Caution and Enthusiasm for Fish Farming in Argentina

Marcela Valente, IPS 25 Oct 08;

From the environmental impact perspective, it is essential to differentiate between community and industrial aquaculture.

BUENOS AIRES, Oct 25 (Tierramérica) - Fish farming is expanding in Latin America, fuelled by the demands of a global market that is facing the stagnation of commercial fishing. But some people are warning about the limits of industrial production of fish and the environmental and social risks.

According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), 45 percent of the fish consumed in the world comes from fish farms. Today that means 48 million tonnes, but by 2030 that volume would have to be doubled because of the decline in commercial fishing and the increasing demands of a growing population.

In Mexico, aquaculture dates back to the pre-Hispanic era. Historians say that several species were raised in ponds and that the Maya Indians controlled fish reproduction in natural pools known as "cenotes".

Currently, fish farms in Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru produce volumes that are the envy of Argentine producers. But in Argentina, the continent's southernmost country, the climate and topographic conditions are not conducive to developing large-scale fish farming, say some experts and activists.

Environmentalists here point out that the social and environmental harm that can arise from aquaculture do not justify industrial-level promotion, and recommend instead fomenting responsible fishing in seas and rivers that still have a rich biodiversity.

With an output of 710,000 tonnes annually, Chile is the region's leading aquaculture producer and one of the top 10 in the world, alongside China and India. It is also the world's second leading producer of farmed salmon and trout (both of the Salmonidae family), after Norway. But the sector is not without its risks.

In 2007, the outbreak of infectious anaemia in salmon closed down many fish farms in Chile. One thousand of 55,000 jobs were lost, according to the government, though the unions say the layoffs affected 3,000 workers.

Argentina has its potential, "but it is not Chile or Brazil," Laura Luchini, national director of aquaculture, told Tierramérica.

"Some provincial governments are promoting this sector, but our job is to make sure people keep their feet on the ground," she said.

Along Chile's long, southern Pacific coast, there are many fjords, making it "very favourable for this activity," said Luchini.

In contrast, Argentina's southern Atlantic coastline does not have any fjords, which provide protection, except in Tierra del Fuego, the country's southern-most province, where mussels are farmed.

Fish farming in this country is being developed on a small scale, with trout, Patagonian flounder and mussels. But production amounts to no more than 3,000 tonnes per year -- an insignificant volume when compared to fishing, which produces between 850,000 and 1.1 million tonnes of fish and shellfish.

"Nor can our country compare to Brazil, which has tropical waters," said Luchini. South America’s giant produces 250,000 tonnes annually of fish and shrimp in freshwater and on its Atlantic coast, in an inlet near the southeastern city of Florianópolis.

The aquaculture official believes that the enthusiasm of Argentine producers, who see enormous potential in fish farming, is a response to the pace of the sector's growth worldwide. "While fishing production has slowed and beef production is growing at a rate of 2.5 percent, aquaculture has grown 8.5 percent annually for the last eight years," she said.

Aquaculture has become a booming activity due to the higher global demand for food and the possibility of tracing the history, location and path of a product along the entire supply chain.

By 2045, FAO estimates that fishing and fish farm production will become homologous. Producers in Argentina believe that with credits, subsidies and better technology, they will be able to make the most of the opportunity to do good business, said Luchini.

But there are no magic solutions. Claudio Baigún, a biologist who is an expert in freshwater fish resources, agrees that the expectations of the producers do not take into account Argentina's limitations.

"They take Chile or Brazil as a guide, but Argentina is different. There are projects to raise pacú (Piaractus mesopotamicus) in Rosario (in the eastern province of Santa Fe). But while in Bolivia or Brazil, with their warm waters, the species matures in eight months, in Argentina it takes 18," Baigún told Tierramérica.

"Argentina is at the limit in South America for raising warm water species," he added. In any case, he warned that aquaculture is not a panacea. There are fish diseases, high costs of energy and fish food, and also the risks associated with the lack of genetic variation among the fish raised in pools.

"We want to believe that fish farming will resolve everything, but we have to preserve what we have, promote responsible management of the fish stocks and not believe that aquaculture is a life-preserver that's going to save us," said Baigún, a researcher at the Technological Institute of Chascomús.

From the environmental perspective, Jorge Cappato, director of the Proteger (Protect) Foundation, maintains that it is essential to differentiate between community and industrial aquaculture, because the latter could have greater negative social and ecological impacts.

In a conversation with Tierramérica, Cappato, whose foundation works to preserve biodiversity and promote sustainable fishing, remarked that "the chemical products used in fish farming -- antibiotics, pesticides, fertilisers -- have negative effects on the water.

"Local communities of artisanal fisherfolk then lose access to sufficient fish stocks and run the risk of being turned into fish farmers," he added.

Colombia produces 70,000 tonnes of farmed fish per year, according to 2006 data from the Colombian Agriculture Institute. With the disappearance of the "bocachico" (Prochilodus magdalenae), the principal freshwater fish species, local small-scale fishermen were turned into fish farmers, Cappato said.

"They earn less, are poorer and have less nutritious diets," said the Argentine foundation director, who visited the fish-raising ponds along the Sinú River, in the northern Colombian department (province) of Córdoba.

Cappato also mentioned the case of Ecuador, where the intensive production of lobster has been promoted in coastal areas of mangrove forests. The companies "destroyed 60 percent of the mangroves, left jobless the women who caught shrimp, and when a virus appeared they left, leaving behind empty concrete tanks."

The destruction of mangroves is also a problem in Mexico, which in 2007 produced 261,000 tonnes of farmed seafood, with shrimp in first place.

The shrimp industry is responsible for a large part of the disappearance of these important ecosystems, according to the Mangrove Ecology Group. In 2007, according to an official inventory, there was a 27 percent decline of mangrove forests since 2000 along Mexico's Pacific, Gulf and Caribbean coastlines.

(*This story was originally published by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network. Tierramérica is a specialised news service produced by IPS with the backing of the United Nations Development Programme, United Nations Environment Programme and the World Bank.) (END/2008)


Read more!

Best of our wild blogs: 25 Oct 08


Flood warning issued for East Johor: will Chek Jawa be affected?
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Malayan Water Monitor catching catfish
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Pompelon marginata
and other moths on the Moth Mania blog

Asian Youth Energy Summit 2008
on AsiaIsGreen

Seafood is the scariest food
on blogfish

Consume less!
on the flying fish friends blog


Read more!

After weeks in Dubai hotel, Sammy the shark is allowed to check out

Sonia Verma, The Times 25 Oct 08;

The Government’s decision comes before the resort’s gala opening next month, billed as the most expensive private party yet staged. Some suspect that the decision to free Sammy has been prompted by fears that the negative publicity could overshadow the festivities.

A 13ft whale shark that has spent weeks as the star attraction in a huge tank in the lobby of a luxury hotel is to be freed after a campaign that included protest songs and the setting up of a “Free Sammy” page on Facebook.

Since the £950 million Atlantis hotel opened in Dubai last month, visitors have been greeted by the sight of Sammy and tens of thousands of other fish swimming about in a giant aquarium.

The whale shark is a juvenile and a protected species. Environmentalists were appalled by the display and began a fight against the hotel’s state-owned developers to have Sammy removed.

The surprise order to liberate her from the hotel, on the giant, man-made Palm Jumeirah development, was issued by the Government of the United Arab Emirates this week.

Such battles between environmentalists and wealthy developers are common in the West but are new to Dubai, where any opposition to its trillion-dollar building boom is rare, and victory against influential, state-owned developers is more elusive still.

“The whale shark should be freed,” Rashid Ahmad bin Fahad, Minister of Environment and Water, told The Times. “There is no decision yet on the timing, but definitely it will be freed.”

The campaigners have demanded that the speckled grey whale shark — the world’s largest fish species — be returned to the sea. She was caught in the shallows off the Gulf coast in August.

Sammy’s plight has dominated local news headlines. Dubai’s main daily, The Gulf News, led a “Free Sammy” campaign, decrying the confinement of the whale shark as “cruel beyond belief”. Children donned “Free Sammy” badges, activists waved placards and supporters put bumper stickers on their cars.

DJs at Dubai 92, a local radio station, played their own Free Sammy song, to the tune of Michael Jackson’s Free the World: “Free the whale shark, Make it a better place, For all the small fish who are scared they might be eaten,” the remix ran. “There are frogs and dolphins who are scared they might be dinner.”

Dubai residents also launched a Facebook campaign, signed by more than 8,000 people.

Sammy was swimming in an open-air aquarium with 65,000 fish, stingrays and other sea creatures. Environmentalists, wildlife activists and scientists condemned its cramped living conditions as life-threatening for her.

The whale shark is harmless to people, feeding on plankton and small fish. In the wild it can live to 100 and roams across thousands of miles.

Environmentalists say that the owners of the Atlantis hotel have disregarded international permit laws, holding her illegally and using her as a ploy to attract tourists. The captivity of whale sharks in the United States and Japan has provoked controversy in the past.

The Atlantis — developed by Sol Kerzner, a South African property tycoon, and Nakheel, a government-owned developer — refused to comment on the row or the government order. However, previous statements have argued that the shark was “under duress” at the time of its capture and claimed that the hotel’s vets were nursing it back to health and studying it for scientific purposes.

The decision to release Sammy came as a surprise to even her staunchest supporters, highlighting how local sensibilities in the UAE are changing, in part because Dubai is attracting growing numbers of expats concerned about the environment.

With its chilled swimming pools, desert snow domes and man-made islands, the UAE has one of the world’s highest per capita carbon footprints. But the Government has embarked on several big green projects in an effort to shed that reputation, including Masdar, the world’s first carbon-neutral city being built in Abu Dhabi.

Azzedine Downes, of the International Fund for Animal Welfare, said that the decision to free Sammy set an important precedent against excess at any cost. “It offers us a snapshot of a much bigger problem: the losing battle that wildlife faces.”

The Government’s decision comes before the resort’s gala opening next month, billed as the most expensive private party yet staged. Some suspect that the decision to free Sammy has been prompted by fears that the negative publicity could overshadow the festivities.

Larger than life

— The largest accurately measured whale shark was a 40ft male caught in Bombay in 1983. Its mouth was over 4ft wide and its fins were more than 6ft long

— An adult male can reach 40 tonnes and live as long as 100 years

— They have been tracked travelling distances up to 8,078 miles, from California to the western Pacific

— Whale sharks are filter feeders, sucking up plankton, squid and small fish as they swim

— They have several thousand 3mm teeth in 11 or 12 rows

Sources: www.sharks.org; Times Archive

Free Sammy
A whale shark's place is in the wild
The Times 25 Oct 08;

“Moby-Dick seeks thee not. It is thou, thou, that madly seekest him!” Thus urges Starbuck, the first mate, to Captain Ahab to desist from his pursuit of the leviathan of Herman Melville's novel. A less dramatic and thereby more poignant drama of human fascination with creatures of the deep is being played out in a hotel in Dubai, as we report on page 4. The Atlantis hotel has captured not a whale, but a whale shark - so a fish, rather than a mammal. And what a fish.The largest variety in the ocean, a whale shark can grow as long as 40 feet.

The hotel claims to have “rescued” the young shark that it now holds. The shark, which has been nicknamed Sammy, was allegedly in distress. It has been held in captivity - specific- ally, the hotel's aquarium - since early September. There is no indication that the hotel intends to release the shark, whose presence is clearly being marketed as a tourist attraction.

The hotel should reconsider the treatment of Sammy. There are some animals for whom captivity is an aid to conservation of the species. The whale shark is not one of them.

Whale sharks are migratory creatures. They may live for decades in the wild, but their life span in captivity is known to be much shorter. They are protected creatures under international convention. The hotel should therefore accede to public pressure and set Sammy free. He would then have to find his way through the man-made archipelagos off the Dubai coast to reach truly open water, and he might need help. Keiko the killer whale, star of the Free Willy films, certainly did. Either way, he deserves the chance to show the world what makes Sammy swim.


Read more!

Is Singapore trying to excel in too many areas?

WHY aspire to be a second Boston or second London and not a first-rate Singapore?
Business Times 25 Oct 08;

It's time - particularly during a global crisis - for Singapore to rethink its economic model and employ niche targeting right where it has unique strengths to become a world leader, rather than stay a follower in various sectors, an economist suggests.

While highly successful so far, Singapore's growth model - built on wooing multinationals to drive key sectors here - may not be sustainable in the changing environment, says Linda Lim, professor of strategy at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business and director of its Center for South-east Asian Studies.

A Singaporean academic who has been in the US for some four decades, she was a speaker at the Singapore Economic Policy Conference yesterday.

In her view, the Singapore growth model has both tried to do too much - going against what theories such as comparative advantage and diminishing returns propose - and achieved too little in terms of delivering returns for Singaporeans relative to foreigners and foreign firms.

'Singapore cannot be internationally competitive and a world leader in semiconductors, life sciences, healthcare, education, financial services, creative industries and casino tourism, all at the same time,' she says in her paper for the conference.

Speaking to BT, Prof Lim said: 'Of course you can make an argument for doing 10 sectors instead of three; you say diversify. But if we do all, everyone becomes uncompetitive; all face rising costs as they compete with each other for scarce land and talent.'

Outlining her alternative strategic vision, she says that the starting point is to take stock of 'what you have, including your geographic location'.

Then look for a strategy of differentiation: 'What do you have, what can you do that nobody else can do? You want to develop a blockbuster drug? Any number of places in the world can do it. You have to look at what is specific about you.

'Perhaps it may be that if we want to have financial services, then we cannot have life sciences, integrated resorts. You have to make a choice, you cannot have everything. You choose the thing you can do better than anybody else.'

And one indicator of a 'market advantage', she says, is whether a country needs to provide 'inducements, or investment incentives, otherwise known as subsidies' to attract talent.

'If people are naturally coming here, that's fine.'

And not least, 'let the private sector do it', she says, suggesting that capital and talent be released to local entrepreneurs, to be allocated according to market forces. When and if private enterprise fails, it will take only small parts, rather than big chunks, of the economy down with it, she argues.

Singapore is particularly well-placed for a whole cluster of economic activities 'from finance to forestry and fisheries', Prof Lim says.

'Where are we? We're next to the biggest forests in the world. Why not be a carbon finance centre? People are doing this in San Francisco! They are doing Indonesian . . . avoiding deforestation . . . out of San Francisco! Why can't we do it from here?

'Why do we want to be a second Boston or second London? We want to be a first Singapore. There are already second, third and fourth Singapores all over the world - people are copying our strategy.'

Singapore could also be a centre of expertise in creative fields such as traditional and modern Asian arts and culture. Already, Singapore is the best place in the world to do South-east Asian studies, Prof Lim says.

Economic growth here has focussed on quantitative targets, but it may be time to look at the qualitative aspects such as its 'purpose' and nature.

'I'm saying, look at net value creation for citizens. 'People for growth' - growth as an end in itself - is not the same as 'growth for people', growth as a means toward greater welfare for people.'

Rethink Singapore economic growth model, says don
Straits Times 25 Oct 08;

SINGAPORE should relook its economic growth model in an era of tighter government regulation and multilateral oversight that could evolve in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.

Professor Linda Lim from the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan, told the Singapore Economic Policy Conference yesterday that the growth model that has served Singapore may be out of place in a changed environment.

Prof Lim said the growth strategy - the 'EDB (Economic Development Board) model of give them a tax break and they will come' - has both tried to do too much and achieved too little in terms of delivering high and secure incomes and living standards.

'We've 40 years of savings and repressed consumption, so do we throw it at UBS and Citigroup and lose 60 per cent of the value, or do we use it for ourselves?' said Prof Lim, a Singaporean and a frequent contributor to The Straits Times.

Instead of letting the state make big bets on a few major, capital-intensive, projects dependent on foreign capital, labour and skills in which they have no intrinsic comparative advantage, it might be worthwhile to consider releasing capital and talent to local entrepreneurs, she said.

These people can innovate and create value in smaller but nimbler locally rooted enterprises, she added.

Prof Lim said that a national government, for example, should not use domestic savings to create employment disproportionately for foreigners simply in order to claim success in establishing a particular sector of its choosing that may not be validated by underlying market forces.

Singapore, she said, can become a 'global model' for environmentally-friendly buildings and lifestyle.

Other clusters of 'regionally integrated' economic activities might be in the creative fields of traditional and modern Asian and Western arts and culture.

Another cluster is social and health services in, for example, developing policies, systems, products and services for an ageing population, Prof Lim said.

'Don't think of yourself as an outpost of a declining empire, or a second Shanghai or a second Boston. Why not be a first Singapore?' she told the audience of economists and academics.

GABRIEL CHEN


Read more!

Singapore gets top marks in UN World's Cities Report

Ca-Mie De Souza, Channel NewAsia 24 Oct 08;

SINGAPORE: The United Nations (UN) gave Singapore top marks in its latest report on the state of the world's cities, and has said it is keen to deepen its collaboration with Singapore as a knowledge hub.

The UN also called on cities to take on pro-growth policies that support the poor and strengthen infrastructure. It said all these can make a difference when it comes to sustainable living.

The UN said people's consumption and lifestyle patterns, and not urbanization, are to blame for climate change. To solve the problem, cities need to use less fossil fuel, maximise recycling and have a well-planned transport network.

Singapore, which set up an inter-ministerial committee on sustainable development in February, has been highlighted for its low per capita car ownership.

With its greening policy, Singapore has also been singled out as a country that absorbs more carbon dioxide than it emits. Another achievement is that Singapore is the only country with no slums.

Director of Monitoring and Research at UN-HABITAT, Banji Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, said: "Obviously, (the) government has taken pro-active steps over a long period of time because it has to be sustained.

"One of the problems you find in most countries is they actually start well, but you need constant investment, sustained effort (and) visionary leadership to sustain those kinds of actions."

The latest UN report by UN-HABITAT, the agency working to boost the liveability of cities, studied 245 cities. The report is a lead-up to the UN World Urban Forum in Nanjing, China in November.

It noted another worrying concern of rising sea levels, and Southeast Asia in particular is at the highest risk due to its low elevation.

Singapore has said in parliament in September that it has taken measures in terms of building requirements on reclaimed land and drainage infrastructure. A two-year study to understand the specific implications of climate change, including rising sea levels, is also expected to be ready in 2009.

Director of Centre for Liveable Cities, Andrew Tan, said: "Moving forward, I would say that having achieved the level of environmental quality we have in Singapore, there is still a need for us to maintain these efforts.

"It's necessary for Singaporeans to be proud of what they have achieved, but at the same time, to know that sustained efforts is required."

The UN has lauded the 43-year-old city state as a model city. However, experts cautioned that as all cities progress, they will no longer be measured just by their level of economic, social and environmental progress.

Cities like Singapore will also have to look at its inclusiveness and its quality of life. Related to this, the report said cultural assets too should be protected to nurture the soul of the city.

- CNA/yt

Singapore lauded as slum-free city
Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 25 Oct 08;

SINGAPORE is the only city in the world without slums, a new report by the United Nations Habitat has found.

The director of UN Habitat's monitoring and research division said the achievement was one that should be studied and, if possible, replicated in other cities.

'There is about 6 per cent slums in more developed countries, so to have zero incidence is an achievement worth celebrating,' said Professor Banji Oyeyinka.

The world organisation released its findings yesterday in cities, including Singapore, to coincide with the 63rd anniversary of the UN.

The report studied factors that contributed to harmonious urbanisation in 245 cities which provided data to UN Habitat.

In Asia, where half the population lives in cities, a third live in slums, the bi-annual State of the World's Cities 2008/2009 report said.

These were defined as areas where there was overcrowding, a lack of safe drinking water, sanitation, durable housing materials and rights over tenure.

Prof Banji said Singapore showed how long-term planning worked to achieve success in slum elimination.

A quarter of Singapore's population lived as squatters or in slums in 1959, with as many as 200 people living in a shophouse before the Government stepped in to build public housing. Over 44,000 flats were ready in 1964.

Asked how much time was necessary for a concerted effort to eliminate slums, Prof Banji said it would depend: 'Just for provision of clean water throughout a city, it would need 10 years of consistently and effectively applied policies.'

For the world to understand the best methods to eliminate such pools of disease and poverty, he invited researchers studying cities to collaborate with UN Habitat. He also invited non-government organisations and universities to send their data.

The Centre for Liveable Cities, Singapore, set up by the National Development Ministry and Ministry for the Environment and Water Resources in June to enhance Singapore's expertise in urban development, is interested in collaboration.

Its director Andrew Tan said: 'We want to learn the best practices of other cities, like Japan's responsible communities, which take care of the cleanliness of their own environment.'

About 50 researchers, analysts and policymakers attended the launch.

The UN Habitat's next report will be released in 2010.


Republic is a 'carbon sink'
Straits Times 25 Oct 08;

SINGAPORE is known to be a carbon sink, absorbing more carbon dioxide than it releases into the atmosphere, said the editor of the United Nations Habitat Report 2008/2009, Ms Rasna Warah.

She said that the city's intense use of greenery with its numerous parks, gardens and nature reserves allowed carbon dioxide to be trapped and stored in the plants.

This was a sustainable solution for other cities to explore, she said.

'Singapore shows urbanisation does not damage the environment, when combined with environmentally friendly policies like the intense use of greenery and low motor usage here compared to other cities with similar income levels,' she said.

The report alluded to Singapore's success in this regard, but noted it did not take into consideration the amount of carbon dioxide produced by industry for products and services destined for foreign countries, including oil refineries and aviation.

The energy consumed in agriculture, in heat and light for residential buildings and power consumed by industry as well as transport were considered.

UN lauds Singapore urban development
Nisha Ramchandani, Business Times 25 Oct 08;

SINGAPORE has been lauded as an example of a successful urban centre by a United Nations report that studies the state of the world's cities.

The report was issued by the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) this week, which aims to provide an update on the challenges facing global urban areas.

Published every two years, this year's report has the theme Harmonious Cities, focusing on three main areas of urban development: spatial, social, and environmental harmony.

Singapore's 'financial trade and communication services' have contributed to its 'significant economic and population growth in recent years', the report said. It also pointed out that Singapore has made 'concerted efforts to reduce levels of air pollutants'. This was aided by Singapore's low private motor use, efficient public transportation system and low levels of energy consumption. Singapore also does not have any slums, which is rare in an urban centre.

UN executive director for UN-HABITAT Anna Tibaijuka wrote: 'Enlightened and committed political leadership combined with effective urban planning, governance and management that promote equity and sustainability are the critical components to the building of harmonious cities.'

Centre for Liveable Cities (CLC) director Andrew Tan pointed out that concerns over employment, the environment, safety and security tend to surface as cities increase in size. 'Dealing with these challenges requires a multi- faceted response at the national, regional and international levels,' he added.

CLC is a think-tank that brings together Singapore's expertise on sustainable urban development from the government, industry and academia.

The key findings of the report can be found on the CLC website (www.clc.org.sg), which was launched yesterday.

UN-HABITAT unveils State of the World’s Cities report
UN-HABITAT website 23 Oct 08

Mrs. Anna Tibaijuka, Executive Director of UN-HABITAT said that the crisis should be viewed as a “housing finance crisis” in which the poorest of poor were left to fend for themselves.

"Clearly you cannot have a harmonious society if people are not secure in their homes," she told reporters at news conference to launch of the State of the World's Cities 2008/2009, a flagship report published every two years by the UN agency.

"The financial crisis we are facing today cannot be seen as an event -- it is a process that has been building up over time and this process now has bust." She said governments had to provide cheaper homes for those on lower incomes because the supply of affordable housing could not be left entirely to the market.

The UN-HABITAT said income distribution (measured through Gini coefficient levels) varies considerably among less-developed regions with the divide most noticeable in African and Latin American cities. In both regions, the gulf is often extreme compared to Europe and Asia, where urban inequality levels are relatively low.

South African cities top the list of the world’s most unqual cities, followed by Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Guatemala and Mexico. Urban inequalities in this highly unequal region are not only increasing, but are becoming more entrenched, which suggests that failures in wealth distribution are largely the result of structural or systemic flaws.

Mrs. Tibaijuka said the proportion of people living in slum conditions in wealthy countries could rise because of the credit crunch. With 1 billion people already living in slums at the dawn of the new urban era, the report warned of unrest should governments fail to tackle the urban poverty crisis more seriously.

"I would not be surprised that, if we did another global survey on people living in slum conditions without security of tenure, this number will have increased in developed countries as a result of this crisis," she said referring to a recipe for riots and social upheaval to which the financial turmoil might lead.

"I am not surprised that world leaders are now seizing on the matter because without leadership, without governance, it is a clear test of social tensions," she said. Click here for further details.see Presskit

Background

Not so harmonious cities

In many cities around the world, wealth and poverty coexist in close proximity: rich, well-serviced neighbourhoods and gated residential communities are often situated near dense inner-city or peri-urban slum communities that lack even the most basic of services. Here the expert in charge of UN-HABITAT’s State of the World’s Cities report, Eduardo Lopez Moreno, explains the report’s latest research on a divide so prominently marked by electrified fences and high walls often patrolled by armed private security companies with killer dogs.

Income distribution (measured through Gini coefficient levels) varies considerably among less-developed regions with the divide most noticeable in African and Latin American cities. In both regions, the gulf is often extreme compared to Europe and Asia, where urban inequality levels are relatively low.

South African cities are the most unequal in the world, followed by Brazil. Latin American and Caribbean cities are among the most unequal in the world, with Brazilian and Colombian cities topping the list, closely followed by some cities in Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Guatemala and Mexico. Urban inequalities in this highly unequal region are not only increasing, but are becoming more entrenched, which suggests that failures in wealth distribution are largely the result of structural or systemic flaws.

And all too often it is not the actual degrees of inequality that matter, but the perceptions of it. And nothing defines that perception better perhaps than the example of a sign with a skull and cross bones carrying the warning “armed reaction” on a high electrified fence cocooning a suburban Johannesburg home.

When gross inequalities are associated with unjust systems that perpetuate poverty, curb upward mobility and exclude the majority, you have a formula for trouble. Put another way: when inequalities are perceived as the result of unfair processes or the unequal distribution of opportunities, people are less likely to accept them. Indeed such perceptions can nurture high crime rates, social unrest or even conflict.

There is no doubt that social unrest and insecurity reduce incentives for investment and force governments to increase the amount of public resources devoted to internal security – resources that might have otherwise been spent on more productive sectors of the economy or on social services and infrastructure.

Inequalities take various forms, ranging from different levels of human capabilities and opportunities, participation in political life, consumption, and income, to disparities in living standards and access to resources, basic services and utilities. Although the traditional causes of inequality – such as spatial segregation, unequal access to education and control of resources and labour markets – have persisted, new causes of inequality have emerged. These include inequalities in access to communication technologies and skills, among others.

“Digital exclusion”, for instance, has exacerbated inequalities within sub-Saharan Africa and resulted in the further marginalization of the region within a globalizing economy.

A society simply cannot claim to be harmonious if large portions of its population are deprived of basic needs while others live in opulence. A city cannot be harmonious if some groups concentrate resources and opportunities while others remain impoverished and deprived. Income inequalities not only threaten the harmony of cities, but also put the harmony and stability of countries at risk, as they create social and political fractures within society that threaten to develop into social unrest or full-blown conflicts. An excessive distributive polarization of income and wealth challenges social cohesion in many parts of the world, and the demands for narrowing social distance are in fact demands for social inclusion, social mobility and equal opportunities; in short they are demands for human dignity.

In Africa, urban income inequalities are highest in Southern Africa. South Africa stands out as a country that has yet to break out of an economic and political model that concentrates resources, although the adoption of redistributive strategies and policies in recent years have reduced inequalities slightly.

Unfortunately, rising economic growth rates in several African countries have not reduced income or consumption disparities. Instead, urban inequalities in many African cities, including Maputo, Nairobi and Abidjan, remain high as wealth becomes more concentrated. In general, urban income inequalities in African countries tend to be higher than rural income inequalities, and Northern African cities tend to be more equal than sub-Saharan African cities.

In Asia, on the other hand, cities tend to be more equal than cities in other parts of the developing world, although levels of urban inequality have risen or remain high in some cities. These include Hong Kong, New Delhi, Ho Chi Minh City, Davao and Colombo.

Cities in China tend to be more equal than other Asian cities, with Beijing being among the most equal city in the region, although some Chinese cities, such as Shenzhen, are experiencing relatively high inequality levels similar to those of Bangkok and Manila. China’s booming economy has also led to rural-urban and regional disparities, with populations living in cities located on the eastern part of the country enjoying significantly higher per capita incomes than rural populations living in remote western parts of the country.

In Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Indonesia, levels of urban inequality are generally low and are comparable to many cities in Europe, Canada and Australia, even through urban poverty is much greater in the former.

However, recent analyses suggest that India will experience rising levels of urban inequality in the future as a result of liberalization and industrialization policies coupled with lack of adequate investment in provision of public goods to the most vulnerable populations.

From many countries around the worlds, the evidence suggests that the benefits of economic growth are not realized in societies experiencing extremely high levels of inequality and poverty. Societies that have low levels of inequality are more effective in reducing poverty levels than those that are highly unequal.

Inequalities also have a dampening effect on economic efficiency as they raise the cost of redistribution and affect the allocation of resources for investment.

Levels of inequality can be controlled or reduced by forward-looking mitigation efforts on the part of governments. UN-HABITAT analysis of urban inequalities in 28 developing countries indicates that since the 1980s, nearly half of these countries managed to reduce levels of urban inequality while enjoying positive economic growth.

Malaysia, for instance, has been steadily reducing levels of urban inequality since the early 1970s through the implementation of pro-poor policies and through human resources and skills development. Similarly, Indonesia’s Growth, Stability and Equity programme has ensured that income distribution and poverty alleviation are integral components of economic growth and development.

Policies promoting equity in Rwanda have also ensured that the high economic growth rates that the country is currently experiencing do not increase inequality levels. These countries have shown that it is possible to grow economically without increasing inequality levels, and that reduction of inequalities is, in fact, a pro-growth strategy.


Read more!

Why 20% electricity price hike despite $1 billion profit?

Desmond Ng, The New Paper 25 Oct 08;


SINGAPORE Power (SP) made more than $1 billion in profit in the last financial year.

Yet, it increased electricity tariffs by about 20 per cent earlier this month.

Asking for more, when the cash box is already full, puzzles ordinary people.

And why a hike now, when Singapore is in a technical recession and inflation is high?

Singapore Power's profit after taxation was $1.09b for the last financial year, according to its March 2008 financial report.

This included an exceptional gain from the sale of the Singapore Power Building.

SP, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Temasek Holdings, has explained that the tariff hike was due to fuel oil price increases and the profits are to fund future infrastructure projects. (See report, right.)

But this, clearly, has not appeased consumers despite detailed replies from the Government to queries from Members of Parliament (MP) in the House earlier this week.

MP Lee Bee Wah (Ang Mo Kio GRC) and Nominated MP Gautam Banerjee were among those who queried the excessive returns.

Ms Lee asked: 'Our SP Services made millions of dollars and yet the price of the electricity tariff goes up.

'So maybe we really have to look into a separate formula of pricing the electricity tariffs. Perhaps one of the yardsticks is the profitability that they make.'

Singapore Power is the parent company of SP Services, which supplies electricity to all households here.

The Energy Market Authority (EMA) regulates the transmission charges of SP Services as it is a monopoly.

Given the billion-dollar profit, it is little wonder that consumers remain unhappy over the hike, despite painstaking explanations from the company.

Why can't our billion-dollar Singapore Power absorb the hike? Or cushion the blow with a smaller hike?

Technician Alvin Cheong finds the raised tariffs difficult to stomach.

The 39-year-old, who is married with a son, 2, pays electricity bills of about $120 a month.

'I understand that the company needs to make money. But I find it hard to accept when they make a huge profit and still increase prices,' he said.

Some asked if SP, which is essentially a monopoly service provider, should make such huge profits.

Dr Huang Fali, an assistant professor of economics from SMU, explained that public utility firms providing essential services such as electricity, water and transport should focus on maximising the welfare of society.

She said: 'This includes making consumers better off. That's the aim of a public utility firm.

'But when these providers make money, it's tough to justify price increases.'

Assistant professor Gopi Rethinaraj of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy noted that the Government is usually cautious and plans for the future, especially in terms of infrastructure.

'Obviously, anyone would be upset when prices go up. But ultimately, this revenue would be going back into the economy in other ways such as the creation of more jobs and infrastructure for future generations.

'Sometimes, profits are made for capital investments. If it's going to find its way back to infrastructure, then it's fine,' said Prof Rethinaraj, who specialises in climate policy and energy technology.

MP Lee Bee Wah told The New Paper that many of her residents still find it difficult to accept the company's explanation.

She said: 'The sentiment among them is that you (Singapore Power) made a billion dollars profit and upi still increase tariff by 21 per cent. That's a lot of money.

'If the company has already made so much, does it still need to raise the tariff?'

She hopes the company will revise its pricing formula and consider pegging profitability to the formula.

Infrastructure: Who should pay?

Mr Leong Sze Hian, president of the Society of Financial Service Professionals, questioned the logic behind consumers paying for future infrastructure.

'In most countries, such infrastructure funding is rarely borne by the operators. (It) is part of national development and, rightly, should come from the state's coffers.'

Mr Leong said that few companies dip into their past profits for future growth and expansion.

Usually, these funds are raised through bank loans or the issuance of bonds.

He said: 'No company will rely solely on their past profit for growth; it'll come from a mix of sources.

'If their growth is based purely on profits, they'll never grow because you never know if your profits will be sustainable into the future.'

In its annual report, SP said its electricity grid is rated 'as one of the world's best performing networks'.

SP recorded revenue of $5.4b and assets of $29b in the last financial year.

Fair rate of return helps investment

ABOUT $5 billion will be used to invest in the Singapore electricity grid infrastructure over the next five years, said Singapore Power.

The company said its bottomline does not benefit from the tariff increase to consumers.

This is because all the extra earnings go into paying for the higher cost of fuel, according to a Straits Times report last week.

Singapore Power said that the $1.09b profit included the results of their international operations and the sale of investments.

Singapore Power has three arms of business.

First is the electricity grid, the second is the gas grid and the third is SP Services.

Minister of State for Trade and Industry SIswaran told Parliament on Tuesday that all three are regulated by the the Energy Market Authority (EMA) to make sure that they do not earn a super normal rate of return.

Said Mr Iswaran: 'So the EMA uses international industry benchmarks to ensure that whatever rate of return they earn is a reasonable rate of return compared to international standards.

For investment

Mr Iswaran continued: 'Why should there be a reasonable rate of return?'

He said it is because if there wasn't such a rate, 'how do you continue to improve and upgrade your infrastructure?'

If Singapore Power does not earn what is considered a fair rate of return by industry standards, then the company will be tempted to cut back on that investment.

This is because it is not in their shareholders' interest and therefore not in the company's interest.

Mr Iswaran added that with reasonable returns, the company will continue to upgrade itself in terms of technology and efficiency and those benefits will then filter down to consumers.


Read more!

Saving the Coral Triangle

Officials from six nations and experts meet to draw up conservation plan
Alastair McIndoe, Straits Times 25 Oct 08;

MANILA: Diving in the glittering clear waters off Balicasag Island in the central Philippines, American marine scientist Kent Carpenter marvelled at the pristine coral reefs and grouper fish 'as big as Mini Coopers'.

That was in 1975. A decade later, diving in the same spot, Dr Carpenter was appalled to find the reef dead. The use of dynamite and cyanide by islanders to catch fish had turned an underwater paradise into a ghostly grey wasteland.

Divers visiting the site a few weeks ago found it in the same sorry condition, said Dr Carpenter. He added: 'And this was once one of the most beautiful coral reefs that I'd seen in over 30 years of diving.'

Blighted reefs like Balicasag are strewn across the Coral Triangle, an area of stunning marine biodiversity spanning the Philippines, eastern Indonesia, parts of Malaysia, Timor Leste, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.

This expanse of ocean, called the 'Amazon of the Seas', now has one of the world's highest proportions of coral species under threat of extinction - a result of destructive fishing and coastal development, aggravated by climate change.

With the meltdown on financial markets overshadowing the debate on global warming and the environment, why worry about coral reefs right now?

Above all, because they provide a habitat for a quarter of all marine species. Research published four months ago by more than 40 leading marine scientists warned that one-third of the world's reef- building corals face extinction from local activities such as over- fishing, and climate change.

Corals are nature's buffers, protecting coastal communities from soil erosion. And they boost local economies through the tourist dollars spent on scuba-diving.

Against that backdrop, officials from the six Coral Triangle countries and marine experts met in Manila earlier this week to draw up a conservation plan. The initiative, started by Indonesia, is backed by US$450 million (S$680 million) in pledges from governments and multilateral development agencies.

'We can't afford a business- as-usual attitude any longer when the livelihoods of so many people are involved,' said Mr Syamsul Maarif, Indonesia's delegation head.

As a Philippine official put it: 'The initiative is about shared responsibilities; we're not talking about boundaries here.'

The condition of the reefs in the Coral Triangle varies considerably.

Papua New Guinea's were spared from the coral-bleaching effects of the ocean-warming El Nino weather pattern in 1997, and are still over 80 per cent intact.

But only 20 per cent of the coral cover in the Philippines is in good condition. A rapidly growing population concentrated in coastal areas has long put an intolerable strain on marine resources there.

Around 40 per cent of Indonesia's eastern-seaboard reefs are still in top condition.

It takes on average 36 years for a coral reef destroyed by pollution - from sewage discharges, for example - or dynamite fishing to repair itself naturally. Scientists have been trying to accelerate that process.

'There's been encouraging results from re-seeding experiments, but this is an expensive process,' said Dr Edgardo Gomez, a leading expert on corals.

Philippine marine scientist Perry Alino said that more reefs must be declared as sanctuaries, to give them a breather from human activity.

Two decades ago, there were only 250 such sites in the Philippines; now there are over 1,000, though they cover only 0.1 per cent of the country's coral area. The government is targeting 10 per cent coverage by 2020 under the plan.

Indonesia aims to double its current 10 million hectares of marine protected areas in its reefs in the Coral Triangle by 2020.

The conservation plan sets out national and regional actions for protecting and rehabilitating the Coral Triangle. These include setting up more reef protected areas, measures to adapt to climate change and establishing baselines for monitoring.

Leaders of the Coral Triangle countries will be asked to implement the measures at the World Ocean Conference in Manado, Indonesia, next May.

amcindoe@yahoo.com

LIVELIHOODS AT RISK

'We can't afford a business-as-usual attitude any longer when the livelihoods of so many people are involved.'

Mr Syamsul Maarif, Indonesia's delegation head to a meeting which saw the Coral Triangle countries and marine experts drawing up a conservation plan for the area

Home to thousands of species
THE Coral Triangle covers 5.7 million sq km and spans the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Timor Leste and parts of Malaysia and Indonesia.

It is home to:

# 75 per cent of known coral species;

# 30 per cent of the world's coral reefs;

# Over 600 coral species;

# Over 3,000 fish species, including 50 per cent of tuna- spawning areas for yellow fin, big eye and skipjack;

# Six out of eight species of marine turtle;

# 45 per cent of the world's seagrass species; and

# 75 per cent of mangrove species.

Related links

Coral Triangle
on the WWF website.


Read more!

Sarawak Needs RM150 Million To Seed Reef Balls And Conserve Marine Life

Bernama 25 Oct 08;

KUCHING - To conserve marine life, especially the endangered sea turtle, Sarawak needs RM150 million to seed 100,000 reef balls along its coastline in the next five years.

Planning and Resource Management Ministry's Deputy Permanent Secretary Datuk Len Talif Salleh said the environment-friendly reef balls could mimic the natural limestone of coral reefs and enhance marine habitat and enrich marine resources.

"To protect the critical habitat and migration routes of the endangered sea turtle along the almost 1,000km coastline of Sarawak, we plan to seed 20,000 reef balls annually, for the next five years," he said.

Len Talif was speaking to reporters after the deployment of 306 reef balls in the north of Talang-Satang National Parks, which is also known as Sarawak Turtle Islands near here.

The Sarawak Reef Ball Project which began in 1998, has clear-cut goals to reduce the mortality rate of nesting marine turtle, deter illegal trawlers and provide new habitat to protect other marine life.

Len Talif, who is also Sarawak Corporation Sdn Bhd managing director, said that currently, the number of turtle deaths was reported at about 20 annually as compared to between 70 and 100 before 1998.

He said the number of sea turtles nesting at the Sarawak Turtle Islands had increased from 737 in 2004 to 1,762 this year.

-- BERNAMA


Read more!

Bird conservation in Sumatra: Project Harapan

RSPB in Sumatra: high hopes
The Telegraph 24 Oct 08;

For all their good intentions, conservation projects in the world's endangered habitats often lose their way, soaking up time, money and effort, only to founder. Richard Grant went to Sumatra, where the RSPB's programme to save the island's over-logged rainforest might buck the trend. Photographs by Clare Kendall

I was going to a big new forest conservation project in Sumatra called Harapan, the Indonesian word for hope. I wanted to hope. I missed being hopeful. But over the years I had visited similar-sounding projects in Mexico, Haiti, Spain, Siberia and parts of Africa, and they had drained the hope right out of me.

They were all going to save endangered forests and wildlife, and empower the local communities to develop alternative sustainable livelihoods that would enhance biodiversity - you have to tick all these jargon boxes to get funding out of the UN, the EU or anyone else these days - and the sad, bald truth of the matter was that none of these projects was working.

The things they were trying to save were being destroyed, and the community development schemes had an amazing knack for absorbing time, money and effort and then falling apart. Why would the Harapan Rainforest Initiative be any different?

It was the brainchild of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), an organisation headquartered in the Bedfordshire commuter belt and perhaps best known for its work in the Suffolk marshes and a certain style of rainproof outerwear favoured by its typical members. Meeting some of its senior executives in London, I learnt that the RSPB is, in fact, a serious player in the big leagues of global conservation. It was founded on an international campaign against bird feathers in ladies' hats in the 1930s, and now it has bird habitat conservation schemes up and running in 35 countries. They seemed like intelligent, determined, efficient people, and deeply committed to their big flagship project in Sumatra, but it was hard to see how or why the RSPB would succeed when so many big international conservation groups had failed to stop or even slow down the rampaging destruction of Indonesia's rainforests.

'The difference now is timing,' said Dr Dieter Hoffman, the head of global programmes. 'Five years ago this project would not have succeeded. But now it is staring Indonesia in the face how little rainforest is left, and the government is getting sensitive about its bad international image on this issue. Plus we have all this talk about carbon credits at the UN, at climate change conferences, in the media.'

The basic idea of carbon credits is for countries such as Britain to pay countries such as Indonesia and Brazil not to cut down their rainforests, because tropical deforestation is such a major contributor to global warming. Hoffman was worried that carbon credits might give us more licence to pollute, and that the money would end up in the pockets of the ruling elite, but he thought that a forest carbon market was emerging and inevitable, and an important reason why the Indonesian government had given Harapan the go-ahead.

I left that meeting feeling encouraged, but also aware that conservation organisations are in the business of selling a message, and the message has to be a careful balance of alarmism and optimism. There is always a dire emergency and a win-win solution that just needs to be funded and implemented. All too often, in my experience, the emergencies were real enough but the solutions were naive, doctrinaire and ineffective. They had a fatal tendency to underestimate the ruthlessness of the economic forces they were up against, the intransigence of local cultures and, above all, the pervasiveness of corruption in the developing world.

We landed at Pelambang airport in south-east Sumatra, loaded the vehicles with supplies and drove up through the middle of the island - hour after hour of oil palm and pulp wood plantations, raw frontier settlements, greasy heat, honking horns, crazy drivers. I was staggered by the scale of what had happened here. This was all lowland tropical rainforest, the richest ecosystem on earth. It used to cover most of Sumatra, an island twice the size of Britain, and contained more species than the Amazon. The logging began in earnest in the 1980s and now the forest is nearly gone. We had bird identification books, binoculars and a sharp-eyed team from the RSPB, and we drove all day and most of the next without seeing a single bird.

From an economic development perspective, we were looking at a success story. People were pouring into this newly opened frontier from other, more crowded parts of Indonesia; Sumatra's population had doubled in 30 years. They were finding work in the plantations or on logging crews, and able to afford monthly payments on motorbikes, cars, mobile phones. They were buying televisions and satellite dishes for their hastily assembled shacks, and running them off car batteries until the electricity arrived. Meanwhile the bosses were getting rich, buying mansions in Jakarta and Sydney, and the rest of us were getting well supplied with wood products and palm oil - a vital ingredient in many of our cosmetics, soaps, shampoos, processed foods, and now an EU-subsidised biofuel.

Environmentally, it was a holocaust. According to Tony Whitten, an ecologist with the World Bank and an expert on Sumatra, clearing 10,000 hectares of this lowland rainforest - enough for one small corporate oil palm plantation - means the death of 30,000 squirrels, 5,000 monkeys, 1,500 hornbills, 900 siamang (a large ape), 600 gibbons, 20 tigers, 10 elephants, and of course everything else that lives there, possibly including rare clouded leopards, sun bears, the Sumatran rhinoceros and the world's biggest and tallest flowering plants.

Here in Jambi province in central Sumatra, one million hectares have been cleared in the past 10 years, so multiply that death toll by 100 and then consider that Jambi is one of seven provinces in Sumatra where the forest is disappearing at a similar rate, and Sumatra is just one island in Indonesia, which has now overtaken Brazil to become the world's leading destroyer of tropical rainforest and the third biggest producer of greenhouse gases after China and the US.

There is still a vague idea wafting around in our culture that the rainforest is last decade's issue, and we are on to the bigger, more pressing matter of climate change, but the two things are inseparable. In 1997 fires burning in the logged-over rainforests of Indonesia supplied a third of the planet's carbon emissions for that year. Last year, deforestation in Indonesia and Brazil contributed more to global warming than the whole of human transportation - all our planes, trains, ships and automobiles put together.

It works like this: tropical forests absorb an enormous amount of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and when you cut them down, you lose that 'carbon sink' effect and also release most of the carbon they have been storing over the millennia. It evaporates from the exposed, decaying forest floor. It goes up in smoke when people burn off the logging remnants to clear the ground for agriculture; the annual dry-season smoke plumes rising off the Amazon and Indonesia are now visible from space. When it comes to global warming, according to Sir Nicholas Stern and other climate change experts, our first priority should be to save the remaining rainforests. But how? This is the vital question, and the reason why Sir Nicholas himself flew to Sumatra and travelled the long bumpy road to Harapan.

On the afternoon of the second day, we reached a white sign bearing the logos of the RSPB, its global arm Birdlife International, and its local partner Burung Indonesia. We turned on to a smaller road. On one side of it was the symmetrical monoculture of a big oil palm plantation, managed recently by the Commonwealth Development Corporation and the Cargill group. On the other side was a high wall of rainforest alive and screeching with monkeys and birds. A troop of long-tailed macaques swung past. Electric-blue kingfishers and hornbills flew overhead. A small deer startled and bolted, leaving heart-shaped tracks in the mud.

Harapan is an old logging concession the size of Greater London and far from pristine. It is damaged, degraded and mostly second-growth forest. Its big trees and high canopy are gone, but it still has its seeds and soil and remnant populations of tigers, elephants, clouded leopards, sun bears and more than 270 species of bird, which is why the RSPB zeroed in on it. After a long campaign of political lobbying and legal jousting, the RSPB and its partner organisations eventually succeeded in persuading the Indonesian government to change its forestry laws, so it could buy a 100-year lease on the logging concession and manage it instead for conservation and restoration. The plan is to let the forest grow back to its former glory, establish sustainable development projects with the local people, and then use Harapan as a model for more rainforest restoration projects with an eye towards carbon credits and ecotourism. You can't fault the RSPB for lack of ambition. Harapan is already the biggest project of this kind in the world.

We pulled up to the headquarters, a quadrangle of white wooden buildings put up by the logging company and now starting to sag and peel. Agile gibbons whooped in the trees, a big black hornbill flapped across the sky and out strode the executive director, Sean Marron, a middle-aged Englishman looking impossibly crisp in the wilting heat. I was soon in front of his wall charts, having an intense caffeinated discussion about the successes so far and the challenges ahead. 'When we arrived on site, less than a year ago, we found 684 chainsaws, 13 mobile sawmills, 67 timber trucks and hundreds of illegal loggers,' he said. 'We started putting patrols in the field, and pressure on the local police, and in the last few months we have seen a dramatic reduction. It is an occasional incident now. We do have an issue with illegal squatters. At its worst, there were several hundred families living inside our boundaries and their numbers were expanding. Now it's down to the low hundreds. Originally I was very pessimistic about this issue, but it's surprising how reasonable people can be when you explain the situation to them. We've also got about 50 families of an indigenous group, the Batin Sembilan, and as far as possible we're hiring them and integrating them into the project.'

I was interested to hear that Marron, his head of administration Muhammed Zubairin, forest conservation manager Ian Rowland and several other staff members all used to work at the big oil palm plantation over the road. They were headhunted by the RSPB because they spoke the language, knew the area and knew how to get things done in Sumatra.

It seemed like a good hiring decision and I was also impressed with their choice of patrol leader. Desnat, a burly 39-year-old with prison tattoos, had an unmistakable air of authority and a new-found but fierce commitment to the cause. He seemed like a very useful man to have on your side when confronting illegal loggers and squatters and telling them they had to leave.

Sitting pillion on a motorbike, I spent a day with three uniformed forest rangers, the Telegraph photographer and a RSPB interpreter. Harapan is so big and the roads are so bad - this is deliberate, to make them impassable to logging trucks - that we saw only a small portion in nine hours. Some areas had been clear-felled and were now growing back in dense lush thickets, and it was here, where the worst destruction had occurred, that most of the tigers were now living. Tapirs and deer were attracted to the tender young shoots and leaves and the tigers had followed them and found good hunting cover in the thickets. The tiger population was estimated at between 13 and 20 and increasing.

The elephants were way off in the south-west and hadn't been studied much, because the main focus and funding was for birds. We encountered ornithologists from Britain and Indonesia and they had just upped the Harapan species count to 286, including nine species of hornbill, the critically endangered storm's stork, the black-thighed falconette, the scaly crowned babbler, and my personal favourite, the fluffy-backed tit babbler.

It was a difficult place to photograph. The birds were very wary, the land was flat, the giant trees were gone, there were no majestic vistas. When you got into the rainforest on foot, it was tangled and gloomy. Vines grabbed at your ankles, thorns tore at your flesh. Saturated with sweat, you slapped at malarial mosquitoes and kept your eyes peeled for venomous snakes. In a small clearing we came across an old hunters' camp with abandoned wire snares. They were getting meat for their families, the rangers said, not tiger parts for the Chinese black market. Poaching had never been much of a problem here. Logging was everything, first legal, then illegal, and everyone had assumed that palm oil would follow.

The next day we went to the north-east part of Harapan where two groups of people were living in separate areas: immigrants and locals. The immigrants were the type of chancers who show up on every frontier, chasing the boom. They had satellite dishes, vehicles and small amounts of capital, and they wanted to log trees and plant smallholdings of oil palm. Their numbers were declining because it was easier to make a living this way in other places. The locals were mostly Batin Sembilan, who had grown up here when it was deep, pristine forest and lived a semi-nomadic lifestyle. Now they were in and around a village built by the logging company. It had a small wooden mosque, a school and a scattering of worker housing, all starting to decay.

We met a man named Lo. He was short, stocky and quietly spoken, 44 years old, he thought. He lived in one of the houses with his wife and two small children. When the logging company came, he got a job as a security guard. When they left, he went back to fishing and planting rice and cassava. Now more outsiders had appeared and hired him as a forest patrol ranger. He had a uniform, a cap and wellington boots and his job was to patrol the forest with other men, and report back on the birds, animals and any loggers, hunters, poachers or new settlers they came across. It was a good job, he said, and he was very happy to have it.

Harapan has hired as many forest rangers out of this and another local village as it can possibly justify, and it's a shame they can't hire more. The rest of the men - nearly all ex-loggers - were now supporting themselves by fishing, gathering a saleable resin from the forest, and picking up pieces of scrap metal. Harapan's community development coordinator, Suhirman Tjandra, a sweet, earnest, slightly fragile young man, had initiated a number of projects intended to promote new sustainable livelihoods, but none of them had quite taken off.

The last outsiders here, the logging company, had paid people to work. Tjandra got them to build a fish pond and a chicken coop, and then didn't pay them. 'I have to explain to them over and over,' he said. 'We are your partner, your friend. These fish will be your fish. These will be your chickens. If you look after them, you will always have food to eat. But this is very hard for them to understand. They have never planned for the future like this.'

He was trying to persuade the women to gather rattan from the forest and weave it into mats, baskets and fire-beaters. He would give them money and then try to find a market for these products. 'We are promoting empowerment,' he said. His English wasn't good but he knew the jargon of his trade. 'We are listening and facilitating. These are pilot projects, not big success yet, but little by little, yes, we must be patient.'

This conjured a flood of memories. The women's handicraft co-operative whose products ended up in the offices of the NGO that had funded it. The pilot farming projects destroyed by the local goats. The organic rainforest honey marketing scheme that was destroyed by its own success: people loved the honey but there weren't enough bees to sustain it.

Back at HQ with Sean Marron, I got into a discussion about the various models of environmental conservation. What works, what doesn't and why? One of the most effective models I had seen was private ownership by eco-conscious billionaires such as Ted Turner, who had bought up two million acres in the American West, reintroduced the buffalo, restored ecosystems and turned his lands into vast nature reserves. Doug Tompkins, the founder of North Face, had done the same thing on a smaller scale in Chile, and in Mexico some billionaires are now hiring ecologists and competing with each other to have rare animals such as jaguars, wolves and ocelots on their estates - not for hunting but for bragging rights.

Another model is national parks and here the success story is Costa Rica. In return for getting its international debts absolved, it agreed to conserve large areas of its rainforests as national parks, and they are now well-funded, well-managed and a major source of tourism revenue. In other parts of the world national parks are overrun with poachers, loggers, livestock grazers and settlers. The RSPB's first idea was to push the Indonesian government to create a national park at Harapan, but the government wasn't interested and its national parks are in a woeful condition - underfunded, understaffed and being ransacked by illegal loggers in collusion with corrupt police.

Then there is grass-roots community-based conservation, the current industry standard model. It evolved in response to stinging criticism from the academic left, who accused conservationists of being neo-colonialists, consorting with repressive regimes to form national parks, imposing their ideas and ignoring the needs of poor, hungry people, doing nothing to help economic development, and so on. So now a lot of time and money was spent listening to local communities and trying to square their needs with the needs of wildlife and conservation. Rather than impose their ideas, the conservationists would try to gently persuade and influence, by setting up workshops, pilot projects and distributing small amounts of patronage. Meanwhile, as I had seen time and again, loggers and poachers were marching straight past them and taking what they wanted, protected by a network of corruption.

The Harapan Rainforest Initiative uses a lot of the language and ideas of community-based conservation but the crucial difference, as Marron was quick to point out, is that they have management control of the land for the next 100 years. They are not here as persuaders, as missionaries for a foreign belief system. They have the power of ownership and they lobbied skilfully and persistently to get it, and in the process they acquired some friends and leverage in high places.

I asked him about his biggest worry for the project. I put the same question to the biologists, ornithologists and Ian Rowland, the forestry manager. They all gave the same answer: fire. The climate was drying out, lightning storms were frequent, people were setting fires all over the island to clear the ground for planting, and it seemed like every Sumatran male, including the Harapan forest rangers, smoked almost continually and were not in the habit of carefully extinguishing their cigarette butts. In the past year, they had extinguished 27 fires in Harapan, mostly by dispatching men with rattan fire-beaters. Now they had ordered water tanks, pumps, chemical flame retardants, satellite-imaging software that could identify the first outbreaks of forest fire. Fire engines would require roads that were also passable to logging trucks, so they were looking instead at fire-extinguishing units that could be mounted on motorbikes.

Leaving Harapan, I had real hope that it could work, and also the worries, concerns and anxieties that come along with hope. What a cruel irony it would be if it were destroyed not by men with chainsaws but by an elemental force of nature. It had been a long time since I had given any money to conservationists, and now I was wondering if I could earmark a donation for one of those bike-mounted fire extinguishers.


Read more!

Cypriot mass bird poisoning blamed on poachers

Yahoo News 24 Oct 08;

NICOSIA (AFP) – Cyprus's game fund on Friday said an estimated 300 birds have been deliberately poisoned in an act of revenge against the state-run body for nabbing poachers.

Officials said the culprits tainted the water system at release pens for chukar partridges that, ironically, are bred for the hunting season that starts next week.

"The Game Fund is convinced this hideous crime is directly linked to illegal poaching cases filed by the service in recent days," said a game fund statement.

"Unfortunately, some people are unable to realize that their actions hurt the ordinary hunter and not the service that has been the target of many criminal acts," it added.

The game and wildlife authority has warned hunters to stay away from the Soleas mountainous region as poisoned birds could prove lethal if picked up by hunting dogs. There are also fears that eagles and foxes in the area are at risk.

Cyprus has over 50,000 avid hunters restricted to designated hunting zones during specific times of the year but poaching has become a lucrative business the authorities are determined to stamp it out.

"The game fund spends a lot of time and energy to release birds so hunters don't complain, so this is an easy, but stupid, way for poachers to exact revenge," Martin Hellicar of conservation group Birdlife told AFP.


Read more!

Polar bears dying out in Russian region: expert

Yahoo News 24 Oct 08;

MOSCOW (AFP) – Polar bears are dying out in the remote Arctic region of Chukotka because of melting ice and increased killing by humans, an expert with the International Fund for Animal Welfare warned on Friday.

"If this tendency continues, the population will disappear very quickly, said Nikita Ovsyanikov, a researcher from Wrangel Island natural park in Chukotka who has spent the past 18 years studying polar bears in the region.

"We need to create new protected areas in the Arctic," said Ovsyanikov, who has conducted research on behalf of IFAW.

The shrinking of the Arctic ice sheet is forcing more bears to live on land in the summer where they often have trouble finding food, which means they have to go into villages to scavenge and are more likely to be shot, he said.

Polar bear furs are also becoming increasingly popular in Russia, where the killing of polar bears is strictly forbidden except for self-defence. IFAW estimates around 100 polar bears are killed illegally in Russia every year.

There are a total of around 22,000 polar bears in the Arctic. Five thousand of them live between Chukotka and the US state of Alaska and are being forced further and further north because of the melting ice, IFAW said.


Read more!

Changing salt levels in the ocean reflect human-induced climate change

Louise Gray, The Telegraph 24 Oct 08;

Global warming is changing levels of salt in the ocean leading to different weather patterns on land, meteorologists have found.

The Met Office and researchers at the University of Reading looked at levels of salinity in the Atlantic Ocean.

In the subtropical zone salt has increased to a level outside natural variablitity over the last 20 years, suggesting less rainfall and increased evaporation caused by human-induced climate change.

However in the North Atlantic, where there are more changeable weather patterns, an increase in salt levels was put down to natural variation.

This reverses previous fears that fresh water from the melting ice caps is diluting the north seas at such a rate it will reverse the warm Gulf Stream current, leading to a significantly colder climate for Europe - although over the long run the North Atlantic is expected to become less salty.

Peter Stott, head of climate monitoring and attribution at the Met Office and leader of the study, said there is relatively little information on the affect of global warming on the oceans.

He said understanding levels of salt in the ocean could help to project how the climate will change on land.

He said: "Knowing how our oceans are changing over what are essentially vast data-sparse areas is important.

"It provides us with a window on changes in the hydrological cycle and gives us more certainty in projections of rainfall as the climate changes."


Read more!

UK Environment Agency accused of flouting EU laws over fish farms

Graham Mole, The Telegraph 23 Oct 08;

The Environment Agency is flouting EU law by letting fish farms pollute rivers and kill threatened salmon stocks, anglers claim.

The fishermen say a report revealing the problem was seen by the agency two years ago but it has failed to act. Even now, they say, the agency is still not planning any action.

Ironically the report was the result of a five year study by another government agency, the Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas) which was funded by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).

It concluded: "The research has indicated that the effluents from fish farms can have significant impacts on Atlantic salmon, particularly during sensitive life history stages such as reproduction and smoltification".

Smoltification is the stage of the salmon's life when it first makes it way from freshwater to saltwater. The report revealed that many smolts affected by the effluence died when they reached the sea.

On one location - the world famous River Test - the report said "the long term ability of male salmon to respond to reproductive pheromones from the female fish was significantly inhibited". It also found other compounds which, it said, suppressed the salmon's ability to reproduce.

The report also confirmed anglers' suspicions that the effluent was killing off the river borne insects on which the fish feed.

The research took place both in laboratories and on the rivers Avon and Test. River quality was tested above and below the fish farms and then upstream and downstream samples were compared.

Almost invariably the quality of the water below the fish farms was poor and contained testosterone, steroids, ammonia and several other substances harmful to the fish.

While the Test is fished by the rich and famous world wide, the nearby Avon has the highest possible European eco-rating - a Special Area of Conservation (SAC). Under the Euro rules anyone doing anything that involves the river, such as fish farms, firstly has to prove it won't damage the stream.

This requirement, say anglers, was totally ignored by the EA and in the November round of regional fisheries committees they'll be insisting that the EA abides by EU law.

In a paper for those committees the EA's acting head of fisheries Matthew Crocker wrote: "We believe that further studies are needed to assess whether it is feasible to develop environmental quality standards to allow regulators to take relevant impacts into account."

Ian Johnson, fisheries policy manager for the EA said: "Cefas has said that further work is required to predict the possible impacts of effluents at the population level. We have recently been in discussion with Defra and Cefas to promote this being taken forward."

Asked about the EU rules on pollution in its most protected rivers he replied: "We have asked that this research should be progressed to provide us with specific information of any population level effects and the levels of any pollutants that are found to be the cause. Clearly, as such information comes available we would look to review relevant consent standards."

Of the two year gap since the results were known Mr Johnson said: "It has been referred to at various meetings when its findings and limitations have been discussed, but it is only recently, following specific interest from other committees, that it has been brought on to the agenda as an information paper.

"As much more detailed work remains before we can assess its implications, it is unusual that such early findings would attract this interest."

Anglers' spokesman Jim Glasspool of the influential Test and Itchen Association said: "The regulations stipulate that there's a rigorous assessment process to determine that it will not have a detrimental effect on the integrity of the SAC.

"The burden of proof is against the application and the precautionary nature of the regulations assumes that the application cannot proceed unless it can be proved it will not have an adverse effect. This interpretation has been tested in the courts."

When it came to the smolts or baby salmon starting to head for the sea the report found disruption in blood potassium regulation and lesions in the gills and kidneys.

It said "These two organs are key for salt regulation in salmon smolts and allow the fish to successfully adapt to the marine environment." As a result it found that when the smolts hit the seawater there were high mortality rates.

Despite this, say the anglers, the EA isn't planning anything. The only recommendation in the papers for November's meetings is that the report be noted.

Mr Glasspool added: "This is unacceptable. There needs to be a clear definition of what this work is and when it will be done."

A Cefas spokesman said: "We have sought/continue to seek further funding to revisit this work, but so far we have not secured any."


Read more!

India gets $800 million ADB loan to tap Himalayan hydropower

Yahoo News 24 Oct 08;

MANILA (AFP) – The Asian Development Bank said Friday it had approved an 800-million-dollar loan to help the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh expand hydropower generation with a series of projects in the western Himalayas.

With the help of the eight-year loan package, Himachal Pradesh plans to harness five major rivers to build hydropower plants that will provide a combined capacity of 808 megawatts, the Manila-based bank said in a statement.

The ADB and the state government have identified two projects ready for financing through the first loan tranche of 150 million dollars -- building the 111MW Sawra Kuddu project on the Pabber river, and civil works for the 65MW Kashang I project.

"Himachal Pradesh's focus on hydropower development will provide jobs to state residents and will further the state's and the country's goal of maximising this clean, indigenous resource to help meet its energy needs," said ADB energy economist Andrew Jeffries.

The mountainous area's power generation potential is 20,415MW --about 25 percent of India's total hydropower potential -- out of which only 6,150MW has been developed, the bank said.

India is critically short of energy to fuel its economy and imports more than 70 percent of its energy needs.


Read more!

Renewable energy - 'Massive shake-up needed to meet targets'

Paul Eccleston, The Telegraph 24 Oct 08;

A Churchillian effort will be needed if Britain is to meet its target of getting 15 per cent of its energy needs from renewable sources by 2020, Peers have warned.

And it will require a massive shake-up of how power is produced and distributed across the energy industry, the European Union Committee says in a new report.

Britain gets only about two per cent of its energy from renewable sources, mostly from wind farms and will be hard-pressed to meet the 15 per cent target imposed by the EU, the report concludes.

Much will depend on the Government being able to persuade the public to use less power and to begin thinking about producing their own electricity at home - so called micro generation.

To achieve this planning laws will have to be shunted aside and Ministers given more powers to drive through renewable energy schemes even when there is local opposition.

The Committee chairman, Lord Freeman, said: "The target is achievable but only through a tremendous national effort on a Churchillian scale.

"Priorities will have to be changed and will involve everybody from the consumer producing electricity at home to the big power companies."

The Government is criticised in the report for not tackling energy efficiency in its Renewable Energy Strategy and it calls for a 20 per cent energy reduction target by 2020.

The report claims 41 per cent of the UK's energy use is for heating and cooling and says renewable heat technologies and micro-electricity generation should form a key part of the strategy.

It calls for bigger grants to give homeowners the incentive to install the new technology needed to start generating their own electricity.

The committee warns that the rush to meet the 2020 target through wind farms might lead to more cost-effective technologies - such as wave and tidal energy - being ignored and it says a 2030 target should also be set to give alternative technologies more time to develop.

It says the Government should not rely on the proposed Severn Barrage to provide enough energy to meet its targets as, assuming it is approved, it won't be operational until 2022. And it says the length of time that will be needed to make a decision on the Barrage cannot be repeated in future projects if it hopes to meet its targets.

It agrees that renewable energy produced abroad should be bought in to help the UK meet its target subject to a limit of 10-15 per cent, and as long as it did not hamper the development of the renewables industry.

Lord Freeman added: "The 15 per cent target is laudable but is an enormous challenge for the UK, particularly given our current levels of renewable generation.

"Urgent and drastic action will need to be taken in terms of planning, the supply chain and the electricity grid. Energy efficiency and energy saving must be the starting points for meeting the target and policies to encourage reductions in energy use will need to be introduced as part of a comprehensive package of measures aimed at meeting the target.

"If we fail to meet this goal, the UK will become increasingly reliant on nuclear and fossil fuel power."

Friends of the Earth's climate campaigner Robin Webster said: "The House of Lords has recognised the need for urgent Government action to meet our target for boosting renewable energy.

"Ministers must stop trying to wriggle out of their commitments and get on with the job of harnessing Britain's huge potential for green power.

"This will help cut emissions, create many thousands of jobs and secure a safe energy supply - leading Britain to a cleaner and more prosperous future."


Read more!

Japanese author serves up insect feast

A Japanese author behind an insect recipe book says that spiders are his favourite dish.
Julian Ryall, The Telegraph 24 Oct 08;

"In order to get 1 kg of beef, we have to raise cows on huge areas of land and give them many more kilos of fodder before they are ready to be slaughtered," he said. "Insects eat the things that humans don't and can be kept in much smaller spaces.

The onset of autumn in Japan means that spiders are presently Shoichi Uchiyama's preferred insect dish, gently boiled and served on a bed of rice. The meat, he said, is soft and reminiscent of simmered soy beans.

"Domestic spiders are large at this time of year and the females are carrying their young in their stomachs, so they're both tasty and healthy," said Mr Uchiyama, who has published a book of 79 insect recipes.

But of the 1,000 or so insects from around the world that are considered edible - most of which Mr Uchiyama has sampled - his favourite are spring cicada larvae.

"They have a slightly nutty flavour, but the texture when you bite into the body is like that of a good prawn," he said.

Mr Uchiyama traces his interest in insect cuisine to his boyhood in the northern prefecture of Nagano, where shops would sell bags of grasshoppers cooked in sake, soy sauce and sugar. Now 58, he believes insects can be the healthy and nutritious answer to the world's growing food shortages.

"In order to get 1 kg of beef, we have to raise cows on huge areas of land and give them many more kilos of fodder before they are ready to be slaughtered," he said. "Insects eat the things that humans don't and can be kept in much smaller spaces.

"Most importantly, insects are very nutritionally balanced, have little fat and are the perfect food source."

Insects have been eaten for centuries, he said, with the Chinese fond of scorpions, huge spiders a delicacy in parts of South America and water bugs popular in Thailand. Although he admits that not all insects make good cuisine.

"The worst one I ate was the larvae of wood beetles, which tasted like leaf mould," he said. He also recommends that anyone trying his cockroach recipes not think about what they are eating when it is served.

To illustrate his point, Mr Uchiyama produced a selection of snacks for The Daily Telegraph to try. Giant brown Colombian ants were crunchy at first and had a roasted-nut aftertaste, while grasshoppers tasted of the soy and sugar they were cooked in. Be warned: they can leave a leg stuck between the teeth of the unwary diner.

Mr Uchiyama has baked crickets and silkworms into heart-shaped biscuits, taking the edge off the taste, but he tucked happily into a live weevil.

Trying a fat weevil, or zomushi, it wriggled on the tongue before finding its feet and starting to explore. It popped between my teeth with the slightest pressure, though it helped that it could be washed down with green tea.

"Look at all the problems we have had with traditional foodstuffs in recent years; mad cow disease, pesticides in food imported from China; processed food with high levels of fat and so on," said Mr Uchiyama.

"I'm not sure if my recipes will actually catch on, but I firmly believe they are a natural resource that benefit mankind."

Recipes

Yellow Hornet Larvae

Blanch the larvae in boiling water for 30 seconds, cool them off and serve with soy sauce and wasabi (Japanese horseradish). Mr Uchiyama says: "The larvae need to be fresh and the best ones are those that you have just taken from a nest, still moving. Then they are sweet and creamy."

Argentine Cockroach

Cut open shell, scoop out meat and fry with butter. Replace in shell to serve on top of salad. "It has no smell at all, but the texture of tender fish," says Mr Uchiyama.

Hornet or Silkworm Pupae

Fry at a high temperature for a very short time and serve wrapped in slices of "kamaboko" fish paste.


Read more!