Downturn seen slowing CO2 rise

Alister Doyle and Gerard Wynn, Reuters 4 Dec 08;

POZNAN, Poland (Reuters) - Economic slowdown will give a respite from surging greenhouse gas emissions but the world will struggle to shift in the long-term to new, greener lifestyles, delegates said at U.N. climate talks on Thursday.

Most experts expect the downturn will dent a 3 percent a year rise in world emissions, mainly from burning fossil fuels. But one scientist said a repeat of the Great Depression of the 1930s would mean them falling by 35 percent.

"What we're seeing in a number of countries is slower growth rather than a decline," Yvo de Boer, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, told Reuters at the December 1-12 talks on a new climate treaty due to be agreed at the end of 2009.

"It would be a pretty depressing way to make progress, to find that recession was helping the world to kick an addiction to burning fossil fuels that spur rising greenhouse gases."

Many experts say that emissions in developing nations, such as China and India, are likely to keep rising and more than offset any falls in developed countries.

But opinions are divided.

Terry Barker, director of the Center for Climate Change Mitigation Research at Cambridge University said carbon emissions fell 35 percent from 1929 to 1932 during the Great Depression.

"I think there's a chance it could fall by more than that by 2012," he said. "The leading indicators are falling like a stone," he added, referring to oil and European carbon prices.

Lower energy demand has contributed to an oil price crash to $46 a barrel on Thursday from $147 in July -- and that may discourage a shift to greener lifestyles. Motorists may drive more, and in aging, more polluting cars because they cannot afford new ones.

"It affects both directions so it's very difficult to work out the total effect," said Jos Olivier, emissions scientist at the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency.

PEAK

Global emissions of greenhouse gases have surged by about 50 percent since 1970 and under current trends are expected to rise by almost half again by 2030. A U.N. climate panel says they should peak by 2015 to avert the worst of global warming.

The U.N. Environment Program has urged the world to use the economic slowdown to shift to a "Green New Deal," inspired by President Franklin Roosevelt's drive to create jobs in the Great Depression. But a change in lifestyles is harder.

"Typically what you see is that after four or five years the (emissions) trend rebuilds back to where it was originally," said Bill Hare of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. "We don't also, from the economic side, expect to see a long-term change in consumption," he said.

Harlan Watson, head of the U.S. delegation in Poznan, said U.S. emissions tended to rebound after falls in recessions. "Except in very few instances, our reductions in emissions have been associated with recessions," he said.

He said California showed there were some hopes for a shift to greener lifestyles -- when electricity prices spiked in 2000-01 in a crisis with rolling blackouts, people cut back and continued with lower energy use even after prices declined.

"It does demand a change of behavior and sometimes it sticks even if prices fall," he said.

Recessions tend to be temporary like big volcanic eruptions that eject dust that can briefly dim the sun worldwide and so offset global warming, scientists say.

Any emissions slowdown "is all temporary, it's a blip in the rising curve," said Bert Metz of the European Climate Foundation who was a leader of a U.N. Climate Panel report in 2007.

(Editing by Janet Lawrence)


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UNEP Atlas Shows How Biodiversity Hotspots Are Also Major Carbon Sinks

UNEP 5 Dec 08;

Poznan/Nairobi/Cambridge, 5 December 2008 - Maps pinpointing overlaps of high carbon and high biodiversity areas were launched today by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) with its Carbon and Biodiversity demonstration atlas.

The research gives shows how reducing emissions from deforestation can not only assist in combating climate change but can also help the conservation of biodiversity, from amphibians and birds to primates.

The atlas, believed to be the first of its kind, comes as nations meet in Poznan, Poland for the latest round of UN climate convention talks.

Close to 20 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions are a result of deforestation. Negotiators are looking to advance plans to fund Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) in a post-2012 climate deal.

The Carbon and Biodiversity Demonstration Atlas was produced by UNEP's World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) with support from the German government and initial seed funding from Humane Society International.

Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director, said: "At a time of scarce financial resources and economic concerns, every dollar, euro or rupee needs to deliver double, even triple dividends. Intelligent investment in forests is a key example where climate benefits and ecosystem benefits can be achieved in 'one transaction'."

He said paramount to a successful REDD mechanism is ensuring safeguards for local and indigenous people so that they can benefit from any future REDD arrangements.

"However, by pinpointing where high densities of carbon overlap with high levels of biodiversity, the atlas spotlights where governments and investors can deal with two crises for the price of one. This does not include the other benefits from investing in forests ecosystem 'infrastructure', from stabilizing soils to conserving and boosting local and regional water supplies," he added.

The Great Ape Survival Partnership (GRASP, an initiative coordinated by UNEP and the UN Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) is set to launch pilot activities to test the potential of achieving these "multiple benefits" from REDD in Central Africa and Southeast Asia.

The experts are looking at how investments in conserving carbon in the forests on the Nigerian-Cameroon border may also assist in conserving the habitat of the highly endangered Cross River gorilla, of which only 250-300 individuals remain. And in Indonesia, national and local authorities, communities and the oil palm sector will be engaged to reduce emissions from the carbon-rich peat-swamp forest, home of many populations of orangutan.

News of the pilot came earlier this week during the launch of the Year of the Gorilla 2009 initiative coordinated by UNEP's Convention on Migratory Species. The GRASP initiative will complement and may form part of a wider United Nations REDD Programme, led by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and UNEP. The UN REDD Programme is assisting nine pilot countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia and will also provide support to the development of a global REDD mechanism, working in cooperation with the World Bank Forest Carbon Partnership Facility and others.

The demonstration Atlas includes regional maps as well as national maps for six tropical countries (see below) showing where areas of high carbon storage coincide with areas of biodiversity importance. It also shows where existing protected areas are high in both carbon and biodiversity. The atlas includes a variety of statistics drawn from these maps demonstrating the different types of possible information that can be provided.

The atlas is at: www.unep.org/pdf/carbon_biodiversity.pdf (PDF)

Forest hotspots pinpointed for climate, animals
Alister Doyle, Reuters 5 Dec 08;

POZNAN, Poland (Reuters) - A U.N. atlas pinpointed on Friday parts of forests from the Amazon to Madagascar where better protection could give the twin benefits of slowing global warming and preserving rare wildlife.

The atlas, issued at December 1-12 U.N. climate talks in Poznan, Poland, identified hotspots with a high diversity of animals and plants in forests that were also big stores of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, in trees and soils.

"It shows overlaps between carbon stored and areas of biodiversity importance," Barney Dickson, of the World Conservation Monitoring Center of the U.N. Environment Program, told Reuters.

"This offers the prospect of a double dividend," he said of the atlas, meant to guide governments in deciding where to protect forests by slowing logging and clearing of forests.

If a government wanted to aid gorillas and other great apes, forests in part of the eastern Congo basin could be set aside. Rare birds and amphibians could be helped by protecting carbon-rich forests in Ecuador.

Elsewhere, it pointed to parts of the Amazon basin, the tip of South Africa, central Papua New Guinea, parts of the Philippines and most of Madagascar as among priority areas.

The 187-nation talks of 11,000 delegates in Poznan are examining schemes to slow the rate of deforestation, such as payments to preserve tropical forests.

Current deforestation rates release about 20 percent of total greenhouse gas emissions by mankind, led by burning fossil fuels.

EXTINCTION

Some U.N. studies have said the world is facing the worst extinction crisis since the dinosaurs were wiped out 65 million years ago, due to factors such as destruction of habitats, rising human populations and climate change.

Dickson said the maps, due to be expanded in more detail next year, were the first to make the overlaps.

"When countries plan they may wish to prioritize action in some areas ahead of others," he said. Other likely factors include protecting indigenous peoples' rights.

Worldwide, the loss of forests was 7.3 million hectares (18.04 million acres) a year between 2000 and 2005, an area the size of Sierra Leone or Panama -- according to U.N. data.

Separately, a report showed that protecting forests could be easier and have bigger effects than parallel drives to curb industrial emissions from factories, power plants and cars.

Reducing deforestation "is commonly seen as a significant, cheap, quick and win-win way to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions," the report by the Center for International Forestry Research said.

"The cost estimates vary, from $7 billion to $28 billion per year for halving deforestation," it said, adding that even the upper estimates compared favorably with industrial curbs.


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Best of our wild blogs: 5 Dec 08


New Pulau Ubin flickr group!
set up by cheguthamrin. Share your favourite Ubin photos on the Pulau Ubin flickr group. More about this on the wild shores of singapore blog

Nesting saga of Peaceful Doves: Part 3 of 6
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

"Expect massive floods in Johor": impact on Chek Jawa?
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Dung beetles in Singapore
on the lekowala! blog

Portrait of a bird: Red-crowned Barbet
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Nat Geo News features the Santo 2006 crabs!
photos taken by the Raffles Museum, on the Biodiversity crew @ NUS blog

Queen puts toe in happy waters
Richard Black on the UK's new marine bill on the BBC News blog


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More orang utan after logging ban

Jaswinder Kaur, The New Straits Times 5 Dec 08;

KOTA KINABALU: The orang utan and other endangered wildlife are making their presence felt at the Ulu Segama and Malua commercial forest reserves almost a year after the Sabah government slammed the brakes on logging at the two sites, giving up billions in potential revenue from timber.
Sabah Forestry Department director Datuk Sam Mannan said that forests at the reserves were starting to look better, a signal that the government had taken the correct step when it announced to the world that it would halt logging at Ulu Segama and Malua, which collectively are almost four times the size of Singapore.

"The forest itself is looking better and we see animals more often now. We see tembadau (wild cattle) and orang utan," he said.

Sabah had in March 2006 said it would stop logging by Dec 31 last year at the two forest reserves due to the high concentration of wildlife.

There are an estimated 4,500 orang utan at Ulu Segama and Malua, almost half of that found in Sabah.
Mannan was speaking after signing a memorandum of agreement with Sime Darby Berhad group chief sustainability officer Puvan Selvanathan for the restoration of degraded forests on a 5,400ha site in the northern part of the Ulu Segama forest reserve.

Sime Darby has pledged RM25 million to restore the habitat of the orang utan by planting indigenous tree species and developing environmental awareness programmes and exchange knowledge to improve wildlife conservation efforts.

"Sime Darby has given us the biggest-ever endowment from outside the government to restore orang utan habitats degraded by years of bad logging practices, multiple forest fires and the threat of encroachments," he said.

"Despite the poor forest condition, northern Ulu Segama is rich in orang utan because it is the last forest refuge north of the Segama river, with its surroundings now developed.

"With this endowment, we believe we can restore the habitat and give the orang utan a better home."

Mannan also pointed out that forest restoration was an expensive business, with more than RM200 million poured in by the Sabah government over the last five years.

He added that political support was crucial in the quest for good environmental and forest governance.

Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman, who witnessed the event, said he was pleased that Sime Darby and other organisations had come forward to assist the state in its efforts to restore degraded jungles.

"Orang utan and other wildlife are important to us.

"We have lost billions in (potential) royalty from logging but we took this bold step to stop logging (at Ulu Segama and Malua)."

Sime Darby president and group chief executive Datuk Seri Ahmad Zubir Murshid said the company was proud to participate in the conservation effort.

"Sabah has taken a critical leadership position. Ulu Segama is nature's gift to the world but it paid the price of development.

"Now the government wants to restore it and it is not going to be a simple exercise," Ahmad Zubir said.


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Polluted Indonesian river to get major cleanup, says ADB

Stephen Coates Yahoo News 4 Dec 08;

JAKARTA (AFP) – One of the world's most polluted rivers, the Citarum in Indonesia, is about to receive a massive cleanup that will improve the lives of millions of people, according to the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

The regional bank said it had agreed to provide a 500-million-dollar multi-tranche loan package to support Indonesian government efforts to rehabilitate the strategic but horribly polluted river on Java island.

The loan, to be delivered in chunks of 50 million dollars over 15 years, is part of the government's 3.5-billion-dollar plan to restore the Citarum and improve the lives of 28 million people who depend on it in some way.

ADB Senior Water Resources Engineer Christopher Morris said pollution levels in the river compromised public health, while the livelihoods of fishing families had been hit by the widespread death of fish.

"The Citarum River basin urgently needs improved management and significant infrastructure investments," he said.

"ADB's initial assistance will provide safe water supply and sanitation facilities for poor families who currently use water from the polluted canal for bathing, laundry and other uses.

"It will also allow the cultivation of an additional 25,000 hectares (62,000 acres) of paddy, benefitting 25,000 farming families."

He said the loans would bolster local efforts to integrate water management along the river, which stretches from Bandung in central West Java province to the capital Jakarta, some 160 kilometres (100 miles) to the northwest.

Once it reaches the capital it becomes a canal bubbling with industrial and household waste, which provides 80 percent of the surface water supply to the city of 12 million people.

Along the way it is lined with hundreds of small-scale industries, only about 20 percent of which are estimated to have waste water treatment programmes.

Dozens of villages also use the river as a place to dump their untreated sewage and household garbage.

Morris said the ADB and the Indonesian authorities would work together with local communities to try to "stop some of the behaviour" that makes the river a "dumping site for all the household waste."

This would involve small-scale projects to build sanitation facilities in villages along the river, as well as larger wastewater treatment plants.

"There's a direct correlation between a lack of water supply, and a lack of sanitation, and poverty in the Citarum River basin," Morris said.

"The communities with toilets and better water supply and the communities which are protected from flooding ... are wealthier."

A health ministry survey published in The Jakarta Globe daily this week showed that 40 percent of households in the country of 234 million people were not fitted with toilets.

It found that 25 percent of households did not have a septic tank or other system for disposing of human waste, and only 73 percent had garbage disposal facilities.

"Many Indonesians know about the importance of using clean water in their daily activities, but if they don't have access to it they have no other choice but to continue living the way they are," ministry official Wan Alkadri was quoted as saying by the newspaper.

"However there are still many Indonesians who ignore their hygiene even when they have access to clean water."

The dumping of solid domestic waste such as plastic bottles blocks drains and contributes to flooding that paralyses parts of Jakarta every wet season.

Morris said rapid urbanization, climate change, environmental degradation, public health and food security were issues affecting not only the Citarum but rivers across Asia and the Pacific region.

Polluted Indonesian river to get $500m clean-up
Jessica Aldred and agencies, guardian.co.uk 5 Dec 08;

One of the world's most polluted rivers, the Citarum in Indonesia, is to get a major clean-up that is hoped to improve the lives of millions of people, the Asian Development Bank announced today.

The Manila-based lender has agreed to provide a $500m (£340m) loan package to the Indonesian government support the restoration of the river basin, which supports a population of 28 million people, delivers 20% of Indonesia's gross domestic product, and provides 80% of water supply to the capital, Jakarta.

Rapid urbanisation over the last 20 years has seen a rise in untreated household sewage, solid waste and industrial effluents, affecting public health and threatening the livelihood of poor fishing families, the bank said.

The loan package will be delivered over the next 15 years, and will support sanitation projects and construction of waste treatment plants in the river basin to provide safe water supply to poor families who use the polluted river for fishing, bathing and laundry.

"Rapid urbanisation, climate change, environmental degradation, public health and food security are all important issues challenging water resources management in Asia and the Pacific region," said Christopher Morris, an ADB senior water resources engineer.

The loan also will allow the cultivation of an additional 61,700 acres (25,000 hectares) of rice paddy, benefiting 25,000 farming families, he said.

The river management programme also aims to supply water to 200,000 more households in Jakarta. It will ultimately increase Jakarta's water supply by 2.5% yearly, and benefit millions by resolving critical water shortages in Bandung, Indonesia's fourth largest city, the bank said.

Last month new research found that severe pollution has made one-third of China's Yellow river unusable.

Known as the country's "mother river", it supplies water to millions of people in the north of China. But in recent years the quality has deteriorated due to factory discharges and sewage from fast-expanding cities.

Much of it is now unfit even for agricultural or industrial use, the study showed.


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Sighting of rare birds brings thrills at Sungei Buloh

Birds could have been blown off-course or their numbers could have risen, says guide
Grace Chua, Straits Times 5 Dec 08;

BIRDWATCHER Danny Lau, 53, was so excited when he spotted the rare Nordmann's Greenshank that he forgot to have lunch.
After a false alarm a month earlier, Mr Lau was thrilled when on Nov 15, he, together with his two friends and his son, saw the rare bird at Sungei Buloh around midday. 'It was the real McCoy,' he said. 'We were so excited we missed our lunch.'

Later, another Nordmann's Greenshank was seen there as well.

Mr Lau's sighting was the first time the 30cm-tall bird had been spotted in Singapore since 1981. The bird breeds in Siberia and usually winters in East and South-east Asia, but can range as far as Australia.

Only 600 to 1,000 Nordmann's Greenshanks (Tringa Guttifer) are believed to exist in the wild.

Their wintering and breeding habitats are at risk, as coastal mudflats in Asia are being developed and wetlands in Russia are being degraded by reindeer.

The Nordmann's Greenshank is often confused with its less endangered cousin, the Common Greenshank, another migratory bird which has longer legs and a single-coloured bill instead of the Nordmann's bi-coloured beak.

Differentiating them is particularly tricky when the two species feed together. 'There are a few hundred waders and you have to spot the one weird-looking guy,' Mr Lau said.

His group spotted the bird during very high tide around 1pm, which forces shorebirds inland to search for crabs, invertebrates, shellfish and worms.

According to wildlife consultant Subaraj Rajathurai, an experienced guide who leads nature trips, the Nordmann's Greenshanks could have strayed into Singapore for several reasons.

Accidents could have blown the birds off-course, while colder winters, fiercer monsoons or loss of feeding grounds could have driven them further south.

Alternatively, there is a small chance that their numbers could be on the rise again.

'It's too early to say if there are any adverse reasons for them turning up,' Mr Subaraj said.

In 1981, the Nordmann's Greenshank was last sighted by a Briton named Richard Arlington at Changi, near what is now the Tanah Merah golf course, he added.

'In terms of VIP status, this bird rates as a once-in-a-lifetime sighting,' he said.

This year's sighting coincides with Sungei Buloh's 15th anniversary, which the reserve will mark this weekend.

'Maybe Sungei Buloh is getting world-renowned, so the birds have heard about it,' Mr Subaraj quipped.

More about Sungei Buloh's Anniversary celebrations this weekend on the wildsingapore happenings blog


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Going bananas over climate change

Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 5 Dec 08;

A GORENG pisang hawker stall along Upper Thomson Road is dishing out green ideology together with its fried bananas.

The vegetarian owners of the stall, Mr Boon Fong Juan, 53, and his wife, Ms Rose Le Thi Tuyet Nhung, 29, have an Internet television station running all day on a screen on their stall counter.

Mrs Boon, who manages the open-air stall, said she does not talk about the broadcast that calls for people to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, unless a curious customer asks.

'Otherwise they might think 'why is a banana seller telling me how to live?',' she said.

Instead, the couple have positioned the screen to face the customers at The Longhouse food court in the hope of encouraging questions or comments.

Of the 150 or so of the stall's customers, Mrs Boon estimates one in five customers poses a question each day.

'Most of the time, people will lose interest when I tell them it's about climate change but if even one person wants to know more, I am satisfied,' she said.

When asked about the best way to mitigate climate change, the couple advocate becoming vegetarian.

They list facts and figures about how it can fight fires, floods and, eventually, food shortages.

In 2006, the Food and Agriculture Organisation estimated 80 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture came from livestock production. This constitutes 18 per cent of all emissions from human activities.

Mr Boon, who was introduced to the concept of global warming during a talk in 1995, started his popular stall the same year.

'Livestock is very polluting and diseases like bird flu are made worse by animal farming, so I thought why not eat more greens?' he said.

Suggestions that customers avoid the use of plastic bags have sometimes led to dirty looks, when the couple are thought of as stingy instead of being environmentally friendly.

'We already provide grease-proof paper bags. I wish we could be like Ikea and charge for plastic,' said Mr Boon.


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More going green by eating greens

Those who avoid meat to save planet swelling the ranks of vegetarians
Tania Tan, Straits Times 5 Dec 08;

MS PAULINE MENEZES went vegan last year after learning about the impact livestock farming had on the environment. Now, she avoids milk and dairy foods, substituting them with soya-based products.

'I don't think I can reverse climate change,' said the 40-year-old, who first stopped eating meat in 1994 for ethical reasons. 'But by not eating meat I like to think I'm doing my small part to help.'

She is one of a growing number of Singaporeans who are choosing leafy greens over meat in a bid to save the planet.

The president of the Singapore Vegetarian Society, Mr George Jacobs, said there are 'definitely more' people turning towards a green diet.

He estimated that the vegetarian population has at least doubled in the past five years, although he could not say how many non-meat eaters there are here.

An increased awareness of ethical and environmental issues, coupled with an 'increasingly colourful range of vegetarian food', has made cutting meat out of everyday diets easier, he noted.

The real cost of livestock farming is alarming, he said.

An environmental report published in 2006 by the United Nations estimates that 50 billion land animals are eaten annually across the globe.

The same report also spells out the heavy toll livestock farming takes on the environment: About 7kg of grain goes into producing 1kg of meat.

Inefficient farming techniques also result in pollution. For instance, over 50 years of agriculture and livestock farming have rendered the water of the Indian Ganges undrinkable.

Facts like these have convinced some Singaporeans to take the plunge into a meatless diet.

Vegetarian food supplier Wu Qing of Zhen Hui Trading has seen a threefold increase in demand over the past five years.

He has been in the business for over a decade and supplies restaurants and vegetarian food stalls. He reckons that on top of the usual religious and health reasons, people are making diet switches to 'be good to the planet' and to 'save money'.

'A lot of Hollywood superstars are also vegetarian, so I think it's becoming more trendy,' Mr Wu added.

In the United States, a movement called Vegetarian Wednesday is slowly gathering steam as more people warm to the idea of abstaining from meat at least once a week.

However, a meatless diet, Singapore's vegetarian society concedes, is not for everyone. Mr Jacobs said his group does not condemn meat eating. Rather, he hopes that through education, Singaporeans will first consider 'reducing their meat intake'.

'The idea of not eating meat might scare some, but if you just keep an open mind, it's not as difficult as one might think,' he said.


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Singapore is 12th most expensive city in Asia

Cheryl Frois, Channel NewsAsia 4 Dec 08;

SINGAPORE: Singapore is the 12th most expensive city in Asia, according to a global survey on cost of living by international human resource company ECA International.

The country jumped 27 places, and is one of Asia's biggest movers.

Hong Kong was ranked 6th, while Tokyo took the top spot.

For the first time, Beijing overtook Hong Kong as the most expensive Chinese city.

The survey noted that the cost of living for Asian cities such as Beijing, Hong Kong, Singapore and Taipei has gone up in the past year due to fluctuating currency and inflation rates.

Cities all over the world are reeling from exchange rate fluctuations brought on by the economic crisis.

This in turn has a big impact on the average costs of living for expatriates.

Living costs in Hong Kong are now approximately 15 per cent higher than in Singapore, an increase from 12 per cent last year.

According to ECA International, the last two months have seen goods and services in Hong Kong swing from being 10 per cent cheaper than in London to being almost 10 per cent more expensive.

Beijing is now three times more expensive than Singapore compared to last year, while cost of living for foreigners visiting Korea and Singapore is now almost on par.

One of the wildest swings is in Japan.

Goods and services in Japan are now 68 per cent more expensive than in Singapore.

This is up from 43 per cent in September last year.

The unravelling of the carry trade resulting in the strengthening of the Japanese yen is mostly to blame for this.

In contrast, Islamabad is the cheapest location in Asia.

Goods and services there are 70 per cent cheaper than in Japan.

In Europe, Moscow is the most expensive location, replacing Oslo.

The weakening of the pound has seen central London off the list of the world's top ten most expensive cities.

ECA's survey is carried out twice a year and compares a basket of 125 consumer goods and services commonly purchased by expatriates in over 370 locations worldwide.

- CNA/yt


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Electricity tariff cuts: Impact on households

Usage dipped 1.4% when prices were high last month; with price fall, homes will save more

Liaw Wy-Cin, Straits Times 5 Dec 08;

HOMES and businesses here powered down last month just as electricity prices hit a high.

Maximum power consumption dipped 1.4 per cent in the very month that electricity prices climbed 21 per cent - the biggest hike in seven years.

The electricity and gas industry regulator, the Energy Market Authority (EMA) said yesterday that the decline was probably due to the slowing economy.

The agency's chief executive designate Lawrence Wong hoped that energy conservation was also playing a part.

'With the increase of this quarter, people have been very conscious about the use of electricity,' said Mr Wong.

Some, however, are cutting back on power consumption because of problems paying their bills.

As of October, there were over 18,000 households with problems making payments, according to statistics provided yesterday.

Some 5,090 households are in arrears and another 13,243 households are on the Pay As You Use scheme which replaces conventional power meters with meters that work only if an account has sufficient credit.

In December 2006, there were about 12,200 households on the special meters.

They will get some help with the latest cut in electricity tariffs.

Households can expect to save anything from $8 a month for one-room HDB households to $63 for families in private homes.

A government programme known as Utilities-Save (U-Save) also provides rebates of $130 to $330 this year to households.

In addition, community development councils offer vouchers to needy residents who have problems keeping up with payments.

For 59-year-old Rahmat Haroun, a cargo warehouse helper who lives in a four-room flat, the U-Save rebates amount to $295 this year.

The amount covers two months' utilities charges, about $130 a month for his family of six.

Electricity charges make up 54 per cent of his total utilities bill, which also includes water and refuse collection charges.

'We've always not used a lot of electricity anyway. I only switch on the lights at 7pm when I come home from work. And we try to sleep by 9pm, so we switch off the lights and television by then, and we don't have an air-conditioner,' said Mr Rahmat.

He earns $900 a month, and lives with his wife and four children aged 24 to 28.

Household electricity charges may become even cheaper in three years, when Singapore's household electricity sector is opened up to competitors of Singapore Power.

Electricity prices have already come down 3 per cent to 8 per cent among industrial users, after the sector was opened up to competition.

For households, the EMA has started with a six-month pilot programme in Marine Parade and West Coast to simulate a system where there are several electricity providers to choose from.

If this works, the system will be rolled out to all 1.2 million households in Singapore.


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Tourist-Friendly Artificial Reef Launched In Pulau Payar, Malaysia

Bernama 4 Dec 08;

LANGKAWI, Dec 4 (Bernama) -- The Malaysian Marine Parks Department today launched a tourist-friendly artificial reef as a recreational outlet and a catalyst to increase coral reefs and fish breeding in the waters that surround Pulau Payar, here.

Its director-general, Abd Jamal Mydin said the artificial reef, made of ceramic worth RM100,000, could increase the marine ecosystem diversity around the island.

"The design of the artificial reef is more dynamic and strong and it was confirmed that its construction did not affect the marine habitat.

"The chosen site is also suitable for tourists who come for scuba diving activity as they could also enjoy the marine life in the reef area," he told reporters after the launch.

Meanwhile, Abd Jamal said the department would continue to upgrade the condition of marine parks nationwide by conducting proactive research pertaining to the conservation of marine life.

"Among others, we would acquire international marine life experts to train our staff," he said adding that RM10 million was allocated for the conservation of marine parks under the 9th Malaysian Plan.


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Malaysia's Marine Parks Vital For Conservation

Melati Mohd Ariff, Bernama 4 Dec 08;

PULAU TIOMAN, Dec 4 (Bernama) -- In 1983, the then Prime Minister Datuk Seri (now Tun) Dr Mahathir Mohamad directed the agriculture authorities to establish the national marine parks.

The move was among efforts to boost the nation's fisheries resources via the conservation of breeding grounds and refuge for the various species of commercial fish.

Each of the marine park measures 2.0 nautical miles from the shoreline of the island gazetted for the purpose and any forms of fishing as well as other activities detrimental to the marine life are prohibited within this zone. So far the authorities have turned 42 islands and their respective marine perimeter into national marine parks.

Among them are the islands of Pulau Tioman in Pahang, Terengganu's Pulau Redang and Pulau Perhentian, Pulau Tinggi and Pulau Sibu (Johor), Pulau Payar (Kedah) and Labuan Federal Territory.

CRITICAL HABITAT

Director General of the Marine Parks Department (JTLM), Abdul Jamal Mydin, said most of the areas gazetted as marine parks are coral reef zones.

"The coral reefs act as breeding grounds apart from providing shelter for this marine life before they move out to the deeper sea.

"In a way we are helping the fishermen to have a better and bigger haul of catch. Just imagine islands without marine parks like what has happened to Pulau Pangkor and Pulau Langkawi," he told Bernama in an exclusive interview here recently.

Abdul Jamal said the coral reefs should be conserved and protected as the structures are exposed to natural and human-related destruction.

He said the department has also constructed artificial reefs as part of its programme to provide more breeding grounds for the fish.

"Before, we used a lot of old tyres but as this adversely affected the sea water quality and we have stopped using this material. Now we are using concrete, PVC and boat wrecks as the fish homes," said Abdul Jamal.

Abdul Jamal was appointed as Director General of JTLM on Oct 13, 2008 after compulsory retirement on May 26, 2008. Prior to the appointment, he has served JTLM for three years.

ECO-TOURISM

According to Abdul Jamal, the coral reef is an important element for the eco-tourism industry.

Each year some 500,000 tourists visited islands that have marine parks. Pulau Tioman alone receives about 200,000 visitors annually.

Abdul Jamal said many of the tourists came to view the various species of coral reefs and fish found at the marine parks and Malaysia is well endowed with marine treasures that include 400 species of corals and over 1,000 species of fish.

"However we need to have a balance between the conservation measures and eco-tourism. This is to ensure that eco-tourism activities do not hamper efforts to conserve the coral reefs," he said.

MORE MARINE PARKS

Abdul Jamal said the department hopes to add more marine parks to the existing list and a road show is planned for early next year for this purpose.

He hoped the road show would provide the public with the information on why marine parks are crucial to the country socially and economically.

The road show is expected to travel through Pulau Pinang, Perak, Melaka, Negeri Sembilan and Kelantan within the first quarter of 2009.

He said one of the key criteria for an island to be made a marine park is that it needs to have coral reefs and other marine resources.

"The consent of the state government is also required as islands in the country come under the jurisdiction of the respective state authorities.

"We need to convince the state government first but if there is no consent then we cannot gazette the island as a marine park," he said.

Abdul Jamal cited the case of Pulau Sembilan, one of the cluster of islands off Pulau Pangkor.

He said the island used to showcase many species of beautiful corals and fishes but certain quarters there rejected the suggestion that the island be made a marine park, hence eliciting a negative answer from the state government.

"Now all of the corals and fish have disappeared from the waters of the island due to extensive trawler activities," he said, adding that many islands in the country are suffering the same fate.

Abdul Jamal called on the state authorities to view marine parks in the long-term perspective as much benefits could be obtained from such a move.

He said the Terengganu government has been very perceptive towards the idea of turning the state's islands as marine parks.

"Almost all of the islands off the Terengganu coast have been turned into marine parks apart from Pulau Bidong due to security reasons."

MARINE PARK ACT

Abdul Jamal said the move to create national marine parks is provided under sections 41-45 of the Fisheries Act 1985 as the marine parks used to be a section under the Fisheries Department.

This section was later moved to be under the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry (NRE) in 2003. Four years later in July, the section was made the Marine Parks Department.

He said with the move, it is a necessary for a new law on marine parks to be enacted and added that the draft has been completed and submitted to the NRE Ministry for further action with the Attorney-General's Chambers.

STIFFER FINES

The draft for the new enactment provides stiffer fines for fishing vessels that encroach into the marine parks.

At the moment, maximum fine is not exceeding RM20,000 depending on the type of offence and size of the vessel.

He said the intruding fishing boats are willing to take the risk of being fined due to this small amount.

At times, they gave the excuse of taking refuge from the stormy seas and bad weather when they intruded into the marine parks, he said.

Abdul Jamal cited Pulau Tioman where from January to November 2008, there were 29 cases of encroachment as compared to only 13 for the whole of last year.

When the new Act is in place, the authority to impose the compound would be with the JTLM as compared to under the Malaysian Fisheries Department currently.

FEES FOR MARINE PARK VISITS

Since 1994, each of the tourist who visited the marine parks has to pay conservation fee of RM5 for adults and RM2 for children below 12 years old. This is provided for under the Fee Act 1951.

"Those exempted are residents of the respective island where the marine park is located, those working at the park and civil servants exempted by the department's Director-General," said Abdul Jamal.

He said there were no problems with foreign tourists over the fees imposed.

"However some of the local visitors have refused to pay," he said, adding that the fees collected is around RM1.5 million per year.

Abdul Jamal said the proceeds were used to fund the conservation of the marine parks including beach clean up, monitoring and enforcement operations.

He also said the department might review the fees imposed.

PATROL BOATS, BOOST EFFICIENCY

Abdul Jamal said the department plans to acquire more patrol boats to boost enforcement at the marine parks.

At present it has 12 of such vessels for patrols at 42 of the national marine parks nationwide.

"All of these boats are from the Fisheries Department and a number of them are not suitable for use particularly during the monsoon season.

"But, we still need to conduct the patrols during this season as it is the time when the fishing trawlers particularly the foreign vessels take the opportunity to cast their fishing nets in the midst of taking refuge in the marine park islands from the rough weather," he said.

According to him, the department is hoping to buy the all-weather boats that could cost up to RM10 million each.

Abdul Jamal also said the department planned to boost its manpower from the existing 86 to 240 people.

LOCAL COMMUNITY

To ensure that the conservation plans of the marine parks to proceed well, the National Marine Parks Department have roped in the assistance of the islanders.

The move has assisted the department particularly in the enforcement aspect as it is being hampered by the shortage of manpower.

Abdul Jamal cited the 'Rakan Park' programme that the department implemented on Pulau Tioman which involved the island's Village Development and Security Committee (JKKK) members.

He said the Rakan Park members function as the 'eyes' and 'ears' for the department on activities like catching fish, sea cucumber and coral destruction at the marine parks.

This programme has instilled the 'sense of belonging' among the island's residents as they became more responsible in protecting their own environment.

"Furthermore, most of the island's residents are involved in the tourism industry," he said.

Since the programme's establishment last year, it has shown a marked improvement with the higher number of encroaching fishing vessels apprehended within the Pulau Tioman marine park.

Abdul Jamal said the department took the Pulau Tioman's Rakan Park members for a motivational course to Pulau Pangkor where they also interacted with the residents there.

He said at Pulau Pangkor, the Rakan Park members were told of the hardship experienced by the fishermen there to the extent that they were forced to sell their fishing vessels due to the severely depleted fisheries resources at the island.

The Rakan Park programme would be expanded in stages to other marine park islands, he said.

EDUCATION IS ALSO VITAL

Abdul Jamal said apart from making enforcement, the department is also into tourism, research, monitoring and management of the marine parks.

He said the department is collaborating with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to stage awareness programmes not only for the school children, right from the year one stage, but also the villagers, university undergraduates and non-governmental organisations (NGOs).

So far these programmes have been implemented at Pulau Perhentian, Pulau Redang, Pulau Tioman and Pulau Payar.

"The focus is on conservation. We want our children to realise the importance of conserving the resources, maintaining the island's cleanliness and the most important aspect is having the sense of belonging.

"Both the young and old should be working as a team to protect the island which would benefit not only the country but the island's community as well," he said.

Abdul Jamal said the department viewed knowledge as the crucial factor as enforcement alone is insufficient to ensure the marine parks' sanctity.

"If we tell them not to fish, many would not take heed of that but if their own children asked them not to do so, then it could be more effective. "Hence, this psychology way has better impact," said Abdul Jamal.

The department is also planning to ask the education authorities to include the national marine parks' conservation in the school's co-curriculum syllabus, he added.

-- BERNAMA


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Major earthquake rumbling off Sumatra

Scientists detect signs but cannot predict when or where it will strike
Tania Tan, Straits Times 5 Dec 08;

AS INDONESIA prepares to mark the fourth anniversary of the Boxing Day tsunami that killed more than 200,000 people, new scientific findings are painting a grim picture.

An earthquake potentially larger than the one that triggered the 2004 tsunami is threatening off Sumatra, researchers from the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) said yesterday.

'What we are now trying to understand is how close it is to happening,' said Professor Kerry Sieh, director of the university's Earth Observatory of Singapore.

Sumatra lies above one of the most active earthquake sites in the world known as the Ring of Fire.

Using satellite and field data collected after an earthquake in September last year near the island's coast, researchers found something ominous.

While the tremor released some of the tremendous pressure created by the movement of the Earth's tectonic plates, a large amount of tension remains.

Researchers say that is a recipe for a major quake that could be larger than the 9.2- magnitude tremor in the Indian Ocean that unleashed the 2004 tsunami.

But the scientists are not sure when or where the earthquake will strike, making it impossible to predict whether the fallout will be as devastating as in 2004.

About 20 people died in an 8-magnitude quake last year which uprooted nearby coral reefs, lifting them up to one metre above the ocean's surface.

The tectonic plates off Sumatra last experienced such a large shift in 1797 and 1833, said Prof Sieh.

Singapore is too far from the Ring of Fire to suffer severe effects from earthquakes in that region, but tremors were felt here during last year's quake.

Eventually, scientists from NTU's Earth Observatory of Singapore hope to develop a system to forecast earthquakes 10 to 20 years before they happen, said Prof Sieh.

'That's the time scale that governments and engineers need to build better infrastructure, and the time it takes to educate the next generation about how to avoid being caught in a disaster.'

Getting there, however, will be difficult.

'The science of earthquake prediction is still at a stage where it's very imprecise,' said Associate Professor Lee Fook Hou, head of the Centre for Hazards Research at the National University of Singapore.

This is because large earthquakes - which throw up the most scientific data - happen once every hundred or thousand years, explained Prof Lee.

'We just don't have enough information right now.'

Learning about past quakes - from corals
Straits Times 5 Dec 08;

UNCOVERING the history of earthquakes has been an uphill task for researchers, as data from past tremors is hard to come by.

Scientists, however, have discovered that coral reefs can tell the story of earthquakes that occurred more than 200 years ago.

The growth patterns of corals reflect the stability of the land mass, or tectonic plate, that they sit on.

The earth's crust is made of several plates that are in constant motion.

Bowl-shaped corals suggest plates that are constantly shifting, while flat-top corals point to stable land, explained Earth Observatory of Singapore director Kerry Sieh.

Researchers from several universities, including the California Institute of Technology and the Indonesian Institute of Science, descended last year upon the Mentawai Islands near Sumatra.

The Mentawai coral reefs, which are several hundred years old, are bowl-shaped - consistent with the constant seismic activity in the area.

The history of earthquakes in the region gives scientists precious data to develop future prediction models.

Understanding when earthquakes occur could, in turn, help governments and policymakers to develop better infrastructure and save lives.

TANIA TAN


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Prelude to Piracy: The Poor Fishermen of Somalia

Horand Knaup, Spiegel 4 Dec 08;

Firing shots at a luxury cruise ship, taking a super tanker hostage: the papers are full of Somalia's audacious pirates. But the local fishermen grab fewer headlines -- and have a stricken existence.

The outcry, addressed to the United Nations and the international community, was loud and bitter. "Help us solve the problem," said professional fisherman Muhammed Hussein from the coastal city of Marka, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of the Somali capital Mogadishu. "What is happening here is economic terrorism."

Jeylani Shaykh Abdi, another Somali fisherman, added: "They are not just robbing us of our fish. They are ramming our boats and taking our nets -- including the catch."

It wasn't long ago that Somali fisherman were loudly complaining about the poor state of their lives and livelihoods. About 700 ships from other countries, they said, were casting their nets along Somalia's roughly 3,300 kilometers (2,050 miles) of coastline, using practices that showed little consideration for the fish stocks or local fishermen. None of the trawlers, the Somali fishermen claimed, had a license or an agreement with the government in Mogadishu. Of course, that government has wielded practically no influence over the past 15 years.

The intruders, Hussein and Shaykh Abdi complained, used nets with very small mesh sizes and fished with banned dragnets, and with dynamite in some cases. The foreign fishing boats would ram local fishing vessels, pour boiling water on them and, if they still refused to budge, shoot at them. It was not unusual for the intruders to hire Somali militias to drive away the local fishermen.

That was in 2006. The outcry was loud and clear -- but without any results.

Back then the Somali fishermen were doing badly. Today they are even worse off. Trawlers from faraway places continue to ply the waters off the long coastline, ships from Japan and India, as well as Italy and Spain. The Spanish fishing cutter that pirates hijacked in May and the Thai trawler an Indian warship inadvertently sank in early November provided evidence of just how attractive the Somali fishing grounds are worldwide.

Sardines To Sharks

And for good reason: The coast of Somalia has among the highest concentrations of fish in the world's oceans. Somali fishermen catch a wide variety of seafood -- from tuna to sardines, dorado to perch, shark to lobster -- in their nets. At the turn of the millennium, Somalia was home to about 30,000 professional fishermen, along with 60,000 occasional fishermen.

Fishing was never a thriving business in Somalia. Somalis are not enthusiastic fish eaters, and the bulk of their catch was traditionally exported. But today there is little left of what was already a relatively small and unprofitable industry. Fish processing, especially for export, has ceased to exist. There is no reliable transportation and there are no longer any functioning refrigeration facilities in the country, nor are there any ships left that could dock in Mogadishu.

Somali fishermen have another problem: toxic waste. Initially dumped on land, toxic waste was increasingly dumped at sea after the collapse of the regime of former President Siad Barre in 1991. Because the country has no coast guard, for the past 20 years the Somali coastline has had no protection against European ships dumping waste at sea. Although hard evidence was rare, there have been periodic and mysterious incidents. In early 2002, tens of thousands of dead fish washed ashore at Merca, south of Mogadishu. The causes remain unclear.

In the spring of 2004, fishermen spotted two large containers floating in the water near Bosaso. Whether they were deliberately tossed overboard or accidentally fell of a container ship in rough seas is unclear. The Indian Ocean tsunami in December 2004, which also reached the African coast, unearthed dozens of containers of toxic waste and deposited the waste along the Somali coast. According to a United Nations report, many coastal residents suffered "acute respiratory infections, heavy coughing, bleeding gums and mouth, abdominal haemorrhages, unusual skin rashes, and even death."

Experts and environmentalists have long been aware of the problem. In 2006, a team of specialists sent to the region to investigate discovered nine toxic waste sites along 700 kilometers (435 miles) of coastline in southern Somalia.

The UN envoy to Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, said last October that the UN has "reliable information that European and Asian companies are dumping toxic waste, including nuclear waste, off the Somali coastline."

An Excuse for the Pirates

In Mombasa, Kenya, pirate expert Andrew Mwangura complains "that toxic waste has been dumped in Somalia for a long time," and that the international community is looking on and "doing nothing about it," thereby giving the pirates "a convenient excuse to legitimize their actions."

The words of UN Envoy Ould-Abdallah were confirmed only a few days later, when leaking containers of toxic waste were washed ashore in Harardhere, about 200 kilometers (124 miles) south of Mogadishu. Animals in the area contracted unusual diseases, and coastal residents suffered coughing and vomiting attacks. The lack of scruples displayed by foreigners using Somali waters to dump their toxic waste is not all that surprising: proper waste disposal in Europe costs about 400 times as much as illegal dumping in Somalia.

The extent of ocean dumping of toxic waste is just as poorly documented as the claims of adverse effects on fish populations off the coast. Speculation abounds, and yet there are no reliable studies from the last 20 years. The fact is, however, that Somali fishermen, for various reasons, have been catching fewer and fewer fish in their nets for years.

While the fishermen complained quietly, the members of another profession -- the pirate trade -- have been quick to claim the plight of the fishermen as their own. The Somali pirates have repeatedly argued that they were forced into piracy by the demise of fishing and the practice of dumping toxic waste at sea. But the truth is that only a small fraction of traditional fishermen have switched to piracy. When the recently hijacked supertanker Sirius Star dropped anchor off Harardhere, former army General Mohamed Nureh Abdulle told the BBC that the hijackers were unknown, and that they had not attempted to establish contact with the coastal population. Elsewhere along the coast, it is often unknown men -- not former local fishermen -- who are guarding the ships and waiting for ransom money.

Attractive Piracy

Nevertheless, toxic waste and illegal foreign fishing are convenient arguments for the pirates. "The Somali coastline has been destroyed, and we believe this money is nothing compared to the devastation that we have seen on the seas," said Januna Ali Jama, a spokesman for the pirate group that is still waiting for its ransom for the MV Faina, a Ukrainian vessel carrying tanks and military hardware.

Pirate life is attractive. The profits are immense, even though the men carrying out the hijackings keep only about 30 percent of the ransom money. Of the remainder, 20 percent goes to the bosses, 30 percent is paid in bribes to government officials and 20 percent is set aside for future actions.

The pirates are quick to accept losses. Even though a number of pirates are now in prison in Paris, in the Kenyan port city of Mombasa and in Bosaso, Somalia's main port, and although the international community has sent a small armada of warships to Somalia, the hijackers are getting more and more audacious, targeting supertankers and ships transporting weapons, luxury yachts and chemical tankers.

In what was apparently a coordinated effort, on Tuesday night they attempted to attack five ships simultaneously in waters east of Somalia. A short time earlier, they had attacked the luxury cruise ship MS Nautica, with more than 1,000 passengers on board.

None of the attacks succeeded -- but this will not deter the pirates. Bosaso, Eyl and Hobyo, which, until recently, were miserably poor fishing towns, are barely recognizable today. Small mansions are popping up by the dozen, new restaurants are opening their doors, giant weddings are all the rage and the imports of four-wheel-drive SUVs are booming. Clan affiliation, long one of the key impediments to development in Somalia, is suddenly irrelevant. With ransom money pouring into coastal towns, former differences are fading into the background.

Everyone profits from the sudden influx of cash: construction firms, gas stations, restaurants and outfits specializing in providing food for the hostages. Even the government of Somalia's semi-autonomous Puntland region appears to be in on the take. "Presumably, all key political figures in Somalia are profiting from piracy," says Roger Middleton, an analyst with the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London.

Only one professional group is getting nothing from the boom along the coast: Somali fishermen.

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan


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Madagascar: Too few sharks is a bad thing

IRIN Africa 5 Dec 08;

TOLIARA, 4 December 2008 (IRIN) - Coastal communities in southwestern Madagascar, who risk their lives travelling long distances in dugout canoes to supply a lucrative demand for shark fins, face an uncertain future as unsustainable fishing practices threaten the survival of the marine resources on which they depend.

People in villages along the southwestern coast are reporting a dramatic decrease in all marine resources. "Around 2000 the decline really started here. The octopus catch fell and sea cucumbers disappeared. Some fish species also disappeared," Roger Samba, in the village of Andavadoaka, in Toliara Province, told IRIN.

"It is difficult to catch enough fish to sell. People go far away, fishing from early in the morning until late at night, to catch not even 10kg or 20kg of fish - just 5kg."

When shark fisherman Zoffe loads his nets into his pirogue (a dugout canoe, often with a sail) in the morning and sets out from his home in the coastal town of Morombe into the deep waters of the Mozambique Channel, he knows that he will be lucky if he catches anything.

"It is really hard to catch shark now," Zoffe told IRIN. "Things are not like they used to be; before, there used to be shark very near the shore - just five metres below the surface of the sea - now they are only found very far away, and are very deep. They are very difficult to catch."

The coral reef system along Madagascar's southwestern coast is almost 500km long and one of the largest in the world. Marine resources provide the primary source of income for all coastal communities, supporting more than 20,000 people in Toliara Province alone. Entire villages have traditionally relied on catching sea cucumbers and octopus, and fishing on near-shore coral reefs as their sole source of income.

"Communities here depend massively on marine resources, yet these are over-exploited and they desperately need to find a way to utilise them sustainably," Garth Cripps, a marine scientist based in Toliara town, told IRIN.

"If they carry on as they are, they will push the ecosystem to the brink of collapse, and the social and environmental consequences of that will be very negative for them."

The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) estimates the value of Madagascar's fisheries at US$160 million annually; fishing mining and tourism are the three main drivers of economic development.

At least 3.6 billion people worldwide - 60 percent of the global population - live within 60km of the coast, the UN estimates. Marine systems provide an estimated $21 trillion in environmental and economic services annually – 70 percent more than terrestrial habitats.

Demand for shark fin in China, where the meat is considered a delicacy, and for sea cucumbers, which are believed to be an aphrodisiac, have become major sources of income in Madagascar, which exports up to 20 tonnes of shark fins every year. A kilogram can fetch as much as 140,000 ariary ($56) on local markets, and up to $1,000 in China.

Poor law enforcement

Poor law enforcement also means that vulnerable marine resources are being over-exploited. Although the government has banned the use of air tanks to dive for sea cucumbers, the practice continues.

"The laws regarding the exploitation of marine resources are not implemented here in Madagascar," said Man Wai Rabenevanana, director of the Institute of Marine Science in Toliara. "The state doesn't invest enough in managing marine resources and capacity building to allow them to manage resources effectively."

Madagascar has a long way to go in protecting its marine resources. "It is very difficult to stop fishermen from catching shark and collecting sea cucumbers," said Rabenevanana. "These fishermen are poor and the attraction of fishing for sharks and sea cucumbers is huge. If we truly want to protect our resources we must address the market. We must do more to discourage the Chinese from eating shark fin soup; perhaps we can even find an alternative."

There are no conservation programmes in place to protect sharks. "It is not a sustainable fishery because it is not properly regulated," Volanirina Ramahery, of the World Wide Fund for Nature, an environmental NGO, told IRIN.

The decline of the primary predator could unbalance the entire marine food chain. Studies in the Caribbean have shown that too few sharks mean other carnivorous species increase and eat too many other useful fish, such as those keeping algae on the coral in check, which can eventually endanger the entire reef ecosystem.

"The disappearance of sharks would have devastating impacts on marine habitats and the local communities that depend on these," Frances Humber, a marine biologist studying shark populations in southern and western Madagascar with the British conservation organisation, Blue Ventures, told IRIN.

"A collapse in the shark fishing industry could threaten the economic stability of the region, and would mean the loss of livelihoods for thousands of fisherman."

In an effort to provide alternative sources of income for fishermen and to help protect the marine environment, Blue Ventures is developing a project to farm sea cucumbers. The organisation is working with an export company to establish sea cucumber farms run by local women in the village of Belavenoke in Toliara. All profits from the venture will go directly to the village.

Women in Belavenoke have welcomed the initiative. "Sea cucumber farming is good for us," Katherine, a member of the local Women's Association involved in the project told IRIN. "Resources are decreasing and I am worried about the future, because maybe one day there will be nothing left for us."

Clarisse, a sea cucumber and octopus supplier in Belavenoke said: "Life is getting harder all the time here, because there is no way of earning money except from fishing. It is only the sea that gives us money, but the fish are fewer and fewer, and I am worried about this."

cc/jk/he


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TV footage leads to discovery of strange and rare monkey

mongabay.com 4 Dec 08;

After showing archival TV footage of a critically endangered species of primate to local villagers, conservationists have discovered a previously unknown population of the Tonkin snub-nosed monkey in a remote forested area of northern Vietnam. The find the offers new hope for the species, which is down to 200 individuals in two of Vietnam's northern-most provinces — Tuyen Quang and Ha Giang.

Following up on 2007 surveys of communities near the Chinese border which suggested the presence of the distinctive primate following TV broadcast of nature programming showing the species, scientists from Fauna & Flora International (FFI) observed 15-20 individuals in a small forest patch in Quan Ba District, Ha Giang Province. The group including three infants, indicating that this is a breeding population. Local reports suggest there may also be another group in a nearby area.

The Tonkin snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus avunculus) — which was thought extinct until rediscovered in the late 1980s — is at risk from hunting and habitat loss. Biologists on the recent expedition noted that the Quan Ba population was "very sensitive to the presence of people", indicating that the monkeys associated humans with danger. FFI says cardamom plantations and logging for the Chinese timber market are the biggest threats to the newly discovered population, but that raising awareness among locals of the conservation importance of the species could help protect it. With funds provided by Twycross Zoo in the UK, FFI is working with local stakeholders and the Swiss development charity Caritas to develop sustainable livelihoods for villagers living near the forest that supports the monkeys.

"When I saw the Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys in Tung Vai Commune I was overjoyed," said Le Khac Quyet, an expert on the species who is credited with discovering both the new population and one in Khau Ca in 2002. "This new discovery further underlines the importance of learning more about the Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys' range and distribution. There is still time to save this unique species, but with just 200 or so left and threats still strong, we need to act now."


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White possum said to be first victim of global warming

Peter Michael couriermail.au.com 2 Dec 08;

SCIENTISTS say a white possum native to Queensland's Daintree forest has become the first mammal to become extinct due to man-made global warming.
The white lemuroid possum, a rare creature found only above 1000m in the mountain forests of far north Queensland, has not been seen for three years.

Experts fear climate change is to blame for the disappearance of the highly vulnerable species thanks to a temperature rise of up to 0.8C.

Researchers will mount a last-ditch expedition early next year deep into the untouched "cloud forests" of the Carbine range near Mt Lewis, three hours north of Cairns, in search of the tiny tree-dweller, dubbed the "Dodo of the Daintree".

The cute white possum (Hemibelideus lemuroids) has not been sighted in any night time spotlighting expedition since 2005.

Scientists believe some frog, bug and insects species have also been killed off by climate change. But this would be the first known loss of a mammal and the most significant since the extinction of the Dodo and the Tasmanian Tiger.

"It is not looking good," researcher Steve Williams said.

"If they have died out it would be first example of something that has gone extinct purely because of global warming."

Professor Williams, director of the Centre for Tropical Biodiversity and Climate Change at James Cook University, said the white lemuroid possum had been identified as highly vulnerable five years ago.

"It only takes four or five hours of temperatures above 30C to kill this highly vulnerable species," he said.

"They live off the moisture in the trees in the cooler, high-altitude cloud forests and, under extreme heat, they are unable to maintain their body temperature."

He said record high temperatures in the summer of 2005 could have caused a massive die-off.

"Prior to 2005 we were seeing a lemuroid every 45 minutes of spotlighting at one main site at Mt Lewis," Professor Williams said.

"But, in three years, in more than 20 hours of intensive spotlighting, none has been sighted."

Reef and Rainforest Research Centre chief executive Sheridan Morris said the "eyes of the world" would be on next year's the expedition to find the little creature.

"If it has died out it will be devastating," Ms Morris said.

"It is a big one, and a big one to bang the drum over.

"It is equally as shocking as losing an iconic marine species like a whale or the dugong."


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Rock painting reveals unknown bat

Paul Rincon, BBC News 4 Dec 08;

An ancient cave painting from northern Australia depicts a previously unknown species of large bat, researchers say.

The team thinks the rock art from Australia's Kimberley region could date to the height of the last Ice Age - about 20-25,000 years ago.

The painting depicts eight roosting fruit bats - also called flying foxes.
They have features that do not match any Australian bats alive today, suggesting the art depicts a species that is now extinct.

The findings have been published online in the scholarly journal Antiquity.

The bats would not have lived in the same cave as the painting; they are depicted hanging on a vine, which indicates a lowland forest habitat.

Jack Pettigrew, from the University of Queensland, and colleagues report that the eight bats in the painting have white markings on their faces.

No present day Australian flying foxes possess these features.

Megabats

Dr Pettigrew and his team then considered whether the bat matched any living "megabats" from other parts of the world.

Worldwide there are six such species, two in Africa and four living in islands off South-East Asia.

The two African species have irregular white markings, unlike the depiction.

One of the Asian species has a white patch above the eyes - which is inconsistent with the rock art; the other lacks the pale belly shown in the Kimberley painting.

This left Styloctenium wallacei , from the island of Sulawesi, Stylocteniummindorensis from Mindoro in the Philippines.
All are medium-sized with the distinctive white facial stripe shown in the cave art. All are fruit eaters living in lowland forest. Although Styloctenium have small white markings just above the eyes, these would not have been visible in profile, say the researchers.

On balance, say the researchers, Styloctenium is the closest living genus to the ancient species in the painting.

No fossil bats that could fit the bill are known from the local area.

"Fossilisation is notoriously poor in the rocky tropical environment of the Kimberley," Dr Pettigrew told BBC News.

"Flying fox fossils are known from the limestone of Queensland's Riversleigh, from which they can be extracted in perfect condition using acetic acid. But the facial markings would never be preserved in such material."

Stripey face

These fossils are also 30 million years older than the Kimberley stripe-faced flying fox.

The bat depictions were found on a sandstone wall protected by overhangs, near Kalumburu. They belong to a type of rock art known as "Bradshaw".

This Bradshaw rock art was painted more than 17,500 years ago by sophisticated artists. The style is spread over an area belonging to several Aboriginal nations, each of which has a different name for the rock art.

"The art site has been chosen so that it is not exposed to sun, has a flat wall for the art and a cap to protect the wall from the weather," Dr Pettigrew said.

There is considerable debate about whether past mammal extinctions in Australia were caused by human hunting pressure or by climate change.

The researchers regard bats as too mobile to have been hunted to extinction by the culture that produced the cave art.

The demise of the Kimberley white-faced megabats is more likely to have resulted from the climatic and ecological changes that followed the end of the Ice Age, say the scientists.


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Seawater holds key to future food

Julian Siddle, BBC News 4 Dec 08;

Growing crops in salt water is becoming necessary to overcome shortages of fresh water, say researchers writing in the journal Science.

They suggest the domestication of wild plants that grow in salty conditions could help reduce global food shortages.

Only 1% of the Earth's water is freshwater.

Around the world, many agricultural areas are becoming less productive as salt levels in water supplies increase.

"Salinisation is irreversible," says Professor Jelte Rozema from the department of systems ecology at the Free University, Amsterdam, in the Netherlands. "Sooner or later mankind has to accept the world is becoming more saline."

The scientists say we will have to make use of salty environments for agriculture. Farmland is becoming increasingly salty as global sea levels rise, but plants which already thrive in salty areas may provide a ready food source.

Wild plants

Future crops could come from plant species that grow in brackish water, around the mouths of rivers, where salt and freshwater mix, say the researchers.

The rising cost of bringing in freshwater to irrigate traditional crops may force producers to turn to salt water agriculture.

"We have limited amounts of freshwater - most of it is used for drinking water. Gradually it will be profitable to think of brackish water and sea water as a resource." said Professor Rozema.

The scientists suggest the best way forward is to domesticate wild plants, crossbreeding them to produce higher yields.

Plants such as sea kale and asparagus-like samphire, which grow along the coast in many countries have been eaten for thousands of years, but it is only recently that their potential has been seen as a substitute for more traditional commercial crops.

In The Netherlands sea kale is now farmed commercially and finds a ready market says Professor Rozema.

"There's a company cultivating it on shingle beaches, its a big success in the Netherlands, people like to get new vegetables, they know sea water is not bad for them."

Biofuel bonus

The researchers say plant breeders also need to look at domesticated plants that are salt tolerant, spinach and beetroot are closely related to samphire, and crops such as sugar beet can grow well in salty conditions.

"Its a salt tolerant plant, this salt tolerance has not been reduced during domestication." said Professor Rozema.

Genetic modification experiments have been conducted for more than 30 years to try to make crops such as wheat or rice salt tolerant.

But the scientists say trying to induce salt tolerance has so far proved impossible. They now believe the genetic manipulations necessary to achieve this may too complex to be achieved at present.

The researchers also say some species of plants currently growing in salty environments could have a future use as biofuels.

They cite one particular type of samphire, the seeds of which produce more oil than soya beans or sunflowers. The plant grows well on subtropical desert coasts.


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Malaysia Chides HSBC Move To Curb Palm Oil

Soo Ai Peng, PlanetArk 5 Dec 08;

KUALA LUMPUR - Banking giant HSBC's decision to curb lending to oil palm projects in Malaysia is misguided and will hurt the bank more than it will hurt Malaysia's palm industry, the country's commodities minister said.

HSBC, under pressure from environmental groups to brush up its green credentials, said on Tuesday it would cut ties with a third of forestry clients such as palm oil, soy and timber companies.

It said that this would include companies in Malaysia and Indonesia, the two largest producers of palm oil in the world, citing them as countries where illegal logging is a problem.

"My immediate reaction to that is I think that banks like HSBC should look at individual clients that they are doing business with rather than saying we will cut 30 percent just like that," Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Peter Chin told Reuters.

Chin said that HSBC Malaysia had told him the bank had 300 forestry clients in the country.

Malaysia's palm oil industry has struggled to establish its environmental credibility at a time when it has been pushing hard for Europe to use more biodiesel, a major new source of demand for an industry coping with a two-thirds fall in prices since they hit a record high in early March.

The local industry says that it does not destroy forests and is socially responsible, but still faces resistance in Europe where critics say the massive expansion of plantation land has come at the cost of vital virgin rainforest that would otherwise help absorb some of the world's carbon dioxide emissions.

Chin said that Malaysia is expected to export palm oil worth nearly 60 billion ringgit ($16.50 billion) this year against 42 billion last year, but saw a decline in revenues next year.

"2009 will be slightly down, not only because of lower prices, (but) there is some dampening of demand especially in Europe," he said.

Palm oil prices have fallen by 67 percent from a March high of 4,486 ringgit per metric ton to about 1,500 ringgit currently, due to the financial crisis and the falling price of crude oil.

(Editing by Jonathan Leff)


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Biofuels No Threat To Africa Food Safety: Institute

Sylvia Westall, PlanetArk 5 Dec 08;

VIENNA - Biofuel crops are not a threat to food security but a potential boon for Africa where some regions could be as successful as Asian palm oil giants, an industry expert said on Thursday.

But Werner Koerbitz, director of the Austrian Biofuels Institute, said the infrastructure and political will were desperately needed.

He said countries particularly along the west African coast, such as Ghana, Nigeria and the Ivory Coast showed great natural potential to become major biofuel producers.

"Those countries could be as rich as Malaysia," he said, referring to the world's second biggest palm-oil producer.

"I see the opportunities there which could be exploited to give people wealth and guarantee a living. The demand for fuel is there."

Biofuels came under the spotlight earlier this year following a spike in commodities prices.

The U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization said in a report in October the Western world needed to rethink its push for biofuels, which had done more harm pushing up food prices than it had good by reducing greenhouse gases. Some critics say biofuels are responsible for hunger in poorer countries.

But Koerbitz said biofuels could actually help developing countries and that the biggest problem was a lack of professionalism at both an agricultural and political level which would be needed for the countries to become big producers.

He said it was doubtful significant progress along these lines could happen in western Africa over the next 10 years.

"But if those countries do learn how to manage this, the potential is huge."

Koerbitz, whose institute acts as a consultant for companies worldwide, said produce would be most likely to be shipped to Europe for processing unless countries were willing to also build their own biofuel plants.

FLAGSHIP PLANT

There have been more encouraging signs in other parts of Africa, Koerbitz said, with experimental crops of jatropha in Madagascar, a country which has suffered from poor crop management in some areas.

The tough, drought-resistant plant is one of the most promising future biofuel sources and is also being grown in India. It cannot be eaten but can be irrigated using waste water and can survive in soil where food crops would die.

It is not yet ready for widespread use because growers need to see how easily it can be bred and which varieties show the most potential. It also needed to be tested for its use as a biodiesel in vehicles, Koerbitz said.

"It is a 'flagship' non-food biofuel source," Koerbitz said, "These are early stages but tests have been very promising," he said, citing results presented at a recent jatropha conference in Germany.

"And genetic modification could help make the (development) process much faster."

In terms of future biofuel production, Koerbitz sees agricultural heavyweights such as Cargill, Archer Daniels Midland and Bunge dominating, rather than oil majors such as BP going further into a market where they have less experience.

The quality of biofuels will also play a significant role in future production, Koerbitz said.

"There is a very clear trend in new emissions regulations where in order to protect the health of citizens, engines must become more sophisticated."

"As a result, the fuel must become more sophisticated as well."

(Editing by James Jukwey)


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As More Eat Meat, a Bid to Cut Farm Emissions

Elisabeth Rosenthal, The New York Times 3 Dec 08;

STERKSEL, the Netherlands — The cows and pigs dotting these flat green plains in the southern Netherlands create a bucolic landscape. But looked at through the lens of greenhouse gas accounting, they are living smokestacks, spewing methane emissions into the air.

That is why a group of farmers-turned-environmentalists here at a smelly but impeccably clean research farm have a new take on making a silk purse from a sow’s ear: They cook manure from their 3,000 pigs to capture the methane trapped within it, and then use the gas to make electricity for the local power grid.

Rising in the fields of the environmentally conscious Netherlands, the Sterksel project is a rare example of fledgling efforts to mitigate the heavy emissions from livestock. But much more needs to be done, scientists say, as more and more people are eating more meat around the world.

What to do about farm emissions is one of the main issues being discussed this week and next, as the environment ministers from 187 nations gather in Poznan, Poland, for talks on a new treaty to combat global warming. In releasing its latest figure on emissions last month, United Nations climate officials cited agriculture and transportation as the two sectors that remained most “problematic.”

“It’s an area that’s been largely overlooked,” said Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, head of the Nobel Prize-winning United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He says people should eat less meat to control their carbon footprints. “We haven’t come to grips with agricultural emissions.”

The trillions of farm animals around the world generate 18 percent of the emissions that are raising global temperatures, according to United Nations estimates, more even than from cars, buses and airplanes.

But unlike other industries, like cement making and power, which are facing enormous political and regulatory pressure to get greener, large-scale farming is just beginning to come under scrutiny as policy makers, farmers and scientists cast about for solutions.

High-tech fixes include those like the project here, called “methane capture,” as well as inventing feed that will make cows belch less methane, which traps heat with 25 times the efficiency of carbon dioxide. California is already working on a program to encourage systems in pig and dairy farms like the one in Sterksel.

Other proposals include everything from persuading consumers to eat less meat to slapping a “sin tax” on pork and beef. Next year, Sweden will start labeling food products so that shoppers can look at how much emission can be attributed to serving steak compared with, say, chicken or turkey.

“Of course for the environment it’s better to eat beans than beef, but if you want to eat beef for New Year’s, you’ll know which beef is best to buy,” said Claes Johansson, chief of sustainability at the Swedish agricultural group Lantmannen.

But such fledgling proposals are part of a daunting game of catch-up. In large developing countries like China, India and Brazil, consumption of red meat has risen 33 percent in the last decade. It is expected to double globally between 2000 and 2050. While the global economic downturn may slow the globe’s appetite for meat momentarily, it is not likely to reverse a profound trend.

Of the more than 2,000 projects supported by the United Nations’ “green” financing system intended to curb emissions, only 98 are in agriculture. There is no standardized green labeling system for meat, as there is for electric appliances and even fish.

Indeed, scientists are still trying to define the practical, low-carbon version of a slab of bacon or a hamburger. Every step of producing meat creates emissions.

Flatus and manure from animals contain not only methane, but also nitrous oxide, an even more potent warming agent. And meat requires energy for refrigeration as it moves from farm to market to home.

Producing meat in this ever-more crowded world requires creating new pastures and planting more land for imported feeds, particularly soy, instead of relying on local grazing. That has contributed to the clearing of rain forests, particularly in South America, robbing the world of crucial “carbon sinks,” the vast tracts of trees and vegetation that absorb carbon dioxide.

“I’m not sure that the system we have for livestock can be sustainable,” said Dr. Pachauri of the United Nations. A sober scientist, he suggests that “the most attractive” near-term solution is for everyone simply to “reduce meat consumption,” a change he says would have more effect than switching to a hybrid car.

The Lancet medical journal and groups like the Food Ethics Council in Britain have supported his suggestion to eat less red meat to control global emissions, noting that Westerners eat more meat than is healthy anyway.

Producing a pound of beef creates 11 times as much greenhouse gas emission as a pound of chicken and 100 times more than a pound of carrots, according to Lantmannen, the Swedish group.

But any suggestion to eat less meat may run into resistance in a world with more carnivores and a booming global livestock industry. Meat producers have taken issue with the United Nations’ estimate of livestock-related emissions, saying the figure is inflated because it includes the deforestation in the Amazon, a phenomenon that the Brazilian producers say might have occurred anyway.

United Nations scientists defend their accounting. With so much demand for meat, “you do slash rain forest,” said Pierre Gerber, a senior official at the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Soy cultivation has doubled in Brazil during the past decade, and more than half is used for animal feed.

Laurence Wrixon, executive director of the International Meat Secretariat, said that his members were working with the Food and Agriculture Organization to reduce emissions but that the main problem was fast-rising consumption in developing countries. “So whether you like it or not, there’s going to be rising demand for meat, and our job is to make it as sustainable as possible,” he said.

Estimates of emissions from agriculture as a percentage of all emissions vary widely from country to country, but they are clearly over 50 percent in big agricultural and meat-producing countries like Brazil, Australia and New Zealand.

In the United States, agriculture accounted for just 7.4 percent of greenhouse gas emissions in 2006, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

The percentage was lower because the United States produces extraordinarily high levels of emissions in other areas, like transportation and landfills, compared with other nations. The figure also did not include fuel burning and land-use changes.

Wealthy, environmentally conscious countries with large livestock sectors — the Netherlands, Denmark, Germany and New Zealand — have started experimenting with solutions.

In Denmark, by law, farmers now inject manure under the soil instead of laying it on top of the fields, a process that enhances its fertilizing effect, reduces odors and also prevents emissions from escaping. By contrast, in many parts of the developing world, manure is left in open pools and lathered on fields.

Others suggest including agriculture emissions in carbon cap-and-trade systems, which currently focus on heavy industries like cement making and power generation. Farms that produce more than their pre-set limit of emissions would have to buy permits from greener colleagues to pollute.

New Zealand recently announced that it would include agriculture in its new emissions trading scheme by 2013. To that end, the government is spending tens of millions of dollars financing research and projects like breeding cows that produce less gas and inventing feed that will make cows belch less methane, said Philip Gurnsey of the Environment Ministry.

At the electricity-from-manure project here in Sterksel, the refuse from thousands of pigs is combined with local waste materials (outdated carrot juice and crumbs from a cookie factory), and pumped into warmed tanks called digesters. There, resident bacteria release the natural gas within, which is burned to generate heat and electricity.

The farm uses 25 percent of the electricity, and the rest is sold to a local power provider. The leftover mineral slurry is an ideal fertilizer that reduces the use of chemical fertilizers, whose production releases a heavy dose of carbon dioxide.

For this farm the scheme has provided a substantial payback: By reducing its emissions, it has been able to sell carbon credits on European markets. It makes money by selling electricity. It gets free fertilizer.

And, in a small country where farmers are required to have manure trucked away, it saves $190,000 annually in disposal fees. John Horrevorts, experiment coordinator, whose family has long raised swine, said that dozens of such farms had been set up in the Netherlands, though cost still makes it impractical for small piggeries. Indeed, one question that troubles green farmers is whether consumers will pay more for their sustainable meat.

“In the U.K., supermarkets are sometimes asking about green, but there’s no global system yet,” said Bent Claudi Lassen, chairman of the Danish Bacon and Meat Council, which supports green production. “We’re worried that other countries not producing in a green way, like Brazil, could undercut us on price.”


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