Best of our wild blogs: 7 Dec 08


Sungei Buloh Wetlands Reserve thanks Toddycats
on the Toddycats! blog

Bigger, wilder Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Semakau at high tide
8 hours on Semakau with some plants seen, the sad situation there and what you can do about it, on the wild shores of singapore blog

We Saw This At Semakau
a pink propagule on the colourful clouds blog

Moving out sale
Seletar camp no more by 31 Dec on the Postcards from Seletar blog

Nesting saga of Peaceful Doves: Part 4 of 6
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Mangroves in Pulau Ubin
on the Urban Forest blog

Promiscuity in birds
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

A White, White Christmas
the Butterfly of the Month on the Butterflies of Singapore blog

An Unexpected Guest!
on the Manta Blog blog

Whale Sharks, Land Crabs, and Crazy Ants: A Trophic Link
on the Amphidrome blog shared by Marcus Ng


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Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve to undergo expansion

Valarie Tan, Channel NewsAsia 6 Dec 08;

SINGAPORE: One of Singapore's largest wetland reserves is set to undergo a revamp in the next five years.

A draft masterplan was launched on Saturday to expand the 130-hectare Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. There will also be rooms for nature experts to conduct research.

Shutterbugs and nature lovers often hang out at the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve in northern Singapore.

So do 220 species of birds, including rare ones like the Nordmann's Greenshank, which breeds in Siberia, and migratory shorebirds which use the reserve as a stopover.

The Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve celebrated its 15th anniversary on Saturday by launching the grand expansion plan.

"We should not let the crisis take the wind out of our celebration.....This draft masterplan will ensure that the core of the nature reserve is conserved for its biodiversity values, while the fringes are enhanced for nature learning and recreation," said Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong.

The plan is to link the current reserve to at least three other mangroves, reservoirs and marshes in the nearby Lim Chu Kang and Kranji areas.

It will also be broken up into different zones to cater to different visitors, such as a wetland playground for children and restricted areas for researchers only.

NParks says the cost of the project will depend on the finalised masterplan, which is expected to be ready by the end of 2009.

Construction will start a year later and is expected to be completed by early 2013.

Sungei Buloh Nature Reserve is Singapore's first ASEAN Heritage Park.

Since 1998, the nature reserve has welcomed some 100,000 local and overseas visitors each year.

- CNA/ir

Sungei Buloh to create more buzz
SM unveils masterplan for reserve that brings back fond memories
Gracia Chiang, Straits Times 7 Dec 08;

As a boy, Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong would wade in the muddy ponds of Sungei Buloh, trying to catch prawns with his bare hands or with a scoop.

His relative operated one of the prawn farms in the area which have since made way for the 130ha Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. 'It was all very exciting, especially eating steamed prawns and prawn fritters for dinner,' he recalled.

He was speaking yesterday at the reserve's 15th-anniversary celebrations, where he also unveiled new proposals for the area, which is home to mangroves, migratory shorebirds and wildlife such as mudskippers.

The draft masterplan will see the reserve being divided into four zones. In those designated as medium to high activity, facilities such as floating boardwalks, outdoor classrooms and a children's play area will be built.

Access to the other two zones will be kept minimal, possibly requiring the accompaniment of certified nature guides or limited only to researchers.

There are plans, too, to 'integrate the surrounding areas so that visitors will be able to enjoy the facilities right from the Kranji area to Sungei Buloh', said Mr Wong Tuan Wah, director of conservation at the National Parks Board, which runs the reserve.

A footpath access from Kranji Dam will be enhanced with amenities such as shelters, allowing visitors to use an alternative entry point instead of the main one at Neo Tiew Crescent.

To strengthen the park's educational efforts, the visitor centre will be upgraded to include a new lookout tower for birdwatchers, meeting rooms and dormitory-style accommodation for research groups.

Mr Wong said some research requires overnight work, while other researchers could stay the night to prepare for early activities the following day.

A working group, with members from the Nature Society, Singapore Environment Council and national water agency PUB among others, is finalising the concept plan, which should be ready in a year's time.

Construction work is expected to start in 2010 and end by 2013.

There are no cost estimates yet and the park hopes to double the number of visitors to 200,000 a year with the new masterplan.

The park is open from 7.30am to 7pm on weekdays and 7am to 7pm on Sundays and public holidays. Admission is free except on Saturdays, Sundays, public holidays and school holidays when adults pay $1, and kids, students and seniors 50 cents.

Visitors from Kranji MRT Station can take SMRT bus service 925 and alight at Kranji Reservoir carpark to take a 15-minute walk to the reserve. The bus stops at the reserve's entrance on Sundays and public holidays.

Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve celebrates 15 years of wetland conservation - New proposals under Draft Sungei Buloh Master Plan unveiled
NPark sMedia Release 6 Nov 08;

Singapore, 6 December 2008 - Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve celebrated its 15th anniversary today, with new proposals under the Draft Sungei Buloh Master Plan to transform it into a distinctive centre for wetland conservation and education.

Senior Minister Mr Goh Chok Tong, who officially opened the wetland reserve 15 years ago, was the Guest of Honour and delivered a speech at the reserve's 15th anniversary celebration today. Mr Mah Bow Tan, Minister for National Development was also at the event to celebrate the occasion with volunteers, corporate sponsors and other partners of the wetland reserve.

As a site along the East Asian-Australasian Flyway for migratory shorebirds and an ASEAN Heritage Park, Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve is a unique asset for conservation, education and recreation in a land-scarce city state like Singapore. The National Parks Board (NParks), together with key stakeholders and partners, has conceptualised the Draft Sungei Buloh Master Plan to strengthen the conservation of its biodiversity, while allowing more visitors to experience the wonders of a wetland habitat.

The Draft Master Plan is designed for sustainability - the core of the nature reserve will be managed for its conservation values while the fringes will be enhanced for recreational use. A working group, comprising representatives from Nature Society Singapore, the Singapore Environment Council, National University of Singapore, National Institute of Education, PUB, Ministry of Education and Sungei Buloh volunteers, has been set up to work on the detailed plan for Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve, from concept to design, and to its implementation.

Elaborating on the community's involvement in the growth of Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve for the past 15 years, Mr Ng Lang, Chief Executive Officer, NParks, said: "It is the strong community ownership that has made Sungei Buloh what it is today. From its humble beginnings as an area of abandoned prawn ponds, it is now a thriving wetland, home to a rich variety of biodiversity and over 220 species of birds. Sungei Buloh was born out of collaboration with the community. We will continue to engage the community in the development of the Master Plan." Key Thrusts of Draft Sungei Buloh Master Plan

One of the key thrusts of the Draft Sungei Buloh Master Plan is to link up pockets of nature around Sungei Buloh, such as Lim Chu Kang mangroves, Kranji Reservoir Park and Kranji Marshes. Habitats for the various species of native wildlife along this belt will be enhanced, in collaboration with other government agencies. By forming a corridor of complementary habitats and biodiversity, this provides the opportunity to plan for mangrove and wildlife conservation more strategically.

At the same time, areas such as the Kranji Nature Trail have been identified where recreational activities can be carried out with new and improved facilities, without impacting on the core conservation areas in Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve.

Currently, visitors to Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve are able to access most parts of the wetland. To balance visitorship and human impact on the rich biodiversity of the reserve, the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve will be zoned into four activity areas, with programmes to cater to different groups of visitors, from beginners all the way to the expert level. This facilitates experiential and lifelong learning and to encourage repeat visits to Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve.

The four activity zones are:

Zone 1 (High Activity Zone) - This area at Kranji Nature Trail and the Visitor Centre provides visitors with an interactive first-hand encounter with mangrove and coastal habitats. It is meant to target visitors in groups. Proposed new facilities for this zone include a wetland-themed play area for children, a floating boardwalk to provide a closer experience with mangroves, shelters and platforms with exhibits to promote a deeper appreciation for nature.

Zone 2 (Medium Activity Zone) - Located at the coastal front of the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve, visitors to this zone will have a more exploratory and sensory experience. New proposed facilities include revamped outdoor classrooms and hides for a more indepth study about mangroves and the various species of flora and fauna.

Zone 3 (Low Activity Zone) - This is a low intensity zone, with minimal interventions to conserve its natural environment and serenity. Future access to this area could require the accompaniment of certified nature guides.

Zone 4 (Very Low Activity Zone) - It is a restricted zone, retaining the core of the wetland reserve for conservation and research purposes.

Proposed New Facilities for the Local and International Community

The working group will also look into the following new facilities to make the wetland experience a more memorable one for both the local and international community:

In line with the Draft Master Plan's objectives to support educational outreach, the exhibition area at the Visitor Centre will showcase broader nature conservation and environmental messages. It will also incorporate a new lookout tower to provide bird-watchers a panoramic view of the surroundings and to better observe birds in flight.

Facilities for meetings are in the pipeline to cater to local and regional workshops on biodiversity conservation, as well as corporate events and retreats.

The educational value of Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve to the international community will be enhanced, with new facilities for nature experts and researchers such as workrooms and guest accommodation, to facilitate scientific studies to be carried out in the reserve.

The working group will be finalising the concept plan for Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. Construction works are expected to start in late 2010 and complete by early 2013.

Sungei Buloh's 15th Anniversary Celebrations - 6 and 7 December 2008

As part of the 15th anniversary celebrations, NParks has organised a series of fun and educational activities with our corporate partners - HSBC, Nature Society Singapore, Toshiba Group, Underworld Singapore, Yahoo and Sungei Buloh volunteers.

An Amazing Mangrove Adventure was specially organised together with HSBC, a long-standing partner of Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. Designed for family participation, participants will be going around the wetland reserve in teams of four, to complete assigned tasks, learning about the vibrant biodiversity found in mangroves in the process. On hand at the wetland reserve to provide guidance to these participants were a group of specially trained Green Volunteers from HSBC and Sungei Buloh volunteers.

Commenting on the significance of the 15th anniversary celebrations, Mr Guy Harvey-Samuel, CEO of HSBC Singapore said: "HSBC's support and involvement in the conservation of the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve goes back to Sungei Buloh's earliest days. Today's event marks a memorable milestone in our efforts to promote environmental conservation and education in Singapore and our long-standing partnership with NParks to achieve this goal. We are delighted to have played our part in the conservation of the reserve over the last 15 years and we look forward to continuing our contribution towards conserving Sungei Buloh as a living classroom for the community."

As part of the celebration, Toshiba Group will be contributing trees to be planted for 10 lucky visitors over 6 and 7 December 2008. During that weekend, there will be nature and photography talks, face-painting activities for children, art and photography exhibitions on the wetland reserve.


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Putting girls in school can help save the world

HOW best to slow down explosive growth in global population, expected to tip 12 billion in less than 50 years?
New Paper 7 Dec 08;

HOW best to slow down explosive growth in global population, expected to tip 12 billion in less than 50 years?

This is one major concern facing experts as resources such as food, water and land run short.

A leading expert in human numbers thinks he may have the answer - make sure teenage girls in the developing world complete secondary school.

It is one of the single most important factors that causes them to have fewer babies in later life, said Mr Joel Cohen, professor of populations at the Rockefeller University in New York.

That could cut the expected growth in human population by as much as three billion by 2050, reported the Independent.

'Education promotes a shift from the quantity of children in favour of the quality of children.

'This transition reduces the future number of people using environmental resources and enhances the capacity of individuals and societies to cope with environmental change,' Professor Cohen added, writing in the journal Nature.

Attempts at limiting growth have concentrated on providing birth control to women, but secondary female education is seen as increasingly important.

The United Nations estimates that the current 7 billion population will hit 9 billion by 2050, with most of this increase in developing countries in Africa and Asia.

Fertility rates

But this 'medium' estimate is based on fertility rates declining from today's 2.55 children per woman to slightly over two children per woman by 2050.

If each woman has, on average, half a child more than the UN estimates, then by 2050 the world population could be as high as 11 billion. If each woman has half a child less, it could be as low as 8 billion, Professor Cohen said.

'Thus a difference in fertility of a single child per woman between now and 2050 alters the 2050 estimate by three billion, a difference equal to the entire world population in 1960,' he added.

'Secondary education has the potential to influence that outcome dramatically. Although there are other factors at work, in many developing countries, women who complete secondary school average at least one child fewer per lifetime than women who complete primary school only.'

In Niger and Yemen, for example, women who completed secondary education had on average 4.6 children, a third less than women who completed primary education only.

Professor Cohen said it would pay for the international community to help to fund the education of girls in the developing world.

'Universal, high-quality primary and secondary education is achievable within 25 years. Educating all children well is a worthwhile, affordable and achievable strategy to develop people who can cope with problems foreseen and unforeseen.'


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Antarctic Cruise Ship Runs Aground; Oil Leak Spreading?

National Geographic News 5 Dec 08;

A cruise ship stranded itself on Antarctica's western peninsula on Thursday, and may be leaking unknown amounts of oil into the fragile oceans, one expert said.

All 122 passengers and crew were rescued from the leaking ship, Ushuaia, on Friday by the Chilean Navy. The ship did not appear to be in danger of sinking.

The Chilean vessel Aquiles transported 89 passengers and 33 crew members to the Presidente Frei Naval Base in Antarctica.

Jon Bowermaster, a National Geographic Expeditions Council grantee and writer, was on the National Geographic Explorer about 30 miles (48.2 kilometers) from the cruise ship when it ran aground after hitting a rock. (National Geographic News is owned by the National Geographic Society.)

"We were in the same area on Wednesday, when hurricane force winds blew for much of the day, gusting over 100 miles [161 kilometers] per hour," Bowermaster told National Geographic News in an email from the Explorer.

"The Ushuaia reported having been in heavy weather; whether or not this contributed to its [grounding] is speculation, but would make sense."

Bowermaster witnessed the sinking of another Antarctic tourist vessel in November 2007. All 154 passengers of the Canadian M.S. Explorer escaped safely.

Alarm Call

The Panamanian-flagged Ushuaia sent out alarms midday Thursday after it started leaking fuel and taking on water.

A rock damaged the hull as the vessel passed through the Gerlache Strait, Chilean Captain Pedro Ojeda told Argentina's Telam news agency. The crash left the boat adrift in Guillermina Bay.

The Chilean Navy said the cruise ship was carrying 14 Danish passengers, 12 Americans, 11 Australians, 9 Germans, 7 Argentines, 7 British, 6 Chinese, 6 Spaniards, 5 Swiss, 3 Italians, 2 French, 2 Canadians, 2 Irish, a Belgian and a New Zealander. All were in good condition.

The cruise ship, built in 1970, operates from the Port of Ushuaia in southern Argentina, transporting passengers to Antarctica and islands in the icy waters of the South Atlantic.

Environmental Dangers?

The navy positioned the ship Lautaro near the abandoned Ushuaia in an attempt to prevent any environmental damage from leaking fuel.

But Bowermaster said it's still unknown how much fuel oil has spilled from the ship.

"A Chilean plane reports seeing no major leak, but it [has] also reported that a fuel leak has spread for half a mile around the ship," he wrote.

"Though containment efforts are being made, it is windy in the area again and the leak is spreading."

Ushuaia may not be able to free itself from the rocks, and has at least one hole, Bowermaster added.

"A sinking ship in this pristine, narrow channel would have long-lasting impact on both the local environment and the future of tourism along the [Antarctic] Peninsula."

"Accident Waiting to Happen"

In addition to the 2007 sinking of the M.S. Explorer, another ship—the Norwegian M.S. Fram—lost engine power during an electrical outage in December 2007 and struck a glacier, smashing a lifeboat but causing no injuries among its 300 passengers.

A boom in Antarctic tourism may be an "accident waiting to happen," Bowermaster told National Geographic News in 2007.

More than 30,000 tourists were estimated to have made the trek to Antarctica on some 50 different ships during the November 2007 to February 2008 cruise season, according to the International Association of Antarctic Tour Operators, a trade group.

"A big question for those who oversee and monitor tourism in Antarctica is [whether] there be limits on who can visit Antarctica, and on what kind of ship?" Bowermaster added.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

The Antarctic: Where death is only five minutes away
Tourists on a stricken Antarctic cruise found themselves at the mercy of the nature they came to witness

Simon Calder, The Independent 6 Dec 08;

At the edge of the world, survival is counted in minutes – on the fingers of one hand. Anyone immersed in the Southern Ocean without special equipment could perish within two minutes; death is a certainty after five. Accordingly, vessels involved in lucrative polar-tourism in the volatile seas around Antarctica share a sophisticated emergency planning network.

Within minutes of the Ushuaia running aground at Wilhelmina Bay on the Antarctic Peninsula on Thursday, the Chilean navy dispatched a tug to refloat the stricken Argentinian vessel, plus a support ship to take on the passengers. Seven vessels offered assistance to the captainand the nearest sped to the scene, in case conditions worsened. Her name: Antarctic Dream.

For many, the Antarctic dream sums up the ultimate in travel. Life around the world's coldest continent is reduced to its most elemental: rock, ice and water collide under a sky that bears the bitterest winds on Earth.

I am writing aboard the Akademik Sergei Vavilov, a Russian research ship that was converted to tourism when communism went out of fashion.The 100 passengers are mostly British, traversing the Southern Ocean. At noon, she was nearing Cape Disappointment in South Georgia. As the captain nudged her between two icebergs the size of apartment blocks, lunch was called. Passengers faced the difficult choice of scampi, stir-fried beef or scenery that Sir Ernest Shackleton – the greatest polar explorer - described as "God in his splendours".

This unforgiving region is rich in wildlife, yet defines the phrase "unfit for human habitation" – all part of the extreme appeal of Antarctica, and why 100 lucky souls have stumped up £7,500 each to achieve their southern dream. The holiday began in Ushuaia, Argentina, which calls itself "The End of the World, and the Beginning of Everything". Next month, at the height of the season, about 30 tourist ships will set sail from South America, destination the deepest south.

A century ago, Shackleton was on his first unsuccessful bid to reach the South Pole; today, Antarctica features in many a glossy brochure. Since man began to discover the lands and seas below 50 degrees South, exploration has been followed by exploitation.

Captain James Cook's reports of prolific seal life in South Georgia led quickly to a massacre of the mammals on an industrial scale. In the 20th century, it was the turn of the whale: 175,000 were taken in the six decades rom 1904. The rusting, rotting relics of these murderous trades now comprise visitor attractions, carefully governed by the rules aimed at ensuring tourism remains benign.

After the Ushuaia went aground on Thursday, an Argentinian aircraft was dispatched to monitor the resulting oil spill. The impact on the chinstrap penguins and blue-eyed shags in the vicinity is likely to be negligible.

Nevertheless, a second incident in successive years involving an expedition ship – in 2007, the Explorer sank off the South Shetland Islands – will raise concerns about the risks to the environment and human life.

One of the worst accidents in aviation history occurred in Antarctica; in 1979, a New Zealand sightseeing flight crashed into Mount Erebus, killing 257. Marine tourism has so far proved fatality-free but addictive. Russell Millner, a surgeon from Blackpool, is on his second visit, drawn by "the unspoilt beauty, the space, the things you can't see anywhere else in the world". As Shackleton wrote after his Antarctic adventures: "We had reached the naked soul of man".


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21 species in new danger of extinction: UN convention

Yahoo News 5 Dec 08;

ROME (AFP) – Twenty-one animal species, including the cheetah, three dolphin families and an Egyptian vulture, were added to the list of those in danger of extinction by a UN conference that ended Friday.

Six other bird species as well as manatees have also been placed on the list of animals benefiting from increased protections, called list I.

In addition, next year has been proclaimed the "year of the gorilla" to help the survival of threatened species.

The findings were made at a conference of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals.

Several types of sharks have been placed on the so-called list II of threatened species, including two families of Mako sharks in the Mediterranean whose population have fallen off by 96 percent in recent years due to overfishing.

The conference also adopted a resolution that aims to reduce noise pollution in oceans caused by increases in vessels, more seismic surveys and a new generation of military sonars.

Marine mammals that use sound, including whales and dolphins, are particularly affected by the noise.

A spokesman for the Whale and Dolphin Society welcomed measures on increased protection for marine species, but said governments had not committed enough money to conservation.

The some 170,000 euros (216,000 dollars) for conservation projects for the next three years was a "slap in the face," said Nicolas Entrupp, a spokesman for the organisation.

21 new species in danger of extinction, UN convention hears
Sarah Knapton, The Telegraph 6 Dec 08;

Twenty-one animal species, including the cheetah, three dolphin families and an Egyptian vulture, were added to the list of those in danger of extinction by a UN conference in Rome.

Six other bird species as well as manatees have also been placed on the list of animals benefiting from increased protections, called list I.

In addition, next year has been proclaimed the "Year of the Gorilla" to help the survival of threatened species.

The findings were made at a conference of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals held in the Italian capital.

Several species of sharks have been placed on the list of threatened species, including two families of Mako sharks in the Mediterranean whose population have fallen off by 96 per cent in recent years due to overfishing.

The conference also adopted a resolution that aims to reduce noise pollution in oceans caused by increases in vessels, more seismic surveys and a new generation of military sonars.

Marine mammals that use sound, including whales and dolphins, are particularly affected by the noise.

A spokesman for the Whale and Dolphin Society welcomed measures on increased protection for marine species, but said governments had not committed enough money to conservation.

Nicolas Entrupp, a spokesman for the organisation said the 170,000 euros set aside for conservation projects for the next three years was "a slap in the face."

Migratory Species Get Conservation Boost at International Wildlife Conference
UNEP 5 Dec 08;

Resolutions adopted to fight climate change, disturbances to marine mammals and bycatch in fishing gear

Rome/Bonn, 5 December 2008 - The future for 21 migratory species, from the reclusive Irrawaddy Dolphin to the Egyptian Vulture and the Cheetah, today got brighter under a UN wildlife treaty.

85 governments met this week at the FAO (Food Agricultural Organisation) Headquarters in Rome for the ninth Conference of the Parties to the UN Environment Programme's (UNEP) Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS).

Proposals to strengthen conservation of endangered land and marine animals that cross international borders were considered and in most cases approved. Several dolphin and whale species were listed for the first time in Appendix I of the Convention, granting them full protection. Four shark species were added to Appendix II, signalling the need for better fisheries management and co-operation.

Alongside improved conservation for species, governments also adopted several resolutions including one to reduce noise pollution from vessels and other sources especially in habitat sensitive for whales, dolphins and other marine species. Measures to reduce accidental bycatch of non-target species in fisheries were at the centre of discussions.

Parties also agreed to give priority to negotiating new agreements on Pacific turtles and several species of sharks. A special inter-governmental meeting to discuss a sharks agreement will commence in Rome tomorrow. Earlier in the week an agreement to conserve the Andean Flamingo was signed by Bolivia, Chile and Peru, while the first Meeting of the Parties to the CMS Gorilla Agreement adopted Action Plans for the 4 gorilla subspecies and welcomed an offer of 200,000 Euros from Germany to support the agreement.

However, several countries attending the conference had very strict instructions on finance which meant that the Convention's plan to improve its capacities had to be sealed down, which led to protests from several NGO partners who support CMS.

The conference today approved a "scientific summary" dealing with Avian Influenza and other wildlife diseases, and listing the key findings of the Convention's Task Force on HPAI (Avian Flu), which is now chaired jointly by CMS and the FAO. This affects developing countries in particular, where animal keeping conditions can catalyze the emergence of such diseases and their transmission to humans.

Climate change and the special role of many migratory species as indicators of its detrimental effects will also receive increased attention from the CMS member states over the next years.

Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) which administers the CMS, said: "Species that migrate across countries and continents are facing ever greater hurdles from loss of habitat and feeding grounds to unsustainable use and the unfolding and often complex threats emerging from climate change."

"Indeed the world is currently facing a sixth wave of extinctions mainly as a result of human impacts. Urgent and accelerated action is needed to ensure that a healthy, productive and functioning planet is handed on to the next generation," he added.

"The Convention on Migratory Species is an important part of our international cooperative response to such challenges. It reflects the shared responsibility of nations for these species as each year they attempt their epic journeys across continents and oceans".

Commenting on the final outcome of the conference, Robert Hepworth, Executive Secretary of UNEP-CMS, said: "The convention's development over the last three years has been remarkable - we have doubled our species agreements, trebled our project donations, and run our first high-profile global awareness campaign - Year of the Dolphin. 18 new countries have joined us in the global effort to conserve migratory species. The conference has shown its confidence in our strategy, and increased our budget modestly in real terms despite the global financial crisis. However we now have to stretch our resources that much further still to protect the birds, mammals and marine creatures which journey around planet earth."

Racing against extinction

The Cheetah, the world's fastest land animal, today gained Appendix I listing across a large part of its migratory range although three African countries are expected to take out reservations on the listing.

The animal, which can reach speeds of up to 120 km/h, has suffered a dramatic 90 percent decline over the past century, becoming extinct in 18 countries of its original range. Less than 10,000 adult cheetahs now live in Africa while a meagre 50 survive in Asia, mainly around Iran's Kavir desert. Severe habitat loss, over-hunting and poor breeding in captivity are all to blame for cheetah's critically endangered status today.

The Appendix I listing will benefit from increased protection in some 80 per cent of the countries it inhabits.

The African Wild Dog has been eradicated from western and most of central Africa. Fewer than 8,000 animals are estimated to survive as a result of conflict with humans, other animals, as well as infectious diseases. Fences on their migration paths further endanger these roaming predators. An Appendix II listing agreed today calls on nations to establish regional agreements for their protection

Swimming against extinction

Seven cetacean species - more commonly known as whales, dolphins and porpoises were listed on CMS Appendices I and II at the conference. According to the recently published IUCN Red List nearly one quarter of dolphin species is threatened with extinction.

The reclusive Irrawaddy Dolphins used to inhabit coastal areas and estuaries throughout south-east Asia. But today, habitat loss, live capture, entanglement in fishing nets, electrocution and boat collisions put the survival of the remaining small populations at risk.

Unique to one of the most degraded marine environments in the world, the Black Sea Bottlenose Dolphin has also suffered from uncontrolled hunting and bycatch despite the ban on cetacean fishery in the sea since 1983.

The Irrawaddy and Black Sea Bottlenose dolphins secured Appendix I listing.

The Atlantic Humpback Dolphin also got Appendix I status while Clymene or Short-Snouted Spinner Dolphin, Risso's Dolphin, the Mediterranean population of the Bottlenose Dolphin and Harbour Porpoise were given Appendix II.

One of the world's most camera-shy species, the West African Manatee migrates in search of food as a result of changes in water levels in lagoons, rivers and sweet waters of Northern, West and Central Africa.

The manatees act as a key clean up and recycling mechanism of the river ecosystems by controlling floating algae and processing the limited nutrients. Although crocodiles and sharks occasionally kill manatees, their only significant threats are from humankind, such as poaching, bycatch, habitat loss, and other environmental impacts.

The Manatees listing on Appendix I complements the conservation efforts laid out in the CMS agreement on Western African small cetaceans and manatees concluded in October.

Furthermore, three shark species have been listed on Appendix II with some modifications or reservations. These are the two species of Mako Sharks, the Porbeagle Shark and the Spiny Dogfish, which continue to be seriously threatened by over-fishing. Sharks remain to be seriously endangered despite their indispensable role in oceans' ecosystems.

The populations of Spiny Dogfish, which is sold as "rock salmon" in fish and chips shops throughout Britain, have plummeted by more than 95 percent in the northeast Atlantic in just 10 years. The species is known for particularly slow reproduction rates with gestation lasting up to two year. It currently lacks any form of international protection.

Despite being one of the fastest swimming fish in the sea, Mako Sharks in the western and central Mediterranean have declined by over 96 percent in recent years. The Shortfin Mako is popular with anglers and shark fin soup lovers alike. A recent study reveals that up to one million Mako sharks enter the shark fin trade each year regardless of finning bans in 19 countries. This species urgently requires introduction of collaborative sustainable science-based fisheries management measures.

Flying against extinction

The Egyptian Vulture was granted Appendix I listing. Pesticides are to blame for the high mortality rates among these birds which get poisoned by feeding on carcasses of feral animals. Birds of prey such as falcons and vultures are important indicators of healthy ecosystems, and are most vulnerable to environmental changes and their disappearance from their habitat is a clear sign of a disrupted ecosystem.

In Latin America, the Peruvian Tern numbers have halved over the past decade, to less than 2,500 birds recorded in the twelve known breeding sites in Peru and Chile. The principal direct threat to the species is disturbance in its breeding grounds caused by human activities. Today it also secured an Appendix I status.

With a range spreading from South-East Asia to the Korean peninsula and Japan, Baer's Pochards - a duck considered a delicacy in Asian cuisine - number less than 5,000 and are in urgent need for legal protection all along its migration route. Governments responded to the threats by giving the bird an Appendix I listing.

Prized as hunting companions by royalty and the aristocracy, the Saker falcons have suffered an almost 70 percent decline since 1990. Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan may have lost up to 90 percent of their populations to meet the increasing demand in falcons. Parties agreed today that the species will be actively monitored and assessed over the next triennium for potential listing in 2011.


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Japan sells Icelandic whale meat

Richard Black, BBC news 5 Dec 08;

Whale meat imported from Iceland and Norway has gone on sale in Japan, according to the Icelandic firm which caught and exported most of the meat.

Hvalur hf told BBC News that after completing food safety checks, the meat was now being distributed.

The consignment is Iceland's first whale export to Japan in 20 years.

The trade is legal because all three countries have registered exemptions to rules banning international trade in whale products.

There were unconfirmed reports last weekend that the meat was on sale, but this is the first official notification.

Some environmental groups fear that Iceland and Norway want to step up whale meat exports to Japan, which is seen as having the biggest potential market.

The present consignment consists of 65 tonnes of fin whale meat caught by Hvalur hf, and five tonnes of minke whale meat exported by the Norwegian company Myklebust Trading.

It arrived in Tokyo in June, received an import permit last month, and has now been given a clean bill of health.

"The meat has now cleared customs in Japan after undergoing very rigorous testing to ensure that it meets every aspect of Japan's food safety regulations," said Hvalur's CEO Kristjan Loftsson.

"We were always confident that this would be the case. It was only a question of time, as Japan is legally obliged to handle whale meat imports in the same way as any other seafood."

Profit warning

Mr Loftsson, whose company is the only one in Iceland equipped to hunt fin whales - the second biggest species - told BBC News that this export was designed to re-introduce fin meat to Japanese palates.

It is considered one of the tastiest varieties, but has largely been absent from the market in recent years, as Japan's own hunts excluded the species until the 2005/6 Antarctic season.

Mr Loftsson said that if the market permitted, he could eventually hunt as many fin whales as Icelandic scientists recommended - provided the government granted a quota, which is likely if there is a proven market.

Although the fin is internationally classified as an endangered species, estimates of the north Atlantic stock run to about 30,000, and Icelandic scientists recently suggested that an annual catch of 200 would not damage the local stock.

But Arni Finnsson of the Iceland Nature Conservation Association (INCA) believes the market may not be as welcoming as the exporters hope.

"I don't believe there will ever be a market in Japan for Icelandic meat that can be profitable," he said.

"If they allow it from Iceland, they have to allow it from Norway, and then you could have thousands of minke whales flooding the market - it's impossible."

He believes the export is a political move designed to show the coalition government - which is divided on the issue - that whaling can be a profitable venture, generating jobs at a time when the country is in dire economic straits.

He also believes Hvalur has an interest in scuppering the "peace progress" within the International Whaling Commission which is exploring whether pro- and anti-whaling countries can find a compromise between their very different positions.

The next meeting in the process takes place next week in Cambridge.

The whale meat trade is banned under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), but Iceland, Japan and Norway have all registered reservations, as the treaty permits, exempting themselves from the ban.


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Gorilla states in poaching pledge

Richard Black, BBC News 5 Dec 08;

Countries that are home to gorillas have pledged to monitor how laws against harming the animals are being implemented on the ground.

Most gorilla range states have laws against poaching, but environment groups say enforcement is often lax.

The agreement came on the final day of discussions in Rome on an international gorilla action plan that came into force earlier this year.

With most populations falling, the UN has made 2009 the Year of the Gorilla.

This week's talks, held during the UN Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) meeting, were aimed at turning the intentions of the action plan into firm measures.

"Virtually all of the 10 gorilla range states have laws against poaching," said WWF International's species programme manager Wendy Elliott, who is at the Rome meeting.

"But are poachers arrested, are they taken to court, are they put in jail?

"The law is not always an effective deterrent."

Germany and Monaco are among countries that pledged new money at the CMS conference to support the action plan.

Some of it will be used to train the judiciary, with the intention of improving implementation of existing laws.

Triple whammy

The gorilla action plan is designed to tackle the three main threats facing gorillas - loss of habitat, poaching and the Ebola virus - and all the 10 range states have signed up.

The plan commits them to securing good habitat for the animals, including the creation of reserves that cross national boundaries where that is appropriate.

They are supposed to clamp down on poaching and reduce the impact of conflict.

There was some good news this week from Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where rangers were able to return to the area where mountain gorillas roam, after having been forced away by armed men a few weeks ago.

Tackling Ebola is likely to be a harder task. So far, there is no effective treatment or vaccine for the virus in humans or in other primates.

The factors that make gorilla populations more or less vulnerable are also not understood, although fragmenting forests into small areas may be a factor, possibly because it increases contact and therefore transmission of the virus between gorillas and humans.

The Year of the Gorilla (YoG) campaign is spearheaded by a number of top experts including Jane Goodall, the renowned biologist and conservationist.

Another of the YoG ambassadors, Ian Redmond of the Great Apes Survival Partnership (Grasp), said that in the long run, looking after gorillas can be very beneficial for local communities.

"In Rwanda and Uganda, tourism, with gorillas as the star attraction, has become the number one foreign exchange earner," he said.

Their role as "gardeners of the forest" was also vital to the long term ecological health of Africa's tropical rainforest, he added.


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'Super ants' threaten UK gardens, scientists warn

James Randerson, guardian.co.uk 3 Dec 08;

An ant species that forms huge supercolonies and infests gardens and parks is marching rapidly across Europe and will soon invade the UK, according to entomologists who are monitoring its spread.

The colonies can swell to 10 or 100 times the size of those of common garden ants and scientists warn that they can cause significant damage to plants.

"When I saw this ant for the first time, I simply could not believe there could be so many garden ants in the same lawn," says Prof Jacobus Boomsma at the University of Copenhagen, one of its co-discoverers almost 20 years ago.

"We reckon it's only a matter of time before [it invades the UK]."

The invasive garden ant or Lasius neglectus was first identified in 1990 when it was found infesting an entire neighbourhood in Budapest, Hungary.

"This ant basically looks like the garden ant that everybody knows, so you don't really become suspicious if you see a few of those crawling around because they are everywhere," he said. It has since become a major pest in central Europe and has spread as far as Jena in Germany, Ghent in Belgium and Warsaw in Poland.

Boomsma and his team think it is moved around by the horticultural trade because it hides inside plant pots. "That is the most reasonable hypothesis for how these ants get transported because the ants themselves have lost the ability to fly so they are very poor disbursers," he said.

In research published today in the journal PLoS One, the team used genetic techniques to work out where the ants originated and what makes them so successful at taking over new regions. One reason is that they are able to form super-colonies.

The ants occupy many interconnected nests with many queens. Because they are related, the ants in these nests do not show territorial aggression. When they reach new locations the parasites that usually keep the ants in check are no longer there, so they are able to expand their colonies rapidly.

"We found that invasive garden ants developed from species in the Black Sea region that have natural populations with small networks of interconnected nests with many queens that mate underground and don't fly.

"It is now becoming clear that rather many ant species share this lifestyle, so it is no surprise that a number of them have become invasive pests with giant super-colonies based on the same principles," said Dr Sylvia Cremer, at the University of Regensburg.

Dr Jes Pedersen, a co-author at the University of Copenhagen, said: "The future will therefore see many more ants become invasive, so it is about time we understand their biology. This study is a major step in that direction."

Much of the damage that the invasive garden ant causes is connected with the herds of aphids that it tends. The ants have a symbiotic relationship with the aphids in which the aphids provide sugary food while the ants provide protection from predators.

With the ants around, aphid populations expand to large numbers causing damage to plants and releasing sticky secretions that create a mess on parked cars. Because the ant colonies are so large they can cause a nuisance by invading homes and spoiling food.

Invasive ants have caused much more significant damage in other countries. The imported red fire ant, which has a nasty sting, causes $750m (£500m) of damage in the US each year to crops and livestock. The Argentine ant has spread along 6,000km of coastline in southern Europe, exterminating many local insects.


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China delays finishing mammoth water project: report

Reuters 5 Dec 08;

BEIJING (Reuters) - China has postponed completing a huge water transfer project to quench its national capital's thirst, citing stubborn pollution worries for pushing the target date back four years to 2014, official media said on Saturday.

The South-North Water Diversion scheme will channel water from the Yangtze River and its tributaries to ease shortages across northern China, where population growth and frantic industrialization have drained dams and underground reserves.

The main "central route" stretching 1,267 kms (787 miles) from the Danjiangkou Dam in central Hubei province to Beijing was due to be finished in 2010.

But not now.

Hubei officials said on Friday that pollution and ecological strains in the rivers feeding the dam will make that impossible, Hubei's Changjiang Times said, in a report reprinted by the official Xinhua news agency ( www.xinhuanet.com ).

"To prevent ecological and environmental risks to the South-North Water Diversion Project, completion of the central route will be delayed for 4 years," said Wang Fenyu, a Hubei official working on the scheme, according to the paper.

"This means Beijing residents will have to wait another 6 years before they can drink high-quality water from the Dankiangkou Dam."

Until now, officials have given no sign the high-profile project would be delayed. The other, eastern route of the project has also been beset by pollution problems.

The hold-up could bring planning headaches for China's national capital, which supports a population of 17 million on dwindling local water sources.

In the absence of the Yangtze tributary supplies, Beijing has been pumping additional water from neighboring Hebei province, which itself suffers severe shortfalls.

A Hubei environmental official, Zou Qingping, said that once the central route draws water from the Danjiangkou Dam, reducing flows along the Han River that cuts past the dam, "water quality problems will become even more serious" for the province.

Wang, the project official, said this meant "Hubei must build even more water treatment plants and ecological restoration facilities."

There was no mention of the delay on the South-North scheme's website ( www.nsbd.gov.cn ), and on the weekend its officials could not be contacted for comment.

Critics of the project have long said the scheme to replenish north China from far-off rivers risks dangerously destabilizing already battered water systems.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Jerry Norton)


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Scientist says ancient technique cuts greenhouse gas

Gerard Wynn, Reuters 5 Dec 08;

POZNAN, Poland (Reuters) - An ancient technique of plowing charred plants into the ground to revive soil may also trap greenhouse gases for thousands of years and forestall global warming, scientists said on Friday.

Heating plants such as farm waste or wood in airtight conditions produces a high-carbon substance called biochar, which can store the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide and enhance nutrients in the soil.

Plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as they grow. Subsequently storing that carbon in the soil removes the gas from the atmosphere.

"I feel confident that the (carbon storage) time of stable biochar is from high hundreds to a few thousand years," said Cornell University's Johannes Lehmann, at an event on the sidelines of U.N. climate talks in the Polish city of Poznan.

Lehmann estimated that under ambitious scenarios biochar could store 1 billion tons of carbon annually -- equivalent to more than 10 percent of global carbon emissions, which amounted to 8.5 billion tons in 2007.

Under a conservative scenario the technique could store 0.2 billion tons of carbon annually, he said. That would still require heating without oxygen -- called pyrolysis -- some 27 percent of global crop waste and plowing this into the soil.

Lehmann cited experiments on 10 farm crops suggesting biochar can also increase yields by up to three times, because the organic matter holds on to nutrients.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) said in November that global greenhouse gas emissions were so out of control that avoiding more dangerous levels of climate change depended on creating negative emissions later this century.

The energy adviser to 28 industrialized countries cited biochar as one way of achieving that.

The technique rings alarm bells among some environmentalists worried it could spur deforestation, but its chief problem may be that it is barely proven on a commercial scale.

"It will remain theoretical without making demonstration plants on the ground," Lehmann said.

Soils containing biochar made by Amazon people thousands of years ago still contain up to 70 times more black carbon than surrounding soils and are still higher in nutrients, said Debbie Reed, director of the International Biochar Initiative (IBI).

The IBI was in Poznan to lobby for research funding for biochar. In Poznan, 187 countries are meeting in ongoing talks to agree a new climate treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol after 2012. They hope to finalize a deal next year.

Lehmann emphasized that the technique was not a substitute for fighting climate change by curbing man-made greenhouse gas emissions, especially carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels.

(Reporting by Gerard Wynn, Editing by Catherine Bosley)


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Pollution 'could kill as many as climate change' warns Met Office

Pollution threatens to kill as many people as climate change in the coming years, Met Office experts will warn at an international conference next week.
Louise Gray, The Telegraph 5 Dec 08;

Representatives from more than 192 countries have gathered at a UN climate change conference in Poznan, Poland, to find a way to stop global warming.

But a delegation from the Met Office said it is just as important for the world to stop pollution, which is set to kill 800 more people every year by 2020 in the UK alone.

Dr Vicky Pope, head of climate change advice at the Met Office, said new scientific evidence shows pollution is a bigger problem in terms of human health than previously thought.

She says that it can exacerbate the effects of climate change with deadly consequences.

This is because increased pollution not only heats the planet through the greenhouse effect but stops plants from absorbing carbon, which in turn increases pollution again.

She pointed out that polluting gases are already killing 1,500 people in the UK every year and that is expected to increase to around 2,391 deaths a year by 2020.

By the 2090s close to one-fifth of the world's population will be exposed to pollution well above the World Health Organization recommended safe-health level. This is expected to cause deaths from respiratory problems on top of the destruction caused by climate change.

Dr Pope will be lobbying the conference to try to reduce pollution as well as climate change at the conference.

She said: "It is not just a question of climate change and rainfall change and the impact of that. A lot more people suffer from air quality problems than suffer from heat. It is an additional problem that people have not really taken into consideration that now needs to be looked at as part of climate change negotiations."

The UN conference is expected to draw up the format of a new Kyoto Protocol to be decided at Copenhagen next year. It will conclude at the end of next week.

The most contentious issue is whether the US will sign up to tough targets on cutting greenhouse gas and whether developing countries like India and China will agree to slow carbon emissions.

The conference is also expected to decide on how to pay poorer countries to halt deforestation and whether there should be an adaptation fund made available to developing countries suffering the worst effects of climate change.

Also next week the Council of Ministers are due to make a decision on the EU's energy package.

The target is to cut emissions by 20 per cent by 2020 as well as increasing the amount of power from renewables to 20 per cent in the same period.

Countries like Italy and Poland, with heavy industries, continue to stall over making a commitment and the decision is expected to go to the 11th hour, casting doubt over the ability of the wider international community to make any decisions at the UN conference.


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UK engineers call for green power from household waste

Report claims domestic rubbish could provide up to 20% of Britain's energy needs
Comments (10)

Alok Jha, guardian.co.uk 4 Dec 08;

Household rubbish should be used to produce green power rather than being sent for recycling, according to energy experts.

At a briefing today to launch a new report by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers on dealing with waste, the authors said that converting waste could provide up to a fifth of the UK's electricity needs in future and help the country meet its renewable energy targets.

But environmentalists have voiced concerns over the report, insisting that recycling rubbish is still the better option in terms of tackling climate change.

The UK produces more than 300m tonnes of waste every year, enough to fill the Albert Hall every two hours. Most of this is buried in landfill, though new EU legislation will require a 50% cut in the practice by 2013.

"We can't afford to do that any more, we're running out of space for landfills," said Ian Arbon, a visiting professor in energy systems at Newcastle University and author of the new report.

"We see energy from waste as being one of the brightest hopes for reaching our 2020 target to source 15% of our energy requirements from renewables.

"We will not meet those targets without energy from waste."

Energy can be harnessed from waste in several ways, depending on the type. The two proven methods are combustion, where waste is burned to produce electricity and heat, and anaerobic digestion, a biological process where waste is treated to produce methane, which can then be used for fuel. The former is most suitable for dry waste while the latter is best for wet or organic waste.

There are fewer than 50 small-scale energy-from-waste plants operating in the UK at the moment, a combination of combustion plants and anaerobic digesters. This compares to several thousand in countries such as Denmark and Germany.

In the past, burning waste in incinerators has been opposed by local residents worried about air pollution. But Arbon said that, using modern combustion methods which scrub out harmful particles from the gases vented by the power plant, every community in the UK could have a waste-processing facility on its doorstep.

"Then you're handling the community's waste locally and you're not having to transport waste large distances, which gets people upset."

Gaynor Hartnell, deputy director of the Renewable Energy Association, added that converting all the country's household and commercial waste, around 75m tonnes per year, could provide significant benefits. "If it all went into electricity, you could get about 17% of the UK's electricity demand from waste [by 2020]."

But Matthew Warhurst, senior resource and waste campaigner at Friends of the Earth, warned that building a new fleet of energy-from-waste plants would miss climate goals. "Household waste is a mixture of fossil-derived plastics and textiles and biologically-derived material, [burning it] you end up producing a lot of carbon dioxide."

Another way of dealing with waste is to recycle it but Arbon urged caution on assuming this was the best option "In this country we have very few recycling plants.

"We do reasonably well with metals and we can handle some paper but, because we've lost most of our manufacturing might in the UK, we ship our waste to china - that process absorbs a lot of energy."

Recycling is an energy-intensive process, said Arbon, the opposite of producing energy from waste. "The energy that we use to recycle mainly comes from our existing energy-production systems, which are 90% fossil fuels.

"Let's get honest about recycling, about how well we do at that. For some things, it's the right thing to do, for others it isn't."

However, FoE's Warhurst said that stepping up recycling facilities was an urgent priority, as was avoiding putting things into landfill that could go on to produce methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

"Rather than building huge plants to burn waste inefficiently, it is better for the climate to be building plants that compost the remains, remove further recyclables and then even if you end up putting what's left in landfill that is a better climate option."


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Nuclear industry claims it is now 'sexy' but admits to rising costs

Terry Macalister, The Guardian 5 Dec 08;

Widespread doubts about the ability of nuclear power companies to bring a new generation of reactors on stream at the right time and on budget were raised yesterday within an industry that the UK government is relying on to meet its climate change and energy security goals.

EDF, the French power company that has positioned itself as a leading player in the market, admitted that its new European Pressurised Reactor programme at Flamanville in France was already 20% over budget, while delays continue to plague a Finnish facility, the only other new plant under construction in Europe.

Paul Golby, chief executive of E.ON UK, which also wants to build two nuclear facilities in Britain, said the 2017 target for a first new UK reactor was "extremely ambitious" and urged ministers to proceed with a new generation of coal plants, such as the controversial Kingsnorth scheme, to fill the growing energy gap.

He was talking at a London conference organised by the Nuclear Industries Association, which was told by another top industry figure that although the sector might have a range of problems to overcome, it had recently achieved an extraordinary transformation and was now perceived externally as "sexy".

Lady Barbara Judge, chairwoman of the Atomic Energy Authority, highlighted skills shortages and waste disposal as difficulties but felt they could be overcome. "Atomic was a dirty word but now it's certainly a sexy one," she said.

But she did warn that the safety of existing plants remained paramount and, while the difficulties for the industry caused by the Chernobyl disaster and Three Mile Island accident had been overcome, they could return. "Everyone knows just one accident [need occur] and the industry will be shut down for 20 years," she said.

Golby raised concerns about the shortage of experts at the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, which governs health and safety, and questioned whether 2017 was a realistic date for a new station. A colleague had suggested that atomic power would be available to cook the Christmas dinner that year but he said: "I have a fear it will be humble pie we will be eating rather than turkey."

Meanwhile, at an investors' day in Paris, EDF said the reactor being built in Flamanville would cost €4bn (£3.5bn) at 2008 prices instead of €3.3bn, blaming "higher raw material costs and the impact of technical and regulatory evolutions".

The new total cost of the electricity generated is €54 a megawatt hour, instead of the €46 announced in 2006.

Luc Oursel, president of Areva NP, said despite Flamanville's problems and rising costs and delays at the Olkiluoto site in Finland, nuclear still made commercial sense. He said the lessons learned would help build plants in Britain on schedule.


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2008 will be coolest year of the decade

Global average for 2008 should come in close to 14.3C, but cooler temperature is not evidence that global warming is slowing, say climate scientists
Comments (332)

James Randerson, guardian.co.uk 5 Dec 08;

This year is set to be the coolest since 2000, according to a preliminary estimate of global average temperature that is due to be released next week by the Met Office. The global average for 2008 should come in close to 14.3C, which is 0.14C below the average temperature for 2001-07.

The relatively chilly temperatures compared with recent years are not evidence that global warming is slowing however, say climate scientists at the Met Office. "Absolutely not," said Dr Peter Stott, the manager of understanding and attributing climate change at the Met Office's Hadley Centre. "If we are going to understand climate change we need to look at long-term trends."

Prof Myles Allen at Oxford University who runs the climateprediction.net website, said he feared climate sceptics would overinterpret the figure. "You can bet your life there will be a lot of fuss about what a cold year it is. Actually no, its not been that cold a year, but the human memory is not very long, we are used to warm years," he said, "Even in the 80s [this year] would have felt like a warm year."

And 2008 would have been a scorcher in Charles Dickens's time - without human-induced warming there would have been a one in a hundred chance of getting a year this hot. "For Dickens this would have been an extremely warm year," he said. On the flip side, in the current climate there is a roughly one in 10chance of having a year this cool.

The Met Office predicted at the beginning of the year that 2008 would be cooler than recent years because of a La Niña event - characterised by unusually cold ocean temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. It is the mirror image of the El Niño climate cycle. The Met Office had forecast an annual global average of 14.37C.

Allen was presenting the data on this year's global average temperature at the Appleton Space Conference at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, near Didcot yesterday. The 14.3C figure is based on data from January to October. When the Met Office makes its formal announcement next week they will incorporate data from November. "[The figure] will differ from it, but it won't differ massively," said Stott, "We would expect the number to go up rather than down because the early parts of the year were still under the La Niña conditions."

Assuming the final figure is close to 14.3C then 2008 will be the tenth hottest year on record. The hottest was 1998 - which included a very strong El Niño event - followed by 2005, 2003 and 2002. The data are a combination of measurements from satellites, ground weather stations and buoys which are compiled jointly by the Hadley Centre and the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia.

In March, a team of climate scientists at Kiel University predicted that natural variation would mask the 0.3C warming predicted by the Intergovernment Panel on Climate Change over the next decade. They said that global temperatures would remain constant until 2015 but would then begin to accelerate.


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EU CO2 to drop 10 pct below 2007 levels: Deutsche

Michael Szabo, Reuters 5 Dec 08;

LONDON (Reuters) - European Union industrial emissions could fall by 10 percent below 2007 levels next year, Deutsche Bank said on Thursday, unnerving traders on the possibility of another price collapse in carbon permits.

The German bank cut its previous forecasts, saying lower productivity from companies participating in the EU's Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) coupled with corporate efforts to meet EU renewable energy targets could lead to a surplus in emissions permits over the next three years.

This will depress prices for permits (EUAs) traded in the scheme's second phase (2008-12), possibly forcing a retest of the all-time low of 11.80 euros a tonne, the bank said, prompting trader worries over a possible repeat of the scheme's first phase when EUA prices fell to zero.

"The price is going to be under pressure, not necessarily because the market thinks Phase 2 is going to be long but also because companies need cash so they'll sell the allowances they won't need for next year when they anticipate lower production," Lewis told Reuters.

EUA prices would not collapse as unused permits would be carried over to the scheme's third phase (2013-2020), he added, reiterating his previous price targets of over 30 euros a tonne.

Benchmark EUAs traded down to 14.45 euros a tonne on Friday, the lowest level since March 2007 and 50 percent below a 2-year high of 29.69 euros hit last July.

HORROR

"It looks like a sequel to the Phase 1 horror movie," said one emissions trader.

In the scheme's first phase (2005-07), an over allocation of permits caused the EUA price to crash, prompting critics to question the effectiveness of emissions trading as a weapon in the fight against climate change.

The difference in the scheme's second phase (2008-12), Lewis said, is that companies can carry over unused permits to the third phase, which begins in 2013, thereby avoiding the mass sell-off that pushed prices down to zero in phase I.

"It's meaningless to say Phase 2 will be long, since allowances will be banked to make Phase 3 less short," he said.

"Looking at Phase 2 separately from Phase 3 is wrong; It's an academic distinction."

Lewis did not change his EUA price forecast, estimating prices of 30 euros a tonne this year, rising by four percent annually to 48 euros in 2020.

RENEWABLES

Next week, EU leaders will hold a summit to agree proposals to cut EU emissions by 20 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and source 20 percent its electricity from renewable energy sources.

Based on the targets being agreed, Lewis said Phase 2 emissions will average 2.076 billion metric tons annually, 7 million metric tons below the cap of 2.083 billion metric tons per year.

But Phase 3 will see annual emissions of around 2.08 billion metric tons, 238 million more than an average cap of 1.85 billion.

"On our revised estimates the ETS is still short by an average of 50 million tons per year over 2008-20 even after allowing for the use of (Kyoto) credits," Lewis said, cutting his previous estimate of 86 million.

Lewis predicted EU member states would meet 45 percent of its renewables target, down from a previous estimate of 50 percent.

He said EU emissions will start to rise again after 2009, growing by 1 percent in 2010, 2 percent in 2011 and 2012, and 0.5 percent in the years following.

For additional news and analysis on the carbon markets, go to here

(editing by William Hardy)


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Climate protesters demand swifter U.N. action

Reuters 6 Dec 08;

POZNAN, Poland (Reuters) - Thousands of climate protesters, some dressed as polar bears, devils or penguins, demanded on Saturday swifter action from the United Nations to combat global warming.

Outside U.N.-led talks in Poland aimed at pushing 187 countries toward stiffer targets to fight global warming, some 1,000 demonstrators said governments were risking the planet's future by delaying action to squabble over who was to blame.

Several thousand more protesters took part in a march through London to demand "urgent and radical action" from the British government on climate change.

"So far I think it's going really slowly," Susann Scherbarth from Friends of the Earth in Germany said of the talks in the western city of Poznan.

She and other protesters in Poznan waved a banner reading: "Stop clowning around, get serious about climate action."

Others carried pictures of seas inundating cities and villages, and the suited hand of a businessman squeezing the planet.

The march fell short of organizers' predictions of a turnout of several thousand and many inside the talks did not see it.

"It's not a matter for negotiators, it's a matter for politicians. They are the ones who have been blocking the whole process," said Rae-Kwon Chung, South Korea's climate change ambassador, adding that he was unaware of the event outside.

Marches, bicycle rides and other events were scheduled around the world on Saturday to mark a "Global Day of Action on Climate," said the Global Climate Campaign, an umbrella group for participants.

London police said between 4,000 and 5,000 people took part in a rally which organizers said was aimed at reminding governments not to let the issue of climate change slip down a global agenda dominated by the financial crisis.

"The current economic downturn does not make the catastrophic consequences of failing to deal with the climate crisis any less catastrophic," said Phil Thornhill, Britain's national coordinator of the Campaign Against Climate Change.

(Reporting Gerard Wynn and Megan Rowling, additional reporting by Kate Kelland in London, editing by Michael Roddy)

Thousands join climate change demo in London
Yahoo News 6 Dec 08;

LONDON (AFP) – Thousands of campaigners marched in London on Saturday to demand that the government take more action to prevent climate change.

Organisers said 10,000 people took part in the colourful procession to the Houses of Parliament, which coincided with a meeting of 192 nations in Poznan, Poland, to draft a new international climate change treaty.

Kate Tansley, of the march organisers Campaign against Climate Change, said the protest highlighted four issues, including a call for plans to build a third runway at London's Heathrow airport, one of the world's busiest, to be scrapped.

She said: "There are four 'no' issues and one 'yes' one.

"These are no to a third runway at Heathrow and the general expansion of aviation, no to coal, and no to agro-fuels," she said, referring to biofuels.

"It's good to have a more positive message though, and that is yes to investment in renewable energy and all the green jobs that it would bring."

The protesters came on bicycles and on foot, carrying placards and banners.

Student Jon Roberts, 26, said: "The turnout today shows the government how many people care about energy issues in this country and are aware of the impact it is having around the world.

"I really hope the government takes more action on energy. There may be bills and proposals to combat climate change but they need to actually do something to enforce them."

The Poznan meeting aims to lay the groundwork for a "shared vision" on how to broaden the fight against climate change after the first set of commitments made by industrialised nations under the Kyoto Protocol expire in 2012.

A new climate change treaty is scheduled for completion by December next year, although the global economic slowdown has made already delicate negotiations even more difficult.


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More Pledge Climate Neutrality at UN Climate Conference

Countries, Cities, Companies and Organizations Pledge Climate Neutrality at UN Climate Conference in Poznan
UNEP 7 Dec 08;

Countries, Cities, Companies and Organizations Pledge Climate Neutrality at UN Climate Conference in Poznan

Poznan/Nairobi, 7 December 2008 - As nearly 200 governments are meeting to move forward a new global deal to address climate change at the UN climate conference, an increasing number of countries, cities, companies and organizations are committing to a low-carbon future by joining the Climate Neutral Network (CN Net).

The CN Net - established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) - brings together countries, cities, companies and organizations that have set some of the world's most ambitious greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets.

UN Under-Secretary-General and UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner said: "From a hip hotel which blends Shanghai's tradition and modernity to Thailand's largest supermarket chain to the biggest outdoor music event that communicates the environmental message to the global audience, the new Climate Neutral Network participants bring the low-carbon vision for the future to millions of people."

"I am also pleased to welcome the Pacific island nation of Niue, which is joining the CN Net in the country category. For many small island developing States like Niue climate neutrality is more than just a concept - it is a matter of survival. Finally, the two cities coming on board - Slough in the UK and Waitakere in New Zealand - exemplify that addressing climate change is part and parcel of urban sustainability," he added.

Are you climate NIUE-tral?

The Pacific island nation of Niue is the new country coming on board the Climate Neutral Network. It is hoping to become carbon neutral in the near future. Niue's own annual CO2 emissions are approximately 0.003 million metric tonnes for a population of about 1,700. The Government of Niue focuses in particular on the transport and energy sectors as the major contributors of greenhouse gas emissions.

It promotes the use of energy saving appliances and compact fluorescent light bulbs, and, in the case of transport, enforces maximum speed limits and encourages carpooling. It also works to cut down carbon emissions through better waste management and harnessing renewable energy resources.

Slough steps to climate neutrality

A historic stopping point for coaches travelling between London and Bath, Slough today has a population of nearly 120,000 and is one of UK's most culturally diverse communities. The Slough Borough Council's strategy includes having all public transport and council vehicles running on cleaner fuel and cutting its CO2 emissions by one-fifth in the next 20 years.

Waitakere is New Zealand's fifth largest city representing nearly five percent of the country's population. The city's Action Plan on Climate Change and Energy targets stabilizing per capita greenhouse gas emissions by 2010 and reducing them by 80 percent by 2051.

In climate neutral company

Companies and organizations big and small are joining the Climate Neutral Network. The eleven new participants are being announced today in Poznan are:

* URBN Hotels, China's first carbon neutral hotel;

* Tesco Lotus, Thailand's largest supermarket chain;

* Live Earth, organizer of large-scale environmental music & entertainment events;

* Ementor Group, Scandinavia's leading IT provider;

* First Climate Group, Europe's leading carbon asset management company;

* Biosphere Capital, carbon trading, technology and finance company;

* GHG, carbon management company working in Portuguese-speaking countries;

* Aeris Futuro Foundation, which created Poland's first CO2 calculator;

* IDEA, Paraguay's Institute for Environmental Law and Economics;

* Rios Tropicales, a Costa Rican eco-adventure company; and

* Yachay Wasi, a Peruvian NGO planting one million native trees in the Andes.


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Scottish climate bill 'could lead world'

BBC News 5 Dec 08;

A newly-published Scottish bill to help tackle climate change could be a "world leader", environmental groups have claimed.

The Scottish Government proposals would see an 80% reduction in the country's greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

It also sets out measures to tackle shipping and aviation emissions.

Campaigners Stop Climate Chaos Scotland hailed the bill as potentially "the most significant for a generation", but said there was room for improvement.

The targets in the Scottish Climate Change Bill will include a 50% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and a cut of 80% by 2050.

If backed by the Scottish Parliament, it would also allow ministers to establish a Scottish Committee on Climate Change, or similar body, to exercise advisory functions.

It will include international aviation and shipping within its targets, as well as emissions from all six greenhouse gases, not just carbon dioxide.

More than 21,000 responses were received during a consultation on draft legislation.

Climate Change Minister Stewart Stevenson said the bill would give Scotland the most ambitious climate change legislation anywhere in the world.

He added: "The measures set out in the bill show that Scotland is at the forefront of global efforts to tackle climate change.

"Achieving these targets will be challenging, but I am confident that government, business and the people of Scotland are ready to rise to the challenge of climate change."

The minister admitted that the targets were not an end in themselves, but stressed the importance of delivery.

"This is why we are developing a range of short, medium and long-term policy options to drive the changes needed to meet our ambitious targets. These options will be published next year," he added.

"As a government we are determined to have carbon assessment at the heart of our decision-making. We are breaking new ground with our carbon assessment project which will ensure climate change impacts are considered in future budgets and spending decisions."

The bill sets out the role the forestry sector can play in reducing emissions, through areas like renewable energy measures and woodland creation.

It also includes measures on energy efficiency, waste reduction, recycling and packaging.

And it gives ministers the powers to make retailers charge for the supply of carrier bags, although it insists legislation will be a "last resort". Some shops already charge for such bags.

Mike Robinson, chairman of umbrella organisation Stop Climate Chaos Scotland, said the bill "could be the most significant for a generation".

He said the group's 30 members, who include Friends of the Earth, the Church of Scotland, Oxfam, Christian Aid and the National Trust for Scotland, had given it a warm welcome.

But he added: "As Lord Turner's report for the UK Climate Committee showed on Monday, there is no reason to back down, and every reason to be even more ambitious in investing for a green economy.

"We call upon MSPs from all parties to back strong measures already in the bill, and to work constructively to improve it further so it becomes genuinely world-leading legislation.

"Scotland has had huge benefit from fossil-fuel based energy; we can and should be leading efforts to shift to a more efficient and sustainable low-carbon economy."

'Environmental limits'

Opposition parties also largely welcomed the bill, but Scottish Labour's climate change spokesman Des McNulty said his party would be scrutinising the bill to ensure its words would be matched with action.

Mr McNulty said: "We will insist that the Scottish Government reports to parliament every year about what has been achieved and that there are penalties available if agreements are broken."

Scottish Tory climate change spokesman Alex Johnstone added: "It remains important that this Scottish bill is developed alongside the UK Climate Change Bill, especially with regard to the Scottish targets on aviation and shipping."

Scottish Green MSP Patrick Harvie said the bill was a "worthwhile starting point" but warned there were still too many loopholes and too much vague language.

"During 2009 we will see whether parliament can rise to the challenge and build on this proposal", he added.

"I believe it can be the foundation for the most effective legislation yet delivered on climate change anywhere in the world, but it still needs a lot of work".

The Sustainable Development Commission Scotland, which advises the Scottish Government on sustainable development, said the publishing of the bill was a "landmark day" for the country as it would provide "more confidence that our future will be a sustainable one in which we have a healthy and just society, a resilient economy and are living within what we can now all see are very real environmental limits."

A spokesman for the energy industry body Scottish Renewables said: "The days of counting the public purse solely in terms of money are over, every pound spent must now be carbon costed so that public buildings and services are run efficiently using more renewable energy to meet targets."


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Sarkozy fails to break EU climate pact deadlock

Gabriela Baczynska, Reuters 6 Dec 08;

GDANSK, Poland (Reuters) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy failed to end deadlock with ex-communist European Union states on an EU climate package on Saturday but predicted a deal would be reached by a December 11-12 summit.

"Things are moving in a good way ... I am convinced we will arrive at a positive conclusion," Sarkozy, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, said after meeting Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and eight other east European leaders.

Poland, which relies on high-polluting coal for more than 90 percent of its electricity, has threatened to veto an EU plan to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 unless Warsaw wins fossil fuel concessions.

"There is still a lot of work ahead of us" before the summit, Tusk said after the talks in the Polish port of Gdansk.

Poland argues it needs until 2020 to curb carbon emissions, for example by using more efficient boilers and carbon-scrubbing equipment and possibly building its first nuclear plant.

Tusk said Sarkozy and the EU Commission agreed to extend a period limiting mandatory purchases of greenhouse gas emissions permits for east European coal plants, in an offer which would need the backing of all EU leaders.

And Tusk hinted at a willingness to compromise at the summit. "At the very end, maybe at the very last minute, we may decide this is a solution we may accept," Tusk said.

East European nations are not the only ones with objections. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has called the EU plan unrealistic and Rome has raised the possibility that EU leaders may approve only parts of the package at the summit.

Poorer east European states say tough caps on carbon emissions will harm their economies at a time of global financial crisis, preventing them from catching up with wealthy western Europe.

CRISIS

"The effects of the economic crisis have been very strong on our countries which are weaker than the western states," Romanian Prime Minister Calin Tariceanu said.

Sarkozy saw reasons for optimism after the meeting with leaders of Bulgaria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, Poland, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia.

"It's a very strong political signal that despite the financial crisis no state wanted to change the deadline or the objectives" of axing greenhouse gases by a fifth, he said.

Earlier, addressing delegates in Gdansk on Saturday to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Polish pro-democracy icon Lech Walesa winning the Nobel Peace Prize, Tusk called on rich EU nations to show more support for their poorer neighbors.

"Solidarity also means taking responsibility for the weaker," Tusk said. Walesa headed the Solidarity trade union which in the 1980s helped topple communism in eastern Europe.

EU diplomats are keen to wrap up climate talks this month before France hands the EU's rotating presidency to the Czech Republic -- split by a political power struggle and led by a president who doubts mankind is causing climate change.

Poland's drive for more concessions contrasts sharply with its role as host of a 190-nation U.N. climate conference in Poznan, Poland, from December 1-12, at which it is meant to muster support for a new U.N. climate treaty to be agreed next year.

Concessions offered on Saturday would force east European coal plants only to buy permits for carbon emissions above those of the most efficient plant until a set date when they would have to buy them all -- such as 2020 in the case of Poland from a previous offer of 2016.

(Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska and Yann Le Guernigou, writing by Alister Doyle, Editing by Matthew Jones)

FACTBOX: Obstacles to an EU deal to fight climate change
Reuters 5 Dec 08;

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union plans to finalize the world's most ambitious measures to combat global warming by the end of this year.

Measures to improve energy efficiency in cars, and to promote green energy including biofuels, have already been agreed.

Here are some of the remaining obstacles.

* Poland says it will not agree to current proposals to include all EU power stations from 2013 in the bloc's flagship Emission Trading Scheme (ETS), which makes industry pay for permits to pollute. It says that would create unbearable costs for Poland's coal-fired power plants, which are among Europe's biggest emitters of carbon dioxide.

Poland is backed by Hungary, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Slovakia.

* Several EU nations, including Germany and Italy, fear the added cost of paying for permits to emit carbon under the ETS will drive up costs for industries such as steel and aluminum, forcing them to relocate to less regulated countries.

* Italy is demanding a review of the laws in 2014, to see whether they need adjusting to take account of any unwanted effects or in light of a possible international deal in Copenhagen next year.

* The EU wants to promote new technology to capture carbon dioxide from power stations and bury it underground, but has not decided where to find the money for costly pilot schemes. Parliament wants funds set aside from the ETS to contribute about 10 billion euros, but member states have set the limit at 4 billion.

* The European Parliament and member states remain deadlocked over how to treat emissions from outside the ETS, such as transport, heating and agriculture. Member states want to buy carbon offsets from the developing world as a cheap alternative to two thirds of their emissions cuts. Parliament says no more than half should be allowed.

(Reporting by Pete Harrison)

Sarkozy cites limited progress with eastern EU climate refuseniks
Yahoo News 7 Dec 08;

GDANSK, Poland (AFP) – Talks between French President Nicolas Sarkozy and nine ex-Soviet nations on a new EU climate pact yielded "progress" but left key points unresolved, Sarkozy said Saturday.

"We are not yet at the end of the discussion, but we have progressed," the bloc's current chairman told a press conference after the meeting in the Baltic coastal city of Gdansk.

"Today, I am optimistic that we can get there even if there is still a way to go," he said.

Sarkozy is also president of the European Union until December 31, after which the rotating post passes over to the Czech Republic.

"We are still in the middle of negotiations, and there are balances to be found. We still have eight days, which is plenty of time to reach an agreement," he added.

France is pushing for the adoption of an ambitious energy package at a summit meeting of the European Union's 27 member states next week in Brussels.

But the bloc's newest members, led by Poland, have threatened to back out unless concessions are made to ease their transition to less carbon intensive economies.

"We are getting closer, but we still have to settle certain points," said Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who met with Sarkozy separately earlier in the day before the second meeting joined by leaders from Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Slovakia.

Poland is highly dependent on CO2-belching coal-fired plants, which account for 94 percent of its electricity.

Along with other EU newcomers, Warsaw opposes the original EU plan to begin full auctioning of CO2 emission quotas for industry in 2013, arguing it would see energy prices skyrocket.

"We have obtained a framework for an exemption for a longer period," Tusk said after the meeting with Sarkozy, mentioning the date 2019 without giving any further details.

The other ex-Soviet bloc countries have said they also need longer transition periods before switching entirely to the auction system.

The EU has set a triple "20" objective for 2020: slashing greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent compared to 1990, increasing renewable energy's share of the market to 20 percent, and improving energy efficiency by 20 percent.

Green groups said the clash did not bode well for Europe's climate pact, and could have a dampening effect on United Nations climate change talks taking place in Poznan, also in Poland.

"We are seeing the further unravelling of the EU climate-energy package, which certainly is not going to help in putting together an ambitious agreement in Poznan," said Damien Demailly, from the WWF's climate and energy programme for Europe.

No deal amid EU climate deadlock
BBC News 6 Dec 08;

France's Nicolas Sarkozy, the current EU president, has failed to break a deadlock with Eastern member states over an ambitious climate change deal.

Mr Sarkozy said there had been progress but that the end had not yet been reached ahead of an upcoming EU summit.

Countries including Poland and the Czech Republic oppose deep cuts in carbon dioxide emissions, saying they unfairly penalise their need for coal.

Polish PM Donald Tusk said a compromise would need a lot more hard work.

But Mr Tusk, whose country has previously threatened to veto the deal, did say some progress had been made.

"We are looking for a wise stand for the EU summit," Reuters news agency quoted him as saying after negotiations in the Polish city of Gdansk. "There is still a lot of work ahead of us."

"Things are moving in a good way," Reuters quoted Mr Sarkozy as saying. "I am convinced we will arrive at a positive conclusion."

Global moves

Eastern leaders argue the cuts also do not take account of the lower levels of earnings in their countries.

The EU plan would cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20% by the year 2020.

While the Poles are leading the opposition to the EU emissions cuts, they are at the same time chairing UN negotiations in the Polish city of Poznan, where they are trying to urge the delegates to accept deep cuts in carbon, BBC environment reporter Matt McGrath says.

Although the talks in Gdansk were not directly related to the meeting in Poznan, they are seen as crucial to maintaining the credibility of Europe's leadership on climate change, our reporter adds.

A new global climate pact is to be signed in Copenhagen in a year's time, succeeding the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which runs out in 2012.

The EU has told the world that if a global deal is done, then the bloc will cut its emissions by 30%.

The EU package, which is under pressure because of fears of the cost of green energy in the middle of a global economic crisis, focuses on three areas: emission cuts, renewable energy sources and energy efficiencies.

France, which hands over the rotating EU presidency to the Czech Republic in January, needs to win the Eastern states' support ahead of an EU summit on 11-12 December.

Mr Sarkozy wants the climate package completely finished before the handover.

Compromise plans

Eastern countries are seeking to soften the blow to their industries and their populations by giving away permits to emit carbon but Brussels wants these permits to be auctioned off to the highest bidder saying that if you give them away for free, you undermine the EU's emissions trading scheme.

Mr Sarkozy was meeting the leaders of Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Romania and the Czech Republic for lunch.

There had been a suggestion that he would agree to a compromise with the Eastern leaders, giving them more time to catch up with the rest of the EU.

Under one compromise being considered, West European plants would have to buy permits to emit every tonne of carbon dioxide they produce from burning fossil fuels from 2013. But the scheme would only be introduced in Eastern Europe from 2016.

Polish Environment Minister Maciej Nowicki rejected as insufficient the French offer of extra time to meet the new climate caps.

"This is one step in the right direction, but not enough," he told Reuters on Friday.

An unnamed official in Mr Sarkozy's office stressed the importance of striking a deal on Sunday.

"If we do not manage to reach an agreement at the lunch, then the night of the 11th to the 12th [ie the EU summit] will be very long," the official told Reuters.

EU climate package explained
BBC News 5 Dec 08;

The EU is trying to hammer out a final deal on a climate change package that is supposed to become law in the 27-nation EU early next year.

The original package presented by the European Commission in January 2008 is expected to be watered down to some extent, because the financial crisis has amplified concern about the economic cost of green energy. EU countries are divided over how to share out that burden and limit the economic pain.

The package focuses on three areas: emissions cuts, renewables and energy efficiency.

The EU's credibility is at stake as it aims to be a model in the run-up to a new global climate pact to be signed in Copenhagen in a year's time. That pact will succeed the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which runs out in 2012.

But pressure is mounting from EU member states for other major polluters worldwide to adopt similar targets.

France, which holds the EU presidency until January, has the tricky task of keeping all 27 member states on board at the EU summit on 11-12 December.

EMISSIONS CUTS AND THE ETS

The European Commission and EU governments agreed on the target of cutting greenhouse gases by at least 20% by 2020, compared with 1990 levels.

The target will rise to 30% if an international agreement is reached committing other developed countries and the more advanced developing nations to comparable emission reductions.

The EU launched its pioneering Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) in 2005. But to meet the new targets for emissions cuts changes to the ETS are required.

Under the ETS, permits for emitting carbon dioxide (CO2) are distributed under a system of national allocations. The permits are traded - so big polluters can buy extra ones from greener enterprises.

The EU aims to reduce the allocations by 21% from 2005 levels by 2020. And there is to be one EU-wide cap on the number of permits, rather than individual national allocation plans.

The ETS covers about 10,000 heavy industrial plants across the EU - notably power plants, oil refineries and steel mills - which together account for almost half the EU's CO2 emissions, the commission says.

All major industrial emitters of CO2 are to be brought under the ETS and the scheme will also include greenhouse gases other than CO2 - nitrous oxide and perfluorocarbons.

Many permits were given away for free in the first ETS phase. But from 2013 enterprises in the power sector will have to buy all their permits at auction, under the EU plans. For other industrial sectors and aviation full auctioning will be phased in by 2020.

The move to full auctioning is proving contentious. German industrial groups say full auctioning will cost them billions of euros - costs that they could not pass on to customers.

Similar warnings have come from new EU member states in Central and Eastern Europe - especially Poland, which is heavily dependent on coal. Italy has added its voice to the protests.

Concessions over the ETS targets may be necessary to prevent Italy or Poland vetoing the whole climate package - a threat that was made at the October EU summit.

Another option may be for the richer EU member states to compensate the poorer ones, to help cover the costs.

Full auctioning might also be delayed for specific sectors where it is feared there could simply be a transfer of jobs or plant to non-EU countries where the rules on emissions are not as strict - so-called "carbon leakage".

Revenues from the auctioning of permits will go to member states' treasuries, but the commission says they should devote at least 20% of that income to low-carbon technology and innovation. National budget pressures are now threatening that target too.

The EU has already softened the targets for reducing CO2 emissions from cars, under pressure from carmakers hit hard by the economic downturn.

A key area of green innovation is carbon capture and storage (CCS) - new technologies that allow industrial CO2 emissions to be captured and stored underground, where they cannot harm the climate.

There are plans to build 10 to 12 big pilot plants in the EU by 2015, with a view to making CCS commercially viable by about 2020. The plants would be funded by revenue from the ETS.

RENEWABLES

The EU package sets the goal of increasing renewable energy's share of the market to 20% by 2020, from around 8.5% today.

Within that goal, 10% of transport fuels will have to come from biofuels. The commission wants a strict certification system to ensure that only biofuels achieving a real cut of at least 35% in CO2 emissions will be allowed.

The use of food-based biofuels is under review because of concern about deforestation and food shortages in developing countries.

The renewables targets for member states differ because they are at different stages in their use of wind energy, solar power, hydroelectric power and other green sources. The UK's proposed target is 15% by 2020, because the UK is far behind many other EU countries in the area of renewables.

The commission says the EU must embrace renewables not only to slow climate change but also because the EU's reliance on imported gas is set to increase from 57% currently to 84% by 2030, and on imported oil from 82% to 93%.

The creation of new jobs in renewable energy technologies is another benefit, the commission argues.

ENERGY EFFICIENCY

Energy consumption is to be cut by 20% by 2020 through improved energy efficiency, the package says.

The commission says state aid can legitimately be used to promote emissions cuts and increase take-up of renewables, so long as it does not breach EU competition rules.

On 3 December the commission came up with new proposals for the EU to co-finance national and local schemes to promote energy-efficient housing.

If the plan is adopted, the EU will help member states install double glazing, wall insulation and solar panels in housing, especially targeting low-income households.

The residential sector accounts for 25% of Europe's energy consumption, the commission says.


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