Best of our wild blogs: 22 Sep 08


Creatures Big & Small
a fascinating blog about Singapore's wildlife

SPCA stands up for whale sharks
upcoming event on 5 Oct with sale of T-shirts with this message, on the wild shores of singapore blog

TeamSeagrass is Two
celebrating two years of seagrass monitoring with a new team badge, on the teamseagrass blog

Chek Jawa cleanup
With 200 volunteers, only 5% of debris removed, more needs to be done on the News from the International Coastal Cleanup Singapore blog

Sand star project at Pasir Ris
on the wonderful creations blog

Changi discoveries
on the discovery blog

Crinoid hunt at Hantu
more encounters on the nature scouter blog

Bird plant: White-stemmed button vine
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog



Read more!

Singapore's no fun? "Still missing the zing"

It will take more to turn Singappore into the ‘world’s playground’: Panel
Jessica Yeo, Today Online 22 Sep 08;

IT’S got a little bit of everything — a vibrant mix of people, places and infrastructure. But it needs that little something extra to give it the buzz.

As cities around the region rush headlong into remaking themselves in the push for the tourist and business dollar, Singapore needs to identify and develop the edge that would turn it into the world’s playground.

The proposed sports hub, the inaugural SingTel Singapore Grand Prix, it’s heady cultural fusion and vibrant night life, the arts, the upcoming integrated resorts, a garden city, health, education and security — it has the basics and more in place.

And “this can be the starting point to attract the people that we want to attract”, said Mr Kelvin Lai, head of biomedical sciences (medical technology) at the Economic Development Board.

Still, the Republic seems to lack that zing, concluded an eight member panel discussing the topic, “creating vibrant iconic cities for the future”, hosted by Philips last Friday.

Infrastructure and branding alone are not enough to make a city “iconic”. It’s the spirit and vitality of its people, said Mr Bert Verschuren of Philips Consumer Lifestyle. “The soul of the city and country comes from the people, the culture and societal norms,” he said during the roundtable.

The Republic has plenty of kernel, observed Mr Ian Wilson, Fairmont Hotel and Resorts regional vice-president for Asia, and that gives it an advantage. “To say that Singapore is not iconic would be a fallacy because if you look around today, Singapore is very much the sacrifice of the people who live here,” said Mr Wilson.

Yet, when compared to Hong Kong, for instance, it’s still not the “fun city” to be in. But the ongoing changes to the city’s skyline, the hosting of major events, like the F1 night race, could change this, said Mr Paul Peeters, CEO of Philips Asean.

“Singapore has not always been seen as an attractive city to play (unlike Hong Kong). But you do see a little change here. There is infrastructure coming up which opens eyes,“ said Mr Peeters.

The “vibrancy factor” of the city could go up a notch or two with the opening of the sports hub at Kallang a few years down the road, said Mr Tai Lee Siang, president of the Singapore Institute of Architects.

Niche marketing is the way to go, said NMP Jessie Phua, who is president of the Singapore Bowling Federation. “Which part of the pie do we want to position ourselves?” she asked. “If we can identify this and to go for it then I think we will be more successful.”

Mr Wilson agreed. “Iconic cities have an edge to them,” he said. “We’ve got to have some people who love some aspects of the city and some who hate some aspects of the city. Some bold gestures and taking some chances is not a bad thing.”


Read more!

Why Singapore power stations were divested

Letter from Jenny Teo
Director, Corporate Communications
Energy Market Authority
Today Online 22 Sep 08;

IN “POWER to the People?” (Sept 15), Mr ConradRaj questioned the need to divest our power stations. The story also suggested that the Government was doing so to extract a “good profit” and to avoid “having to explain to the public high (electricity) tariffs”. But this was not why the power stations were divested.

The divestment of the generation companies should be seen in the broader context of the Government’s strategy to open up and restructure the electricity industry. The first step was to separate ownership of the monopoly parts of the market, like transmission and distribution, from the contestable parts, like power generation and retail. All companies in the contestable business would then compete on a level playing field.

By 2001, we had three separate generation companies competing in the market, i.e. Senoko Power, PowerSeraya and Tuas Power, albeit under the common ownership of Temasek. From the outset, the government’s intention was for Temasek to sell the companies at an appropriate time. How the divestment is done is a commercial decision for Temasek to make. From a regulatory perspective, EMA is satisfied that the divestment will achieve our aim of enhancing market competition in an orderly fashion, while maintaining the reliability and security of energy supply.

Over the years, competition in the electricity market has brought about real benefits to all Singaporeans. While our electricity prices have gone up primarily because of the increase in world oil prices, they would have been much higher today if not for competition driving efficiency and productive gains, which are passed on to consumers. With the participation of new players and further liberalisation in the industry, there will be more scope for product innovation, better service, and competitive pricing, as Singapore’s energy needs grow.


Read more!

Bukit Batok strangers become strays' best friends

Hedy Khoo, The New Paper 22 Sep 08;

WOULD you spend thousands of dollars to give a stray dog a proper home?

Two Good Samaritans did just that.

When they found out the stray dogs in their neighbourhoods had been impounded by the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA), they decided to claim ownership.

But they each had to pay between $400 and $500 in fines first because they were regarded as owners who had allowed their dogs to wander around without a license.

The two of them do not know each other.

After claiming the dogs, they paid a monthly fee of $130 for them to live at an animal boarding house, Pet's Villa, in Pasir Ris.

Madam May Tan, 43, a trader, first came across her dog, which she named Angel May, at a park in Bukit Batok West last year.

She would see the dog regularly until last September, when it went missing.

'She was usually with a pack of dogs, and I found her special because she was the only one which would come up to me and allow me to pet her on the head,' said Madam Tan.

She then heard that officers from the AVA had caught some dogs in the area.

'I panicked and went to the Centre for Animal Welfare and Control. I was so relieved that she was alive,' she said.

Madam Tan paid the fine and applied for a licence for it. But that wasn't all.

She later paid more than $2,000 in veterinary fees as Angel May was badly infected and in a poor condition.

'I couldn't keep her at home as I already have three dogs. I managed to get a place for her at Pet Villa, but she had to be sterilised and vaccinated,' she said.

Every Sunday, Madam Tan, her husband and her daughter go to Pet Villa to see Angel May. They also help to clean the area and feed the other dogs there.

Said Madam Tan: 'It's not just about giving money. There is a lack of volunteers to maintain the area, and I want Angel May and the other dogs to have a clean home.'

The other dog lover, who wanted to be known only as Mr Lin, had first seen the dog, which he calls Ah Boy, at a park in the east in 2005.

'Other park-goers who went there regularly would feed him. He would usually eat and then wander off,' the 28-year-old, who is self-employed, recalled. 'But even when I didn't feed him, he would sit near me whenever I was there. Maybe he could sense that I like animals.'

Mr Lin would visit the park two or three times a week. Then, last November, he noticed that the dog was gone.

Like Madam Tan, he became worried and called the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which checked and told him that the dog was with the AVA.

Forlorn

Mr Lin then went to the Centre for Animal Welfare and Control to claim the dog.

'I was shocked when I saw him. He had been there for almost a week and had lost a lot of weight. He looked very forlorn,' said MrLin. 'Though he wasn't my dog, I decided to pay the fine and get him a licence.'

Mr Lin also took the dog to the vet and had him checked and vaccinated. He had to pay another $400 in veterinary charges.

'I would love to have Ah Boy live with me, but I live alone and it is not fair for me to leave him in an apartment on his own,' said MrLin. 'He was a stray dog and he needs a lot of space to roam around.'

He now pays $130 monthly for his dog to be boarded. He visits the place every weekend to bathe and play with the dog.

'It's amazing to see how Ah Boy has transformed. He is about 5 years old, but in the past year, I managed to get him to obey some simple commands like 'Sit' '.

Asked why he chose to adopt and care for an adult stray dog, Mr Lin replied with a smile: 'He is my friend. If you know a friend is in trouble, you would do your best to help.

'He needed me and I did what I could. It was fate. I didn't pick him. He chose me to be his friend,' he added, tears glistening in his eyes.


Read more!

Make it easier to recycle

Letter from Donovan Lo, Today Online 22 Sep 08;

I refer to “Recycling mandatory for condos, private properties” (Sept 17). Recycling works best as a voluntary effort instead of being governed by laws.

Haven’t our previous attempts in recycling taught anyone anything? Examples include the distribution of recycling bags (which only ends up littering the doorstep of houses when owners are not home), and complaints of how items in recycling bins are collected (demoralising those who really made an effort).

The Government should help to make recycling a lifestyle, rather than force people to pay for access to recycling facilities. It should be made easier for someone to recycle his trash. Since rubbish collectors dump recyclables together with the trash, which is later sorted at recycling points, there is no need to differentiate paper, glass and cans before collection.

Also, recycling should be made convenient, instead of having centralised recycling bins that residents have to walk a long way to get to. One recycling bin located at each block will encourage residents to put in more effort.

Recycling should be rewarding. If the karung guni (rag-and-bone) man is able to make a living collecting tin cans, can’t entrepreneurs think up some profitable recycling programme?

I feel recycling efforts have taken a wrong turn. What’s next? A law to fine those who throw a recyclable can down the rubbish chute?


Read more!

Floods lay waste to 36 Thai provinces

Straits Times 22 Sep 08;

Mobile units sent to give aid to about 700,000; at least 16 reported dead
BANGKOK: Severe flooding across Thailand has left at least 16 people dead and more than half a million struggling to cope with damaged property and disease, officials and news reports said yesterday.

Floods caused by heavy rain since the second week of this month have deluged 36 of Thailand's 76 provinces in the north, east and centre of the kingdom, affecting almost 700,000 people, the disaster prevention department said.

A total of 123,407 people have sought treatment for flood-related diseases over the past 10 days, the permanent secretary for public health said yesterday. Of them, 41 per cent suffered from athlete's foot, 32 per cent from cold and 11 per cent from rashes, Dr Prat Boonyawongwiroj added.

On Saturday alone, 69,461 people received treatment from the hundreds of public-health mobile units deployed in flood-hit areas, he said.

Nearly 1,900 houses, hundreds of roads and tens of thousands of acres of farmland have also been damaged in the floods, officials have said.

The cost of the damage is estimated at 28.55 million baht (S$1.2 million) so far.

In the worst-hit areas, people have evacuated to high ground. Many others are living on upper floors of homes.

'Flood waters are more than 2m deep in many areas,' Tambon Kabin Municipality mayor Rangsan Bootnien said.

In Nakhon Ratchasima, the overflowing Lamtakhong Dam has flooded the main city. Chao Phraya levels are around 1.52m, prompting the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) to suggest that the capital will not face serious flooding.

'Only those without flood barriers will be affected, and only for an hour when the high tide comes,' deputy Bangkok city clerk Somsak Klanpoj said.

The disaster prevention department said two people remained missing. It did not say how the 16 people had been killed, but local media reports said most had been swept away in flood waters.

The authorities are delivering essentials such as food, drinking water and medicine to those affected, officials said.

Also yesterday, the meteorological department warned residents of Phechabun, Lop Buri, Surin and Prachin Buri provinces to be on the alert as the main rivers there could burst their banks.

Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat inspected flood barriers at ancient sites in Ayutthaya province.

Despite the recent building of a protective embankment around the province's Wat Chaiwattanaram temple, a World Heritage site, floods caused by heavy rain late on Saturday had begun to inundate the temple grounds, Thai News Agency reported.

The province's Maharat, Pak Hai, Bang Ban and Bang Sai districts were also inundated with 1m-deep flood waters.

Local farmers urged Mr Somchai to reconsider diverting the flood waters into natural water-retaining fields, which are now their rice fields.

He was also briefed that Phitsanulok, Lop Buri, Sara Buri, Nong Bua Lamphu and Khon Kaen provinces had been ravaged by floods. But he was told that they should be back to normal in four days if the rains subside. Lop Buri, however, is expected to take a month to recover.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, THE NATION/ASIA NEWS NETWORK


Read more!

World's common birds 'declining'

Mark Kinver, BBC News 22 Sep 08;

The populations of the world's common birds are declining as a result of continued habitat loss, a global assessment has warned.

The survey by BirdLife International found that 45% of Europe's common birds had seen numbers fall, as had more than 80% of Australia's wading species.

The study's authors said governments were failing to fund their promises to halt biodiversity loss by 2010.

The findings will be presented at the group's World Conference in Argentina.

The State of the World's Birds 2008 report, the first update since 2004, found that common species - ones considered to be familiar in people's everyday lives - were declining in all parts of the world.

In Europe, an analysis of 124 species over a 26-year period revealed that 56 species had declined in 20 countries.

Farmland birds were worst affected, with the number of European turtle-doves (Streptopelia turtur) falling by 79%.

In Africa, birds of prey were experiencing "widespread decline" outside of protected areas. While in Asia, 62% of the continent's migratory water bird species were "declining or already extinct".

Biodiversity barometers

"For decades, people have been focusing their efforts on threatened birds," explained lead editor Ali Stattersfield, BirdLife International's head of science.



"But alongside this, we have been working to try to get a better understanding of what is going on in the countryside as a whole."

By consolidating data from various surveys, the team of researchers were able to identify trends affecting species around the world.

"It tells us that environmental degradation is having a huge impact - not just for birds, but for biodiversity as well," she told BBC News.

While well-known reasons, such as land-use changes and the intensive farming, were causes, Ms Stattersfield said that it was difficult to point the finger of blame at just one activity.

"The reasons are very complex," she explained. "For example, there have been reported declines of migratory species - particularly those on long-distance migrations between Europe and Africa.

"It is not just about understanding what is happening at breeding grounds, but also what is happening at the birds' wintering sites."

She said the findings highlighted the need to tackle conservation in a number of different ways.

"It is not enough to be looking at individual species or individual sites; we need to be looking at some of the policies and practices that affect our wider landscapes."


The global assessment also showed that rare birds were also continuing to be at risk.

One-in-eight of the world's birds - 1,226 species - was listed as being Threatened. Of these, 190 faced an imminent risk of extinction.

The white-rumped vulture, a once common sight in India, has seen its population crash by 99.9% in recent years.

An anti-inflammatory drug for cattle, called diclofenac, has been blamed for poisoning the birds, which eat the carcasses of the dead livestock.

"That has been a really shocking story," Ms Stattersfield said.



"Four years ago, we were not even sure what was responsible for the dramatic declines. It happened so suddenly, people were not prepared for it.

"Since then, the basis for the decline is well understood and measures are being taken to remove diclofenac from veterinary use in India.

"However, it is still available for sale and there still needs to be a lot more work to communicate the problem at a local level.

"But it demonstrates that we can get to the bottom of the reasons behind declines."

The plight of albatrosses becoming entangled in long-line fishing tackle has also been the subject of sustained campaigning, attracting high-profile supporters such as Prince Charles and yachtswoman Dame Ellen MacArthur.

About 100,000 of the slow-breeding birds are estimated to drown each year as a result of being caught on the lines' fish hooks.

But fisheries in a growing number of regions are now introducing measures to minimise the risk to albatrosses.

Ms Stattersfield said these examples showed that concerted effort could investigate and identify what was adversely affecting bird populations.

But she quickly added that prevention was always better than finding a cure.

"We don't want to have to react to problems that come about from bad practice.

"What we are trying to do with this report is to be as clear as possible about what are the underlying causes, and then present a range of conservation measures that can preserve birds and biodiversity."

BirdLife International will use the report, which is being published at its week-long World Conference in Buenos Aires and on the group's website, to call for governments to make more funds available for global conservation.

"Effective biodiversity conservation is easily affordable, requiring relatively trivial sums at the scale of the global economy," said Dr Mike Rands, BirdLife's chief executive.

He estimated that safeguarding 90% of Africa's biodiversity would cost less than US $1bn (£500,000) a year.

"The world is failing in its 2010 pledge to achieve a significant reduction in the current rate of loss of biodiversity," he warned.

"The challenge is to harness international biodiversity commitments and that concrete actions are taken now."

Catastrophic fall in numbers reveals bird populations in crisis throughout the world
Michael McCarthy, The Independent 22 Sep 08;

The birds of the world are in serious trouble, and common species are in now decline all over the globe, a comprehensive new review suggests today.

From the turtle doves of Europe to the vultures of India, from the bobwhite quails of the US to the yellow cardinals of Argentina, from the eagles of Africa to the albatrosses of the Southern Ocean, the numbers of once-familiar birds are tumbling everywhere, according to the study from the conservation partnership BirdLife International.

Their falling populations are compelling evidence of a rapid deterioration in the global environment that is affecting all life on earth – including human life, BirdLife says in its report, State of The World's Birds.

The report, released today with an accompanying website at the BirdLife World Conservation Conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, identifies many key global threats, including the intensification of industrial-scale agriculture and fishing, the spread of invasive species, logging, and the replacement of natural forest with monocultural plantations.

It goes on to suggest that in the long term, human-induced climate change may be the most serious stress.

Based in Cambridge, BirdLife International is a global alliance of conservation organisations working in more than 100 countries and territories which is now the leading authority on the status of birds, their habitats and the issues and problems affecting them.

When brought together, as in its new report, the regional pictures of bird declines combine to present a startling picture of a whole class of living things on a steep downward slope.

A remarkable 45 per cent of common European birds are declining, with the familiar European turtle dove, for example, having lost 62 per cent of its population in the last 25 years, while on the other side of the globe, resident Australian wading birds have seen population losses of 81 per cent in the same period.

Twenty common North American birds have more than halved in number in the last four decades, while in Asia, the millions of white-rumped vultures which once filled the skies have crashed by 99.9 per cent and the species is now critically endangered.

"Many of these birds have been a familiar part of our everyday lives, and people who would not necessarily have noticed other environmental indicators have seen their numbers slipping away, and are wondering why," said Dr Mike Rands, BirdLife's chief executive.

All the world's governments have committed themselves to slowing or halting the loss of biodiversity by 2010, but reluctance to commit what are often trivial sums in terms of national budgets means that this target is almost certain to be missed, according to the report.

"Birds provide an accurate and easy-to-read environmental barometer, allowing us to see clearly the pressures our current way of life are putting on the world's biodiversity," Dr Rands said.

"Because these creatures are found almost everywhere on earth, they can act as our eyes and ears, and what they are telling us is that the deterioration in biodiversity and the environment is accelerating, not slowing.

"Effective biodiversity conservation is easily affordable, requiring relatively trivial sums at the scale of the global economy. For example, to maintain the protected area network which would safeguard 90 percent of Africa's biodiversity would cost less than $1bn a year. Yet in a typical year, the global community provides about $300m.

"The world is failing in its 2010 pledge. The challenge is to harness international biodiversity commitments and ensure that concrete actions are taken now."

The State of the World's Birds report can be found at www.birdlife.org/sowb

Birds in peril

*Europe

The report highlights the decline of common European birds. An analysis of 124 of Europe's common birds over a 26-year period reveals that 56 species (45 per cent) have declined across 20 European countries, with farmland birds badly hit. The familiar common cuckoo Cuculus canorus has declined by 17 per cent. The European turtle dove Streptopelia turtur, grey partridge Perdix perdix and corn bunting Miliaria calandra have dropped 62, 79 and 61 per cent respectively.

*African migrants to Europe

Birds migrating between Europe, the Middle East and Africa have suffered 40 per cent population declines over three decades. "Birds impacted by agricultural intensification in Europe may suffer excessive hunting in the Middle East and desertification of African wintering grounds," warned Dr Rands. "The Eurasian wryneck Jynx torquilla, northern wheatear Oenanthe oenanthe, and common nightingale Luscinia megarhynchos are vanishing."

*Africa

Birds of prey are in widespread decline. In just three decades, 11 eagle species declined by 86-98 per cent in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. In addition, six large vulture species – including the once widespread Egyptian vulture Neophron percnopterus – have suffered very dramatic losses.

*Middle East and Central Asia

Many common species such as the Eurasian eagle owl Bubo bubo are under pressure. "The global population of Houbara bustard Chlamydotis undulata may have fallen 35 per cent in the past 20 years," noted Dr Rands.

*Asia

"Thirty years ago, tens of millions of white-rumped vultures Gyps bengalensis were flying the skies of Asia. The species was probably the most abundant large bird of prey in the world: it is now on the brink of extinction," Dr Rands said. Numbers have fallen by 99.9 per cent since 1992. "Migratory shorebirds and the wetland habitats they rely on for their annual journeys, are also under threat," added Dr Rands. Sixty-two percent of migratory waterbird species in Asia are declining or extinct.

*North America

Twenty common species have suffered population declines of over 50 per cent in the last 40 years. "Northern bobwhite, Colinus virginianus, has declined the most dramatically, with population reductions of 82 per cent," noted Dr Rands. Other widespread species suffering include the evening grosbeak Coccothraustes vespertinus (78 per cent), northern pintail Anas acuta (77 per cent) and boreal chickadee Poecile hudsonicus (73 per cent).

*North America to Latin America migrants

"57 per cent of neotropical [Central and South American] migrants monitored at their breeding grounds in the US have suffered declines over the last four decades," warned Dr Rands. "Migratory species such as the Wilson's phalarope Steganopus tricolor and semipalmated sandpiper Calidris pusilla are disappearing."

*Latin America

Bird monitoring in El Salvador reports that 25 per cent of common resident species – including the flame-coloured tanager Piranga bidentata, chestnut-capped brush-finch Arremon brunneinucha, and collared trogon Trogon collaris – have experienced significant declines over the last decade. No monitored species saw their numbers rise. "Formerly widespread species like the yellow cardinal Gubernatrix cristata, once common in Argentina, are endangered," noted Dr Rands.

*Pacific

"Studies of resident Australian waders reveal that 81 per cent of their populations disappeared in 25 years," said Dr Rands. Seabirds are threatened at a faster rate globally than all other groups. Nineteen of the 22 species of albatross are threatened with extinction, including the critically endangered Chatham albatross Thalassarche eremita.


Read more!

Scientists Behind 'Doomsday Seed Vault' Ready World's Crops For Climate Change

ScienceDaily 18 Sep 08;

As climate change is credited as one of the main drivers behind soaring food prices, the Global Crop Diversity Trust is undertaking a major effort to search crop collections—from Azerbaijan to Nigeria—for the traits that could arm agriculture against the impact of future changes. Traits, such as drought resistance in wheat, or salinity tolerance in potato, will become essential as crops around the world have to adapt to new climate conditions.

Climate change is having the most negative impact in the poorest regions of the world, already causing a decrease in yields of most major food crops due to droughts, floods, increasingly salty soils and higher temperatures.

Crop diversity is the raw material needed for improving and adapting food crops to harsher climate conditions and constantly evolving pests and diseases. However, it is disappearing from many of the places where it has been placed for safekeeping—the world's genebanks. Compounding the fact that it is not well conserved is the fact that it is not well understood. A lack of readily available and accurate data on key traits can severely hinder plant breeders' efforts to identify material they can use to breed new varieties best suited for the climates most countries will experience in the coming decades. The support provided by the Global Crop Diversity Trust will not only rescue collections which are at risk, but enable breeders and others to screen collections for important characteristics.

"Our crops must produce more food, on the same amount of land, with less water, and more expensive energy," said Cary Fowler, Executive Director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust. "This, on top of climate change, poses an unprecedented challenge to farming. There is no possible scenario in which we can continue to grow the food we require without crop diversity. Through our grants we seek, as a matter of urgency, to rescue threatened crop collections and better understand and conserve crop diversity."

Through a competitive grants scheme, the Trust will provide funding for projects that screen developing country collections—including wheat, chickpea, rice, barley, lentils, coconut, banana, maize, and sweet potato—for traits that will be essential for breeding climate-ready varieties. These projects involve 21 agricultural research institutions in Argentina, Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Israel, Mali, Nigeria, Niger, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Peru, the Philippines, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Syria.

Scientists will be screening chickpea and wheat collections in Pakistan for traits of economic importance for farmers; characterizing rare coconuts in Sri Lanka for traits of drought tolerance and tolerance to other pests and diseases; screening for salinity tolerance in sweet potatoes in Peru; and identifying drought-tolerant bananas in India.

Much of the screening will take place within collections where many of the unique samples are at risk. Therefore, in addition to its efforts to bolster the development of climate-ready crops, the Trust will provide funding to save unique crop collections that are at risk of disappearing. Crop collections need to be re-grown at regular intervals, and fresh seed harvested and placed in seedbanks to ensure long-term conservation and availability. The Trust is working with more than 60 countries to "regenerate" unique collections of crops critical for food security, and to ensure that they are duplicated elsewhere for safety in a collection that meets international standards, as well as in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

Worldwide, there are a handful of crop collections that can be said to meet international standards. And even these few, despite their role in protecting the foundation of our food supply, lurch from one funding arrangement to the next without ever having any real long-term security. The Trust is now endowing these, the world's most important collections, ensuring their conservation and availability for the future of agriculture. Crops already being safeguarded by the Trust's pledge of financial security include banana, barley, bean, cassava, faba bean, forages, grass pea, lentil, pearl millet, rice, sorghum, taro, wheat and yam. These are housed in collections managed in trust for humanity at eight agricultural institutions that are supported by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) and by the Secretariat for the Pacific Community.

"Secure funding on this sort of time-scale has been unheard of in this field. Crop collections are all too often amassed and then lost according to changing funding fashions and priorities," said Daniel Debouck, Head of the Genetic Resources Unit at the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), one of the agricultural institutions supported by the CGIAR. "Genebanking is not something you can turn on and off, and a shortfall in funding of just a few months can result in the permanent loss of unique varieties. We need to be sure that we will have sufficient funding year after year after year. The Trust is now providing that security."

"The contents of our genebanks—some 1.5 million distinct samples—are the result of a 13,000-year experiment in the interaction between crops and environment, climate and culture," said Fowler. "If we are wise enough to conserve these collections, we will have a treasure chest of the very traits that crops used in the past when they successfully adapted to new conditions—the traits they will need again in the future to adapt as climates and environments change."

The Global Crop Diversity Trust

The mission of the Trust is to ensure the conservation and availability of crop diversity for food security worldwide. Although crop diversity is fundamental to fighting hunger and to the very future of agriculture, funding is unreliable and diversity is being lost. The Trust is the only organization working worldwide to solve this problem, and has already raised over $140 million. For further information, please visit: http://www.croptrust.org.


Read more!

Most industries remain dependent on hazardous substances

Many obstacles, including insufficient investment and lack of training, keep scientists from embracing green chemistry and designing safer substitutes for the vast majority of compounds in use today.

Marla Cone, Los Angeles Times 19 Sep 08;

To a chemist, chlorine is the perfect compound.

Easily combining with other elements and molecules, chlorine is transformed into new classes of chemicals with an endless array of uses. It disinfects water, cleans clothes, kills bugs, degreases metals, bleaches paper. It has long been vital to the synthesis of plastics, drugs, microchips and many other products around the globe.

But to environmental scientists, chlorine is a perfect nightmare. FOR THE RECORD:
"Green" chemistry: An article in the A Section on Friday's about the limitations of more environmentally friendly "green chemistry" said chlorine was a compound; it is an element.

Fumes seeping from a tanker could kill thousands. Some formulations are linked to cancer. And several notorious chlorinated compounds, including DDT, chlorofluorocarbons and PCBs, have saddled society with many of its costliest environmental problems.

Though great strides have been made in reinventing some chemicals and products, most industries remain dependent on thousands of hazardous substances such as chlorine. Many obstacles, including insufficient investment and lack of training, keep chemists from embracing green chemistry and designing safer substitutes for the vast majority of compounds in use today.

Of the estimated 83,000 chemicals in commerce, only a few hundred are "green." Hundreds of others accumulatein human bodies, build up in nature or are linked to diseases such as cancer. For many of the rest, the risks are unknown or uncertain.

"Today, chemists can make virtually any molecule, no matter how structurally complex, using the synthetic methods available to them. On the other hand, only a very small percentage of the chemical products are made following the principles of green chemistry," says a 2005 National Academy of Sciences report called "Sustainability in the Chemical Industry."

The industry -- which had $637 billion in global sales in 2006 and employs 7 million people -- has begun to focus more of its efforts on environmental health and safety, but the transformation is occurring slowly.

"I believe 100% that it will happen, but what terrorizes me is how long will it take? A decade? A generation? A century?" said John Warner, a former University of Massachusetts chemistry professor who is now president of a research company, Warner Babcock Institute for Green Chemistry. "Right now, it's not nearly the pace it should be."

In 2006, 12 of the largest chemical companies, including BASF, Dow, DuPont and Rohm and Haas, hired consultants to explore ways to make their industry more environmentally friendly. After nearly a year of research, the consultants concluded the industry was "fiercely defensive" with a "bunker mentality" that was impeding progress.

Its environmental initiatives are "reactive, not proactive," and "disconnected with company and stakeholder priorities,'" said the consultants' report, published by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development.

"The industry has a very short-term focus and discounts long-term issues," the report said. "There is a lack of product responsibility in the industry, with most product stewardship efforts seen as minimal and ineffective."

Many chemical companies still take a stance of "let's just let this green thing blow over," said Yale chemistry professor Paul Anastas, known as the father of green chemistry.

Others do what amounts to corporate "greenwashing," taking a few steps that involve a fraction of their products. Some look for safer substitutes only when forced to by lawsuits or laws.

"The chemical industry doesn't have the most wonderful reputation in the industrialized world," said Alan Barton, executive vice president of Rohm and Haas Co., a Philadelphia-based chemical manufacturer that was acquired in July by Dow Chemical Co. "It does suffer a credibility gap."

Fierce competition

Chemical company executives say pursuit of green chemicals is vital for creating new markets in their fiercely competitive industry. But they stress that the goal can't be just to save the planet, but also to make substances that work at a reasonable cost. Consumers, they say, aren't going to stop demanding high performance and low cost from an array of goods traditionally made from cheap petrochemicals.

"You probably don't need any of the products of the chemical industry if you don't mind living in the year 1400," said William Carroll, past president of the American Chemical Society and a vice president at Occidental Chemical Corp.

Despite recent advances, such as detergents derived from coconut and plastic polymers made of corn or soybeans, the industrial world's dependence on hazardous compounds hasn't changed much since World War II.

"One of the things we're fighting against is [that] green chemistry is relatively new and you have decades, even centuries, of chemistry that is off the shelf right now," said Richard Engler, director of the Environmental Protection Agency's green chemistry program.

The premise of green chemistry is that it's better to prevent environmental problems than to clean them up later. That means knowing the dangers of a chemical before it is manufactured or used, and designing safer compounds to replace hazardous ones.

But the National Academy of Sciences report says funding for research and development at the top 50 chemical companies has been declining since 2000.

"Green chemistry is currently a small band of dedicated champions, and it needs to be a massive scientific revolution backed by serious funding and support," said Stacy Malkan, co-founder of the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics.

The failure to identify hazards of a chemical before it is mass-produced has created some of the world's worst environmental crises -- asbestos causing deadly lung disease, DDT and polychlorinated biphenyls building up in food chains, and ozone-eating chlorofluorocarbons.

Even newer chemicals can be problematic. Brominated flame retardants, for instance, have rapidly accumulated in people and wildlife, and have harmed the reproductive systems and brains of lab animals.

"Unfortunately, we often do not find out about a chemical's real toxic impacts until after it is commercialized and some intrepid scientist somewhere figures out that nature is telling us there is a problem, or discovers a new toxicity in the lab," said Terry Collins, a chemistry professor who directs Carnegie Mellon University's Institute for Green Science.

Even after the dangers are known, Collins said, chemical companies "tend to want to protect cash flows and expansion plans of established chemicals."

Anastas said the industry is playing a risky game of whack-a-mole: It handles one problem, only to have another one pop up. "If you ban chemical X, everyone runs to chemical Y," he said.

Under the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act, the EPA can ban or restrict a substance if it "presents an unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment." But the last industrial chemical outlawed was asbestos in 1989, and a court reversed that decision. The EPA takes decades to analyze threats of individual chemicals. It has taken 20 years to review dioxins, carcinogens created by chemical factories, paper mills and other manufacturers using some chlorine compounds.

The first step toward solving "this 83,000-piece jigsaw puzzle" is to ensure that complete data is available on potential hazards of every chemical, said Michael Wilson, a scientist at UC Berkeley's Center for Occupational and Environmental Health who wrote a report on toxics policies commissioned by the state Legislature.

"This is a fundamental piece, that if we don't get right, green chemistry will continue to operate just at the margins," Wilson said. "Companies are becoming aware of the liabilities of hazardous substances in their supply chains, but they need enough information about them to make a proper decision."

Essential chlorine

The European Union two years ago adopted the world's most rigorous chemicals law, which requires companies to submit health and safety data on about 30,000 substances. Those posing the most danger could be phased out.

California is mounting its own effort to propel green chemistry from a niche to the mainstream. After nearly 18 months of soliciting and analyzing ideas, state officials are expected to send their recommendations to the governor later this month.

As a first step, the Legislature and governor are considering a new law to require state scientists to evaluate chemicals in consumer products and determine how to minimize their hazards.

Environmental groups are urging California to insist on safer substitutes. The chemical industry, which opposed Europe's law, is urging the state to offer funding, education and incentives rather than imposing bans.

"We never will be able to eliminate the use of toxics and maintain the same quality of living and health in this country," said Michael Walls, vice president of the American Chemistry Council, the industry's trade group. "We must understand the risks and costs and benefits of eliminating a substance. Hazard alone shouldn't drive decisions."

Chlorine, for example, can be extremely hazardous. Not only is it deadly if inhaled, but various formulations have harmed the ozone layer, triggered multibillion-dollar excavations of rivers and nearly wiped out some birds of prey.

It also is perhaps the most essential chemical in use today.

"I'm hard-pressed to find another chemical with the breadth of use," said Rob Simon, managing director of the American Chemistry Council's chlorine division.

Though there are alternatives for some uses of chlorine, there are few viable substitutes for others, such as water disinfection. About 93% of drugs are manufactured with it.

The pharmaceutical industry lags behind many industries in finding greener technologies.

For every kilogram of a drug they make, pharmaceutical companies use more than 100 kilograms of chlorinated compounds and other solvents that are thrown away. In comparison, the oil industry wastes a much smaller amount of solvents: 0.1 kilogram for every kilogram of product.

"Higher-tech products often are much more wasteful, and the pharmaceutical industry is an example," said Tracy Williamson, chief of the EPA's industrial chemistry branch.

Kim Albizati, former executive director of chemical research at Pfizer, said a more efficient technique -- using catalysts made of enzymes, cloned from natural organisms -- can replace solvents. Pfizer, he said, saved $1 billion over the lifetime of a drug after his team invented a way to transform enzymes into catalysts.

"If you practice green chemistry, you are going to bring down the costs. No question about it," said Albizati, who co-founded BioVerdant, a chemical research firm in San Diego that specializes in environmentally friendly solutions for pharmaceutical companies.

Many pharmaceutical manufacturers still see green chemistry as slowing down their research. Being first with a drug is more important to most companies than being green or cutting costs.

Neil Hawkins, vice president of sustainability at Dow, which manufactures chlorine and about 20,000 compounds, said his company "is looking at all times for alternatives to every product."

"Compared to a decade ago, it is much easier to commercialize some of these [green] products," Hawkins said. "I see real movement in all the major chemical companies."

For consumer products, green chemicals often cost more initially than petrochemicals because extracting raw materials from plants is a more complicated process and manufacturing occurs on a smaller scale, said Josef Koester of Cognis, a specialty chemical company that created coconut-and-corn detergents for household cleaners.

"Starting green chemistry is a niche application, so that means it's exotic and it's expensive," Koester said. However, as the scale enlarges, it becomes more competitive, he said.

Nilesh Shah, Rohm and Haas' research director for performance materials, said many nontoxic products are doomed to fail because of cost.

"Any of the ones that cost more and are green for the sake of being green are unsustainable," Shah said. But "if they are green and more expensive and they bring some other attribute, then there's hope."

Ease, not cost

Regulation continues to be the most powerful force driving the market.

Rohm and Haas in the 1980s developed a biodegradable compound that prevented algae from growing on ship hulls. But the shipping industry didn't have much interest in green antifoulants until a few years ago, when the EPA banned the old tin-based compound, which built up in waterways and killed aquatic life.

"There's a big barrier to change. I demonstrate to so many companies that their costs would be much lower and they still don't convert, and they won't until there's a regulation forcing them to," said Katy Wolf, a former Rand Corp. scientist who directs the Institute for Research and Technical Assistance in Glendale.

"People think American industry looks at the bottom line," she said. "But they don't. They look at what's easiest."

For now, petrochemicals remain the foundation of the modern industrial revolution. Many conventional chemicals are made of petroleum.

Yet a new economic force -- the high cost of oil -- may finally lead reluctant companies to take a closer look at green chemicals.

"The notion that petrochemicals are cheap or inexpensive, that's a transient notion," said Dow's Hawkins. "All you have to do is look at oil at more than $100 per barrel."


Read more!