Best of our wild blogs: 14 Nov 08


Pulau Jong
of dwarfs and a giant on the colourful clouds blog and the wild shores of singapore blog

Black-naped Monarch in display
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Small hill of high hopes
on Kusu Island on the annotated budak blog

Doing Simple Things for the Planet
on AsiaIsGreen

Slower shipping in Singapore
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Monitoring in Bukit Timah: Binjai Stream
on the Water Quality in Singapore blog

Pay To Watch Sun Set?
on the Manta Blog

6 & 7 Dec (Sat & Sun): Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve Anniversary Celebrations Amazing Mangrove Adventure and other activities planned, on the Singapore Celebrates our Reefs blog

Butcherbirds of Australia
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Enough With Coral As Home Decor
on the Malaria, Bedbugs, Sea Lice, and Sunsets blog


Read more!

Cleaner killed by tigers at Singapore Zoo

Khushwant Singh, Straits Times 14 Nov 08;

A CLEANER at the Singapore Zoo who jumped into the white tiger enclosure yesterday was killed by the animals as a horrified crowd looked on helplessly.

Malaysian Nordin Montong, 32, was set upon by two of the three big cats in the enclosure at around noon.

According to eyewitnesses, Mr Nordin, who was seen shouting and flinging items about shortly before the incident, vaulted a low wall and landed in a moat in the enclosure, four metres below.


Carrying a yellow pail and a broom, he then crossed the 1.75m-deep moat, walked up to a rocky ledge near where the animals were and began agitating them by swinging the broom.

As two of the tigers approached him, he covered his head with the pail, lay down on the ground, and curled himself into a foetal position, two eyewitnesses, an Australian couple, told police. Their identities were withheld pending investigations.

In a flash, two of the extremely rare white tigers were on him. One took a swipe at him with its paw - which is about the size of a softball glove - and he began screaming in pain, said another eyewitness, Dutch tourist W. R. de Boer.

He said many in the crowd of 30 or so onlookers at the enclosure initially thought the intrusion was part of a show.

But when Mr Nordin began screaming, they reacted with horror.

'Some were screaming: 'Go away' to the tigers and others were shouting to scare the tigers,' he said.

The cries alerted zoo staff, and the alarm was raised.

About 20 keepers arrived within minutes. Some tried to prevent the attack from continuing by throwing brooms and dustbin covers, while the rest ushered the shocked onlookers away.

Also deployed were two zookeepers armed with rifles and live ammunition, but these were not used, said the zoo's assistant director of zoology, Mr Biswajit Guha.

Despite the efforts of the keepers, one tiger continued attacking Mr Nordin for several minutes, the zoo said in a statement yesterday.

It only relented after a door to the tigers' feeding area was opened. The animals retreated to it, leaving the cleaner motionless on the ground.

Once the tigers were in the feeding area, the door separating it from the rest of the enclosure was closed, and keepers were able to reach the cleaner.

It was too late, however. Mr Nordin, who hails from Sarawak, had been bitten on the neck and suffered a fractured skull. He died before police arrived.

His colleagues later told zoo staff that the contract worker, who had been working at the zoo for about 41/2 months, had been behaving strangely minutes before the incident.

He had thrown his cutters and meal coupons about before telling them in Malay: 'Goodbye, you won't be seeing me again.'

He then rode off on his bicycle.

The Australian tourists also said they saw him shouting and throwing some things as he walked by the crocodile exhibit, just 10 minutes from the tiger enclosure.

Yesterday's incident was the first time a person had been killed by an animal at the zoo since it opened in 1973.

Before this, the most serious incident occurred in 2001, when Chawang, a bull elephant, gored his keeper of 18 years, Mr Gopal Krishnan.

The keeper suffered fractured ribs and a punctured lung, and was in hospital for close to two months before he eventually recovered.

The zoo, which had to stop the tram ride and prevent visitors from entering during the incident, said yesterday that it would close the white tiger exhibit temporarily as a precautionary measure. It did not say how long the closure would last.

It said the tigers, which are nine years old and were brought in from Sumatra in 2001, would not be put down as they had acted naturally.

White tiger exhibit safe for visitors: Zoo

THE white tigers' enclosure is safe for visitors as long as they stand outside it, the Singapore Zoo said yesterday.

It has closed the exhibit for the moment, but this is to facilitate investigations into the incident rather than for safety reasons, it said.

A moat separates the tigers from the visitors' bridge by 8.5m at the nearest point, and by 10m at the furthest.

The centre of the moat, its deepest portion, is 1.75m deep, while water on either side comes up to 1.5m. The fences on the sides of the enclosure are 5.8m high, and those at the back, 4.7m high.

Another 1.5m-high hot-wire fence stands in front of the 4.7m fence as an additional precaution.

These measurements 'conform to international safety guidelines imposed by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums', said Mr Biswajit Guha, the zoo's assistant director of zoology.

He pointed out that regular safety audits are held, with the last done on Sept 11. Only minor defects, such as rust on the fences and overgrown vegetation, were found, and rectified.

'In view of the permanent safety features, there is no risk to any visitor or zoo staff at any time,' he added.

LEE HUI CHIEH

Visitors at first thought tiger attack was a show
Tourist witnesses horrifying incident together with other shocked visitors
Esther Tan, Straits Times 14 Nov 08;

FOR Dutchman W. R. de Boer, paying a visit to the Singapore Zoo yesterday was meant to be a relaxing book-end to a business trip.

Instead, the 40-year-old witnessed one of the most horrifying things he has ever seen.

The software consultant, who arrived in Singapore two weeks ago, was among about 30 others who saw zoo cleaner Nordin Montong, 32, mauled to death by two white tigers yesterday afternoon.

In an interview with The Straits Times, Mr de Boer said he was concentrating on taking pictures of the tigers, and only realised something was amiss when he heard others screaming.

'I turned and saw a man lying on the ground with a bucket over his head. He yelled and the tigers came towards him,' he recalled. 'I thought it was a show at first. But I knew it wasn't when the claws came out and there was blood.'

Mr de Boer said he saw one of the tigers hit the man with its paw and then attacked him.

'I couldn't see clearly whether the tiger attacked his back or his neck because he still had the bucket on his head,' he said.

By then, visitors standing around the enclosure were screaming for the tigers to go away. One of them even threw an umbrella in to distract the tigers, he noted. But it did not work.

'I was afraid for the man,' he said.

The screams of the onlookers alerted zookeepers, and they arrived shortly after.

From the viewing area, the keepers tried to use a pole to prod the tigers and distract them from Mr Nordin, but it was too short, and soon, one of the tigers pounced on the cleaner.

Mr de Boer also saw a keeper armed with a rifle, but no shots were fired. Despite the horror unfolding before him, he kept clicking away with his camera. He later provided The Straits Times with pictures of the attack. 'I don't know why I (took the photos). I wasn't thinking,' he said.

He took just a few pictures before keepers ushered him away and cordoned off the enclosure.

Yesterday, the zoo declined media requests to speak to the keepers involved in the incident.

The zoo's director of sales and marketing Isabel Cheng said that keepers involved in the incident were not in a position to speak to the media as they were traumatised by what had happened. They were receiving counselling from a psychologist.

Two other visitors to the zoo, an Australian couple, gave a similar account of what happened, said the zoo yesterday. The couple, whose identities were withheld by police, had video footage of the attack taken from them by police.

According to the zoo, they told police that they said they had earlier seen Mr Nordin shouting and throwing things as he walked by the crocodile enclosure, a short distance from the tiger enclosure.

Minutes later, as they arrived to view the white tigers, they heard a splash and looked down to see the Malaysian contract worker in the moat.

They told police it appeared that Mr Nordin had deliberately provoked the animals.

Contacted again last night, Mr de Boer, who leaves Singapore tomorrow, said he was overwhelmed by the day's events. 'It's not nice to see something like this on a holiday,' he said.

In an emergency...
NOBODY is allowed in the white tigers' enclosure when the big cats are in it, the Singapore Zoo said yesterday.

When their dens need cleaning, it is done only after the beasts are confined in an adjoining den. If someone is attacked, staff members raise the alarm over their walkie-talkies. Field staff head for the site with emergency equipment, including fire extinguishers, extendable poles, cymbals and clay balls to distract the animals. Licensed shooters go to the zoo's armoury to collect a double-barrelled shotgun and a .375 rifle - 'shoot-to-kill weapons in case a life is in danger', said the zoo's assistant director of zoology Biswajit Guha. Yesterday, it took five minutes to activate the shooters. By the time they arrived, the tigers were already confined in their dens, so there was no need to shoot them, said Mr Guha.

LEE HUI CHIEH


White tigers very rare
WHITE tigers belong to the Bengal tiger subspecies native to the forests and grasslands in South Asia.

Bengal tigers make up about 60per cent of the world's wild tiger population, now estimated to stand at only 4,000 cats.

Only one in every 10,000 tigers has white instead of orange coat. There are about 200 white tigers in captivity. The Bengal white tiger is not an albino. It has dark stripes and blue eyes; albino tigers have completely white coats and pink eyes.

White tigers, which can now be seen only in captivity, can grow to more than 3m from nose to tail tip, and weigh more than 250kg. This big cat has 30 teeth, the longest ones at 7.5cm, with which it hunts wild boar, cattle and even smaller rhinoceroses. It can reportedly eat 18kg of meat at one go.

The zoo feeds its three nine-year-old white tigers beef, pork, mutton and chicken. Each tiger gets 3kg to 5kg of meat tossed to it daily, and another 7kg of meat thrice weekly in the den.

LEE HUI CHIEH

‘Goodbye, I won’t be seeing you again’
Zul Othman, Today Online 14 Nov 08;

HE HAD seemed disturbed at lunchtime, people later said: Tearing up food coupons, muttering agitatedly to himself.

Then Mr Nordin Montong turned to his co-worker at the Singapore Zoo and said, in Malay: “Goodbye, I won’t be seeing you again.”

With that, the 32-year-old contract worker rode away on his bike. Moments later, at about 12.15pm, he climbed over the 1.2-metre high railing of the white tiger exhibit, walked along the ledge — and jumped into the 10-metre wide moat.

He waded ashore and climbed onto the rocks, waving a pail and broom and “taunting” the animals, according to a horrified Australian couple. That’s when the three big cats, each weighing over 100kg, attacked.

As he curled into a foetal position, and visitors screamed, the tigers grabbed him by the neck and dragged him to the back of the exhibit.

A nearby staff sounded the alarm over the walkie-talkie system, and some 20 keepers converged, some ushering visitors away while others distracted the tigers and lured them into their dens.

Once the animals were confined, four of the zoo’s vets rushed in and gave Mr Nordin first aid. But by the time a Singapore Civil Defence Force ambulance arrived at 12.34pm, it was too late – Mr Nordin was pronounced dead 10 minutes later, with a fractured skull and bite wounds to the throat.

The Malaysian had been working at the zoo’s chimpanzee exhibit since June.

According to Ms Isabel Cheng, director of sales and marketing at the Singapore Zoo, this is the first such incident in the park’s 35-year history. “Our exhibits are designed to be safe but if someone wants to deliberately get in, they will find a way,” she said.

Mr Biswajit Guha, the assistant director of zoology, said: “At no time was any visitor or staff exposed to any danger.” The zoo has begun investigations and, to facilitate this, has “temporarily closed the white tiger exhibit to visitors”.

Zoo staff declined to be interviewed, but several visitors said Mr Nordin’s erratic behaviour had caught their eye.

Some told authorities he was shouting and throwing things around outside the exhibit.

One British tourist told TODAY he saw Mr Nordin try to climb into the enclosure, “which didn’t seem like an easy thing to do seeing it had high fences followed by a deep trench”.

Zoo authorities say the enclosure measurements conform to international safety guidelines. A moat between 8.5m and 10m wide, and up to 1.75m deep, surrounds the white tiger exhibit. Fences on the left and right wings stand 5.8m high, inclusive of the moat wall. The exhibit was last audited for safety on Sept 11.

Following security protocols, zoo operations were closed for half an hour, and resumed when it was found the incident was contained.

A police spokesperson said the case has been classified as that of “unnatural death” and investigations are on going. Mr Nordin’s family has been notified, and the zoo has offered them its condolences and assistance.

Malaysian worker dies after being attacked by white tigers at zoo
Satish Cheney, Channel NewsAsia 13 Nov 08;

SINGAPORE: A Malaysian contract worker died after being attacked by three white tigers at the Singapore Zoo on Thursday.

The worker has been identified as Nordin Bin Montong. Zoo officials said the 32-year-old had jumped into a moat at the white tiger enclave and was subsequently mauled to death by the white tigers.

Police said they received a report at 12.30pm about a man sustaining neck injuries at the zoo. Paramedics were called to the scene and Nordin was pronounced dead at 12.45pm.

Biswajit Guha, assistant director, Singapore Zoo, said: "Prior to the incident, the zookeepers had actually noticed that the contract worker was behaving erratically.

"He was throwing things around and as he was walking out of the zoo, he passed comments like 'Goodbye, you won't see me again'. He later cycled back and 5 minutes later, the alarm went off."

Nordin had jumped off the ledge into the water and once he was inside the enclave, the three white tigers mauled him for five to ten minutes, while 20 zookeepers tried desperately to save him by distracting the animals.

They were too late, as were the two licensed rifle shooters who were called to the scene.

As a precautionary measure, the white tiger exhibit has been temporarily closed and the 9-year-old tigers, which came from Indonesia, are in confinement for now.

Zoo officials said once the police finish their investigations, they would examine if there is a need to further enhance safety measures.

They added that it is natural for tigers to pounce on any prey and there is no reason to sedate the animals.

In a statement, the Singapore Zoo said the white tiger enclosure measurements conform to international safety guidelines imposed by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums.

Regular animal safety audits are also conducted every month and there is no risk to any visitor or staff at any time.
- CNA/yb/so

4 MINUTES OF TERROR
The New Paper 15 Nov 08;

They had seen a man in the enclosure belonging to three white tigers. It's just an animal act, thought Nizam Zainal and his six friends.

Who in their right mind would jump into an enclosure with three wild tigers, armed with nothing but a pail and a broomstick?

So Nizam continued filming at the White Tiger exhibit with his video camera.

His group of friends were all prepared for a relaxing day at the zoo, despite the cold, drizzly weather.

All of them had just completed their O-level examinations and had been looking forward to this break.

It was a slow day at the zoo. Small pockets of tourists were strolling around. It was a weekday. And the weather was dreary.

SUDDENLY, HE HEARD A LOUD SPLASH.

The 16-year-old swung his video camera around and was surprised to see Mr Nordin Montong, 32, wading in the water.

'I turned and saw a man in the water, walking slowly with both his arms outstretched, with a pail and a broom in each hand.

'The man looked very calm and was shouting at the tigers, trying to attract their attention.'

It must be a zoo-keeper who was familiar with the tiger exhibit, he thought, still calm.

Tiger approaches

One of the tigers, clearly excited by the splash, sprinted towards the water to investigate the disturbance.

Mr Nordin coolly emerged from the water and walked up a stone ledge, coming face-to-face with the still calm but curious and waiting tiger.

Nizam thought for a moment that the tiger was familiar with Mr Nordin and had gone to welcomehim.

PERHAPS THE TIGER WAS BEGGING FOR A SNACK, thought Nizam.

But the tiger suddenly swiped at Mr Nordin, to the horror of the 20-strong gawking, frightened crowd at the enclosure.

The blows brought Mr Nordin to his knees.

The huge cat then sank its teeth into the back of Mr Nordin's neck and tossed him around repeatedly like a ragdoll.

Then the second tiger crawled up the ledge.

Both tigers started to sniff at and circle Mr Nordin.

Nizam's friend, Fadzil Ramlee, also 16, shouted repeatedly to Mr Nordin: 'Dude, get into the water!'

Fadzil told The New Paper later. 'When he was being attacked, some people started screaming and shouting at him to get into the water.

'We also shouted at the tigers to distract them. One tourist threw his umbrella at the tigers but missed.'

His hands trembling, Fadzil continued shooting with his video camera, somewhat mesmerised by the vicious attack unfolding before his eyes.

Mr Nordin was then curled up on the stone ledge. He used the pail to cover his head.

The two tigers stood over him. Then they circled him, sniffed him - and began swiping at him repeatedly with their huge paws.

The tigers seemed distracted by the crowd's shouts and whistles, but they never left Mr Nordin's side.

This lasted a good two minutes.

The crowd swelled to more than 30 people, including some of the zoo's staff. One zookeeper tried to distract the tigers by using a long stick to hit the water.

Nizam said he didn't see any zoo staff armed with rifles.

Just when the crowd thought the tigers were distracted enough for Mr Nordin to be safe, one tiger suddenly grabbed him by the back of his neck and dragged him further into the enclosure.

The crowd screamed even louder at the two tigers, both in shock and horror, and in a desperate bid to distract the tigers.

The two tigers looked away, momentarily distracted by the crowd. Mr Nordin stood up but was quickly brought down again by the tigers.

One tiger started to bite Mr Nordin on his back repeatedly. The crowd cringed in horror.

Blood could be seen streaming from the wounds on his back. The tiger's mouth was also bloody. Mr Nordin was struggling and thrashing his legs about.

Then he became still.

That was Nizam's last glimpse of Mr Nordin.

Just before the four-minute clip ended, a third tiger emerge from the bushes.

Nizam and his friends were by then literally trembling. Nizam could no longer hold the camera steady.

They were ushered quickly out of the enclosure by the zoo-keepers, who then cordoned off the area.

The group remained quiet after that, traumatised by what they saw and captured on video.

Said Nizam: 'I didn't expect to shoot something so terrifying. It was so unreal.'

He said that his hand was shaking while he was shooting the entire scene, but for some reason, he couldn't put down the camera.

He said: 'It was emotional but I just couldn't put down the camera.'

The $1,100 video camera belongs to his father.

He said that he saw one girl crying, and holding on to her boyfriend while being led out of the enclosure.

The group continued their tour of the zoo, and returned to the enclosure about three hours later.

It was then that they learnt that the man had died from his injuries.

Said Fadzil: 'All of us thought that maybe the man was rescued and had only slight injuries.

'It's a terrible way to die.'

'Goodbye, I won't be seeing you again'
The New Paper 15 Nov 08;

BEFORE the four minutes of terror that were captured on video by Nizam Zainal, the horror began with what seemed like strange, agitated behaviour.

Contract cleaner Nordin Montong, 32, was seen fumbling through cards in a wallet and then throwing the contents into a crocodile enclosure.

An Australian couple saw him do this at the zoo's Treetops Trail near the main entrance. He then cycled away.

Zookeepers had also seen Mr Nordin near a building where workers have their meals. The area is not accessible to the public.

They saw him throw his food coupons and plant cutter to the ground, zoo officials said.

'Goodbye, I won't be seeing you again,' he announced to the zookeepers in Malay, before cycling out of the zoo through a back exit.

But minutes later, Mr Nordin was seen cycling back in through the main entrance.

Then there was a commotion at the white tiger exhibit...

A keeper nearby was alerted and he sent out the chilling message over the zoo's walkie-talkie system at 12.15pm: Someone was in the white tiger enclosure.

Zookeepers who were having their lunch sprung into action.

About 20 of them ran to the white tiger viewing gallery where horrified visitors were watching Mr Nordin approach the three tigers.

The three tiger keepers spread themselves out.

One of them joined the other keepers in trying to distract the tigers from Mr Nordin by shouting and throwing items like brooms and bin lids.

Meanwhile, the other two tiger keepers ran to the back of the exhibit to try to lure the tigers - a male and two females - back into their dens.

Veterinarians also rushed over to see how they could help the injured man, while the civil defence force and police were alerted.

Two licensed shooters, armed with rifles containing live rounds, arrived five minutes after the alarm was raised.

But the tigers were confined in their dens by the time the shooters got there.

The tigers had dragged Mr Nordin to the back of the enclosure and let go of him inside the passageway leading to the dens.

Four veterinarians then entered the passageway and administered first aid to Mr Nordin.

To get into the enclosure, Mr Nordin had jumped over a railing and fallen into the deep moat.

Before Mr Nordin jumped, someone had seen him climb onto and walk along the ledge at the viewing gallery, said Mr Biswajit Guha, the zoo's assistant director of zoology.

He told reporters that the tiger keepers had to lure the tigers into the den as no one is allowed to have direct contact with the beasts.

They are led into the den via a series of guillotine and sliding doors.

Mr Nordin was barely alive when he was pulled out.

Said Mr Guha: 'His heart was still beating but it was very weak. By the time the ambulance arrived, the vets were not able to resuscitate him.'

The ambulance arrived at 12.45pm, followed by the police at 1pm.

Mr Nordin had multiple bite wounds to his neck, and his skull was fractured.

'His family has been notified. Our heartfelt condolences are with Nordin's family and we will provide whatever assistance they need during this difficult period,' said Mr Guha.

He said it would have taken quite an effort to jump into the moat as there is a 1.5m-high wooden railing, followed by a 1m-wide planter bed with shrubs in front of the railing.

Why weren't the tigers shot?

Mr Guha said a tranquiliser dart was not used because the tiger was beside the worker.

'If darted, the tiger may react adversely to the sudden impact and redirect it to the worker. Tranquilisers are not instantaneous and will take time to react,' he added.

Mr Nordin, who is from Sarawak, Malaysia, was a cleaner with cleaning contractor Sun City Maintenance.

He started work in June and was tasked to clean the chimpanzee enclosure, about 1km away from the white tiger exhibit.

The two exhibits are at almost opposite ends of the zoo, said Mr Guha.

The white tiger enclosure was closed off after the incident. It will be closed for the next few days for a thorough check and to allow the tigers to settle down.

'We will continue to observe for any sign of stress in the animals and they will continue to be in our collection,' Mr Guha said.

The 9-year-old white tigers, named Omar, Jippie and Winnie, arrived at the Singapore Zoo from Indonesia in 2001.

As a safety precaution, the zoo will be checking to see if there are any areas that are easily breached, he added.

He said there was no risk to any visitor or zoo staff at any time.

A Sun City Maintenance spokesman said its operations manager had often described Mr Nordin as 'very hardworking'.

The police are investigating.


Read more!

Pasir Ris residents upset by noise, dirt from migrating birds

Benson Ang, The New Paper 14 Nov 08;

AT Pasir Ris, birds of a feather are everywhere - on air-con compressors, window ledges, corridor railings, bamboo poles, and even inside people's homes.

And so are the birds' droppings.

While the focus in recent years has been on controlling the crow population, Pasir Ris residents are now pressing for something to be done about the invasion of migrating swallows.

Housewife Quek Geok Keow, 45, who lives on the third storey of Block 645, along Pasir Ris Drive 10, is one of many frustrated residents.

She said that if she knew there were so many birds there before she bought her flat in March, she would not have moved in.

'When my agent first showed me the flat, the windows were covered with curtains, so I didn't see the bird droppings on the outside,' she said.

She noticed the bird droppings the night she moved in.

Her husband, 41, a technician, who wanted to be known only as Mr Goh for fear of embarrassment, complained to the Town Council a week after they moved into their flat.

The problem has prompted Madam Quek to think of creative ways to deal with the birds.

She fixed a plastic bag to one end of a bamboo pole. She holds this pole out of her window and makes a loud flapping sound with it, so that birds would not settle near her window.

She uses her device every evening.

And, she claims, the strategy has worked; There are now fewer birds landing on her window ledge.

When The New Paper visited the area last month at 7pm, we saw flocks of birds flying around the housing estate, in the corridors and through the void decks.

At the lift lobby outside Madam Quek's flat, we had to duck when a few birds flew directly at us.

The racket from the chirping birds was also quite loud and there was a faint smell of bird droppings in the air.

Madam Quek said: 'I feel like I'm living on a farm, with chickens and ducks.'

From her window, hundreds of birds could be seen flying around the housing estate.

Mr Goh said he is afraid to walk across the estate at night, 'because of the birds, not robbers.'

The Pasir Ris-Punggol Town Council said most of the birds are swallows (see report on facing page) but there are other breeds, too.

Housewife Angela Tan, who is in her 40s, has been living in Block 633, near Pasir Ris Drive 3, for more than 10 years.

She said the number of mynahs has become a problem, but only since last year. Scores of them gather on the rooftop in the mornings.

Last year, Madam Tan placed a wire mesh over her kitchen windows to prevent mynahs from flying into her home.

Not birdbrains

But the birds are clever, said Madam Tan. They force their way through the corners of the fence, and enter her home.

'When I come home and see bird droppings on my kitchen floor, I know they've been here,' she said. 'It's so disgusting.'

Madam Tan related an incident that happened to one of her friends who had left a basin of water in her sink.

When her friend returned to the sink after a few minutes, she found a mynah bathing in the water, and 'shaking its bottom' at her.

Residents have also found bird droppings on clothes put out to dry, and birds rummaging through their rubbish bins.

'I still hang my clothes out to dry, but keep an eye on them as I'm doing housework.

'If I see or hear any birds landing on my clothes, I immediately shoo them away,' Madam Tan said.

'These birds are not afraid of humans. Even when I shake the bamboo poles they are on, they refuse to fly away.'


Read more!

Christmas switch-on to lighten up the gloom?

Today Online 14 Nov 08;

AFTER weeks of economic gloom, yesterday may have seemed a good time to herald the start of the holiday season.

And a number of festive activities and announcements did just that.

This year’s Orchard Road Christmas light-up, to be officially switched on tomorrow by President SR Nathan, will be themed “A Sweet Christmas in Singapore” and feature environmentally-friendly light emitting diodes which will cut energy consumption by 70 per cent, said the Singapore Tourism Board (STB).

Conceptualised by Singaporean music composer Dick Lee, the shopping stretch will be lit with candy cane street lamps and decorated with cupcake houses and giant doughnuts.

The decorations will centre around the Sweet Family who live in Christmas Town and run a Sweet Shoppe.

This year’s tourist numbers are not expected to exceed last year’s visitorship of 1.8 million in November and December, but Ms Geraldine Yeo, STB’s director of leisure marketing and events management, told radio 938Live that the Board is still hoping for a healthy turnout.

Meanwhile, a Santa Claus flew in from Finland to bring cheer to children at Nanyang Primary School and the KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital’s Children’s Cancer Centre yesterday.

Flown in by homegrown retailer of Scandinavian-designed furniture Scanteak, the Santa — whose real name isMr Timo Alarik Pakkanen — also greeted invited guests and customers of the company at its Henderson Industrial Park outlet.

“Singapore’s a bit too warm for Santa, but it’s so clean and I love to be here,” said Mr Pakkanen.

A veteran Santa of 48 years, Mr Pakkanen will also visit cancer-stricken children at the National University Hospital before flying off on Monday.

Also launched was the Santa Claus Club in Singapore, one of fewer than 10 worldwide and the first in Asia.

The club is a partnership between the Santa Claus Finland Foundation and Scanteak, which owns the rights here. Scanteak customers who spend $800 or more will be entitled to a membership card, a letter and envelope addressed to Santa, a certificate and a stocking.

Over at Kreta Ayer and Pipit Road, about 30 staff from bread company Gardenia distributed 1,700 fruit and nut loaves to residents in one- and two-room rental flats.

Done in partnership with the Singapore Kindness Movement — which celebrated Good Neighbour Day yesterday — its aim was to reach out to the underprivileged, saidMs Lena Chew, Gardenia’s marketing communications manager. NEO CHAI CHIN

Christmas light-up tradition to kick off its 25th year on Saturday
Ali Smith, Channel NewsAsia 13 Nov 08;

SINGAPORE: Christmas is just over a month away and this year marks the 25th anniversary of the annual light up tradition at the Orchard Road belt.

This year's theme is "A Sweet Christmas in Singapore" and the decorations are centred around the Sweet Family.

Mascots will be going around Orchard Road and Marina Bay to meet and greet shoppers.

The shopping belt will be adorned with colourful gumdrops, lollipops and candy cane street lamps.

President S R Nathan will launch the annual light-up on November 15 at the Ngee Ann City Civic Plaza.

The lights will be turned on from 7pm to midnight, Monday through Thursday and from 7pm to 2am on Friday and Saturday.

The light-up will last until 2 January 2009. - CNA/vm


Read more!

Retiree wins top prize in NEA's 10% Energy Challenge

Lynda Hong, Channel NewsAsia 13 Nov 08;

SINGAPORE: Some 2,500 households took part in the National Environment Agency's (NEA) 10% Energy Challenge, which was held from May to August this year.

NEA said the average monthly household electricity consumption dipped by 4 per cent during the campaign, compared to the same period last year.

Wong Hwee Kiat, a retiree, managed to reduce energy consumption in his house by nearly 30 per cent every month since the NEA campaign started in May this year.

He uses energy efficient light bulbs and has stopped using the air-conditioning which he finds consumes the most amount of energy. This has helped him to reduce his utility bills, which is now in the S$80 range.

Mr Wong, who lives in a six-room executive flat with his wife and daughter, said all it took was a bit of adjusting.

"Initially, it was a bit uncomfortable without the air-conditioning. But gradually, it became a habit. It's human nature to want to enjoy luxury," he said.

Mr Wong was also the winner of the NEA challenge's lucky draw top prize, which is a S$90,000 fuel efficient hybrid car.


- CNA/so


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Global biodiversity panel knocked back at UN talks

Yahoo News 13 Nov 08;

KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) – Plans for a scientific panel on biodiversity, similar to a Nobel-winning group on climate change, have been knocked back by representatives of 80 countries at UN-sponsored talks.

Government officials and representatives of 129 organisations held a three-day conference in Malaysia to discuss the need for an Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).

The IPBES would have mirrored the functions of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change under the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which helped drive climate change to the top of the global agenda.

The panel was intended to be an independent authority on species loss, bringing together experts who can guide governments on the issue, amid warnings about the accelerating rate of extinction and its implications for humans.

"Many delegates supported the need for (a platform)... but others considered that it is too early to conclude whether there is a need for a new and independent body," the UNEP said in a statement late Wednesday.

Delegates, who included representatives from the United States, China, India and African and European nations, called for a study into the weaknesses and strengths of all existing mechanisms before embarking on a new panel.

UNEP boss Achim Steiner had said at the opening of the conference that the IPBES was aimed at bringing scientific knowledge on biodiversity into the political arena to enable governments to make informed decisions.

"Data alone does not create options on how to act, you have to turn that into politically and economically viable actions," he said at the meeting in Malaysia's administrative capital Putrajaya.

Malaysian officials said on condition of anonymity that the Putrajaya conference was "too premature to be able to reach any decisions".

"There were fears by some that this was just another agenda waiting to be hijacked by the north to dictate to the south and to curtail their development activities. There is still a long way to go," one official told AFP.

He was referring to allegations by developing nations in the global "south" that the industrialised "north" is unfairly imposing on them the burden of addressing issues like climate change.

The conference did not decide when and where the next round of meetings would be held.

Biodiversity advocates have struggled for decades to sound the alarm over the need for a plan to save Earth's vanishing flora and fauna, much of it in tropical rainforests and the sea.

Nations Take Forward Debate on How Best to Put 'Natural Assets' at the Top of the International Political Agenda

More Discussions Necessary on Requirement for an Intergovernmental Scientific Body for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services

UNEP website 12 Nov 08;

Putrajaya/Nairobi, 12 November 2008 - Close to 100 nations concluded a review of how science can better guide policy by examining the merits of a new scientific body able to put the loss of biodiversity, ecosystems and their multi-trillion dollar services at the top of the political agenda.

Recommendations on the final day included one to carry out a preliminary ‘gap analysis’ on where the link between scientists and those that make policy decisions at a national, regional and global level might be strengthened and for the Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) to present toe outcome of this week to UNEP’s Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum - the big gathering of environment ministers scheduled for mid-February 2009.

The meeting also recommended that the UNEP Governing Council “requests the Executive Director to “convene a second Intergovernmental Multi-stakeholder Meeting on an Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services.”

And added:” With the view to strengthening and improving the science-policy interface for biodiversity and ecosystem services for human well-being, including consideration of a new science-policy platform.

The nations, gathering over three days in the Malaysian city of Putrajaya, were weighing the effectiveness of existing mechanisms to translate science into policy- action by governments including the merits of establishing an Intergovernmental Panel or Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES.

It reflects growing concern that the current international response is failing to galvanize a real and meaningful response to the decline of the globe’s economically important natural or nature-based assets from species and soils to forests and fisheries.

The failure is in part as a result of a fragmented landscape of reports and assessments by a multitude of organizations each coming to the issue from different approaches and with different methods.

“The end result is that a policy-makers lack the validated, coherent and actionable guide to what is the most sensible tack for turning around biodiversity loss and ecosystem degradation,” said Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme which convened the Malaysia meeting.

“An intergovernmental body, perhaps mirroring the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which has put global warming high on the political radar, is one of the options that represents a possible way forward,” he added.

“One thing that was not in doubt here was an overwhelming acceptance that business and usual is unlikely to stem the tide of decline of the Earth’s natural world and natural assets and that some kind of urgent response is long overdue - that a transition to a Green Economy must put scientific and sustainable use of these resources amongst the top political priorities,” said Mr Steiner.

The nations meeting in Malaysia today requested a ‘gaps’ report aimed at pin pointing where the problems in the current response to biodiversity and ecosystem decline actually rest.

Some of those could include the current gaps in knowledge on the precise link between biodiversity, healthy ecosystems and thus livelihoods.

In other words how many species can disappear from a forest or fertile soils before they collapse or become ever less productive?

Meanwhile many experts believe that an intergovernmental panel or platform could provide early warning of biologically-related developments of regional or global significance years in advance of their public emergence.

Some experts cite the case of biofuels, an area that has triggered fierce and polarized public debate in recent months. The issues surrounding biofuels or certain kinds of biofuels have been known to scientists for several decades, but only now are hitting the headlines.

Similar arguments can be made for the disappearance of amphibians as a result of viruses or perhaps climate change and for acidification of the oceans and loss of coral reefs as a result of the build up of C02 in the atmosphere and the seas.

Others believe that some of the greatest ‘gaps’ exist in developing countries where there is an urgent and practical need to strengthen the knowledge, skills and capacity to carry out biodiversity and ecosystem assessments in the first place.

Nations this week requested that such a gaps analysis, able to demonstrate the need or otherwise of an international panel or some other mechanism, should be presented before a global gathering of the world’s environment ministers.

The meeting - UNEP’s Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum- is scheduled to take place in Nairobi, Kenya in mid-February 2009.

Notes to Editors

Documents for the meeting, which ran from 10 to 12 November at the Putrajaya International Convention Centre, can be found at http://www.ipbes.net/en/index.aspx

UNEP Global Environment Outlook-4 http://www.unep.org/geo/geo4/media/

Millennium Ecosystem Assessment http://www.millenniumassessment.org/en/index.aspx

UNEP Green Economy Initiative http://www.unep.org/greeneconomy/


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Malaysian logging plans threaten rhinos and tigers

WWF website 13 Nov 08;

Petaling Jaya, Malaysia: Habitats of the critically endangered Sumatran rhinoceros and the endangered Malayan tiger are under threat from a plan to clear nearly 19,000 hectares of forest in north-eastern Malaysia.

A Detailed Environmental Impact Assessment (DEIA) has revealed that the Terengganu state government has proposed to extract all commercially valuable timber in 12,630ha of forest, adjacent to the 6,130ha of forest reserve currently being cleared for the construction of two hydropower dams.

The Tembat and Petuang Forest Reserves also act as a water catchment area for Tasik Kenyir, the largest man-made lake in South-east Asia. They are currently being logged to build the Puah and Tembat dams and are home to the Sumatran rhinoceros and Malayan tiger. The forest reserves also fall within the dam catchment area.

In addition the DEIA, which was available for public viewing recently, states that 30 per cent of the existing elephant population within the project area will be forced into nearby plantations, creating more human-elephant conflict.

“Evidence on the ground also suggests that logging and clearing of the reservoir area has already proceeded prior to the approval of the DEIA,” said Dato’ Dr. Dionysius Sharma, CEO of WWF-Malaysia. “There seems to be little regard for relevant laws and the DEIA process.”

A survey conducted as part of the DEIA has revealed evidence of the presence of the elusive Sumatran rhinoceros within the Tembat Forest Reserve, and as recently as August 2008 a survey by the Department of Wildlife and National Parks’ Sumatran Rhinoceros Task Force revealed evidence such as feeding trails and horn scratch marks.

Both forest reserves are also habitats for other endangered wildlife like the Malayan tiger and Malayan tapir, which are totally protected under the Protection of Wildlife Act 1972.

Dato’ Dionysius also expressed his concerns over the anticipated high erosion rate due to the logging activity and forest clearing in the area, leading to deterioration in river water quality. “The Kelah fish population found in rivers there will undeniably decrease,” he said. Kelah has high conservation and commercial values.

The DEIA report also states that the deterioration in river water quality in Sungai Tembat and Sungai Terengganu Mati will affect eco-tourism and that high soil erosion and sedimentation will affect fish biodiversity and spawning grounds.

Dato’ Dionysius further stated that logging in a dam catchment forest will increase siltation and could reduce the dam lifetime in the long run, even if logging was only carried out during the construction stage of the dam. “This is because forests take many years to regenerate and fully resume their ecosystem function as water catchment and for soil protection,” he said.


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Brown clouds of pollution a huge threat to Asia: UN

Yahoo News 13 Nov 08;

BEIJING (AFP) – Enormous brown clouds of pollution hanging over Asia are killing hundreds of thousands of people, melting glaciers, changing weather patterns and damaging crops, the United Nations said Thursday.

Car traffic, factory emissions and indoor cooking are among the culprits for the "Atmospheric Brown Clouds", which are up to three kilometres (1.8 miles) thick, according the UN's Environment Programme (UNEP).

Releasing a landmark report on the phenomenon, the UNEP said getting rid of the clouds could help ease many environmental problems in Asia.

"The Atmospheric Brown Cloud is both complex and in need of a great deal more attention," UNEP executive director Achim Steiner told reporters.

Unlike greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming, which take decades or longer to disperse, the clouds would disappear in a matter of weeks if the sources of the problem ceased to pollute, the report said.

Five Atmospheric Brown Cloud (ABC) hotspots have been detected around the world, three of which are in Asia.

Asia's dense population and heady development of recent decades are two of the main reasons for the clouds, with one vast expanse of soot hovering across the Arabian Peninsula through to China and the western Pacific Ocean.

The clouds are so prevalent that black soot has been detected at Mount Everest base camp at levels normally expected in urban areas, according to the report.

The soot that has fallen on the glaciers of the Himalayas and other mountainous regions of Asia have amplified the effects of climate change, because the black particles absorb more heat.

However the clouds can both magnify and mask climate change, because the pollutants also block sunlight.

But the report said many of the consequences of the clouds were indisputable, such as accelerating the melting of glaciers, which in turn has a long-term negative impact on water resources and crop yields across Asia.

The pollutants have also contributed to decreases in the Indian summer monsoons and a north-south shift in rainfall patterns in China.

"The human fatalities from indoor and outdoor exposures to ABC-relevant pollutants have also become a source of grave concern," the report said.

The UNEP estimated that as many as 340,000 people died each year in China and India alone from cardiovascular, respiratory and other diseases linked to exposure to the pollutants.

UN: Clouds of pollution threaten glaciers, health
Tini Tran and John Heilprin, Associated Press Yahoo News 14 Nov 08;

BEIJING – A dirty brown haze sometimes more than a mile thick is darkening skies not only over vast areas of Asia, but also in the Middle East, southern Africa and the Amazon Basin, changing weather patterns around the world and threatening health and food supplies, the U.N. reported Thursday.

The huge smog-like plumes, caused mainly by the burning of fossil fuels and firewood, are known as "atmospheric brown clouds."

When mixed with emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases blamed for warming the earth's atmosphere like a greenhouse, they are the newest threat to the global environment, according to a report commissioned by the U.N. Environment Program.

"All of this points to an even greater and urgent need to look at emissions across the planet," said Achim Steiner, head of Kenya-based UNEP, which funded the report with backing from Italy, Sweden and the United States.

Brown clouds are caused by an unhealthy mix of particles, ozone and other chemicals that come from cars, coal-fired power plants, burning fields and wood-burning stoves. First identified by the report's lead researcher in 1990, the clouds were depicted Thursday as being more widespread and causing more environmental damage than previously known.

Perhaps most widely recognized as the haze this past summer over Beijing's Olympics, the clouds have been found to be more than a mile thick around glaciers in the Himalaya and Hindu Kush mountain ranges. They hide the sun and absorb radiation, leading to new worries not only about global climate change but also about extreme weather conditions.

"All these have led to negative effects on water resources and crop yields," the report says.

Health problems associated with particulate pollution, such as cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, are linked to nearly 350,000 premature deaths in China and India every year, said Henning Rohde, a University of Stockholm scientist who worked on the study.

Soot levels in the air were reported to have risen alarmingly in 13 megacities: Bangkok, Beijing, Cairo, Dhaka, Karachi, Kolkata, Lagos, Mumbai, New Delhi, Seoul, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Tehran.

Brown clouds were also cited as dimming the light by as much as 25 percent in some places including Karachi, New Delhi, Shanghai and Beijing.

The phenomenon complicates the climate change scenario, because the brown clouds also help cool the earth's surface and mask the impact of global warming by an average of 40 percent, according to the report.

Though it has been studied closely in Asia, the latest findings, conducted by an international collaboration of scientists, reveal that the brown cloud phenomenon is not unique to Asia, with pollution hotspots seen in North America, Europe, South Africa and South America.

More specifically, researchers found, brown clouds are forming over eastern China; northeastern Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and Myanmar; Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam; sub-Saharan Africa southward into Angola, Zambia and Zimbabwe; and the Amazon Basin in South America.

The enormous cloud masses can move across continents within three to four days. Although they also form over the eastern U.S. and Europe, winter snow and rain tend to lessen the impact in those areas.

An international response is needed to deal with "the twin threats of greenhouse gases and brown clouds and the unsustainable development that underpins both," said the lead researcher, Veerabhadran Ramanathan, a professor of climate and ocean sciences at the University of California in San Diego.

One of the most serious problems, Ramanathan said, is retreat of the glaciers in the Himalaya and Hindu Kush and in Tibet. The glaciers feed most Asian rivers and "have serious implications for the water and food security of Asia," he said.

Monsoon rains over India and southeast Asia decreased between 5 and 7 percent overall since the 1950s, the report says, naming brown clouds and global warming as a possible cause. Likewise, they may have contributed to the melting of China's glaciers, which have shrunk 5 percent since the 1950s. The volume of China's nearly 47,000 glaciers has fallen by 3,000 square kilometers (1,158.31 square miles) in the past 25 years, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Soot winds up on the surface of the glaciers that feed the Ganges, Indus, Yangtze and Yellow rivers, which makes the glaciers absorb more sunlight and melt more quickly and also pollutes the rivers, the researchers say.

But the U.N., which began studying the problem six years ago, still finds "significant uncertainty" in understanding how brown clouds affect conditions regionally, Ramanathan cautioned.
___

Associated Press Writer John Heilprin contributed to this report from the United Nations.

Giant Asian smog cloud masks warming impact: U.N.
Emma Graham-Harrison, Reuters 13 Nov 08;

BEIJING (Reuters) - A three-kilometer thick cloud of brown soot and other pollutants hanging over Asia is darkening cities, killing thousands and damaging crops but may be holding off the worst effects of global warming, the U.N. said on Thursday.

The vast plume of contamination from factories, fires, cars and deforestation contains some particles that reflect sunlight away from the earth, cutting its ability to heat the earth.

"One of the impacts of this atmospheric brown cloud has been to mask the true nature of global warming on our planet," United Nations Environment Program head Achim Steiner said at the launch in Beijing of a new report on the phenomenon.

The amount of sunlight reaching earth through the murk has fallen by up to a quarter in the worst-affected areas and if the brown cloud disperses, global temperatures could rise by up to 2 degrees Celsius.

But the overall effect of slowing climate change is not the silver lining to a dark cloud that it appears to be.

The choking soup of pollutants may hold temperatures down overall, but the mix of particles means it is also speeding up warming in some of the most vulnerable areas and exacerbating the most devastating impacts of higher temperatures.

The complex impact of the cloud, which tends to cool areas near the surface of the earth and warm the air higher up, is believed to be causing a shortening of the monsoon season in India while increasing flooding there and in southern China.

Soot from the cloud is also deposited on glaciers, which are at the center of environmentalists' and politicians' concerns because they feed Asia's key rivers and provide drinking water for billions who live along them.

There the particles capture more solar heat than white, reflective snow and ice -- speeding up melting of a key resource. At a monitoring station near Mount Everest, soot has been found at levels which scientists say would be expected in urban areas.

There is also a high human cost. The report estimates round 340,000 people are dying prematurely because of damage to their lungs, hearts and risk of cancer.

DARKER CITIES, SMALLER HARVESTS?

Scientists are still studying the impact on crops, but possible problems include falling harvests because of less energy for photosynthesis and higher ozone concentrations.

There may also be damage from acidic and toxic particles in the cloud that land on plants, and wider changes to weather patterns may dry up or flood fields.

"The emergence of the atmospheric brown cloud problem is expected to further aggravate the recent dramatic escalation of food prices and the consequent challenge for survival among the world's most vulnerable populations," the report said.

One consolation, however, is that if the world stopped emitting the particles that form the cloud, it could be expected to vanish in weeks, unlike many longer-lasting greenhouse gasses.

The ingredients that make up the cloud are little different from the smog that cloaks many of the world's large cities, particularly in developing nations.

But scientists have realized this local pollution is a global problem, because of the way it rises and spreads.

"We used to think of the brown cloud as a regional-scale urban problem, now we know because of fast transport it travels vertically for three to four kilometers and spreads," said Professor Veerabhadran Ramanathan, head of the U.N. scientific panel which is carrying out the research.

There are similar brown clouds over parts of Europe, North America, Africa and the Amazon Basin, though research so far has been focused on the Asian cloud which stretches from the Arabian Peninsula to the Pacific Ocean.

(Editing by Valerie Lee)

Wide Spread and Complex Climatic Changes Outlined in New UNEP Project Atmospheric Brown Cloud Report

Cities Across Asia Get Dimmer: Impacts on Glaciers, Agriculture and the Monsoon Get Clearer

UNEP website 13 Nov 08;

Beijing/Nairobi, 13 November 2008 - Cities from Beijing to New Delhi are getting darker, glaciers in ranges like the Himalayas are melting faster and weather systems becoming more extreme, in part, due to the combined effects of man-made Atmospheric Brown Clouds (ABCs) and greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

These are among the conclusions of scientists studying a more than three km-thick layer of soot and other manmade particles that stretches from the Arabian Peninsula to China and the western Pacific Ocean.

Today the team, drawn from research centres in Asia including China and India, Europe and the United States, announced their latest and most detailed assessment of the phenomenon.

The brown clouds, the result of burning of fossil fuels and biomass, are in some cases and regions aggravating the impacts of greenhouse gas-induced climate change, says the report.

This is because ABCs lead to the formation of particles like black carbon and soot that absorb sunlight and heat the air; and gases such as ozone which enhance the greenhouse effect of CO2.

Globally however brown clouds may be countering or 'masking' the warming impacts of climate change by between 20 and up to 80 per cent the researchers suggest.

This is because of particles such as sulfates and some organics which reflect sunlight and cool the surface.

The cloud is also having impacts on air quality and agriculture in Asia increasing risks to human health and food production for three billion people.

Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director, UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said: "One of UNEP's central mandates is science-based early warning of serious and significant environmental challenges. I expect the Atmospheric Brown Cloud to be now firmly on the international community's radar as a result of today's report".

The phenomenon has been most intensively studied over Asia. This is in part because of the region's already highly variable climate including the formation of the annual Monsoon, the fact that the region is undergoing massive growth and is home to around half the world's population.

But the scientists today made clear that there are also brown clouds elsewhere including over parts of North America, Europe, southern Africa and the Amazon Basin which also require urgent and detailed research.

"Combating rising CO2 levels and climate change is the challenge of this generation but it is also the best bet the world has for Green Growth including new jobs and new enterprises from a booming solar and wind industry to more fuel efficient, vehicles, homes and workplaces. Developed countries must not only act first but also assist developing economies with the finance and clean technology needed to green energy generation and economic growth," said Mr Steiner.

"In doing so, they can not only lift the threat of climate change but also turn off the soot- stream that is feeding the formation of atmospheric brown clouds in many of the world's regions. This is because the source of greenhouse gases and soot are often one and the same - unsustainable burning of fossil fuels, inefficient combustion of biomass and deforestation," he added.

Professor Veerabhadran Ramanathan, head of the UNEP scientific panel which is carrying out the research said: "I would like to pay tribute to my distinguished colleagues, drawn from universities and research centres in Asia including China, India, Japan, Korea, Singapore and Thailand as well as Europe and the United States".

"Our preliminary assessment, published in 2002, triggered a great deal of awareness but also skepticism. That has often been the initial reaction to new, novel and far reaching, counter-intuitive scientific research," he said.

"We believe today's report brings ever more clarity to the ABC phenomena and in doing so must trigger an international response - one that tackles the twin threats of greenhouse gases and brown clouds and the unsustainable development that underpins both," added professor Ramanathan who is based at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California.

"One of the most serious problems highlighted in the report is the documented retreat of the Hind Kush-Himalayan-Tibetan glaciers, which provide the head-waters for most Asian rivers, and thus have serious implications for the water and food security of Asia," he said.

"The new research, by identifying some of the causal factors, offers hope for taking actions to slow down this disturbing phenomenon; it should be cautioned that significant uncertainty remains in our understanding of the complexity of the regional effects of ABCs and more surprises may await us " added Professor Ramanathan.

Highlights from Atmospheric Brown Clouds: Regional Assessment Report with Focus on Asia

Five regional hotspots for ABCs have been indentified. These are:

* East Asia, covering eastern China;

* The Indo-Gangetic plains in South Asia from the northwest and northeast regions of eastern Pakistan across India to Bangladesh and Myanmar;

* Southeast Asia, covering Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam;

* Southern Africa extending southwards from sub-Saharan Africa into Angola, Zambia and Zimbabwe; and

* The Amazon Basin in South America.

There are hotspots too in North America over the eastern seaboard and in Europe - but winter precipitation tends to remove them and reduce their impact.

Cities and 'Dimming'

Around 13 megacities have so far been identified as ABC hotpots.

Bangkok, Beijing, Cairo, Dhaka, Karachi, Kolkata, Lagos, Mumbai, New Delhi, Seoul, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Tehran where soot levels are 10 per cent of the total mass of all human-made particles.

ABCs can reduce sunlight hitting the Earth's surface in two ways.

Some of the particles such as sulphates, linked with burning coal and other fossil fuels, reflect and scatter rays back into space.

Others, also linked with fossil fuel and biomass burning, in particular black carbon in soot, absorb sunlight before it reaches the ground. The overall effect is to make 'hot spot' cities darker or dimmer.

* 'Dimming' of between 10-25 per cent is occurring over cities such as Karachi, Beijing, Shanghai and New Delhi

* Guangzhou is among several cities that have recorded a more than 20 per cent reduction in sunlight since the 1970s

* For India as a whole, the dimming trend has been running at about two per cent per decade between 1960 and 2000 - more than doubling between 1980 and 2004.

* "In China the observed dimming trend from the 1950s to the 1990s was about 3-4 per cent per decade, with the larger trends after the 1970s," says the report.

Impact on Cloud Formation and a Further Dimming Effect

* Regions with large concentrations of ABCs may be getting cloudier which can also contribute to dimming but data are not sufficient to quantify this effect.

* Particles and aerosols in the ABCs may act to inhibit the formation of rain drops and rainfall. "The net effect is an extension of cloud life-times," says the report.

Masking the Impacts of Climate Change

ABCs shield the surface from sunlight by reflecting solar radiation back to space and by absorbing heat in the atmosphere.

These two dimming phenomena can act to artificially cool the Earth's surface especially during dry seasons. The pollution can also be transported around the world via winds in the upper troposphere (above 5 km in altitude).

* As a result global temperature rises - linked with greenhouse gas emissions - may currently be between 20 per cent and 80 per cent less as a result of brown clouds around the world says the report.

* If brown clouds were eliminated overnight, this could trigger a rapid global temperature rise of as much as to 2 degrees C.

* Added to the 0.75 degrees C rise of the 20th century, this could push global temperatures well above 2 degrees C - considered by many scientists to be a crucial and dangerous threshold.

* Thus simply tackling the pollution linked with brown cloud formation without simultaneously delivering big cuts in greenhouse gases could have a potentially disastrous effect.

Complex Regional Impacts on Temperature

The science of ABCs, woven with the science of greenhouse gases, is not simple and may be behind some highly complex warming and cooling patterns witnessed on Continents and in different regions of specific countries.

* The masking of greenhouse warming by ABCs may in part be the explanation for the lack of a strong warming trend over India since the 1950s during the dry season which runs from January to May.

* ABCs may explain in part why the warming trend in India's night time temperatures is much larger than the trend in day time temperatures.

* Annual mean temperatures in mainland China have risen by over one degree C in the past half century.

* However the trends have not been uniform with the Tibetan Plateau and the North, Northeast and Northwest of China experiencing the highest temperature rises.

* Conversely Southwest and central Eastern China has experienced a strong cooling trend of between 0.1 to 0.3 degrees C per decade.

* "The combined effects of greenhouse gases, ABCs and rapid urbanization are required to explain the complex pattern of warming and cooling trends in China," says the report.

Impacts on Weather Patterns Including the East Asian Monsoon

The large heating and cooling effects of ABCs respectively in the atmosphere and at the surface, combined with the impacts of greenhouse gases, may be also triggering sharp shifts in weather patterns.

This is being aggravated by dimming over the Northern Indian Ocean versus the relatively clean Southern Indian Ocean setting up new gradients in surface sea temperatures and surface sea evaporation rates.

ABCs, along with the global warming may thus be acting to trigger significant drying in northern China and increased risk of flooding in southern China while in part also triggering other environmental and economic effects.

* Overall decrease in monsoon precipitation over India and Southeast Asia by between five and seven per cent since the 1950s.

* Since the 1950s the Indian summer monsoon is not only weakening but shrinking with a decrease in early and late season rainfall and a decline in the number of rainy days.

* In both China and India extreme rain events of more than 100 mm a day have increased.

* In both India and China very heavy rainfall of more than 150 mm a day have nearly doubled.

Impact on Glaciers

The Hindu Kush-Himalaya-Tibetan glaciers provide the head-waters for the major river systems including the Ganges, Brahmaputra, Mekong and Yangtze rivers.

The Ganges basin is home to over 400 million people and holds 40 per cent of India's irrigated croplands.

The Chinese Academy of Sciences estimates that the glaciers have shrunk five per cent since the 1950s and the volume of China's nearly 47,000 glaciers has fallen by 3,000 square km over the past quarter century.

Glaciers in India such as the Siachen, Gangotri and Chhota Shigiri glaciers are retreating at rates of between 10 and 25 metres a year. The retreat has accelerated in the past three and-a-half decades.

The Gangotri glacier alone provides up to 70 per cent of the water in the Ganges.

* ABC solar heating of the atmosphere, due to the absorption of soot and black carbon pollution "is suggested to be as important as greenhouse gas warming in accounting for the anomalously large warming trend observed in the elevated regions" such as the Himalayan-Tibetan region says the report.

* Decreased reflection of solar radiation by snow and ice due to increasing deposits of black carbon is emerging as another major contributor to the melting of ice and snow.

* Elevated regions of the Himalayas within 100 km of Mount Everest experience large black carbon concentrations ranging from a few hundred to a few thousand nano grammes per cubic metre.

Impacts on Agriculture

Impacts of ABCs on food production and farmers' livelihoods may be many.

However there remains a great deal more research to undertake in terms of crops at risk and the precise role various ABC-linked effects - separately or in combination with those of greenhouse gases - may or may not be having.

Possible effects may include

* Damage to crops as a result of increased ground level ozone. In Europe a threshold concentration at which damage can occur is deemed to be 40 parts per billion

* The report says that in parts of Asia ground level ozone can reach 50 parts per billion during February to June and peaking again between September and November at 40 parts per billion

* The studies suggest that growing season mean ozone concentrations in the range 30 - 45 parts per billion could see crop yield losses in the region of 10 - 40 per cent for sensitive cultivars of important Asian crops such as wheat rice and legumes

* A recent study translated such impacts on yield into annual economic losses estimating that for four key crops - wheat, rice, corn and soya bean - these may amount to around $5 billion a year across China, the Republic of Korea and Japan

* Other effects may include damage linked with the various acidic and toxic particles from brown clouds depositing on plants from the atmosphere

* Reduced levels of photosynthesis and thus crop production due to 'dimming'

Health Impacts of ABCs

Brown clouds contain a variety of toxic aerosols, carcinogens and particles including particulate matter (PM) of less than 2.5 microns in width. These have been linked with a variety of health effects from respiratory disease and cardio-vascular problems.

* Outdoor exposure - Increases in concentrations of PM 2.5 of 20 microgrammes per cubic metre could lead to about 340,000 excess deaths per year in China and India

* Indoor exposure - the World Health Organization estimates that over 780,000 deaths in the two countries can be linked to solid fuel use in the home

* Economic losses due to outdoor exposure to ABC-related PM2.5 has been crudely estimated at 3.6 per cent of GDP in China and 2.2 per cent of GDP in India

Notes to Editors

Project Atmospheric Brown Cloud was established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in 2002 following the documentation of brown clouds and haze by the Indian Ocean Experiment (INDOEX).

The science secretariat of ABC is located at the Center for Clouds, Chemistry and Climate, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD.

The current project is funded by UNEP with support from the governments of Italy, Sweden and the United States.

Atmospheric Brown Clouds: Regional Assessment Report with Focus on Asia can be found at www.unep.org


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Vietnam to grow genetically modified crops: reports

Yahoo News 13 Nov 08;

HANOI (AFP) – Vietnam plans to test genetically modified (GM) agricultural crops from now until 2010 and then grow them on a large scale, media reports in the communist country said on Thursday.

Agriculture Minister Cao Duc Phat announced the plan in a National Assembly session this week, said the state-run Vietnam News Agency.

Under the government plan, Vietnam would from 2011 plant GM species of maize, cotton and soybean, said the news site Vietnamnet quoting experts attending a recent biotechnology workshop.

The Ho Chi Minh City Biotechnology Centre plans to grow a GM maize variety from the Philippines on a trial basis, the report said.

GM technology has been highly controversial, praised by some for increasing yields and improving varieties, and condemned by others for creating "frankenfoods" that pose dangers to the environment and people's health.

Environmental group Greenpeace has called for a worldwide recall of GM foods, with a spokesman saying this week that distributing them was "like playing Russian roulette with consumers and public health."


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Japan rejects report to cut whaling target

Yahoo News 13 Nov 08;

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan rejected a report Thursday that it would cut by 20 percent the number of whales it planned to hunt in the Southern Ocean because of anti-whaling protests, but said it would keep its moratorium on catching humpbacks.

The Asahi Shimbun daily reported that Japan aimed to cut its target to 700 minke and 50 fin whales in the southern summer hunt, due to start shortly, which Australia's environment minister said would be the first cut in numbers since Japan started its current whaling program 21 years ago.

Japan, which considers whaling to be a cherished cultural tradition, abandoned commercial whaling in accordance with an international moratorium in 1986, but began what it calls a scientific research whaling program the following year.

A government official said there was no truth to the Asahi report, which said the reduced target was because of high-seas skirmishes with anti-whaling activists in recent years and dwindling demand for the meat from Japanese consumers.

"There is no change to our plans," said Toshinori Uoya, assistant director of the far seas fisheries division at the Fisheries Agency.

Japan still planned to hunt around 850 minke whales and 50 fin whales, the same target as last year, Uoya said.

It would also continue to avoid killing humpback whales for now, while the International Whaling Commission (IWC) held talks on "normalising" its functions, he added.

Previous plans to hunt humpbacks had sparked an outcry from activists, with the endangered whales popular among whale watchers for their distinctive silhouette and acrobatic leaps.

Japan's annual hunts have led to heated clashes between whalers and activists, with activists boarding a whaling ship last year and Japan and Australia exchanging complaints, although both agreed not to let the issue hurt diplomatic ties.

Japan said sabotage by activists reduced its catch to 551 whales last season.

"We plan to do all that we can to prepare ourselves against protests this season, although we can't go into detail on what we will do," Uoya said.

Australia's Environment Minister Peter Garrett, citing the Asahi report in parliament, said that any reduction in Japan's whaling target would be an encouraging sign that international opposition to scientific whaling was having an effect.

"Since 1987, the target has only increased, including more than doubling the number of whales targeted between 2004/05 and 2005/06," he said.

(Reporting by Chisa Fujioka and Rob Taylor in SYDNEY)


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Japanese whale industry's flagship restaurant to close

The whale industry has announced plans to close its flagship whale meat restaurant in Tokyo as the nation's fleet of whalers prepares to depart on its annual cull.

Danielle Demetriou, The TelegraphYushin, owned by The Institute for Cetacean Research, the organisation behind Japan's whaling programme, and Kyodo Senpaku, which operates the whaling fleet, was designed to showcase and promote the consumption of whale meat in Japan.

However, the owners of the restaurant, which also had a whale meat shop and was located in the historic tourist area of Asakusa in Tokyo, have now unveiled plans to close it down.

Whale meat supplied in Yushin's shop and restaurant reportedly came directly from supplies on board Japan's whaling fleet's mother vessel, the factory ship Nisshin Maru.

Its demise came to light as the nation's annual whaling fleet was believed to be in the final stages of preparing to depart to the Southern Oceans in order to cull its annual quota of whales for scientific research.

Confirming that it was a financially motivated decision, a whaling industry spokesman told the Telegraph: "The purpose of Yushin was to enable more people to taste whale meat and to promote its consumption in Japan.

"We believe this purpose was achieved sufficiently and there was no reason to continue operating, particularly in the light of the costs involved in keeping a restaurant in a very expensive area of Tokyo."

The departure of the whaling fleet has been shrouded in secrecy this year amid growing fears of high-profile clashes with anti-whaling environmentalists such as Sea Shepherd.

Plans for the whaling fleet's traditional Buddhist ceremony at Shimonoseki port in southern Japan have reportedly been cancelled this year amid growing security fears.

Environmentalists hailed plans to close Yushin as a sign of a weakening whaling industry in a nation where demand for whale meat was in decline.

Sara Holden, whales campaign coordinator for Greenpeace International, said: "Although whaling officials claim the decline in business is due to a lack of supply, the Institute for Cetacean Research's own figures flatly contradict this; the stockpile of whale meat is actually increasing, which shows that there is no market for whale meat in Japan."

Anti-whaling activists have become increasingly high-profile in their opposition tactics in recent whaling seasons. Members of the Sea Shepherd organisation are planning to head to the Antarctic next month in order to confront the whaling fleet in a bid to minimise the volume of whales caught.

Last year, clashes between whales and activists led to the Japanese fleet returning home early, having caught 551 minke whales - reportedly several hundred fewer than their initial target.
13 Nov 08;



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Giant, Prehistoric Fish Rebounding in Canada

Stefan Lovgren, National Geographic News 13 Nov 08;

When dozens of white sturgeon began washing up dead on the banks of British Columbia's Fraser River in the mid-1990s, some feared that North America's largest freshwater fish could be headed toward extinction.

Once plentiful in the river, the sturgeon population had dropped below 40,000, and scientists were unable to explain the die-offs of mostly female fish.

That's when an alliance of government agencies, environmentalists, aboriginal groups, and commercial and recreational fishers came together to save the sturgeon, spurring a robust recovery of the lower Fraser River population.

Recent estimates show the population has increased to about 50,000 fish.

To Zeb Hogan, who leads National Geographic's Megafishes Project and has studied the sturgeon, it's a rare success story. (Read about the world's gargantuan freshwater fish.)

"Worldwide, most species of large freshwater fish are in danger of going extinct in the near future," said Hogan, a National Geographic emerging explorer. (The National Geographic Society operates National Geographic News.)

"The white sturgeon seems to have avoided the fate of species like the Chinese paddlefish of the Yangtze River and the critically endangered giant catfish of the Mekong River."

But Hogan points out that collaborative conservation programs, such as the one in Canada, would be hard to implement in other parts of the world.

For example "in the Mekong River [in southeast Asia] you have six different countries and their governments, 60 million fishermen, scientists, tourists, all of these different groups," he said.

Healthiest Population

The conservation movement is the brainchild of Rick Hansen, a paraplegic athlete and Canadian national hero who became famous for his 1980s "Man in Motion" tour, during which he traveled around the world by wheelchair.

"There was a lack of knowledge of what was happening with the fish," said Hansen, who founded the Fraser River Sturgeon Conservation Society in 1997.

"We wanted people to volunteer to go out on the river and give them the capacity to tag and then release the fish, and have that volunteer effort be connected to first-class science."

During the conservation effort, the aboriginal peoples of Canada, which call themselves First Nations, ordered a stop to harvest fishing of the sturgeon. Strict catch-and-release regulations for sport fishers were imposed.

A government-research program also led to a volunteer tagging effort of some 35,000 sturgeon—though it's still unknown what caused the die-off.

Today, the lower part of the 870-mile (1,375-kilometer) Fraser River, which flows unimpeded through British Columbia and into the Pacific Ocean at Vancouver, is home to the only white sturgeon population in the world that is entirely wild.

That's because the fish, which are highly migratory, can move and spawn freely throughout their life cycles.

"It's our healthiest population in the province, though it continues to face a lot of pressure from urbanization and habitat degradation," said Steve McAdam, a fisheries biologist with the British Columbia Ministry of Environment in Vancouver.

White sturgeon in three other British Columbia rivers—Columbia, Nechako, and Kootenay—aren't as lucky, and were added to Canada's endangered species list in 2006.

Spectacular Jumps

Among the most dedicated conservation volunteers are recreational fishers.

With commercial fishing banned, sturgeon sport fishing on the Fraser is thriving.

Dating back 200 million years, prehistoric sturgeon are among the largest species of fish on Earth, and are known for their spectacular jumps out of the water when hooked.

There are unconfirmed reports of white sturgeon 20 feet (6.1 meters) in length and weighing more than 1,500 pounds (680 kilograms)—though no fish that large have been caught in the Fraser for decades.

On a rainy Sunday morning this past summer, Megafishes Project leader Hogan was speeding down the Fraser in a boat captained by Fred Helmer, a veteran sturgeon fisher and one of more than 200 guides working in the burgeoning sport-fishing business estimated to be worth U.S. $20 million.

"The sport fishery, which is all catch-and-release, is as good as I've ever seen it," Helmer said.

Sturgeon are bottom dwellers with four barbels—or whisker-like organs—to sense their prey, which is mostly salmon. They have no teeth, and use their vacuum-like mouths to suck up fish.

Anglers capture sturgeon with balls of salmon eggs tied up in panty hose or dead hooligans, members of the smelt family, for bait.

Downstream from the town of Mission, recreational angler Stu Love had caught what turned out to be an 8.5-foot-long (2.7-meter-long) sturgeon weighing close to 300 pounds (136 kilograms).

It took him more than two hours to reel in the beast, which twice jumped completely out of the water.

"It's pretty intimidating to see a fish that big at the end of a rod and reel," Love said.

Helmer scanned the calm sturgeon, a female, to see if it had been previously tagged.

"Nope, it's a virgin capture," he confirmed, before injecting a tiny tag right behind the skull plate of the animal.

After snapping pictures of the giant catch, the fishers released it back into the turbid waters of the Fraser.

Fish Wheels

The sturgeon conservation society has formed a close partnership with aboriginal groups along the Fraser River who are historically and culturally connected to the fish.

"The white sturgeon is almost a god-like sea creature for the First Nations," said Ralph Roberts, who works as the First Nations coordinator for the society.

"They're the ones who put [their] foot down and said this fish has to be protected."

Although First Nations groups are legally entitled to harvest sturgeon, they adhere to a voluntary moratorium, Roberts said.

But each year thousands of white sturgeon are caught—and often killed—accidentally in gill nets deployed by First Nations fishers to intercept salmon migrating upstream.

Encouraged by fisheries-management experts, some are now turning away from gill nets to alternative fishing methods, including the use of fish wheels, which are used to scoop up the fish in a series of baskets that rotate close to the river bottom.

"Nothing is going to be as easy on the fish as a fish wheel," said Karl English, a fisheries biologist working with the society.

"You can take the abundant species and let the rare ones go."


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Global Warming Link To Amphibian Declines In Doubt

ScienceDaily 13 Nov 08;

Evidence that global warming is causing the worldwide declines of amphibians may not be as conclusive as previously thought, according to biologists. The findings, which contradict two widely held views, could help reveal what is killing the frogs and toads and aid in their conservation.

"We are currently in the midst of a sixth mass extinction event," said Peter Hudson, the Willaman professor of biology at Penn State and co-author of the research study. "And amphibians are bearing the brunt of the problem."

Studies suggest that more than 32 percent of amphibian species are threatened and more than 43 percent face a steep decline in numbers.

Much of the massive declines associated with amphibians appear to be centered in places such as Central America and Australia, said Hudson. "It appears to be linked to a chytrid fungus -- Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) -- which we did not know affected frogs," he added.

There are currently two theories on the extinctions. The first -- chytrid-thermal-optimum hypothesis -- suggests that the declines were triggered by global warming which pushed daytime and nighttime temperatures to converge to levels that are optimal for the growth of the chytrid fungus.

But according to a second theory -- spatiotemporal-spread hypothesis -- amphibian declines were simply driven by the introduction and subsequent spread of the fungus from certain locations.

"Our models suggest that both these theories are slightly wrong," added Hudson, director of the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences at Penn State. "Neither of them fit available data."

While the researchers do not completely discount the role of global warming in amphibian declines, they believe that evidence linking it with the declines is weak.

"There is indeed a positive, multi-decade correlation between amphibian extinctions in Latin America and air temperature in the tropics," said Jason Rohr, lead author and assistant professor of biology at University of South Florida. "But this relationship should not necessarily be interpreted as causal."

Rohr and his University of South Florida colleagues Thomas R. Raffel and John M. Romansic, both faculty associates, along with Hudson and Hamish McCallum, professor of wildlife research, University of Tasmania, tested the competing theories by re-analyzing the same data used in conceiving the two ideas.

The scientists checked the first hypothesis to see whether climatic factors such as the percentage of cloud cover, narrowing difference between the lowest average daily temperature and the highest average daily temperature, and the predicted growth rate of the fungus under certain temperatures, could accurately predict extinctions.

Their statistical analysis revealed no such narrowing of temperature spans in the 1980s, when extinctions were increasing. When the difference in average daily temperatures did narrow in the 1990s, amphibian extinctions were decreasing.

Further, while the chytrid-thermal-optimum hypothesis showed high elevations as having the highest proportion of amphibian declines and the second highest proportion of amphibian extinctions, statistical analysis showed that growth rates for the fungus and cloud cover to be lowest at the highest elevation.

"While there is evidence to suggest that the chytrid fungus is killing the frogs, further research is needed before we can conclude that climate change is accelerating the spread," said Rohr, who previously was a researcher with Penn State's Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics.

A separate statistical analysis of the spread hypothesis also indicated inconsistencies between the year of amphibian declines, and the sites from where the fungus might have been introduced.

"Almost all of our findings are contrary to the predictions of the chytrid-thermal-optimum hypothesis," said Hudson.

The researchers say their findings show the pitfalls of drawing conclusions from multi-decadal correlations between climatic factors and extinctions, and underscores the need for molecular data on the fungus to understand from where and how it spread.

"We are facing a cataclysmic global decline in amphibians, caused primarily by the effect of a fungus that was historically not important, but the emergence of which might be associated with climate change, along with the use of herbicides and pesticides," Hudson explained. "The bottom line is that there doesn't seem to be one single explanation for the massive amphibian declines. It could be a mix of other factors."

The team's findings were published in a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The work is funded by the National Science Foundation.


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Nobel winner urges protection for key forests in UN talks

Yahoo News 12 Nov 08;

PARIS (AFP) – Nobel laureate Wangari Maathai on Wednesday urged upcoming talks on climate change to focus on protecting forests, especially rich treelands in the Congo Basin, Amazonia and Southeast Asia.

"I've been hoping that this time, in the negotiations, forests will be protected," Maathai told reporters during a trip to Paris.

"African countries have to prioritise these issues," she added. "African environment ministers are working closely to come up with one African position."

Deforestation accounts for around a fifth of global emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases.

This problem was not addressed in the UN's 1997 Kyoto Protocol for tackling climate change. Campaigners hope that in talks to frame its successor deal, which will take effect from the end of 2012, new mechanisms will be set in place to encourage forest conservation, including financial rewards.

Negotiations unfold in Poznan, Poland, from December 1 to 12 as a prelude to a final haggle in Copenhagen in December 2009.

Maathai is to attend the Poznan talks as a "goodwill ambassador" for the forests of the Congo Basin, but she also spoke about the importance of the rainforests of Amazonia and Southeast Asia.

"These three blocks are extremely important, and I hope the post-Kyoto negotiations will include the issue of forests, especially these three forests."

Maathai, 68, received the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize for environmental work and reforestation in her native Kenya.


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