Best of our wild blogs: 1 Dec 08


Wildfacts updates: Red List changes
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Chek Jawa intertidal walk dates for Jan-Jul 09 now online
booking open from today, on the wild shores of singapore blog

Chek Jawa wild boars
on the wonderful creations blog

Nesting saga of Peaceful Dove: Part 1 of 6
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Hantu Blog at Singapore American School
reaching out for Hantu on the Pulau Hantu blog

Morning walk at Sungei Buloh
on the manta blog

Ducks in danger
on the annotated budak blog and Tyger in the woods as well as Here be Dracos

At a guided tour of the Dubai Aquarium
on the wild shores of singapore blog

The TRUE (?) meaning of Aristotle's Lantern??
discussing the sea urchin's body parts on The Echinoblog

Food that puts more than just hairs on your chest
discussing hairy slugs on the Catalogue of Organisms


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Two new CNG stations to open

World's second biggest to be built in Bukit Timah; Serangoon North's set for Feb opening
Christopher Tan, Straits Times 1 Dec 08;

DRIVERS of cars which run on compressed natural gas (CNG) can expect more competitive prices when two new refuelling stations open in the next few months.

One station will be in Serangoon North, and the other - to be the world's second biggest - will be in Old Toh Tuck Road, in the Bukit Timah area.

For Mr Wong Chee Wei, who drives a Chevrolet Optra Magnum CNG, the Serangoon North station is good news. It is not far from his Aljunied home, which will save him a long drive to the Mandai station. The 34-year-old customer service representative said: 'I only wish it could have opened earlier.'

About 3,300 vehicles here use CNG, up from virtually none before 2006. They are mainly cars and taxis, granted tax breaks for being environmentally friendlier than their petrol or diesel counterparts.

Besides the station in Mandai Link, the only other CNG stations are in Jalan Buroh and on Jurong Island; the latter is not an option unless motorists work in the high-security area. The Mandai and Jalan Buroh stations often see long queues.

Smart Energy, which owns the Mandai station, is building the one in Serangoon North. 'The roof is up,' said managing director Johnny Harjantho. 'We expect it to open for business in February.'

The station will have eight pumps, with provision for another eight, and costs about $12 million.

The other new station, a 38-pump affair in Old Toh Tuck Road, is being built by bottled cooking gas supplier Union Energy. Worldwide, it is second in size only to a new 44-pump facility in Bangkok.

Construction of the $13 million facility is expected to start in February. A Union Energy spokesman said it is expected to open early in the second half of next year, possibly in July.

Mr Alexander Melchers, who chairs Singapore's newly-formed CNG Committee - a body representing nearly 20 companies in the CNG business here - said the increased competition would lower the fuel price. The gap between CNG and petrol rates can be expected to widen.

The two stations do not have any incentive to lower prices quickly now, since long queues are snaking out of them, noted Mr Melchers.

Meanwhile, CNG prices are set to fall today.

Mr Harjantho said the rate will fall to $1.39 per kg, from $1.48 now. Petrol now costs $1.603 for a litre of 92-octane before discount. A kg of CNG gives the mileage of about 1.3 litres of petrol.


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Blow to recycling as plastic prices plummet

Households keen to recycle more but now, many scrap dealers and collectors refuse to take plastic
Grace Chua, Straits Times 1 Dec 08;

THE recent slump in scrap plastic prices is bad news for scrap traders and karung guni men, and also for households trying to recycle more.

The price has fallen so low that firms which buy recyclables from collectors are no longer accepting plastic. This has left collectors unable to cover their costs at a time when households are under increasing pressure to recycle throwaways.

In August, the kind of plastic used in mineral-water bottles - known in the industry as PET or polyethylene terephthalate - was sold at more than $380 a metric ton. By mid-October, the price had plunged to $50 a ton.

One major reason was the decline in oil prices, which made it cheaper to manufacture new plastic resin from oil than to use recycled plastic.

Prices of waste paper and metal, less hard-hit, have fallen by half in the past three months.

'Plastic? It's totally dead,' said Mr Jimmy Tay of SembEnviro Tay Paper, a trading firm in Jurong that buys waste paper from karung guni men and waste collectors and then sells it to paper mills.

The company used to accept between 100 and 200 metric tons of plastic each month to sell to recycling facilities in Singapore and overseas. It stopped taking plastic in mid-October, and is sitting on its existing stock, waiting for a better price.

The other options are not pretty: Sell the stock at cost or even at a loss, or pay to send it for incineration. The last option costs $77 to $79 a ton.

Two other scrap-trading firms said they too had stopped accepting plastic in October. Three others are still taking plastic. One of the three, Polysin Plastic Trading, has the facilities to turn scrap plastic into pellets, ready to be used in manufacturing. However, this means it can take only high-quality, clean plastic, which fetches a better price.

Of the 1.2 million tons of plastic waste generated in Singapore each year, only 11 per cent is recycled.

The Government has been encouraging people to do more recycling, and wants to raise the recycling rate - now at 54 per cent - to 60 per cent by 2012.

Since Nov 1, condominiums and private apartments with more than 50 units have been required to provide recycling facilities on-site. They have till May to comply with this requirement.

Condos scrambling to do so say that the going will be tough as long as prices for plastic and other scrap materials remain low.

Property manager Lillian Oh of Hilandas, which manages more than 20 condos, has been looking for a waste-collection contractor to service these estates. Such contractors now ask for up to $500 a month to collect recyclables, she said. Previously, condo residents were being paid up to 20 cents a kilogram for recyclables such as newspapers, she noted.

However, real estate company Colliers' asset management division, which oversees 32 condominiums, said it had not encountered problems with recycling collection so far.

Waste-collection company Coverall, which picks up recyclables from two condos, said it might have to start charging condos for providing this service because of the low scrap prices.

The National Environment Agency said its public-waste collectors will continue to accept recyclables, regardless of price. The agency meets its refuse collectors regularly and has contingency plans to cover any difficulties they might run into.


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Invest green and save the world

Lin Jinlong, Yeow Xue Ting, Yong Qiao Qing and Zhang Shaojun, Business Times 1 Dec 08;

Green investing is a socially responsible investment which puts investors' money into areas deemed beneficial to the environment

OTHER than adjusting the temperature of your air-conditioner to the optimal 25 degrees Celsius and filling plastic bags to their brim on 'bring-your-own- bag' Wednesdays at the supermarkets, it is also possible now to save the environment by investing wisely.

Green investing is all the rage these days. It is a socially responsible investment which puts investors' money in areas which are deemed beneficial to the environment. One way to engage in such green investments is to put your money into environment-friendly, or green, funds.

What are green funds?

Green funds are professionally managed investment portfolios that comprise stocks which fund managers classify as environmentally responsible. By investing in these funds, one can gain a share in companies that engage in environment-friendly practices. However, as each person's definition of being 'environment friendly' can differ, what exactly qualifies as a green fund is still a grey area.

Typically, two categories of green funds exist in the market. The difference between them lies in the way these funds select their stocks.

The first category takes the direct approach. Funds in this category are made up of companies that produce goods or services aimed at solving environmental problems. They normally invest in alternative energy, recycling and pollution control. For example, LSB Industries provides geothermal and water source heat pumps to multiple markets in the United States. Geothermal energy sources are environment-friendly alternatives to the burning of fossil fuels, a contributor to environmental pollution.

Another example is First Solar Inc, a company which designs and manufactures solar modules that convert sunlight to electricity using thin-film semiconductor technology. Solar energy is an alternative source of energy and helps to reduce the reliance on fossil fuel as an energy source.

Funds in the second category take the 'best-in-breed' approach. These funds seek out various sectors or industries for their respective industry leaders in terms of employing environmentally-conscious business practices. Unlike funds that take the direct approach, funds in this category may invest in an oil company, for example, as long as it is considered the cleanest oil company of the lot.

Achieving two green objectives

In a 2007 research survey by the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, it was reported that 70 per cent of Americans felt that the government did not give adequate attention to environmental problems, while 81 per cent felt that it was a personal responsibility to protect the environment. Environment-friendly investments can achieve two objectives. Investors will be injecting capital into companies that help slow down Earth's degradation. Also, the more investments go into companies that engage in green practices, pressure is put on others to clean up their act in order to attract further investments. Therefore, by investing green, investors are also indirectly pressuring more companies to think about Mother Earth.

Recent trends in green investments

According to a recent study done by Allianz Global Investors, 49 per cent of 1,003 investors polled said they were likely to invest in a company or mutual fund that seeks to provide solutions for environmental problems in the next year. In addition, 17 per cent said they have already made such an investment.

In the same survey, 71 per cent considered the environmental technology sector a 'buy' - the most attractive sector out of the six surveyed. Most importantly, 54 per cent of the investors agreed that environmental investing will be an important focus for them in the future.

The green phenomenon has grown so much that, now, state treasuries and other institutional investors have also started to put their money into environment- friendly investment vehicles. In February, the state of Pennsylvania announced that it would invest US$15 million in environment-friendly funds as part of its Keystone Green Investment Strategy.

With such heavyweight investors gaining interest in these funds, the impact of green investments on the world seems set to continue growing.

The investment management industry has responded quickly to the increasing demand for green investment. As at last December, a total of 158 investment funds were classified as 'environment-friendly' in Bloomberg's financial database. Seventy-seven of them were set up before December 2004, three in 2005, 12 in 2006, and 66 in 2007, a significant jump relative to the previous two years.

Advice for green investors

Green investments appeal to investors who want to practise social responsibility by being environment-friendly. For them, it is good news that such funds perform on par with the overall market.

However, one should select a green fund wisely. Before picking the right one that matches your beliefs, it is important to research, examine carefully the fund's holdings, philosophy and strategies, and also watch out for commissions, fees and other costs of investing.

Lin Jinlong, Yeow Xue Ting and Yong Qiao Qing are final-year students at the Nanyang Business School, Nanyang Technological University. Zhang Shaojun is an assistant professor at the school's banking and finance division.


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Use nature to fight climate change – IUCN

IUCN 30 Nov 08;

Countries should use their natural resources to fight climate change, according to IUCN.

Protecting natural resources, such as forests, rivers and mangroves, enhances the ability to cope with changes that are already happening as a result of global warming.

“Governments are once again coming together in Poznan to deal with the climate crisis, but they are running out of time,” says IUCN Director General Julia Marton-Lefèvre. “We need to make substantial progress at Poznan to achieve a credible and efficient post 2012 climate change agreement by Copenhagen in 2009.”

The deadline for setting serious cuts in emissions is fast approaching. Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) in developing countries, which promotes the protection and planting of forests, is one of the most immediate and cost effective ways to reduce carbon emissions.

“Forests have the potential to be one of the best means to help slow the rate of global warming,” says Stewart Maginnis, Head of IUCN’s Forest Conservation Programme. “But for Reduced Emission from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) to be included in the post-2012 climate change framework, it will also be important for countries to identify and deal with the underlying causes of deforestation. This will include enhancing good governance, involving local communities and respecting indigenous people’s rights.”

Despite the fact developing countries produce less greenhouse gases per capita, they will suffer most from the impacts of climate change. The poor and vulnerable will be particularly hard-hit by inreased drought, flooding, less food, fuel, medicines and building materials. Discussions in Poznan need to progress on helping people adjust to a changing climate. Nature already has many of the solutions.

“It’s often better to use mangroves, for example, to guard coastal communities against extreme weather events than a sea wall because mangroves do more than protect the coastline,” says Neville Ash, Head of IUCN’s Ecosystem Management Programme. “They provide means for people to make a living, they are a home for many important species and – best of all – they already exist. We just need to recognize their value, and manage them better.”

IUCN demands that the roadblocks to a meaningful agreement on fighting climate change are removed, especially given the climate agenda of the newly elected US government.

“Developed countries signing up to reduce emissions by 80 to 95 percent below 1990 levels by 2050 is a promise for the too distant future,” says Ninni Ikkala, IUCN Climate Change Officer. “We want to see concrete commitments to reduce those levels by 25 to 40 percent by 2020.”


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Congo's war-baby gorillas bring hope for endangered species

Denis Barnett Yahoo News 30 Nov 08;

BUKIMA, DR Congo (AFP) – High above the war-battered plain, a giant silverback gorilla ruminatively strips a plant of its leaves with green tombstone teeth. Five females nearby suckle their babies. The world can celebrate a small miracle in eastern Congo.

Park rangers greeted the primordial scene with hushed astonishment after hacking for two hours though the verdant gloom of the jungle Friday, the only sound the metallic ring of a machete on stringy vines and the din of insects.

In a clearing on the slopes of Mount Mikeno, a 4,500 metre (14,000 feet) -high volcano, a young blackback carefully picked insects and seeds from his brother's shaggy black fur. An impish new-born clung to her mother's back, fixing the interlopers with shimmering dark brown eyes.

Park director Emmanuel de Merode later described the discovery of five new-borns at the outset of a month-long census as "quite phenomenal", given that the endangered gorillas' habitat has long been a war zone.

"They've had a growth of about 11 percent in 10 years, less than two percent a year. To get five births in a group of 30 is about 15 percent growth. It's quite tremendous and very unusual," he said.

The infants are all war-babies, born in the 15-month period since CNDP rebels wrested control of the eastern gorilla-sector of Virunga national park from government forces in September 2007. The rangers they chased away lost all contact with park, home to 200 of the world's last 700 mountain gorillas.

De Merode, a government employee, pulled off a diplomatic coup this month when he negotiated directly with rebel leader Laurent Nkunda to allow his rangers to return to the park, and conservationists their first glimpse of the state of the endangered gorilla population here.

Friday's discovery "doesn't confirm anything about the population as a whole. That's what we're worried about and we'll only know that when the survey is completed in about three weeks' time," cautioned De Merode, adding that only two of the seven family groups in the park had been located to date.

Each group takes its name from the dominant male, or silverback. In this case the 200 kilogramme Kabirisi provided the assembled humans with a jolt of adrenaline as he crashed through the thick undergrowth, screaming and agitated, perhaps jealous of the attention being doted on his females.

The brief demonstration of dominance over, serenity returned. The giant pot bellied ape resumed his Buddha-like position, brushing salami-like fingers over a face fixed in an imperious frown.

"Kabirisi tends to be stand-offish a little bit, and lets you know when he's not happy," whispered park employee Pierre Peron.

While the adults were detached and contemplative, the young were curious to reach out to their human visitors. One juvenile twice rapped a journalist playfully on the leg before disappearing into a thicket.

Many of the rangers remained with the CNDP in the forest and maintained the gorilla watch, but De Merode pointed out that only the returning Innocent Mburanumwe, whose father was also a ranger, could identify all the gorillas.

He and his green-uniformed comrades made respectful low grunting sounds as they moved through the group, identifying each individual by their noseprints -- the wrinkles and marks on a gorilla's nose unique to each individual.

De Merode said that despite appearances, the imperilled gorillas could not have been indifferent to the battles that have raged around them.

"They were right in the middle of the war. Bukima (the closest ranger post) was on the front line and the fighting moved back and forth in that area," he said.

Eight gorillas were shot dead in the park last year. Kabirisi took over the group 10 years ago when the dominant male was killed by crossfire during fighting in 1998. Now it numbers around 30, but rangers will have to make repeated visits to each group to be sure.

Despite a ceasefire in the months-long fighting, tracer from a heavy machine gun streaked across the sky close to the rangers headquarters late Thursday. Answering gunfire rattled up from the valley, in what a ranger said was a clash between the CNDP and the Rwandan Hutu rebels based in the park.

Innocent and his comrades are happy to be back to offer their gorillas what protection they can.

"It's been a long time since I've seen my gorillas. I've missed them," he said, checking his notes and video before leading the group out of the forest and leaving the gorillas to their fragile peace.


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Iceland whale meat to arrive in Japan: report

Yahoo News 30 Nov 08;

TOKYO (AFP) – Japan is to allow imports of whale meat from Iceland for the first time since 1991, a report said Sunday.

Nations across the world are signed up to an agreement not to hunt whales for commercial purposes but Japan said it was not breaking the accord and considered the trade as "a deal between private companies", Jiji Press reported.

Iceland announced in October 2006 it had authorised commercial whaling, making it only the second country after Norway to outright defy a 1986 moratorium.

An Icelandic company which has killed seven fin whales plans to export the meat to Japan, its boss has said in an interview with The Daily Telegraph published in early November.

Meanwhile the Japanese government has approved a plan to import whale meat submitted by a Japanese trading firm, Jiji said, citing unnamed government and other sources.

Japan officially complies with the International Whaling Commission (IWC) moratorium on commercial whaling. But it uses a loophole that allows countries to kill whales for research, with the meat ending up on dinner plates.

Japanese officials were not immediately available for comment.


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The fool’s gold of carbon trading

A huge new market designed to solve global warming seems doomed to failure
Jonathan Leake, The Times 30 Nov 08;

It was a deal to make Alistair Darling hug himself with glee. Just as the world’s existing financial markets were hitting a five-year low two weeks ago, the Treasury raked in a cool £54m from a brand new one. The occasion was Britain’s first auction of CO2 permits. Almost 4m were knocked down to greenhouse gas emitters in a sale that was four times oversubscribed. The government expects to sell 80m more over the next four years, raising a further £1 billion.

The plan, at first glance, seems simplicity itself: by charging companies for the , the government hopes to encourage them to switch to cleaner andright to emit CO2 greener technologies. It is the latest development in a global campaign to save the planet by making polluters pay.

We are witnessing the birth of the greatest and most complex commodity market the world has seen. Last year alone, permits worth more than £55 billion were traded on the world’s carbon markets – but future trading volumes, if all goes global according to plan, will dwarf these.

Carbon trading schemes originate from the Kyoto protocol on climate change agreed under the auspices of the United Nations in 1997. Governments adhering to Kyoto accept limits on the CO2 their countries can emit. To meet their pledges, they put caps on the carbon outputs of domestic companies, which have to buy annual permits to exceed them.

Permits are bought from governments or from carbon traders, who, naturally, charge a commission. For the City the arrival of carbon trading is a bonanza. The sector already employs about 3,000 people and has created a few dozen new millionaires.

Several such schemes are up and running around the world: Europe’s Emissions Trading Scheme, founded in 2005, is the biggest, but others are following in Australia, the US and even China.

It sounds good news for everyone: governments, taxpayers, City boys and the environment. The reality is a great deal less rosy – indeed some of those closest to the carbon markets say openly that the system is doomed to failure.

Many carbon traders believe they could make the system work but fear the politicians who oversee it will never dare put a sufficiently high price on carbon emissions to make a difference.

Those millions collected by the Treasury, for example, came mainly from UK power companies, and the cost will be added directly to our bills, as will the cost of annual CO2 permits in future. More worrying still, carbon trading shows no sign of achieving its purpose: CO2 emissions have increased, not slackened, since the first trading schemes. What, then, is the point? Good question, particularly for the 10,000 politicians, policy-makers and civil servants arriving this week in Poznan, Poland, for the latest round of global climate negotiations. They will consider a proposal to make carbon trading one of the world’s main tools for cutting greenhouse gas emissions after the Kyoto protocol expires in 2012.

The incongruity of proposing that a brand new financial market might be able to save the world – when faith in every other kind of financial market is tumbling – needs no underlining. But there are plenty of other reasons for scepticism, too.

Jim Hansen, director of the Nasa God-dard space centre and a renowned critic of global measures to combat climate change, believes carbon trading is a “terrible” approach. “Carbon trading does not solve the emission problem at all,” he says. “In fact it gives industries a way to avoid reducing their emissions. The rules are too complex and it creates an entirely new class of lobbyists and fat cats.”

Even some of those involved in setting up the carbon markets fear they will fail in their principal aim of cutting carbon emissions. Liz Bossley of CEAG, a City consultant in carbon trading, may have helped the fledgling system to grow from nothing into a big business but she is frank about its limitations. “The fatal flaw is . . . the politicians, because they set the cap which determines the supply of CO2 credits,” she says.

“The problem is that making those caps tough enough to achieve real cuts in CO2 emissions would have all kinds of political consequences. The chances of any politician taking such a decision are negligible.” What Bossley means is that consumers – voters – have to foot the bill when the cost of permits turns up in domestic energy prices.

British consumers are already paying about £60 extra each year on their gas and electricity bills to support renewable energy. Will they take more of this medicine in the middle of the worst recession for dec-ades? Nervous politicians remember the backlash in 2000 when angry lorry drivers almost brought the country to a standstill over the fuel accelerator tax.

There’s more. Under the 1997 Kyoto deal the main 37 industrialised nations (but not America) agreed that one of the ways they could cut emissions was by financing “clean development” projects in the developing world.

The idea is certainly appealing: if a company is emitting too much CO2 it can either make cuts or pay other companies to cut their emissions instead. If it turns out to be cheaper to pay someone in China to plant a forest to absorb carbon dioxide, or a factory in India to install clean technology to cut its emissions of greenhouse gases, then this is allowed, provided the project has been approved under the UN framework convention on climate change. For each tonne of CO2 saved, the convention issues a certified emission reduction certificate, or CER. These are valuable: indeed, they are the nearest thing to currency that the carbon markets acknowledge. Each one is worth about £14.

The original plan was to create a system for transferring wealth from developed countries such as Britain and America to the Third World, hence killing two birds with one stone: cutting emissions and helping international development.

It certainly sounded good – but the reality is the most complex trading system the world has known.

The complexity naturally means the system is open to abuse. Last year The Sunday Times revealed how SRF, an Indian company that produces refrigeration gases at a sprawling chemical plant in Rajasthan, stood to make £300m from selling certificates to overseas companies including Shell and Barclays. The Indian company had spent just £1.4m on equipment to reduce its emissions – and was using the profit to expand production of another greenhouse gas, a thousand times more . Other manufacturers damaging than CO2 in India and China producing similar products are expected to earn an estimated £3.3 billion over the next six years by cutting emissions at a cost of just £67m.

Internal papers leaked from the UN show that such problems arose because the system for checking companies involved in emissions reductions schemes was seriously flawed. One official estimated that up to 20% of the carbon credits issued did not represent genuine reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. This meant that the real effect of the system had been to increase the amount of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere.

Nor is this all. One of the unintended consequences of the carbon trading system is a potentially huge – and massively destabilising – transfer of money and influence from the industrialised West to Russia. This is because when the Kremlin signed up to the Kyoto treaty it was given an annual emissions limit based on the horrors pumped out by filthy old Soviet industries back in 1990. Since then Russia’s industrial base has contracted so drastic-ally that it uses only a fraction of its allowances. One recent analyst’s report found that Russia has accumulated emissions permits worth about four billion tonnes of CO2. The report warned: “Russia must be singled out as a potential threat to the ability of the market to produce a meaning-ful carbon price.”

There is of course another huge incongruity in Russia, one of the world’s biggest suppliers of coal, gas and oil, also in effect having control of the system for reducing emissions from these fossil fuels. It means that the West could end up paying the Russians for fuel – and then paying them again for the right to burn it.

Undeterred by these fundamental flaws, the UN is planning many more CER schemes. About 4,000 are awaiting approval, including plans for capturing methane from Indian chicken farms, Filipino pig farms and Thai coal mines. Other schemes propose destroying industrial gases at factories in China and India and cutting CO2 emissions by building wind farms in Mon-golia. One of the ideas under discussion in Poznan could result in European industry paying millions of pounds to landowners in Brazil and Indonesia not to cut down their rainforests.

It is easy to mock such schemes but the mockery hides from view the really big question, and the one that is hardest to answer: are the emerging carbon markets capable of making a significant dent in the world’s surging carbon emissions?

Lord May, a former government chief scientist, is now an influential member of the British government’s climate change committee, whose inaugural report (Building a Low-Carbon Economy – the UK’s Contribution to Tackling Climate Change) will be published tomorrow.

The report will include a full scientific and economic analysis of how Britain can achieve its target of cutting emissions by 80% by 2050, including specific reduction targets for each of the UK’s first three five-year “carbon budget” periods. Although the report will support carbon trading as a possible means of reducing emissions, May has warned that the system risks creating a false sense of security.

Speaking at the Royal Society last month, he said: “The [inclusion of] these fiscal instruments could give the misleading impression that they can deliver real emissions reductions. Sooner or later, people are going to have to realise that, in climate change, we now face something far worse than world war two.”

Some of his fellow scientists even warn that governments may soon have to accept that combating climate change is becoming incompatible with economic growth. A recent peer-reviewed paper from the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, the government’s leading academic research centre for global warming, warned: “Unless economic growth can be reconciled with unprecedented rates of decarbonisation, it is difficult to foresee anything other than a planned economic recession being compatible with stabilising the climate.”

At the Royal Society, Professor Kevin Anderson, director of the Tyndall Centre, spelt it out: “The target set for the climate talks was to keep global temperature rises below 2C. At the moment, however, the level of emissions is rising so fast that we are heading for a world that is 4-5C warmer than now by 2100. That would be catastrophic for the environment and for humanity.”

In other words, if the scientists are right, all our efforts to fight off the recession are wrongheaded. We should be embracing it. So where does this leave the world leaders and their Sherpas, heading for Poznan with their hopes set on trading our way out of the abyss? Anderson’s answer is a shrug.

“Carbon trading may have been the answer once but not any more,” he says. “It will just take too long to achieve anything, and we no longer have the luxury of time.”

Stinking rich

For clever City boys, carbon markets are a marvellous way of turning muck into brass. Daniel Co, a Filipino pig farmer, used to shovel the dung from his 10,000 animals into ponds on his Uni-Rich Agro Industrial farm. The manure generated thousands of tons of methane, a global warming gas, but Co did not want to spend £110,000 on kit to trap the gas.

Then EcoSecurities, a British carbon trading firm, worked out that anything that captured the methane would entitle the farmer annually to nearly 3,000 “certified emission reductions” – the nearest thing to a carbon trading currency.

EcoSecurities did the paperwork for Co and gave him just over £2 per certificate. He put in the methane-capture kit, generating power and saving about £24,000 a year in utility bills. EcoSecurities sells the CERs for about £10 each to a French bank, which sells them on to power plants that need to offset emissions. The consumer pays through higher bills. A nice little earner for everyone except the poor mugs (us) at the end of the chain – but can it save the planet?


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UN climate chief warns of 'next economic crisis'

Simon Sturdee Yahoo News 30 Nov 08;

POZNAN, Poland (AFP) – Investing in "cheap and dirty" power because of the global recession will lead to another financial crisis, the UN climate chief warned Sunday on the eve of tough international talks in Poland.

"My firm belief is that if as a result of that financial crisis, we make a next generation of bad investments, we will be setting ourselves up for the next economic crisis," said Yvo de Boer, head of the 192-nation UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

"Over the next five to 10 years we will be replacing about 40 percent of power-generating capacity worldwide. If, in light of the financial crisis, that power-generating capacity is replaced using cheap and dirty technology, then that technology is going to be around for the next 30 to 50 years," he said.

"If we use the financial crisis as a reason for short-term thinking then I believe we will basically be setting ourselves up for capital stock destruction in 10, 15, 20 years time."

The comments came on the eve of 12 days of talks starting Monday in Poznan, Poland, involving representatives from almost every country on the planet.

Their aim is to clear the way for a new global climate-change pact to be signed in Copenhagen in December 2009.

Barack Obama, president-elect of the world's biggest polluter per capita, the United States, will not be present but his "eyes and ears" such as Senator John Kerry will be, de Boer said.

"President-elect Obama has asked a number of senators to be his eyes and ears at this conference" de Boer said.

"I have also been told by the current US representation that they will be sure to keep in very close contact with Senator Obama's team in order to ensure that positions taken by the US delegation during this meeting here do not go in a direction that would not be favoured by Senator Obama's team," de Boer said.

George W. Bush, US president for only another few weeks, mauled the UNFCCC's Kyoto Treaty on binding emissions cuts for rich countries when he abandoned it in 2001, but an Obama White House looks set to be a different prospect.

The president-elect has said he would set a goal of reducing US emissions to 1990 levels by 2020 and by 80 percent by 2050, use a cap-and-trade system and a 10-year, 150-billion-dollar (118 billion euros) renewable energy programme.

Delegates in Poland will be examining an 82-page document containing a range of differing and complex proposals, de Boer said.

By the end of the talks on December 12, it is hoped that this will have been condensed into a workable blueprint for negotiations to culminate in the deal in the Danish capital in 12 months' time, he said.

"The first benchmark (of success at Poznan) for me is that at the end of the two weeks here, that document is taken to the next level... whittled down into something that could be agreed upon in Copenhagen," de Boer said.

"We have two very busy weeks ahead of us," he said.


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150 whales die in stranding in Australia

Yahoo News 30 Nov 08;

HOBART, Australia – A group of 150 whales that became stranded on a remote coastline in southern Australia were battered to death on rocks before rescuers could save them.

Officials from Tasmania state's Parks and Wildlife Service rushed Sunday in four-wheel-drive vehicles to the remote site at Sandy Cape after the long-finned pilot whales were spotted by air a day earlier.

A helicopter crew that arrived late Saturday found about a dozen of the whales injured but alive, said Warwick Brennan, a spokesman for the service.

Other officials and volunteers arrived by four-wheel-drive vehicle on Sunday and worked frantically to save those remaining, but they died, Brennan said.

The coastline is strewn with reefs and jagged rocks, making it much more dangerous for the stranded whales than if they had landed at a sandy beach, said Rosemary Gales, another wildlife service official.

"Because of the physical beating they take from stranding on rocks and surf, compared to sandy beach strandings, animals die more quickly," said Gales.

Officials in small boats steered about 30 whales that were part of the same pod as those stranded away from the bay where they went ashore. They were apparently responding to cries of distress from an injured whale and were in danger of becoming stuck too, Brennan said.

The operation comes one week after rescuers saved 11 pilot whales among more than 60 stranded on a beach in northwestern Tasmania, which is an island.

Strandings are not uncommon in Tasmania, where the whales pass by on their migration to and from Antarctic waters. It is not known why whales get stranded.

72 whales die in mass stranding in Australia: official
Yahoo News 30 Nov 08;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Seventy-two whales have died after becoming stranded on rocks in southern Australia, one week after 53 of the giant animals died nearby in a similar beaching, an official said Sunday.

The long-finned pilot whales are believed to have beached themselves at the rocky and remote Sandy Cape on the west coast of the southern island of Tasmania on Saturday.

"There are 72 deceased animals," Chris Arthur of Tasmania's Parks and Wildlife Service told AFP.

Arthur said rescuers had shepherded 32 more whales, which had been trapped in a channel offshore among reefs, to safety using a small boat and these animals were now swimming strongly.

Tasmanian officials were alerted to the beaching early Saturday and a helicopter inspection of the remote area showed that 12 were still alive, despite being badly cut by the rocks.

A rescue team reached the area Sunday but found only two of the pilot whales, which can reach up to more than seven metres (20 feet) in length and weigh up to three tonnes, alive.

"There were two alive in the rocky shore, but they died earlier this afternoon," Arthur said.

Rescuers had been afraid that the whales would not survive the night as they would have thrashed heavily on the rocks, unlike the 64 animals which beached on a sandy Tasmanian beach the previous week.

Eleven of those animals were saved after they were transported to another beach and dragged into deep water.

"On sand they tend to lie fairly quietly but when they land on rocks and in amongst boulders they thrash, they cut themselves. There's a lot of blood loss," the parks and wildlife service's Rosemary Gales told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Saturday.

"We know from previous experience that when pilot whales strand on rocks, which these ones have, they die very quickly."

There are a number of whale strandings in Tasmania every year, but there is debate among scientists over causes the animals to beach themselves.


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Climate change gathers steam, say scientists

Marlowe Hood Yahoo News 30 Nov 08;

PARIS (AFP) – Earth's climate appears to be changing more quickly and deeply than a benchmark UN report for policymakers predicted, top scientists said ahead of international climate talks starting Monday in Poland.

Evidence published since the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change's (IPCC) February 2007 report suggests that future global warming may be driven not just by things over which humans have a degree of control, such as burning fossil fuels or destroying forest, a half-dozen climate experts told AFP.

Even without additional drivers, the IPCC has warned that current rates of greenhouse gas emissions, if unchecked, would unleash devastating droughts, floods and huge increases in human misery by century's end.

But the new studies, they say, indicate that human activity may be triggering powerful natural forces that would be nearly impossible to reverse and that could push temperatures up even further.

At the top of the list for virtually all of the scientists canvassed was the rapid melting of the Arctic ice cap.

"In the last couple of years, Arctic Sea ice is at an all-time low in summer, which has got a lot of people very, very concerned," commented Robert Watson, Chief Scientific Advisor for Britain's department for environmental affairs and chairman of the IPCC's previous assessment in 2001.

"This has implication's for Earth's climate because it can clearly lead to a positive feedback effect," he said in an interview.

When the reflective ice surface retreats, the Sun's radiation -- heat -- is absorbed by open water rather than bounced back into the atmosphere, creating a vicious circle of heating.

"We had always known that the Arctic was going to respond first," said Mark Serreze of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado. "What has us puzzled is that the changes are even faster than we would have thought possible," he said by phone.

New data on the rate at which oceans might rise has also caused consternation.

"The most recent IPCC report was prior to ... the measurements of increasing mass loss from Greenland and Antarctica, which are disintegrating much faster than IPCC estimates," said climatologist James Hansen, head of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York.

Unlike the Arctic ice cap, which floats on water, the world's two major ice sheets -- up to three kilometers (two miles) thick -- sit on land.

Runaway sea level rises, Hansen said, would put huge coastal cities and agricultural deltas in Bangladesh, Egypt and southern China under water, and create hundreds of millions of refugees.

The IPCC's most recent assessment "did not take into account the potential melting of Greenland, which I think was a mistake," said Watson, the former IPCC chairman.

Were Greenland's entire ice block to melt, it would lift the world's sea levels by almost seven meters (22.75 feet), while western Antarctica's ice sheet holds enough water to add six metres (20 feet).

Neither of these doomsday scenarios is on the foreseeable horizon.

But for coastal dwellers, even a relatively small loss of their ice could prove devastating.

IPCC estimates of an 18-to-59 centimetre (7.2-to-23.2 inches) rise by 2100 has been supplanted among specialists by an informal consensus of one metre (39 inches), said Serreze.

The accelerating concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, and signs of the planet's dwindling ability to absorb them, are also causing some scientists to lose sleep.

During the 1970s, there were on average 1.3 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide -- the main greenhouse gas -- in the air. In the 1980s the figure was 1.6 ppm, and in the 1990s 1.5 ppm.

In the period 2000-2007, however, the concentration jumped to an average 2.0 ppm, with a high of 2.2 last year, according to the Global Carbon Project, based in Australia.

"The present concentration is the highest during the last 650,000 years and probably during the last 20 million years," said the Global Carbon Project's Pep Canadell, a researcher at Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.

And in 2008, he said, there has been an "exponential growth" in the atmospheric concentration of methane, another greenhouse gas that is an even more potent driver of global warming than CO2.

One potential source of both gases is frozen tundra in the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions, where temperatures have risen faster than anywhere else on Earth.

"The amount of carbon that is locked up in permafrost that could be released into the atmosphere is just about on a par with the atmospheric load the world has right now," said Serreze.

These higher concentrations of greenhouse gases come at a time when Earth's two major "carbon sinks" -- forests and especially oceans -- are showing signs of saturation.

The December 1-12 forum of 192-member UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) comes midway through a two-year process launched in Bali for braking the juggernaut of global warming.

Scheduled to run until December 12, the talks are a stepping stone towards a new pact -- due to be sealed in Copenhagen in December 2009 -- for reducing emissions and boosting adaptation funds beyond 2012, when the current provisions of the UN's Kyoto Protocol expire.


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