Best of our wild blogs: 16 Mar 09


Not good enough
on the annotated budak blog

Aquarium deaths: stingrays at Calgary Zoo
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Semakau, in the Early Morning Light
on the Running with the Wind blog

Strange clouds over Semakau
from wild shores of singapore blog

The claws of attraction
on the annotated budak blog

Tuas and beyond
on the wonderful creation blog

Batik lady
on the annotated budak blog

A Pedal Ubin Guide reflects
on the Toddycats! blog

Monday Morgue: 16th March 2009
on the Lazy Lizard's Tales blog

iNaturalist.org
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Copulation of a pair of Hardheads
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

What do the flowers of the Seashore pandan look like?
on the wild shores of singapore blog


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Not enough Singaporeans to fill cleantech jobs

Jamie Lee, Business Times 16 Mar 09;

(SINGAPORE) Some 1,200 jobs are up for grabs in the clean technology (cleantech) industry this year, says the Economic Development Board (EDB).

Most of the jobs would be created from investments by wind turbine maker Vestas Wind Systems and solar cell manufacturer Renewable Energy Corporation, EDB's director of cleantech, Goh Chee Kiong, told BT in a recent interview.

But there are not enough Singaporeans who can fill the specialist jobs - Vestas employees span 20 nationalities.

'There's a clear gap today,' Mr Goh said. 'It's safe to say that companies want to hire Singaporeans as much as they can if they can find the skill sets. But there are many instances where there's just insufficient Singaporean talent.'

EDB is also bracing for a pullback in new investments in the sector during the recession, though Mr Goh said that it was still 'early days' to assess the extent of the impact.

'There's no doubt that the current financial crunch has affected this industry,' he said. 'If people are building a wind farm or a solar farm, there are going to be more difficulties than usual in raising the money, so that has set the market back.'

A new incubator fund has been set up to attract cleantech investments. Capped at $500,000, the loan would be offered to start-ups, which have to meet criteria in accumulated revenue and technological breakthroughs over three to four years.

At the end of five years from the time the loan is taken, the company must repay it at 1.25 times the original sum.

However, if the start-ups are unable to meet targets, EDB is prepared to write off the investment, Mr Goh said.

But to avoid counterintuitive strategies by start-ups in setting high revenue targets during the recession, the EDB would set balanced terms that 'reflect the success' of these companies, said Mr Goh.

EDB is in talks with a few local and international companies to disburse the grants, he added.

Besides looking at cleantech manufacturing, EDB is keen to encourage developers and businesses to fit energy-efficient or cleantech features and facilities into buildings and other infrastructures.

'That is a new emerging area that many parts of Asia are not accustomed to, and we believe we can develop a niche in that,' said Mr Goh.

For example, water treatment plants built in rural areas may require solar panels to generate power to treat water for the villages, since the plants have no electricity, said Mr Goh.

Singapore is largely seen as clean and green, though some quarters feel that it ought to take a tougher stance on environmental policies, given its high gross domestic product (GDP) and steep per capita carbon dioxide emissions.

'Singapore's image as a clean and green nation has been well accepted by many societies in the world,' said Mr Goh, when asked about criticisms of Singapore's green policies.

Green-collar jobs 'the sexiest around'
Cleantech sector hots up with 1,200 jobs despite recession
Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 15 Mar 09;

AS MANY as 1,200 jobs will be up for grabs this year in an emerging sector that is still hotting up despite the recession: clean technology.

The Economic Development Board (EDB) said the jobs will come from foreign companies that have invested locally and are now hiring.

Also, the burgeoning number of research and development (R&D) centres and start-up firms in the sector are aggressively hiring, said EDB's director of cleantech Goh Chee Kiong.

Clean technology - 'cleantech' for short - refers broadly to eco-friendly technologies and solutions such as clean energy, environmental or water technology.

The cleantech industry is one of the fastest growing in the world, with investments rising from US$148.4billion (S$228billion) in 2007 to US$155.4 billion last year in spite of the global financial crisis, according to research firm New Energy Finance.

The EDB recognises the sector as an opportunity for Singapore to diversify its economy, and recently put its cash behind cleantech. Singapore has invested $680million in the sector, building its R&D, test-bedding and manpower capabilities, and giving a leg-up to start-ups.

January's Budget also pledged a further $1billion to fund sustainable development.

The EDB expects the industry to contribute $1.7 billion to gross domestic product come 2015, providing 18,000 jobs - 11,000 from environment and water space, and 7,000 from the clean energy industry - according to Mr Goh.

He cited examples of such 'green-collar jobs': membrane specialists in the water industry, engineers in the solar sector, systems integrators who wire solar panels to buildings, suppliers of sustainable building material and those in energy management.

Even the finance sector is benefiting with the growth of cleantech funds and business trusts in environmental technology.

The EDB continues to woo major international firms to relocate here and will announce deals in the year to come, said Mr Goh.

Singapore remains attractive as it provides the right infrastructure for businesses and is positioned as a 'living lab' for test-bedding such technologies before exporting to the world.

The country's manufacturing sector, which includes electronics, chemicals and precision engineering clusters, provides a good foundation for the industry.

'All the building blocks are already in place,' said Mr Goh.

'Despite the crisis, we are confident that the industry is on track and will become a major contributor to our economy in the next decade.'

Cultivating talent is extremely important and to this end, the Government has given out $5million for 18 cleantech-related scholarships via the Clean Energy Programme Office and the Environment and Water Industry Development Council.

The target is to award 200 scholarships worth at least $55million over the next five years.

And demand seems to be growing strong as interest in the sector hots up. Mr Goh said 160 applications for scholarships were made this year, twice the number last year.

Singapore Environment Council executive director Howard Shaw added that jobs linked to the environmental and sustainability sectors now are 'on the list of sexiest jobs'.

'I think these jobs will be snapped up. There is a lot of career development in the green sector now. Even the economic woes have not stopped long-term investments in this industry.'


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Cheapest grade petrol makes comeback in Singapore

Caltex reintroduces 92-octane fuel, pricing it below rivals' and possibly starting new price war
Christopher Tan, Straits Times 16 Mar 09;

CALTEX has reintroduced 92-octane, the cheapest grade of petrol, at its pumps here in response to the economic downturn.

This grade of petrol, which disappeared from its stations in 2000, is now back at the pumps at its Pasir Panjang, Bukit Merah and Alexandra stations. All 33 stations of the smallest oil company here will have it by March 24.

Not only that, Caltex is pricing its 92-octane at $1.536 a litre before discount - 2.2 cents lower than its rivals, making it the cheapest petrol here.

This advantage is, however, expected to be shortlived as other players are likely to match its rate eventually.

Mr John Sam, retail manager at Chevron Singapore, which markets the Caltex brand, said of the company's decision to bring back 92-octane: 'For some motorists, driving is a necessity and may even be a form of livelihood.'

Pumps dispensing 92-octane have become harder to find in recent years. After Caltex dropped it from its pumps nine years ago, oil giant Shell began reducing its number of such pumps gradually.

A Shell spokesman said this was because demand for the petrol grade was low, at 5 per cent to 6 per cent of total petrol sales. 'Our stations are therefore geared up accordingly,' he said.

The Consumers Association of Singapore (Case) was critical of this practice of cutting back on the choice consumers would otherwise have had.

Case executive director Seah Seng Choon said: 'In a difficult economic situation like this, motorists will be looking for ways to lower cost. Petrol companies should show their social responsibility and ensure that low-cost fuel is easily available at their stations.'

Chevron Singapore could not say why it dropped 92-octane in 2000, but observers reckon it could have been due to motorists then favouring higher-octane fuels.

But the tide has turned in favour of the more environmentally friendly 92-octane. Even performance vehicle maker BMW has confirmed that all its cars here can run on it.

Industry consultant Ong Eng Tong, an advocate of lower-octane fuels, said: 'Most cars do not need high-octane fuels. With better education and soaring prices in recent years, motorists are moving away from high-octane petrol.'

Data from the Ministry of Trade and Industry confirmed this trend. Last year, sales of 92- and 95-octane fuels grew 13 per cent and 14 per cent respectively, while 98-octane sales shrank by 18 per cent.

The two lower grades accounted for 64 per cent of sales last year. As recently as 2005, 98-octane sales outstripped the sale of 92 and 95 combined.

ExxonMobil is one oil company that has kept its number of dispensers for 92-octane. With the exception of two kiosks at Lavender and Guillemard, all of the company's stations here devote an equal number of dispensers to each grade.

The company's retail manager here, Mr Loh Chee Seng, explained that this is typical of the company's stations worldwide, and that its policy is to give consumers choice.

For Caltex, the move to bring back 92 is at the expense of 98-octane petrol as 92 will be dispensed at pumps previously used for 98.

The company has fired another salvo in what could be the start of a petrol price war - by pricing its 'ultra-premium' Platinum 98 at its regular 98-octane rate - a cut of about 17 cents a litre. This fuel has long been priced alongside Shell's V-Power, the other 'ultra-premium' grade of petrol.

Mr Sam said: 'With the challenging economic climate, we want to bring more choice and savings to customers.'

The move could affect Chevron's profit margins, as 92-octane petrol is about 15 cents cheaper per litre than 98-octane fuel. But the company reckoned this would be more than made up for by a higher volume of sales.

With Caltex's reintroduction of 92, about 23 per cent of Singapore's 6,603 petrol pumps will dispense the grade, up from 21.5 per cent.


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Rise in lost dogs, despite laws

Loh Chee Kong, Today Online 16 Mar 09;

DESPITE recent laws making itcompulsory for dogs to be licensed and implanted with microchips,the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) received more lost dogs last year, even as the population of stray cats appears to be under control.

The ruling, which animal activists hoped would discourage pet dumping, took effect in September 2007. But it did not stop the SPCA from receiving 1,162 lost dogs last year, a marginal increase as compared to 2007, according to its latest statistics.

Last week the SPCA said in a press statement that most of the lost dogs were “pedigree or pedigree crosses and the majority had no microchip or identification”. Only just over a third was claimed by their owners.

The dumping of such dogs — a concern the SPCA had flagged last year — continue unabated, with 1,550 purebreds received. Mindful that some could have been lost pets, the SPCA reminds owners to microchip their dogs at veterinary clinics.

“More importantly, they mustlicense their dogs with the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority for the microchip to be effective,” it said. Jack Russell Terriers, Maltese and Golden Retrievers were some common breeds surrendered or abandoned, as well as a “considerable number” of Huskies.

The Society receives around 700 animals each month, with only two out of every 10 possibly finding new homes. The good news is that the number of cats coming through its doors has dropped by 13 per cent — or 600 cats — year-on-year. The average number of cats taken in each month has also fallen from 500 to 300.

Such a “significant change” was likely due to more stray cats being sterilised, the SPCA said.

Since 1991, the SPCA has implemented a free voucher scheme under which it pays for the sterilisation of neighbourhood cats brought by volunteer caregivers to participating veterinary clinics. More than 2,000 vouchers were distributed last year.

“Although the demand for vouchers always exceeds the supply, many community cats are being sterilised, which ultimately means the number of births should decline,” the SPCA said.


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Terengganu's mosques to help fight poaching

Sean Augustin, New Straits Times 16 Mar 09;

KUALA TERENGGANU: The success of Friday sermons in raising awareness of turtle conservation has prompted the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) to use the same approach to tackle poaching.
The sermons, which are scheduled to be delivered at the state's mosques between April and May, will also touch on the conflict between humans and nature.

The WWF is co-organising the sermons with the Kelantan Islamic Council and the Islamic Understanding Institute of Malaysia (Ikim).

Last November, 482 mosques throughout the state preached about turtle conservation and environmental preservation.

The sermons were the result of efforts made by the Ma'Daerah Heritage Community Association (Mekar) to use the state's mosques as a medium to spread the message of turtle conservation.
Mekar also prepared the text for the sermons with the help of Ikim.

The one off event was deemed a success and received a lot of positive feedback.

WWF Tiger and Rhino communication officer Sara Sukor said the latest sermon would only be preached at a few mosques in Jeli as the poaching of animals such as pangolins, tigers and elephants at forest reserves there was deemed "critical".

The clearing of forests for agricultural purposes in the area has also seen a high conflict between the communities and elephants, especially in the past two years.

"We hope it will have the same impact as the sermon did on turtle conservation in Terengganu," she told the New Straits Times, yesterday.

"People think poaching is not wrong in Islam, but the Quran does mention protecting the wildlife.

"In addition people justify their actions, claiming poaching is done in self-defence. And in the case of elephants, the community needs to realise that elephant habitats are being destroyed and that is why they raid plantations and villages.

"We also hope we can later use the sermon for the whole of Kelantan," she added.

Sara said the organisation is planning a similar sermon in Perak as the state was a hotbed for wildlife trade.

Malaysians to preach tiger protection in mosques
The Associated Press, Jakarta Post 16 Mar 09;

Preachers in some Malaysian mosques will urge worshippers to help stop the poaching of tigers, elephants and other endangered animals after similar sermons on turtle conservation were well received, an environmentalist said Monday.

Dozens of preachers in northern Kelantan state bordering Thailand have agreed to read sermons against the illegal wildlife trade, said Sara Sukor, an official with the World Wildlife Fund.

The sermons "talk about how Islam teaches you to conserve animals and plants. We try to connect the Quran verses with the issues themselves," she said. "It has gotten very critical of late. In unofficial reports we hear about all this conflict and poaching going on."

Last year, Islamic preachers in neighboring Terengganu state stressed the importance of turtle protection in a specially written sermon. World Wildlife Fund officials say the sermon received a good response. Figures indicating the impact of the sermons on illegal trade in turtles were not immediately available.

Sukor said the sermons to protect elephants and tigers were expected to start in April or May.

Among other messages, preachers will explain how chopping down forests takes away elephants' and tigers' natural habitats, forcing them to raid plantations and villages for food.

Wildlife fund officials say only 500 Malayan tigers still live in the wild in Malaysia - down from 3,000 in the 1950s - while about 1,300 Asian elephants remain on peninsular Malaysia, according to government figures.

The World Wildlife Fund said it also hopes to work with local Islamic authorities in other states to distribute conservation sermons nationwide, dealing with each area's specific issues and animals.

Kelantan and Terengganu states are among Malaysia's most conservative. Some 60 percent of Malaysians are Muslims, and Islam is the country's official religion.


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Climate woes hit flagship species in Australia

Bridie Smith, The Age 16 Mar 09;

IT'S not just exotic animals living in icy continents that are at risk of extinction because of climate change. According to a report, some of the species most threatened by climate change call Australia home.

"What a lot of people don't know is that a third of Australia and New Guinea's macropod species, which are kangaroos and wallabies, are threatened with extinction," said the report's author, Tammie Matson. Commissioned by WWF Australia for Earth Hour, the Climate Change and Species report reviews research on 10 species — including polar bears, African elephants and kangaroos — and outlines their plight in a warming planet.

Dr Matson said most of the threatened kangaroo species were small animals, such as the tree kangaroo, rock wallaby and hare wallaby. Those animals most at risk are under pressure from loss of habitat, introduced species and hunting. "Species are getting hounded on all fronts," she said.

Since European settlement in Australia, nine of the 83 species of macropods have become extinct and 28 are listed as threatened.

The Great Barrier Reef is also set to endure bleaching events that are more extreme and more frequent due to global warming, with mass coral deaths forecast to occur regularly by 2060.And Dr Matson said it was an urgent problem, with as many as 80 per cent of the world's corals at risk of dying within decades. In 1998 alone, 16 per cent of the world's corals died. "If we lose a flagship species, we stand to lose a lot more than just that species," she said.

Dr Matson listed the tigers of the Sunderbans as one of the worse cases, with only 400 individuals remaining in the wild. These tigers, which live in the mangrove forests of India and Bangladesh, risk losing their habitat as sea levels rise.

Research presented last week at a climate change meeting in Denmark warned that sea levels could rise by more than a metre by 2100, significantly worse than a rise of up to 59 centimetres by 2100 previously projected.

However, she said polar species that lived in areas that were warming at a greater rate than average could be extinct within 75 years.

Earth Hour takes place from 8:30pm on Saturday March 28. The Age is an official sponsor.


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'Water tribunal' condemns Turkish dam projects

Yahoo News 14 Mar 09;

ISTANBUL (AFP) – A symbolic environmental tribunal slammed Turkey Saturday over three dam projects on grounds that their construction would destroy natural and historical riches and displace thousands of people.

The international tribunal -- made up of academics and environmental activists -- convened as part of an initiative to raise awareness on water resources management ahead of the fifth World Water Forum, to begin in Istanbul next week.

"The Turkish government has always been the victim of dam fetishism," Ulrike Dufner from the German foundation Heinrich Boll Stiftung, which co-sponsored the initiative, said in a written statement.

Turkish plans to build a "countless number" of new dams with controversial environmental and social consequences are "beyond reason," she said.

The tribunal urged Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government to adopt a new policy of "public benefit," balancing economic considerations with social and ecological factors, the statement said.

The government, it said, should revise its energy policies and incorporate civic society and local communities into the decision-making process.

The dams the tribunal targeted are planned to be built in the Munzur Valley, a natural park in eastern Turkey, at an ancient historical site on the banks of the Tigris River in the southeast, and on the Coruh River in the northeast.

The tribunal lamented also "the apparent lack of concern of the Brazilian government in paying attention" to environmental concerns over dam projects on the Madeira River in the Amazon forests.

On another case dealing with "the dramatic environmental situation in Mexico," the tribunal slammed "the governmental breaches that have damaged the country and the rights of its people."


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Carbon-neutral goal for Maldives

BBC News 15 Mar 09;

The Maldives will become carbon-neutral within a decade by switching completely to renewable energy sources like wind and solar power, its leader has said.

President Mohamed Nasheed told the BBC the Maldives understood better than most what would happen if the world failed to tackle climate change.

His tiny country is one of the lowest-lying on Earth and so is extremely vulnerable to rises in sea level. He said he hoped his plan would serve as a blueprint for other nations.

Mr Nasheed was due to announce the plan formally after the screening of a new film on climate change, The Age of Stupid, on Sunday.

The Maldives is made up of a chain of nearly 1,200 islands, most of them uninhabited, which lie off the Indian sub-continent.

None of the coral islands measures more than 1.8 metres (six feet) above sea level, making the country vulnerable to a rise in sea levels associated with global warming.

'Starting from scratch'

"We understand more than perhaps anyone what would happen to us if we didn't do anything about it or if the rest of the world doesn't find the imagination to confront this problem," Mr Nasheed told Newshour, speaking by telephone from the capital, Male.

"So basically, we don't want to sit around and blame others, but we want to do whatever we can, and hopefully, if we can become carbon-neutral, and when we come up with the plan, we hope that these plans also will serve as a blueprint for other nations to follow.

"We think we can do it, we feel that everyone should be engaged in it, and we don't think that this is an issue that should be taken lightly."

It is estimated that the Maldives, which has high levels of poverty, will need to spend about $110m a year to make the transition to renewable energy sources.

Asked how it could afford this, the president said the country was already spending similar sums on existing energy sources, and he expected to recover the extra cost within the decade.

"We start almost from scratch, we are having to go for new investments in almost all areas and it is quite pointless for us to go to yesterday's technologies," he said.

The Age of Stupid stars British actor Pete Postlethwaite as an old man living in a devastated future Earth, watching archive film of the planet and asking why more was not done to combat climate change.

The film's producer, Franny Armstrong, told the BBC the Maldives had set a good example to the developed world.

"I think the challenge has now been laid down by the Maldives, a very poor undeveloped country," she said.

"So now it's over to us, to the rich countries."

An international climate change conference is due to be held in Copenhagen in December to debate initiatives for when the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon recently urged the world to strike a "conclusive carbon emissions reduction" deal at the conference.

Maldives vows to be first carbon-neutral nation
Olivia Lang, Reuters 15 Mar 09;

MALE (Reuters) - The Maldives will shift entirely to renewable energy over the next decade to become the first carbon-neutral nation and fight climate change that threatens the low-lying archipelago's existence, the president said on Sunday.

President Mohamed Nasheed said the Indian Ocean islands would swap fossil fuels for wind and solar power, and buy and destroy EU carbon credits to offset emissions from tourists flying to visit its luxury vacation resorts.

"Climate change threatens us all. Countries need to pull together to de-carbonize the world economy," Nasheed said in a statement. "We know cutting greenhouse gas emissions is possible and the Maldives is willing to play its part."

The $1.1 billion plan would require 155 wind turbines supplying 1.5 megawatts each and a half a square kilometer of solar panels to meet the needs of the islands' 385,000 people.

"We aim to become carbon-neutral in a decade," he said.

The state-owned electricity monopoly will be privatized, and investors and donors invited to take part in the plan.

The program envisions installing battery backup in case wind and solar sources are inadequate, and a power plant to be run off coconut husks in the capital, Male.

The Maldives' economy, based almost entirely on fishing and tourism, is worth about $800 million a year, so it will need outside help.

Nasheed last year unseated Asia's longest-serving ruler, 30-year incumbent President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, in the islands' first multiparty presidential election. Gayoom has become a vocal advocate for mitigating climate change.

Nasheed drew global attention shortly after his election when he said the Maldives would start looking to buy land in other countries to resettle people once the seas rose, but later acknowledged the plan was not feasible financially.

The new plan could pay for itself in 10 years because of the savings on oil imports, said Mark Lynas, an environmentalist and author of three books on climate change who worked with the Maldivian government on the plan.

"It's going to cost a lot of money but it will also save a lot of money from not having to import oil," he said.

The Maldives imports diesel and fuel oil to power its 200 inhabited islands.

"The point of doing it is that it is something the Maldives can lead the world in," Lynas told Reuters. "No rich country has the excuse that it is too expensive and we can't do anything."

In 2007, a U.N. climate change panel predicted an increase in sea levels of 58cm, which would submerge many of the Maldives' 1,192 islands by 2100.

(Writing by Bryson Hull; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Maldives leader vows to make country carbon neutral
Yahoo News 14 Mar 09;

LONDON (AFP) – The Maldives will become the world's first carbon neutral country by fully switching to the use of renewable energy within a decade, President Mohamed Nasheed said in an article to be published Sunday.

Writing in Britain's Observer weekly newspaper, Nasheed said the country would rely on solar panels and wind turbines instead of oil, adding that "the Maldives will no longer be a net contributor to greenhouse gas emissions."

Nasheed's remarks come just less than a week after scientists meeting in Copenhagen earlier this week warned the impact of global warming was accelerating beyond a forecast made by UN experts two years ago.

"For the Maldives, a nation of tropical coral islands just 1.5 metres (five feet) above the sea, these warnings come with added bite," the Indian Ocean atoll nation's leader wrote.

"Climate change isn't a vague and abstract danger but a real threat to our survival. But climate change not only threatens the Maldives, it threatens us all."

He added: "In a grotesque Faustian pact, we have done a deal with the carbon devil: for untold fossil fuel consumption in our lifetime, we are trading our children's place in an earthly paradise.

"Today, the Maldives will opt out of that pact."

Nasheed noted that "making the radical shift to carbon neutrality won't be easy. But where there is a will, there is a way."

"People often tell me caring for the environment is too difficult, too expensive or too much bother. I admit installing solar panels and wind turbines doesn't come cheap.

"But when I read those science reports from Copenhagen, I know there is only one choice. Going green might cost a lot but refusing to act now will cost us the Earth."

In March 2007, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that global warming, if unchecked, would lead to a devastating amalgam of floods, drought, disease and extreme weather by the century end.

Maldives president vows carbon neutral nation
Associated Press 15 Mar 09;

LONDON (AP) — The president of the Maldives says the Indian Ocean nation will become the world's first carbon-neutral country within a decade.

Writing in Sunday's edition of Britain's Observer newspaper, President Mohamed Nasheed said his country of low-lying tropical islands faced "a real threat to our survival" from rising sea levels produced by global warming.

Climate researchers say that many of the Maldives' 1,200 islands could disappear if the seas continue to rise. Much of the archipelago is only 5 feet (1.5 meters) above sea level.

Scientists meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark last week warned that climate change was accelerating faster than predicted. They said melting glaciers and ice sheets could help push the sea level up by as much as 39 inches (1 meter) by the end of the century.

Nasheed said his country would renounce oil and get all its energy from renewable sources such as wind and solar power.

"Going green might cost a lot but refusing to act now will cost us the Earth," he wrote.

Nasheed accused politicians around the world of failing to act and striking "a grotesque Faustian pact" by sacrificing the environment's future for fossil-fuel consumption today.

"Today, the Maldives will opt out of that pact," Nasheed wrote.

He said the Maldives would officially announce its plan later Sunday at the premiere of the environment-themed British film "The Age of Stupid."

The screening, in a tent in London's Leicester Square, is being billed as the world's first solar-powered film premiere.


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New York Seas to Rise Twice as Much as Rest of U.S.

Richard A. Lovett, National Geographic News 15 Mar 09;

Sea levels around New York City and much of the U.S. Northeast will rise twice as much as in other parts of the United States this century, according to new climate models.

Driven by changes in ocean circulation, the rapid sea level rise will bring increased risk of damage from hurricanes and winter storm surges, researchers say.

"Some parts of lower Manhattan are only 1.5 meters [5 feet] above sea level," said lead study author Jianjun Yin, a climate modeler at Florida State University.

"Twenty centimeters [8 inches] of extra rise would pose a threat to this region."

Yet New York, Boston, and Washington, D.C., area seas will rise 14 to 20 inches (36 to 51 centimeters) by 2100, according to the study, published online today in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Other U.S. cities, such as Miami and San Francisco, are expected to see only half as big an increase in sea levels.

Gulf Stream Forces to Weaken?

The reason U.S. Northeast seas are expected to rise disproportionately is because the forces that generate the North Atlantic's Gulf Stream ocean current are projected to weaken in the coming decades.

New climate models predict that global warming will reduce the sinking of cold water that drives the Gulf Stream. As a result, the deep ocean will begin to warm in the North Atlantic, Yin aid.

As water around the current warms, it will expand, adding to the sea level rise caused by global factors such as melting ice caps and icebergs, the study says.

Ice Free Arctic by 2100?

Adding to those global factors may is an Arctic Ocean that appears to be melting rapidly, according to Julien Boé, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles, in another climate study in today's Nature Geoscience.

After comparing a range of models with actual observations, his team predicts that the Arctic Ocean will be ice free during September as early as the end of this century.

Such studies are vital, experts say, because they offer scientists a more precise idea of how different regions might prepare for potential damage due to global warming.

"In both papers," Boé said in an email, "the objective is to improve the projections of important aspects of regional climate change."

Warming to make N.Y. vulnerable to storms: study
Reuters 15 Mar 09;

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Global warming should lift sea levels along the U.S. Northeast nearly twice as fast as global rates this century, putting New York City at risk to damage from hurricanes and winter storm surges, scientists said.

"The northeast coast of the United States is among the most vulnerable regions to future changes in sea level and ocean circulation, especially when considering its population density," said Jianjun Yin, a climate modeler at Florida State University.

Yin, who published a study on rising seas in the journal Nature Geoscience on Sunday, said sea levels along the Northeast should rise 8.3 inches more than the global mean level sea rise by 2100. Well before then, New York City will be at risk of severe flooding from storm surges because many parts of the city are only slightly above sea level.

The rising seas could also submerge low-lying land in and around the city, erode beaches, and hurt estuaries, some of the most diversely populated ecosystems.

Climate scientists say higher temperatures caused by heat-trapping emissions from tailpipes, smokestacks and the burning of forests have the potential to raise sea levels by melting land ice, such as the Greenland icesheet, and expanding water in the ocean.

The U.S. Northeast's coast is particularly vulnerable as global warming slows the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, which is basically a natural conveyor belt that carries warm upper waters to northern latitudes and returns colder waters southward.

Yin and colleagues from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory at Princeton University studied 10 climate models used by the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in their study. Yin was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy's science department.

(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Christian Wiessner)

Northeast US to suffer most from future sea rise
Seth Borenstein, Associated Press Yahoo News 15 Mar 09;

WASHINGTON – The northeastern U.S. coast is likely to see the world's biggest sea level rise from man-made global warming, a new study predicts.

However much the oceans rise by the end of the century, add an extra 8 inches or so for New York, Boston and other spots along the coast from the mid-Atlantic to New England. That's because of predicted changes in ocean currents, according to a study based on computer models published online Sunday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

An extra 8 inches — on top of a possible 2 or 3 feet of sea rise globally by 2100 — is a big deal, especially when nor'easters and hurricanes hit, experts said.

"It's not just waterfront homes and wetlands that are at stake here," said Donald Boesch, president of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, who wasn't part of the study. "Those kind of rises in sea level when placed on top of the storm surges we see today, put in jeopardy lots of infrastructure, including the New York subway system."

For years, scientists have talked about rising sea levels due to global warming — both from warm water expanding and the melt of ice sheets in Greenland and West Antarctica. Predictions for the average worldwide sea rise keep changing along with the rate of ice melt. Recently, more scientists are saying the situation has worsened so that a 3-foot rise in sea level by 2100 is becoming a common theme.

But the oceans won't rise at the same rate everywhere, said study author Jianjun Yin of the Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies at Florida State University. It will be "greater and faster" for the Northeast, with Boston one of the worst hit among major cities, he said. So, if it's 3 feet, add another 8 inches for that region.

The explanation involves complicated ocean currents. Computer models forecast that as climate change continues, there will be a slowdown of the great ocean conveyor belt. That system moves heat energy in warm currents from the tropics to the North Atlantic and pushes the cooler, saltier water down, moving it farther south around Africa and into the Pacific. As the conveyor belt slows, so will the Gulf Stream and North Atlantic current. Those two fast-running currents have kept the Northeast's sea level unusually low because of a combination of physics and geography, Yin said.

Slow down the conveyor belt 33 to 43 percent as predicted by computer models, and the Northeast sea level rises faster, Yin said.

So far, the conveyor belt has not yet noticeably slowed.

A decade ago, scientists worried about the possibility that this current conveyor belt would halt altogether — something that would cause abrupt and catastrophic climate change like that shown in the movie "The Day After Tomorrow." But in recent years, they have concluded that a shutdown is unlikely to happen this century.

Other experts who reviewed Yin's work say it makes sense.

"Our coastlines aren't designed for that extra 8 inches of storm surge you get out of that sea level rise effect," said Jonathan Overpeck, director of an Earth studies institute at the University of Arizona.

While Boston and New York are looking at an additional 8 inches, other places wouldn't get that much extra rise. The study suggests Miami and much of the Southeast would get about 2 inches above the global sea rise average of perhaps 3 feet, and San Francisco would get less than an extra inch. Parts of southern Australia, northern Asia and southern and western South America would get less than the global average sea level rise.

This study along with another one last month looking at regional sea level rise from the projected melt of the west Antarctic ice sheet "provide a compelling argument for anticipating and preparing for higher rates of sea level rise," said Virginia Burkett, chief scientist for Global Change Research at the U.S. Geological Survey.

Burkett, who is based in Louisiana, said eventually New Englanders could be in the same "vulnerability situation" to storms and sea level rise as New Orleans.

Wall St. underwater: rising seas to hit NY hard
Marlowe Hood Yahoo News 15 Mar 09;

PARIS (AFP) – A predicted slowdown in Atlantic Ocean currents will cause sea levels along the US northeast coast to rise twice as fast as the global average, exposing New York and other big cities to violent and frequent storm surges, according to a new study.

Manhattan's Wall Street, barely a metre (three feet) above sea level, for example, will find itself underwater more often as the 21st century unfolds, said the study, published online Sunday in Nature Geoscience.

Sea levels vary across regions by up to 24 centimetres (9.5 inches), influenced in part by powerful currents that coarse around the globe in a pattern called the thermohaline circulation.

In the Atlantic, warm water moving north along the surface from the Gulf of Mexico helps temper cold winters in western Europe and along the US east coast, while frigid Arctic waters run south along the bottom of the sea.

The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded in early 2007 that expanding ocean water driven by climate change will drive up sea levels, on average, anywhere from 18 to 59 centimetres (seven to 23 inches) by 2100, depending on how successful we are at slashing greenhouse gas emissions.

This rising water mark will erase several island nations from the map, and is likely to cause devastation in Asian and African deltas home to tens of millions of people.

More recent studies, taking the impact of melting ice sheets in Greenland and the Western Antarctic into account, forecast an even higher increase of at least one metre (39 inches) over the same period.

Jianjun Yin of Florida State University and two colleagues wanted to find out what impact these sea level rises would have at a regional level, especially along the American eastern seaboard.

The researchers analysed the projections of nearly a dozen state-of-the art climate change models, under three different greenhouse gas scenarios.

They found that sea levels in the North Atlantic adjusted in all cases to the projected slowing of the Gulf Stream and its northward extension, the North Atlantic Current.

The weakened currents account for nearly half of a predicted sea rise -- from thermal expansion alone -- of 36 to 51 centimeters for the US northeastern coast, especially near New York, they found.

"This will lead to the rapid sea level rise on the Northeast coast of the United States," Yin told AFP by phone.

And if, under the influence of melting ice sheets, "the global sea level rise is higher, the relative sea level rise will be superimposed. Proportionally it would be the same," he added.

Rapid sea level increases would put cities such as New York, Boston, Baltimore and Washington D.C. at significantly greater risk of coastal hazards such as hurricanes and intense winter storm surges.

A study released last year by the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Union of Concerned Scientists showed that, due to rising sea levels, once-in-a-century storms would occur on average every 10 years by 2100.

A large belt of around the tip of Manhattan -- included Wall Street -- would have a 10 percent chance of flooding in any given year, it concluded.


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Engineer 'carbon sinks'? Not so fast

Michael Richardson, Straits Times 15 Mar 09;

RUSSIAN and South Korean scientists made a disturbing discovery recently in the Sea of Japan.

They found that the amount of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, being absorbed in the water dropped by half between 1992 and 2007. They also reported that not as much of the carbon dioxide being absorbed in the Sea of Japan was being held at depths of more than 300m, where it was more likely to stay permanently.

French scientists concluded last month that there had been an even sharper drop in the capacity of the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica to soak up the excess carbon dioxide being released into the atmosphere, largely as a result of fossil fuel burning and deforestation.

In its latest report in 2007, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimated that human activity produced 32 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide worldwide each year, but that only 15 billion tonnes actually stayed in the atmosphere and affected climate change. The oceans, forests, vegetation and soil stored the rest.

In this natural system of 'carbon sinks', the oceans - which cover about three-quarters of the earth's surface - played a key role. They were thought to absorb about eight billion tonnes of carbon dioxide, one-quarter of the annual total.

The Southern Ocean was rated as the biggest ocean sink. But scientists affiliated to France's National Centre for Scientific Research now reckon that it may take in ten times less carbon dioxide than previously estimated, around 50 million tonnes annually instead of 500 million tonnes.

The weakening of this carbon absorbing cycle would leave substantially more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, increasing the pressure on governments to adopt stricter controls on emissions to prevent dangerous rises in temperature.

The French scientists concluded that climate change was affecting atmospheric pressure in the region, causing higher wind speeds in the often stormy Southern Ocean. This caused increased mixing of deep waters with surface waters.

Water near the surface contains less carbon dioxide than deep water. The gas is absorbed by vast numbers of minute algae known as phytoplankton. They not only provide the basic food sustaining

oceanic life, but also help to regulate concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. As the organisms die, they sink and get broken down by bacteria, thus enriching the deep water with carbon dioxide and trapping the greenhouse gas.

Some scientists believe it may be possible to absorb in the sea much larger amounts of excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by seeding the oceans with iron or other nutrients that make phytoplankton multiply.

A study published in January by researchers at the University of Southampton in Britain looked at a natural source of iron released into the sea near the Crozet Islands in the Southern Ocean, 2,250km south-east of South Africa. It showed that iron - which is added by volcanic rocks to the north, but not to the south, of the island - tripled the growth of phytoplankton and also the amount that sank into the depths of the sea.

Meanwhile, a team of scientists from India, Germany and Chile is on a German polar research vessel in the Southern Ocean, roughly midway between the southern tips of Africa and Latin America. The team is nearing the end of an experiment to fertilise about 300 sq km of sea with up to 20 tonnes of iron sulphate, a relatively minute amount of nutrient.

By the time their ship docks in Chile tomorrow, they will have observed the development and impact of the phytoplankton bloom on the environment and the progress of the carbon sinking to the deep ocean as the algae die.

The experiment is the most comprehensive of six carried out since 2000 by Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research and India's National Institute of Oceanography. But scientists involved say that based on current knowledge, they oppose large-scale iron fertilisation to regulate the climate.

Fertilising oceans with iron is advocated by those who believe that geo-engineering is a promising way of preventing extensive climate change. Some say it could remove as much as one billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from the air every year if applied widely.

Private companies in the United States and Australia have come up with schemes to seed the oceans with iron and then sell carbon credits to energy-intensive firms that need to offset their emissions by buying the credits. They estimate that ocean iron fertilisation could be worth US$100 billion (S$153 billion) in the carbon trading market.

However, no one knows exactly how much carbon dioxide can be captured and stored in this way, for how long, or the risks to ocean ecosystems. Until these questions can be answered with reasonable certainty, it would be irresponsible to allow geo-engineering ventures to proceed.

The writer is a visiting senior research fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore.


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Postlethwaite lambasts climate deniers on eve of green film premiere

Oscar-nominated actor compares those who do not accept human-induced global warming with Holocaust deniers
Felicity Carus, guardian.co.uk 13 Mar 09;

Actor Pete Postlethwaite yesterday denounced climate change deniers as a "negative force" with their "heads in the sand". Ahead of Sunday's premiere of The Age of Stupid, an environmental doomsday docudrama, he compared those who do not accept that human-induced global warming is occurring with Holocaust deniers, and said the evidence for global change is now beyond doubt.

"The naysayers are a negative force," said Postlethwaite, whose new film, The Age of Stupid, premieres on Sunday. "Because that can be really bad for people who are not sure and they'll think 'well it's too late'. There are some people who disagree with it therefore what can I do? Therefore forget it. I think that's really bad."

In the film, the Oscar-nominated actor stars as a future survivor of the 21st century's climate apocalypse, who looks back on the present through documentary footage and asks why humanity failed to save itself while it could.

In an interview with the Guardian, the actor made the link between climate change denial and Holocaust denial: "There are bound to be deniers. Whenever you set up a thesis there's bound to be somebody who comes the opposite way … like Holocaust deniers. They can stick their heads in the sand if they like, but the evidence is absolutely there and graphic for anybody to have a look at."

The film has already provoked strong reactions from climate change naysayers, but Postlethwaite dismissed them. "I just put a reflective mirror up at them and let it bounce back them and go 'bye bye, let's hear the positive things from George Monbiot'," he said.

He said the film, which he described as "refreshing and startling", would help the waverers swing in favour of doing something about climate change. "I think there will be more people coming out of that film who will go 'man oh man that was really moving, exciting, that was terrifying, what do we do?' And that's the kind of feeling we want to get out of it and I think the majority of people will think that."

Postlethwaite said he did not want to be hypocritical about climate change so he and his wife Jacqui Morrish have done extensive work to their rural Shropshire home to make it as green as possible. They have reduced their carbon footprint by almost 60 tonnes in the past year but adding a small wind turbine, better insulation and a wood-burning stove. They export much of the electricity produced by the wind turbine back to the grid.

"I do feel strongly about this movement to get people aware of climate change. But we've also got to be aware of our own personal responsibility and where we can do something at home, we have done. Simple things, like insulation, so you're not giving heat out. It seems a simple thing, but that'll save you 25% on your bills straightaway. We're lucky enough to live somewhere where we can have a wind turbine. The council had one caveat. Don't paint it a garish colour. I don't think we were thinking of having it pink and white striped, although it would look quite nice."

The premiere of Age of Stupid is being billed as the greenest ever. Celebrities will arrive in cars powered by cooking oil and are being discouraged from flying. The projector will be powered by batteries charged from solar panels and the tent will be lit by gas from London landfill sites, and heated with stoves using "eco-logs" made from recycled free London newspapers, and possibly also horse manure. As the film is screened in Leicester Square, 64 cinemas across the country will also premiere the film for a one-off showing before it goes on general release on 20 March.

The PR company handling the film's release says it has received threatening telephone calls which they have reported to the police ahead of the premiere in Leicester Square and cinemas around the country on Sunday. The Metropolitan police said they had not received complaints of specific threats and would have "appropriate policing levels as for any premiere at Leicester Square" but were "flexible if something more needs to be done".

Watch the making of Age of Stupid here


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