAA told the 11th International Coral Reef Symposium in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, that nearly half of coral reef ecosystems in the United States are in poor or barely passable condition.

"This is absolutely a call to action," said NOAA Coral Program director Kacky Andrews.

To reverse the deterioration and lessen the threat to coral reefs, she strongly suggested curbing emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases and the use of fertilizer, prevent damage from anchors and stop the sale of coral for jewelry.

"In the Caribbean, parts of Jamaica, Dominican Republic and Mexico that have been strongly impacted by hurricanes in the past few years, large communities of coral have been lost," Diego Lirman, a University of Miami Rosentiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science expert, told AFP.

He said the Caribbean region, which sustains only 60 or 70 species of coral compared to more than 500 in the Pacific, "has lost a large part of its most ancient corals, which ... can be more than 500 years old and make up the reef's basic structure."

While reports indicate a worldwide reduction in coral reef covering, in the Caribbean the problem is compounded by the reefs' increasingly slow rate of recovery, Lirman said.

"In some places protected zones have been set aside, but the fact is many countries lack the means to monitor them -- there are no patrols in the area and no real measure of control," the expert said.

Nonetheless, he said the University of Miami has a coral reef recovery program.

"We extract some corals, help them to grow and get stronger and return them to their communities in better condition so they can reproduce, or we take them to places where (coral reefs) have died off."

Development and overfishing also pose a threat to coral reefs, said Chantal Collier, with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection.

"In Florida, which has the third longest reef system in the world, coastal population has grown by 64 percent in the past two decades, putting pressure on the reefs from development," Collier said.

"Fishing is an activity of major concern in Florida, which is known as the fishing capital of the world," he added, noting that fish keep coral reefs healthy by cleaning them of algae that can overgrow and choke off nutrition.

The five-day Coral Reef Symposium ending Friday brings together some 2,500 scientists, conservationists and government officials from 114 countries. It is held every four years.


Read more!

Indonesia to recover its forests in 15 years: minister

Antara 7 Jul 08;

Karanganyar, Central Java (ANTARA News) - Indonesia is expected to recover its damaged forests in the next 10 to 15 years if the current reforestation programs continue to be implemented, Forestry Minister MS Kaban said.

The minister made the remarks during the inauguration of The Colomadu Koran Reading and Interpretation Assembly here on Sunday.

He said that many people nowadays had forgotten the importance of nature while in maintaining it there were many laws that had to be abide by.

"The Indonesia`s territorial land that stretches from Papua in the east to Aceh in the west constitutes a green belt or tropical forests. I hope that all members of this assembly which are living in all parts of the country would also take part in preserving the country`s nature," he said.

He said that one of the problems being faced today was how to preserve the country`s tropical forests. The number of trees being cut down was still bigger than that being planted.

"We should now plant trees more than we fell as we have set in the programs now being carried out throughout the country," the minister said.

The minister said that if the reforestation programs were carried out without constraints it was expected that in the next 10 to 15 years Indonesia would recover its normal nature conditions. (*)


Read more!

Conservationists unite to restore Britain’s parched wetlands

£2 million a year for restoring bogs and ponds
Lewis Smith, The Times 7 Jul 08;

Thousands of acres of bog and ponds are to be recreated as part of an initiative to restore ancient wetlands to the landscape.

Wetlands, whether sparkly blue water or boot-suckingly squelchy marsh, were once a common feature of the countryside, but most have been drained, dried and developed out of existence. A map showing the extent of prehistoric wetlands has been drawn up by conservationists to help to identify the best places to reestablish them. A second map shows the quantity of wetland habitat surviving today and areas where they can best be recreated over the next 50 years.

Wetlands form an invaluable home for a wide range of animals and plants, many of them rare, and the loss of the habitat has severely squeezed their population numbers. Some, such as the large copper butterfly, have already been wiped out in Britain.

Wetlands also fulfil important roles for human life by soaking up huge quantities of water, dramatically reducing the risk of flooding in surrounding areas, and in offsetting climate change by acting as carbon sinks.

Conservation groups and government agencies have joined forces to develop Wetland Vision, which will map out the potential for restoring lost marshes, fens, ponds and lakes. The partnership, including bodies such as Natural England and The Wildlife Trusts, wants to reverse the loss that has seen the destruction of 90 per cent of the freshwater wetlands that were in England when William the Conqueror invaded.

Previous generations were driven to drain wetlands and to engineer the flow of rivers to provide themselves with extra fields for crops and livestock, and dry land where they could build homes and businesses. Housing and industrial developments caused further fragmentation of wetlands.

Up to £2 million a year will be spent over the next three years by Natural England to bring back bogs and other wetland habitats. The meres and mosses of the West Midlands, the fens of South Lincolnshire, and the peatlands of the Humberhead Levels will be among areas where they will return.

Rare plants to benefit from restoration schemes are expected to be fen violet, fen ragwort and fen orchid, which only survive in a few locations.

Bitterns are among the rare birds likely to carve out new territory with the creation of more wetlands, as are snipe and redshank. Of the threatened species of invertebrates, the great silver diving beetle and marsh fritillary butterfly are likely to enjoy an important boost to their numbers.

Much of the wetland recreation will be based on achievements at the Great Fen Project in Cambridgeshire, which provides a blueprint on how to restore the habitat while balancing the needs and demands of neighbouring interests, notably farms. Work is under way there to form a 3,700-hectare fen between Huntingdon and Peterborough. It incorporates land that boasted the largest lake in England outside Cumbria until it was drained in the 19th century - today it has dried out so much that the land lies 14ft below its level less than a century ago.

Stopping water escaping from former wetland areas by blocking drains and ditches is one of the main tasks when recreating the habitat, along with landscaping and replanting. Before carrying out the work, delicate negotiations have usually to take place to ensure that neighbouring farms and businesses are not adversely affected, such as by having water back up on to their land.

Wetlands can also be created in tandem with quarrying. The biggest reed-bed creation scheme in Europe is part of the Great Ouze Wetland, where the RSPB and Hanson Aggregates are in partnership to create landscaped lakes in a sand and gravel quarry.

Carrie Hume, the Wetland Vision project manager, said the creation of the maps showing the past, present and possible future of wetland areas signalled a “change in ambition” for conservationists anxious to improve the landscape.

“We have created an extremely powerful tool to help restore England’s wetlands, which are among our most useful as well as our most beautiful landscapes,” she said.

Rob Cunningham, of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, added: “We are not looking to turn back the clock, but to establish a place for wetlands at a time when demands on our land are increasing.”


Read more!

The killing fields: Europe's hunting season begins

The Independent 7 Jul 08;

As Brad and Angelina have discovered to their cost, Europe's hills and forests will soon be echoing to the sound of gunfire, as hunting season begins. John Walsh takes aim

It's one of those tiny details that the estate agent or the surveyor omits to tell you, like the fact that there's a ghost in the drawing-room or a septic tank in the next field. For Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, it was worse than either.

The couple and their four children recently moved into a new home in France, to await the arrival of their twins. Their new residence is a 17th-century chateau in Aix-en-Provence, leased from the US millionaire Tom Bove. Since Brad and Ange are keen supporters of environmental causes, they were shocked to learn that the castle's grounds are traditionally used by locals to hunt wild boar every summer. The season starts on 15 August.

Could Hollywood's golden couple do something? Should they risk irritating their new neighbours by trying to ban a traditional French pastime? As they didn't own the land, the moment passed. The president of the boar hunt told France Dimanche that the chateau estate was fair game: "We have a written agreement to hunt on the estate, which doesn't expire until at least 30 August," he said. So the Jolie-Pitts will have to put up with spilt boar-guts in their backyard, along with the other signs of Provence en fête.

The extent to which such things go on in our European backyard is startling. Home-grown hunters and bloodthirsty tourists wipe out livestock in 20 countries – some very close to home. Deluded hunter-gatherers flock to Scotland every year to take pot-shots at hundreds of thousands of male deer. You don't need a licence to kill them. You can just roll up with your mates. Yes, stag-party stag-hunts have become popular – even if it seems a lot of trouble (and mayhem) to go to, for the sake of a pun. Bear-fanciers visited Romania in droves over the past 15 years for a simple reason: under communist rule, bear-shooting was banned (unless you were a Communist party official). The bear population grew until it was the largest in Europe outside Russia – and after the fall of the USSR, and the rescinding of the ban, the door was open for European hunters to visit, paying €8,000 (£6,000) to hunt bear in the Carpathian mountains.

In Ireland, fox hunting with hounds is still perfectly legal, and traditional hunts such as the Galway Blazers, the Black and Tans and the Golden Vale still thunder across meadows in search of their prey. In France, as Brad and Angelina discovered, hunting holidays are organised around chateaux. In the Loire valley, the count and master of hounds dress up their guests (for $5,000/£2,500 to $6,000 per person) in 18th-century livery, with velvet-collared coats and tricorn hats, and ride to battle with fox, stag, roebuck and hare while listening to uniformed flunkeys blowing huge circular hunting horns. In Austria and Switzerland, ibex and chamois deer are slaughtered by annual visitors to the mountains; but there's a contrast between their approaches. Austria offers holidaymakers "big-game hunting" before revealing that the big game in question will be "sub-species of deer, chamois and sheep". Sheep? When were they big game?) Tour operators offer a five-day hunt in a 14,000-hectare game reserve and promises "top world-level trophies" without requiring any documentation from the shooter.

In Switzerland, you must apply a year in advance for a licence to hunt ibex or chamois, pay $2,000 – and there's no guarantee you'll get one. If successful, you're allowed two days to stalk the deer, but you can't use a car; you have to stalk on foot. And they'll steer you towards the older and more clapped-out animals, so you don't shoot the young ones. In Spain, hunting ibex and chamois is allowed on private hunting grounds in national wildlife reserves. Hunters need a licence, a permit, gun clearance and personal insurance. Throwbacks who prefer stalking living animals with a bow and arrow for pleasure, as their Neanderthal ancestors did from necessity, can go on bow hunts, in which red stag, fallow deer, sheep and wild boar are drawn towards "tree stands", "ground blinds" and "productive meadows", to guarantee a clear shot for the humans in the hunting lodges. Depending on season and duration, prices can go up to $200,000.

The Czech Republic became a Mecca for huntsmen after the fall of communism, but hunting was always big in Czechoslovakia: stags, roe deer and wild boar have been bred to be blown away for five centuries, and new species have been introduced – fallow deer, sika deer and mouflon sheep – in the interests of variety. You need a valid hunting licence from your country of origin, before you can apply for a Czech one. The boar season runs from 1 August to 15 January, though the good news is that enthusiasts can blast away at piglets and yearlings all year round.

In Italy, fox hunting has been replaced by drag hunting with hounds – but wild boar hunting is enthusiastically pursued by locals. Foreigners, according to the law, can hunt deer and boar only in private hunting grounds, usually found near major cities, and pay £600 a day. They need a hunting licence, permit and insurance.

And England? Surely, since the fox-hunting ban in 2004, we are exempt from any taint of hunting and blood sports? Nope. It's easy to find websites cheerily offering "Exotic Deers [sic] Hunting in England" and promises a rich haul of carcasses from the "autochthonous" (native) deer population. The organisers explain that, due to the insanely complicated gun laws in the UK, they can't rent you guns – they'll just lend you the things and you pay for the ammunition. The season is September-December, the quarry is muntjac and fallow deer and soay sheep, and they charge a cool £470 per diem. It's still legal to hunt deer with guns in England, you see – but not with bows and arrows or with a pack of hounds.

So there you have it – a veritable blitzkrieg of wildlife right across Europe on every day of the season; some of it goes on all year round. Different countries have different approaches to the subject. Is it perhaps time they were standardised? In October 2006, the European parliament declared that "improved animal protection is a permanent obligation of the Community" and MEPs endorsed a resolution on the Community Action Plan on the Protection and Welfare of Animals 2006-2010. It has a dry, bureaucratic, rather hollow ring, and will continue to, until Europe starts to allow its wildlife the most basic welfare protection of all – not having men shoot it for their idle pleasure.


Read more!

Britain declares war on food waste

Andrew Grice, The Independent 7 Jul 08;

The Government is to launch a campaign to stamp out Britain's waste food mountains as part of a global effort to curb spiralling food prices.

Supermarkets will be urged to drop "three for two" deals on food that encourage shoppers into bulk-buying more than they need, often leading to the surpluses being thrown away. The scandal of the vast mountains of food that are thrown away in Britain while other parts of the world starve is revealed in a Cabinet Office report today. It calls for a reduction in food waste: up to 40 per cent of groceries can be lost before they are consumed due to poor processing, storage and transport.

The report says UK households could save an average of £420 per year by not throwing away 4.1 million tonnes of food that could have been eaten.

Gordon Brown said he would make action to tackle the soaring cost of food a priority at the G8 summit starting today in Japan. "If we are to get food prices down, we must do more to deal with unnecessary demand, such as by all of us doing more to cut our food waste which is costing the average household in Britain around £8 per week," he told journalists on board the plane to the summit.

Mr Brown's determination to act follows The Independent's campaign to reduce waste through excessive packaging of food in supermarkets. The Government is to launch a major offensive to encourage supermarkets, restaurants, schools and all public sector bodies as well as householders to try to cut down dramatically on the amount of food they throw away.

The key findings of the 10-month review are that:

*Global food prices have risen significantly in recent years due to a combination of poor harvests in some exporting countries; higher costs for energy, fertiliser and transport; the diversion of some commodities to biofuel; and a long-term rise in demand for grain to feed a growing global population;

*The average UK household now devotes about 9 per cent of its expenditure to food, down from 16 per cent in 1984. But the poorest 10 per cent of households in the UK saw 15 per cent of their expenditure go on food in 2005-06; the richest 10 per cent just 7 per cent. And low-income households also spend proportionately more on staples such as milk, eggs and bread – products that have seen some of the biggest price rises in recent months;

*The increase in global food prices has hit developing countries the hardest, with food accounting for 50 to 80 per cent of household expenditure of the poorest. Price rises have contributed to social unrest in a number of countries.

At his first G8 summit as Prime Minister, Mr Brown will argue that the world's richest nations must do more to tackle the food price crisis. He will urge them to halt the decline in funding for agricultural projects in Africa, so the continent can boost farm production by 6 per cent a year.

He will call for a rethink over the use of biofuels so they are used more selectively. A separate study to be published by the Department for Transport today will admit they have contributed to the rise in food prices because land has been switched from food production to plant-derived alternatives to petrol and diesel.

Mr Brown hopes the G8 leaders can unblock the stalled world trade talks, which could collapse in the next few weeks.

The Cabinet Office study concludes that urgent action is needed on the supply of and demand for food. "The solution lies in raising the potential of food production in the developing world," it says. "If yields in Africa and elsewhere reached their potential, global food output would be much higher, far fewer people would go hungry and social instability around the world would decrease."

Oxfam accused G8 leaders of an "inadequate and hypocritical" response to the food crisis. Phil Bloomer, its spokesman, said: "World leaders ... must reiterate their promises to increase aid ... and make the necessary reforms including increasing investment in agriculture in poor countries."

Cut waste to help environment, lower food prices: Britain
Yahoo News 7 Jul 08;

Cutting back on the amount of food that Britons buy but throw away uneaten could help cut rising global prices and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, a government-commissioned report said Monday.

The Cabinet Office study said British consumers spend an average 420 pounds (528 euros, 826 dollars) per household each year on food that goes into the bin -- the equivalent to 4.1 million tonnes or 10 billion pounds.

"Eliminating household food waste would deliver major benefits, including a reduction in GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions equivalent to taking one in five cars off UK roads," it added.

Researchers estimated that 60 percent of the food thrown away could generate enough renewable energy to power all the homes in the Scottish cities of Glasgow and Edinburgh, where more than one million people live, it said.

Helping to reduce food costs would also aid low-income households, the poorest 10 percent of which spent 15 percent of their income on food in 2005-6, compared to about nine percent by the average British household.

Internationally, a world response to tackling high food prices could ease the pressure on the developing world, where many people can spend as much as 50 to 80 percent of their income on food.

The advice comes as Prime Minister Gordon Brown attends the G8 summit in Japan, where spiralling food prices and the downturn in the world economy are high on the agenda.

Brown commissioned the study of food policy last September. Separate research on the impact of biofuels on food production and supply and prices is to be published later Monday.

Other recommendations included increasing world food output, particularly of cereals and meat, plus cutting waste in the developing world, where up to 40 percent of food harvested can be lost due to storage and distribution problems.

It also called for cuts in emissions from agriculture through changes in fertiliser use and animal feed, and initiatives to encourage British consumers to eat healthier, more environmentally-sustainable food.

About 18 percent of Britain's greenhouse gas emissions are related to food consumption and production, particularly through packaging, the report said.

In a statement, Brown said Britain could not act alone, and pushed for an international effort to tackle higher prices and helping developing countries "reach their potential" in food production.


Read more!

Can city dwellers be more self-sufficient in food?

The Times 28 Jun 08;

Anna Shepard asks whether city dwellers can become more self-sufficient in food production

We may dream of quitting the rat race and moving to the countryside, but the reality is that we are overwhelmingly an urban population. In the UK more than 80 per cent of us live in urban areas. Globally, it's the same story, with the UN estimating that, by the end of this year, more than half the world's population will be living in towns and cities.

The question of how we will feed these growing cities is an urgent one. According to Sustain, the food and farming alliance, the greatest challenge of modern agriculture is how to produce affordable food for everyone.

“Growing Food for London”, a one-day conference that takes place on Monday at City Hall, focuses on urban food production in the capital. By drawing on efforts to develop agriculture within cities - from roof gardens in New York to community gardens in Havana - it is hoping to change the way that urban land is perceived.

“There's a lot of space in our towns and cities that is just green desert. It's there to look at,” says Ben Reynolds, one of the author's of Sustain's recent report, Edible Cities. “There are multiple benefits from making our cities more self-sufficient. The obvious one is security. The nearer food is, the easier it is to get at in times of crisis.”

We can also combat climate change by reducing how far food has to travel to get to consumers. When the WWF calculated an average personal carbon footprint in Britain, it found that food production and its transport accounted for our greatest use of carbon - 23 per cent of each person's total, ahead of personal transport and home energy.

There are already signs that we would like to become more self-sufficient. Half a million families - 2 per cent of households in the UK - keep hens, waiting lists for allotments have never been longer and, for the first time since the Second World War, vegetable seeds are outselling flower seeds.

But just how self-sufficient can our towns and cities ever be? Jeanette Longfield, a co-ordinator at Sustain, says: “They will never rival rural areas in terms of production - there never will be wheat fields and large-scale livestock production - but we could produce a lot more fruit and vegetables.”

At present 80 per cent of London's food comes from abroad. The rest arrives from other parts of the UK with only a fraction being produced within the city. Jenny Jones, a Green Party London Assembly member, says that the capital could produce as much as 25 per cent of its food, an ambitious target until you hear that there is 24 times the size of Richmond Park in flat roofs, ready to be turned green.

If all this sounds familiar, it's because we've done it before. At the height of the Dig for Victory campaign in 1943, 1,400,000 allotments around the UK produced 1.3million tonnes of food, half the nation's fruit and vegetables needs.

Today, as the examples below show, we're doing it again. What stands out about each project is how it has captured people's imagination, demonstrating that urban communities can respond to a food crisis and eke out productivity from unlikely places.

www.sustainweb.org

On the roof

On his lunch hour, Dave Richards leaves his desk, walks up to the roof of his office and grazes in a 200sqm garden. Once he's picked a few garlic chives or salad leaves to add to his sandwich, he finds a quiet spot and settles down.

Perched above the centre of Reading, he describes the urban oasis as “a beautiful space that you can eat”. It contains 180 varieties of plants, most of which are edible. “We eat the garden from the first nettles and wild garlic of early spring to the medlars, a spicy fruit, in October,” he says. It provides food for the café in the building below, as well as for staff and volunteers. “My daughters (aged 7 and 10) seem to eat most of it,” he says. “They come and strip it bare.”

It all started six years ago with a leaky roof. It was going to have to be redone, so Richards and other staff working for RISC (Reading International Solidarity Centre), the development education charity, decided they might as well ask for funding and do something different.

To prevent tree roots doing structural damage, a waterproofing and root-proofing layer was laid on top of the flat roof. Then a drainage layer, followed by thick fleece and, finally, a foot of soil. With a £50,000 grant from the Big Lottery Fund, they also put up a wind turbine and solar panels to provide electricity to pump the water collected from surrounding roofs and held in a vast 2,000-litre tank.

The emphasis was not so much on providing food for the town, but on showing how you can produce diverse crops in a low-maintenance way in the middle of a city. It is based on the forest garden concept, a productive and self-maintaining approach to gardening, founded by Robert Hart in the late Sixties. Fruit trees offer shade to crops that require it; other plants, such as strawberries, are planted strategically to suppress weeds, and the whole garden takes only a few hours a week to maintain.

Richards points out that rooftop gardens are also an essential part of “sustainable urban drainage” as they act as a sponge for rainwater.

He believes that all new-build offices and public buildings should have a roof garden. “The best thing is that it's an extra room, an edible boardroom,” he says. “In a crowded environment it provides more space, so instead of everyone bundling into parks on a sunny day, they can go up and find a peaceful bit of green.”

www.risc.org.uk

Vertical farms

Imagine a high-rise building in the heart of a city with floor after floor of vegetables and grains. There might be poultry and fish too, maybe even a shrimp farm, providing every food that a city dweller might want. This is the idea behind vertical farms, sometimes called farmscrapers, and several cities have confirmed their ambitions to make them a reality, including the eco-city planned for Abu Dhabi and Incheon, in South Korea.

You grow in a controlled, small-scale way on a vertical farm, so need less fossil fuel than the fertiliser and farm machinery-dependent methods of modern agriculture. Plus, as its creator, Professor Dickson Despommier, of Columbia University, New York, points out, it's a way of getting around the farmer's number one enemy: the weather. According to Despommier's plans, one vertical farm, rising up to 30 storeys, could provide enough food for 10,000 people.

Plants could be grown hydroponically with their roots submerged in water. This reduces the weight on the building's floors as the volume of water needed is less than the volume of soil. Chickens could be reared organically, although they would never be free-range.

If it all sounds too much like factory farming, city-style, remember, says Despommier, that producing food in urban areas enables us to give land back to nature. “Instead of farms taking up our open spaces, we can go back to having forests soaking up CO2 and reverse deforestation.”

The building's carbon footprint would be kept down with LED low-energy lighting, an irrigation system that recycles grey water, and lots of daylight, maximised by it being made entirely of glass. Renewable resources would be used for energy, depending on what is available: it might be solar in a sunny city, geothermal elsewhere.

“You'd have to be clever about the design, putting plants that tolerate shade in the building's internal space and those that need more light on the outside,” Despommier says. “The first one might not be perfect, but we'd improve things each time.”

Neglected urban space

For inner-city productivity, nothing beats the fruits of a project called Vacant Lot, pioneered by two architects keen to promote the use of neglected urban space. On a run-down square of concrete, hidden between several housing estates in East London, there is now a thriving patchwork of vegetables, salads, fruits and flowers.

All this growing takes place in 70 half-tonne building bags filled with soil and compost. Made from drainage-friendly fibres, they make ideal, if unlikely, planting containers, with plenty of room for root development. Each is tended by a local resident, except for a few that are planted by Ulrike Steven and Gareth Morris, the project's founders.

It is one of several schemes established by What If, their organisation funded by the Arts Council and Shoreditch Trust, to highlight how many city spaces could be used for growing. Steven says that she has found 27 other “vacant lots”, in this corner of East London. She admits there is also a need for affordable housing, but green space is needed to accompany it.

When the organisers sent flyers about Vacant Lot around the nearby tower blocks, take-up was slow. A year on, there are barbecues and parties on the plot in the summer. There is also a waiting list, and the only trouble has been from a couple of teenagers frustrated that their bag was given to someone else after they moved away.

A diverse mix of people, some English, others immigrants from Poland, Turkey and Ghana, have become involved, growing everything from maize and sprouting broccoli to strawberries and spinach.

“People from different countries use different planting methods,” Steven says. She points to a bag containing a haphazard tumble of flowers and vegetables that belongs to Grace, 60, from Ghana. By contrast, a neighbouring bag, owned by an English man, is ordered, with wellbehaved rows of beetroot and salad leaves.

www.what-if.info

City parks

You'd expect to see geraniums and dahlias growing in a city park, but courgettes and cabbages? Last year, in Middlesbrough, parkland was identified as an ideal location for growing vegetables. As part of a council-run urban farming project, ornamental flowers were replaced by lettuces, tomatoes, strawberries and sprouts in two of the city's green spaces, Stewart Park and Albert Park.

It may have been the first time that park space has been treated like an allotment in the UK, but it has been going on since 2005 in Chicago's Grant Park. A similar project replaced a formal bedding area with more than 150 varieties of vegetables, herbs and edible flowers, which were distributed to community projects and soup kitchens.

Back in Middlesbrough, ploughing up parks is only one aspect of its attempt to create fertile growing zones. Grass verges and community centre gardens also have been turned over, along with school playing fields and residential backyards; in total, 264 growing sites across the city involving 1,000 people.

“One concern was vandalism, but we only had two episodes of that, one of which involved vegetables being pulled up and replaced with cannabis plants,” says Ian Collingwood, a regeneration consultant at Middlesbrough council.

The produce was used last year for a series of local meals, which culminated in a town meal. The outdoor event attracted 8,500 people, 2,500 of whom were fed. “One of the best things was seeing how people were encouraged to experiment with cooking the produce, to find what goes with what.”

With double the numbers involved this year and even more growing space being annexed, the future for the city's ornamental plants looks uncertain.

www.dott07.com/go/food/urban-farming

How to be self-sufficient at home

A paved garden can still be productive if you lay out a couple of growbags in a sunny spot. Instead of lugging them home, get a delivery from crocus.co.uk (£7.99).

Don't like the way plastic growbags look? Then buy a grow box from this recycling project (recyclingwood.org.uk (from £40). It comes with a frame so is ideal for plants that need support, such as tomatoes and beans.

You can still produce home-grown bounty, even if you haven't got a garden. Try a mushroom growing kit, which will yield edible fungi at any time of year (gardeningexpress.co.uk ; £12.95), or a window box of salads and vegetables (rocketgardens.co.uk ; £24.99).

Fancy fresh eggs for breakfast? An eglu hen house keeps up to four chickens safe (omlet.co.uk ; £395, includes two chickens, plus feed).

Autumn is the right time to plant fruit trees. Gooseberry bushes are low in maintenance and will give you a constant supply of fruit for crumbles and fools (organiccatalog.com ; £10.40 for one bush).


Read more!