Best of our wild blogs: 24 Mar 09


A myth busted... and a new believer is born
on the Water Quality in Singapore blog

Civet cats on Tanglin Halt tree? Look again
on the Lazy Lizard's Tales blog

Nectar harvesting and pollination by spiderhunters
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

1-3 May: Formal Seagrass-Watch training and certification
on the teamseagrass blog

Mass balloon release kills
from wild shores of singapore blog

Mountain bike rental
on ubin.sgkopi

2008 Waste Statistics and Current Waste Situation in Singapore (Part Three) on the Zero Waste Singapore blog


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Solomon dolphin forum a farce: annual export quota set at 100 dolphins

Solomon Star 24 Mar 09;

I WOULD like to comment extensively regarding the so-called Dolphin Forum and its failed attempt to appear transparent on this issue on the part of the government.

It is very obvious that this forum was to be biased from the beginning and a farce.

First, I was invited after the Minister of Environment knew I had left the Solomon Islands.

I had provided a large number of important documents on Monday, March 9 to the minisiter’s office for review.

In these documents were opposition letters from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) stating that the capture and exports of tursiops from Solomons was not based on sound science despite the claim from Dr Defran.

Maybe Dr. Defran is a Phd from San Diego State Univ. but that does not give him the sole credential to state it is fine and dandy to capture and export 100 dolphins per year.

The National Marine Fisheries Service and the Marine Mammal Commission of the US would certainly oppose this abuse.

In fact there have been no captures of dolphins in US waters since 1989. It is also interesting that Dr Defran is funded by Kerzner International.

This is the same company that bought the 28 dolphins for Kerzner's dolphin amusement park in Dubai.

So where is the peer review and fair and non- biased science for the dolphin capture and exports?

It does not exist. How many environmental NGOs and marine scientists can be quoted as supporting this absurd notion that dolphins can be captured and exported as if they were reef fish?

Did the forum discuss that Mexico, the first customer of Solomon dolphins has since banned the import of marine mammals?

Was it discussed that 16 of those 28 sent to Mexico are dead? How about the fact that 5 are already reported dead in Dubai?

And the fact that the last 18 shipped to Philippines are not staying in that country, but moving to Singapore for a resort that any normal Solomon Islander or US citizen for that matter could not afford?

It has also been confirmed that Thailand will NOT allow imports of dolphins, from Solomon Islands or any other country.

If Safari World is indeed working with Francis Chow, then this park will not be allowed the import of dolphins per confirmation I have received from the Government of Thailand.

The fact that the numbers of the dolphin dealers were present at the forum and given unlimited time to speak while Lawrence Makili of Earth Island Institute was given a very limited time to speak shows the government's true colours on this issue as biased and driven by the potential profits only by capturing and exporting the dolphins of the Solomon Islanders, not the select few who claim them for their own greedy profits.

The attacks on Mr Makili and myself (even though I am not present) by the dolphin dealers sends the message that we are threatening their money making scheme.

We will continue to do so.

The dolphin trade is nothing but a 20th century wildlife destruction practice that is doomed to fail as more people are aware worldwide of how dolphins are being abused in this industry.

Japan is the only other country which allows this atrocity toward dolphins, and is soon to be exposed in a large scale feature film this summer.

Once the darkness is lifted from the secrets of these people who destroy dolphins for profit, their markets will dry up.

If the two dolphin exporting companies in the Solomon Islands are transparent, then why is it that Lawrence Makili and I are threatened if we attempt to view the dolphins held?

What are these two dolphin dealing companies trying to hide?? This insidious business is one that is like any wildlife trade, done in secret with threats to anyone who opposes it.

On another note, the party that claims that Earth Island has no clout in the world tuna industry, think again.
Earth Island works with 95 percent of the world canned tuna market to certify it is dolphin safe.

We have done this third party certification for 20 years.

The relationship is driven by consumers in the US, Canada, EU, Thailand, Australia and New Zealand and other markets.

Dolphin safe is the law in US and this is under Earth Island guidelines.

I can assure your readers that the new proposed cannery in Malaita will have no markets without Dolphin Safe tuna accreditation.

In fact, the tuna technical consultant Don Hosokawa who is working with Getax regarding this proposed cannery has stated the dolphin issue must be dealt with first.

A twenty million US dollar investment in a tuna plant needs customers.

We are willing to work with this cannery, but the government of Solomons and Malaita must first figure the long term benefit here, dolphin safe tuna, or a few dolphin exports that will certainly end as more people learn the true nature of the disgusting capture and brutal trade in live dolphins.

Our job is to educate people to boycott parks with dolphins and show them the brutality of capturing them, sticking them in small pens , feeding them dead fish, and then if they survive ship them on a plane to some unknown habitat that is not their own.

These dolphin parks are now fading in the US and EU as more of them close or consolidate.

The so called premier park Sea World in the US which is just a fancy dolphin prison is now for sale due to the lack of tourism and the lack of people who want to pay $65.00 US per person to see dolphins jump through hoops.

The NGO community is not going away on this issue. As long as the dolphin abuse continues by the greed of a few, our campaign of exposing the truth continues until this trade ends once and for all.


By MARK BERMAN
Associate Director
Earth Island Institute
San Francisco, USA

Environmentalist flips over dolphin forum
Solomon Star 23 Mar 09;

SOLOMON Islands' outspoken environmentalist, Lawrence Makili, has labelled a forum on the dolphin trade in the Honiara a farce.

Stakeholders in the controversial industry gathered in a Honiara hotel where the Government had organised a meeting to debate last Thursday the export of live bottlenose dolphins.

However, the meeting seems to have generated more problems than solutions, the Australia Network News reported.

Trading on tradition

Traditionally, hundreds of dolphins are killed every year in Solomon Islands for food.

Their teeth are also used for traditional money and ornaments.

But since 2003 live dolphins have also been exported - a practice that has since generated international protests.

The Minister for Environment and Conservation, Gordon Darcy Lilo, invited all the stakeholders to a forum in Honiara to discuss the issue.

"We believe that this opportunity should provide an avenue for all of us to air our views and establish an understanding as how to we would move forward," he said.

But the Regional Director of the US based Earth Island Institute, Lawrence Makili, said the forum was called by the Minister just to re-enforce the government's annual export quota of 100 dolphins.

Raw deal

"In fact it was a farce, I thought, made by the Minister for Environment and Conservation.

"In fact at the end of the conference I just realised I was called in just because the Minister would like to announce the stance of the current government about the quota of dolphin exports.

"So it was not really a consultation effort to get views from all the stakeholders.

"It was only designed in a way that dolphin traders came in an were happy with the Minister's announcement," he said.

The debate was lively and accusations flew across the table.

One of the dolphin traders, Cathy Chow, found herself defending accusations her dolphins are starving.

"We don't starve our dolphins," she said

"Our dolphins are so fat that the boys told me that they can't get their arms around them."

Clash over dolphin export
Solomon Star 20 Mar 09;

PRO and anti-dolphin exporters clashed in a public forum the Government organised on the issue yesterday.

Earth Island Institute local representative Lawrence Makili led those who were against the export of the animals.

Animal vet Dr Baddeley Anita and others face Mr Makili in a heated debate that turned to personal attacks at times.

They argued dolphin export brings much needed revenue into the country, especially at this time of economic recession.

But in the end both sides agreed that a research into the wild dolphin population needs to be conducted urgently.
This is to determine the number of animals in the wild so that it could be sustainably managed.

The export of dolphin is a highly sensitive issue. This started in 2003 and up until now, less 90 dolphins were exported.

Solomon Marine Export and Solomon Marine and Wildlife Part, owned by Canadian Chris Porter, were the companies exporting the animals.

Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Environment and Conservation, who chaired the forum yesterday, said the Government wants to see a scientific study conducted into the dolphin population.

He said Cabinet had agreed to have 100 dolphins exported from the country a year.

Mr Sore said the Government will also review the management of the dolphins.

By TRIXIE CARTER

Annual Export Quota for Dolphins Capped at 100
Joy Basi, Solomon Times 20 Mar 09

"The export of bottlenose dolphin is our life, it is our only way of making money...and it is our culture to hunt dolphins," said Robert Satu of the Solomon Marine Export Limited.

Despite continuous warnings of possible backlash by the international community, the government has decided that dolphin export would continue, but limited to 100 dolphins per annum.

The decision by cabinet was made known during a public forum yesterday, organised to get the views of all major stakeholders involved in the exportation of dolphins.

The news did not go down well with the representative of Earth Island Institute, Lawrence Makili. "It is important for the government to have proper policy and regulations in place...or else it would be chaos," said Makili. "Government authorities should carry out studies required by the CITES, a convention we have signed up to...it is only through compliance will we get acceptance in the international community."

Meanwhile dolphin exporter Robert Satu from the Solomon Marine Export Limited lashed out at the comments made by Mr. Makili, describing them as insensitive to the needs of ordinary Solomon Islanders. "The export of bottlenose dolphin is our life, it is our only way of making money...and it is our culture to hunt dolphins."

Cathy Chow of Solomon Marine and Wildlife Park raised similar sentiments. "We should not ignore the fact that big money has been paid to the government in terms of duty taxes when we bring in dolphin food and a lot more money is earned when we export them out of the country."

Dr. Bradley Anita, a member of the Fisheries Advisory Council, said they are looking at expanding their Population Assessment Programme based on the preliminary work carried out by Dr. Richard Defran, of San Diego State University. "Many institutes are willing to assist and for exporters, particularly in a time of global economic recession, this may be the best time to carry out such a research."


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Celebrate marriage without balloons

Straits Times 24 Mar 09;

I HEARD an advertisement on the radio for the event Real Love Works 2009, at the Marina Barrage last Saturday.

While I applaud the organiser, Marriage Central, on its efforts to promote longevity of marriage in Singapore, I would like to ask if it is truly necessary to mass-release 'love balloons' as part of the event.

While hundreds of balloons flying off into the sky may be a pretty sight, people need to remember that the balloons do not just vanish or vaporise. Once they burst or deflate, they come back down to earth. While latex balloons are biodegradable in the long run, in the short run, they are nothing but litter and pollution.

As the Marina Barrage is at the water's edge, the balloons that end up in the sea are eaten by dolphins, turtles, sharks and other sea life. They can cause serious problems in these creatures' digestive systems, resulting in pain and sometimes death.

Ingestion of too much latex can cause the sea creatures to become too buoyant. As a result, they will not be able to dive into the sea to hunt for food, and they will starve. Ribbons and strings that are often tied to these balloons are not biodegradable and can cause entanglement and even strangulation.

Balloons that end up on land also result in litter problems. In fact, the mass release of balloons is so problematic, it is illegal in some states in the United States.

By all means, celebrate marriage and long-term commitment. But please do so in an ecologically considerate way, without causing harm to the natural environment.

Sheri Kristen Goh (Ms)

More links
More about how mass balloon release kills and efforts to ban releases on the wild shores of singapore blog.

One-stop marriage portal
Ang Yiying, Straits Times 19 Mar 09;

PLAY Scrabble using only loving words. Share a sausage from opposite ends. Give a bottle of tabasco with a note 'U R HOT!'

These are some of the '365 tips for love to work' available on marriagecentral.sg launched on Thursday.

The website by Marriage Central bills itself as a one-stop portal for marriage-related information and programmes.

The organisation, which was started by the National Family Council in 2008 and supported by the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports, is also partnering voluntary welfare organisations that offer pre-marital and marital counselling.

Its website targets web-savvy couples who are contemplating marriage, newly-weds and those who have been married for some time.

It is divided into three sections – When I fall in love, It takes two and Eternal Flame – to cater to couples in different stages of their relationships.

Said Marriage Central Executive Director Christopher Ang: “It reinforces the whole marriage eco-system. We take care of those planning marriage, those beginning marriage and those who have been married for a while."

Couples can find suggestions for romantic dates, get advice for relationship problems by emailing experts, read stories about real-life loving couples, sign up for marriage preparation or marriage enrichment courses, or pre-marital and marital counselling, among other things.

Ms Anita Fam, who chairs Marriage Central’s 11-member advisory board, said the organisation will be establishing physical points where marriage-related information will be offered. At least one spot will be ready by end of the year.

Marriage Central will also be holding a series of activities under its tagline, Real Love Works, from Saturday. Over 1,000 couples will set off thousands of heart-shaped balloons at the city reservoir, Marina Barrage on that day. A marriage convention will also be held on March 28 and 29 for the public.

For more information, go to www.marriagecentral.sg

1,000 couples reaffirm love and commitment at Marina Barrage event
Channel NewsAsia 22 Mar 09;

SINGAPORE : Some 1,000 couples did not let the heavy rain on Saturday evening stop them from reaffirming their love and commitment.

The heavens cleared just in time for the event held at the Marina Barrage.

Organisers of Real Love Works Marriage Central said it is a celebration which aims to highlight the importance of the understanding and effort that is required to make a marriage work.

As a symbol of their soaring love, a thousand balloons were released into the sky.

But that is not all. Proving that small doses of love can lead to something big, the participants also set a new Singapore record for the largest heart formation made with a collection of love notes. — CNA/ms


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Wild hornbill seeks Mr Right

Grace Chua, Straits Times 24 Mar 09;

WANTED: A mate for Singapore's only wild rhinoceros hornbill living in the Bukit Timah Nature Reserve.
The female already has possible suitors from among captive males, but they may belong to any of three sub-species of this endangered bird and not be an exact genetic match. Preserving the sub-species is vital as each is uniquely suited to its environment. Allowing them to cross-breed may produce less hardy hybrids.

Wildlife photographer and field researcher Marc Cremades said: 'We are trying to provide a boyfriend for the lady, and have them breed, and then provide some friends for the babies.'

The striking bird, with its orange-and-white beak and casque, was first sighted in Singapore four years ago.

Its search for love has been bumpy. Last year, researchers - who aim to reintroduce the rhinoceros hornbill sub-species here - decided the bird needed help.

Mr Cremades and his comrade for this mission, gynaecologist and amateur naturalist Ng Soon Chye, front the Singapore Hornbill Project, which has teamed up with the National Parks Board, Jurong BirdPark, National University of Singapore (NUS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and the Nature Society.

Last month, NUS and NTU researchers captured the bird from the nature reserve, and compared its DNA to that of rhinoceros hornbills from the birdpark and from an aviary in Bali. This DNA typing reveals the sub-species, which differ slightly in colour and plumage.

A single male rhinoceros hornbill, now stationed in an aviary at the nature reserve, will undergo DNA testing. If the test confirms he is Mr Right, he will be released into the wild, so the female hornbill will be lonely no longer.


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Sand and granite importers will need to get licences

Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 24 Mar 09;

PARLIAMENT yesterday passed the Building and Construction Authority (Amendment) Bill requiring all importers to obtain a licence before they can supply sand and granite to Singapore's construction industry.

The move comes two years after Singapore's 'sand crisis' of early 2007 when Indonesia abruptly banned all land sand exports to the city state - causing building activity to almost grind to a halt and sand prices to treble at one point.

During the second reading of the Bill yesterday, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said the scheme would ensure imported materials met high standards and help safeguard supplies.

'The sudden disruption of concreting sand and granite supplies in 2007 demonstrated the significant impact that such a disruption could have on our construction industry,' he said.

As Singapore imports most of its construction materials, it was important to ensure that the supply was 'resilient, thus minimising the possibility of any disruption to construction work', he said.

The Bill empowers BCA to license importers and allows it to revoke licences under certain circumstances.

Initially, the scheme will apply to the imports of concreting sand and granite for building, street or railway work in Singapore. Existing importers will be given six months to apply for a licence, which will be valid for up to 24 months and be renewable.

The Bill will also allow BCA to enforce existing test requirements so materials meet required standards.

Importers have to submit a 'business continuity plan' that puts in place measures to mitigate any supply disruption.

Mindful of the current economic conditions, importers will have a lead-time of at least 18 months to comply with this requirement. Licence and import permit fees will be waived for the first year of implementation.

Without a permit, licensees are prohibited from importing construction materials and those that do will be liable to a fine of up to $500,000, a two-year jail sentence, or both.

The severe penalties are there to act as a strong deterrent, said Mr Mah, given that unlicensed businesses importing poor quality materials could endanger public safety.

Mr Simon Lee, executive director of the Singapore Contractors Association, told The Straits Times that the new Bill was a 'good thing for the bigger picture'.

'This is an effort to diversify our supply sources, as we were heavily reliant on one source before,' he added.

Although the National Development Minister insisted there would be no additional cost burden for industry - since the requirements were 'already imposed administratively' - Mr Lee felt increased regulation was going to make doing business slightly more expensive.


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Going green makes sound sense: Euston Quah

Euston Quah and co-author: Qiyan Ong, Straits Times 24 Mar 09;

THERE is a common misperception that the current global financial crisis will mean that concern for the environment will come to a standstill.

The reasoning is as follows: During a recession, creating jobs and jump-starting economic growth are paramount. Thus governments around the world are busy crafting stimulus packages, the main motivation being the creation and preservation of jobs. With most resources channelled towards economic revival, many fear that nothing will be left for the environment. This presumption, however, is flawed.

A financial crisis is often accompanied by a drastic fall in global demand. This translates to lower production and consequently less pollution, less carbon emissions and lower rates of resource depletion. Environmental awareness is never stronger than in times like these and the market for renewable energies has already taken off.

Last month, United States President Barack Obama announced that Washington will invest more than US$20 billion (S$30 billion) in green technology. His intention was to achieve the dual task of creating jobs and fighting climate change. This shows that the global environmental agenda has not been forgotten - and more importantly, that protecting the environment and the pursuit of economic growth do not always have to be a zero- sum game.

The dual focus on reviving economic growth and sustaining the environment is also evident in Singapore's 2009 Budget. Being a small open economy that relies heavily on international trade, Singapore has little chance of averting a sharp downturn regardless of the amount of money it pumps into its economy.

The Singapore Government has thus adopted the pragmatic approach of cushioning the impact of the financial crisis while continuing or bringing forward its plans for non-economic concerns such as the environment. The Government plans to spend $1 billion over the next five years on sustainable development initiatives. These include promoting energy efficiency in industries and households and investing in green transport, clean energy and the greening of our living spaces.

Investing in the environment is an economically sound decision during a financial crisis. Lower global demand means that transactions will be slow in most industries. This, in turn, will affect the cost of raw materials which now may be lower. With lower opportunity cost, industries will have more incentive to incorporate energy efficiency considerations into the design of their industrial facilities as well as adopt energy efficient technologies if there is some financial support and/or subsidy from the government.

From the business perspective, undertaking such investments will lead to improvement in production efficiency and consequently lower business cost in the long run. This prepares the firm for the good times ahead by keeping it competitive in the global business arena.

From the country's perspective, encouraging energy efficiency will enhance business competitiveness and also energy security, besides reducing greenhouse gas emissions. These goals can be achieved together with the goal of job creation.

Singapore has set aside $10 million for the MND Research Fund to support research and development in green building technologies and energy efficiency. It is also actively trying to attract renewable energy firms to set up their plants in the country. Such efforts will further enhance Singapore's energy security, protect the environment - and create jobs.

The Singapore Government has also allocated $24 million to transforming a network of drains, canals and reservoirs into beautiful and clean streams, rivers and lakes, surrounded by parks and green space. A further $695 million has been allocated to transform Singapore into a 'City in a Garden' - by constructing Gardens by the Bay, building a park connector network and promoting skyrise greenery. These projects will not only provide leisure space but also beautify the city state and reduce urban heat. People will have more time to spend on leisurely pursuits, visiting parks and enjoying recreation . Some may even become healthier - and thus, more productive when economic growth resumes. More will become environmentally aware. All this will benefit the green economy in the long run.

Although the current financial crisis is vicious in causing unemployment, it provides opportunities nationally for transformation towards sustainable development. At the individual level, busy city dwellers may finally find time to appreciate and preserve the gifts of nature.

And far from hurting the environment, the consequences of the financial crisis for the environment will probably be positive.

Euston Quah is professor of environmental economics and head of economics at Nanyang Technological University. Qiyan Ong is pursuing her PhD degree at the same university.


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Weather@SG pilot project to provide mobile weather forecast service

Timothy Ouyang, Channel NewsAsia 23 Mar 09;

SINGAPORE: Mobile phone users will soon get real-time animated graphics of where it may be raining in Singapore.

By the middle of this year, mobile users will be able to access real-time weather information directly on their web-enabled phones and devices, including smart phones, Blackberrys, iPhones and Personal Digital Assistants.

The National Environment Agency (NEA) has partnered Microsoft to launch Weather@SG - the first such service in Asia for the global software giant.

Weather@SG will combine the capabilities of NEA's real-time weather information with Microsoft's real-time map services. This will enable mobile users to access specific weather information on the go.

That includes overall weather conditions in Singapore for the next three hours, up to three days ahead.

And if you are moving around the island, Weather@SG will tell you where it is currently raining and alerts will inform you of heavy showers.

Information on temperature, wind speed and direction, as well as humidity information at various locations around the island will also be provided.

CEO of NEA, Andrew Tan, said: "Imagine if you can just go for a stroll on the weekend with your family, or you're out surfing, you can get both wind conditions as well as whether it's sunny or it's rainy. I think it's very practical information that everyone can make use of."

The service will be rolled out as a one-year pilot project free-of-charge, although standard telco data charges still apply.- CNA/yb/yt


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Mekong Delta readies for tides and rising seas

Vietnam News 23 Mar 09;

CAN THO — Work to help the Cuu Long (Me kong) Delta cope with the impacts of rising sea levels will be carried out this year through an irrigation development project, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development’s Construction Management Department.

The project will include work on controlling salinity levels and ensuring fresh water supplies for local residents and agricultural production.

Global warming forecasts indicate that about 20,000sq.km of coastal land in the delta will be submerged in 10 years due to climate change. Water flow in the Mekong River is forecast to reduce by 2 to 24 per cent during the dry season and increase by 7 to 15 per cent during the flood season.

The department reported that droughts would pose a greater threat to the delta, while the intensity of floods would also increase.

Floods are forecast to be more intense in the provinces of An Giang, Dong Thap, Long An, Tien Giang, Kien Giang, Vinh Long and Hau Giang.

Scenarios

A scenario on rising sea levels carried out by the Can Tho University’s Climate Change Research Institute showed that if the sea level increased by one metre by 2030, a large area of Cuu Long Delta would be submerged. Ben Tre Province would be the hardest hit, with 51 per cent of land flooded, while 49.4 per cent of land will be submerged in Long An Province and 43 per cent in HCM City.

The institute’s director, Le Quang Tri, said the institute was focusing on researching ways to best deal with this threat.

"It is necessary to carry out projects that raise the community’s adaptive capacity to the rising sea level," said Tri.

The region’s farms and aquaculture are also under threat from increased salinity, which may occur during droughts as sea water reaches fields further inland.

Doctor Le Sam from the Southern Irrigation Science Institute said salinity had encroached 70km inland in the Delta provinces through six river gates on the Mekong River. Some localities in the delta now lacked fresh water.

The Cuu Long Delta irrigation development project, with an investment capital of US$101.8 million funded by the World Bank, will address the salinity threat as well as include work on the O Mon – Xa No water supply and drainage system in Can Tho and Hau Giang provinces, serving 450,000ha of land and a water supply system for two million people in 13 cities and provinces in the region.

The project was launched in 2004 and so far almost 150 sewage works have been upgraded and 2,000km of channels have been dredged, while as many as 240,000 local households have been provided with access to fresh water. — VNS


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REDD in Indonesia could evict forest people from their lands, warns U.N. committee

mongabay.com, 23 Mar 09;

Without safeguards, REDD could mimic logging concessions in Indonesia, a model fraught with corruption and conflicts over land, say indigenous rights' groups.

In a letter released today, the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination expressed concern that a scheme to promote forest conservation in Indonesia via the Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) mechanism could increase conflict over land if the government doles out forest-carbon concessions in the same manner that it has with logging and plantation concessions. In the worst cases, forest people could be denied access rights to their traditional territories say indigenous rights' groups.

"The Committee has received information according to which Indonesia continues to lack any effective legal means to recognize, secure and protect indigenous peoples' rights to their lands, territories and resources. For instance, it seems that Indonesia's 2008 'Regulation on Implementation Procedures for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation' reiterates Law 41 of 1999 on Forestry that appears to deny any proprietary rights to indigenous peoples in forests," wrote Fatimata-Binta Victoire Dah, Chairperson of the Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (UNCERD).

The letter urges the Indonesian government to "review its laws ... as well as the way they are interpreted and implemented in practice, to ensure that they respect the rights of indigenous peoples to possess, develop, control and use their communal lands."

Earlier this month Indonesia applied to join the World Bank's Forest Carbon Partnership Facility, a $350 million fund for jump-starting REDD projects in developing countries. To date Indonesia is the largest country to apply to the program, which seeks to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by protecting tropical forests. Although REDD could eventually send billions of dollars to tropical nations for forest conservation and sustainable development activities, critics say the mechanism could be hijacked by industry interests seeking compensation for establishing large-scale plantations on forest lands or abandoning unprofitable concessions that would otherwise not have been developed. There are also fears that corruption will impede fair distribution of funds to local people especially in places where the rights of forest people are not recognized.

“Since the rights of indigenous peoples is an important national issue, not just as it relates to forests, it requires good will and strong efforts by the various government institutions to work together to implement these rights," said Abdon Nababan, Secretary General of Aliansi Masyarakat Adat Nusantara (AMAN), Indonesia's national indigenous peoples' organization. AMAN is calling for greater transparency, accountability, and involvement of indigenous people in the REDD development process.

The UNCERD letter also criticized Indonesia for failing to respect indigenous peoples' rights in relation to oil palm plantations. It highlighted threats posed to indigenous territories by the Kalimantan Border Oil Palm Megaproject, a massive oil palm project planned in the heart of Borneo near the Indonesia-Malaysia border.


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Struggle to save beached whales in Australia

Yahoo News 23 Mar 09;

PERTH (AFP) – Volunteers on Monday joined rescue workers struggling to save the lives of 17 whales that survived a mass stranding on a beach on Australia's west coast, officials said.
Around 80 long-finned pilot whales and bottlenose dolphins were found beached over more than five kilometres (three miles) in Hamelin Bay, south of the city of Perth.

"When found this morning there were 25 whales alive, since then a further eight have died," the Department of Environment and Conservation said in a statement.

About 100 staff and volunteers were working to stabilise the survivors while awaiting equipment to help return them to the sea, spokesman Greg Mair said.

"The main strategy is to re-group the animals into one pod and hold them overnight in Hamelin Bay until day-break when they will be transported by truck to Flinders Bay for release," he said.

"This method has been chosen to ensure the whales' greatest chance of survival," he said.

"Flinders Bay provides sheltered waters and is far enough away from the stranding site to reduce the risk of the whales re-stranding."

Authorities initially thought the stranded creatures were false killer whales but later identified them as long-finned pilot whales, a medium-sized species.

The department said 19 whales of the same species stranded at nearby Busselton in 2005 and 13 were successfully returned to the ocean

The latest beaching takes the total number of whales stranded around southern Australia and Tasmania in the past four months to more than 400.

Earlier this month rescuers saved 54 pilot whales after nearly 200 of the giant creatures beached themselves on King Island off Australia's southern coast.

In November, more than 150 pilot whales died after beaching themselves on Tasmania's remote west coast and in January, 48 sperm whales died on a sandbar at the north of the island.

The phenomenon of whale strandings and the causes remain the subject of scientific debate.


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Activists say Canada's seal hunt target excessive

David Ljunggren, Reuters 23 Mar 09;

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadians armed with rifles and clubs ventured on to ice floes off the Atlantic coast on Monday to start the annual harp seal hunt, an event that opponents say is totally unjustified.

Ottawa announced on Friday night that hunters will be allowed to kill 280,000 young harp seals out of a herd of 5.5 million, slightly more than the 275,000 limit set last year.

Protesters say the hunt is unsustainable and unnecessary, given that the price for pelts is falling and the European Union is moving closer to a ban on the import of seal products.

"I think it's outrageous that at a time when we're seeing up to 100 percent mortality in seal pups born in key whelping areas, the Canadian government thinks it's appropriate to assign one of the highest quotas we've seen in recent years," said Rebecca Aldworth of the Humane Society of the United States.

"As I say every year that we get high quotas like this, the last time that Canada allowed this many seals to be killed, nearly two-thirds of the harp seal population disappeared in the space of about a decade," she told Reuters.

Although most animals are shot, some are killed by blows from large spiked clubs, called hakapiks. Animal rights groups often use graphic and bloody pictures of the clubbing as part of their campaign to halt the hunt altogether.

The initial stage of the hunt takes place off the Madeleine Islands in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and is usually the focus of intense media interest. Most seals are killed later, off the cost of Newfoundland.

The seals are hunted for their fur, meat and oil, which is rich in omega 3 fatty acids.

Two years ago the hunt was badly disrupted by a scarcity of the sea ice that the seals give birth on.

Canadian Fisheries Minister Gail Shea said Ottawa would defend the seal hunt, which she said was a significant source of income in many small, isolated coastal communities.

"Our management decisions for the hunt take into account this fact as well as the advice of scientists to ensure the seal population is maintained," she said in he statement issued late on Friday.

Sheryl Fink of the International Fund for Animal Welfare said the real reason for the hunt was local politics in Eastern Canada, where Shea is from.

"For the past two years we've seen saturated markets for seal fur, and pelt prices are now the lowest in recent memory," Fink said in a statement.

"If this is a market-based hunt, as the government claims, the quota for this year should be zero ... our government is insistent on keeping Canada stuck in the dark ages."

Russia said last week it had banned the hunting of baby harp seals, weeks after Prime Minister Vladimir Putin called it a "bloody industry".

(Reporting by David Ljunggren; editing by Rob Wilson)

Canadian seal hunt begins
Michel Comte Yahoo News 23 Mar 09;

OTTAWA (AFP) – An annual seal hunt on ice floes off Canada's eastern seaboard got underway Monday, amid renewed opposition from animal rights groups and a looming European ban on seal products.

The Canadian government announced a total allowable catch this year of 338,000 harp, hooded and grey seals, out of herds of more than 6.4 million.

The cull began as usual in the Magdalen Islands region of the Saint Lawrence Gulf and is expected to later expand northward to the east coast of Newfoundland province.

Fisheries and Oceans department spokesman Phil Jenkins told AFP 20 sealing vessels launched in the early morning and were targeting a "fairly large herd" nestled up against the Magdalen Islands.

Sixteen observer permits were also issued to activists and media to monitor the hunt, he said.

On Sunday, as hunters gathered to remember four colleagues who died last year when their crippled vessel capsized in the icy waters of the North Atlantic, activists renewed their opposition to the hunt.

The Humane Society condemned this year's slightly increased kill quota, up 5,000 from last year, saying in a statement it "flies in the face of the best available science and common sense."

The animal rights group also accused the Canadian government of a "profound lack of judgment" in setting such an "absurdly high quota."

"The last time Canada allowed this many seals to be killed, the harp seal population was reduced by as much as two thirds within a decade," it said, accusing Ottawa of trying to "wipe them out."

Fisheries Minister Gail Shea retorted the cull takes into account the advice of scientists "to ensure the seal population is maintained."

The minister reiterated Ottawa's commitment to "defend Canada's humane and sustainable seal hunt, and the livelihoods that depend on it."

In April, the European parliament is to vote on a proposed prohibition on seal products that would ban products derived from seals from being imported, exported or even transported across the 27-member bloc.

The measure still has to be approved by EU governments before it can be implemented.

Last week, Russia banned the hunting of harp seals less than a year old, after Prime Minister Vladimir Putin criticized the "bloody practice," its natural resources ministry said.

Harp seals are hunted commercially off the coasts of Greenland, Norway, the United States, Namibia, Britain, Finland and Sweden. But Canada is home to the world's largest annual commercial seal hunt.

The seals are hunted mainly for their pelts, but also for meat and fat, which is used in beauty products. In some countries, 12 to 15 week old pups were also prized for their snow-white fur.

According to the Canadian Fisheries and Oceans department, the value of the Canadian seal hunt in 2008 was seven million Canadian dollars (six million US).

It was worth 12 million dollars (10 million US) in 2007 and 33 million dollars (27 million US) in 2006.

The average price per pelt received by sealers is approximately 52 dollars (42 US).

Sealing can represent 25-35 percent of 6,000 local fishermen's total annual income, the department said.

In past years actors and activists including the Dalai Lama, Brigitte Bardot, Paul McCartney, Kim Bassinger and many others, have campaigned against the hunt.


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Exxon Valdez Anniversary: 20 Years Later, Oil Remains

Christine Dell'Amore, National Geographic News 23 Mar 09;

Two decades after the worst oil spill in U.S. history, huge quantities of oil still coat Alaska's shores with a toxic glaze, experts say.

More than 21,000 gallons of crude oil remain of the 11 million gallons of crude oil that bled from the stranded tanker Exxon Valdez on the night of March 23, 1989.

The oil—which has been detected as far as 450 miles (724 kilometers) away from the spill site in Prince William Sound—continues to harm wildlife and the livelihoods of local people, according to conservation groups.

Dennis Takahashi-Kelso, who was on the ground at the Exxon Valdez disaster as Alaska's commissioner of environmental conservation, remembers wading through knee-deep pools of bubbling, thick oil. The smell of the pure oil was intense and pungent, he said.

When he returned to the same beaches years later, he found "surprisingly fresh" oil just below the sand.

"The damage that [the spill] created is something beyond anyone's imagination," said Michel Boufadel, Temple University's Civil and Environmental Engineering chair, who has just completed research on why the oil persists.

Oil-Munching Bacteria

An 11,000-person crew removed oil from the beaches until 1994, when government officials decided to end the clean up effort. At that time, what was left of the the oil was naturally disintegrating at a high rate, and experts predicted it would be gone within a few years. But they were wrong.

Oil naturally "disappears" through two processes: As the tide rises over an oil patch, the water sloughs off bits of oil, which then disperse into the ocean as tiny, less harmful droplets that can biodegrade easily.

Biodegradation occurs when bacteria or other microorganisms break down oil as part of their life cycle.

But Prince William Sound is what ecologists call a closed system—it's not exposed to big, pounding waves, so the oil has time to seep into the sand, according to Margaret Williams, who oversees conservation in the Bering Sea for the nonprofit World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

In these stagnant areas, oil-munching bacteria don't receive the nutrient-rich water flow they need to thrive, said Temple University's Boufadel.

"The assumption that oil is going to disappear is surprising—we have to put an effort into understanding oil spills and how they interact with the environment much better," Boufadel said.

Boufadel's research on the leftover oil was funded by the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council, a state and federal partnership to restore the damaged ecosystem.

Shangri-La of the North

Twenty years of oil exposure has injured this stretch of Alaska's coast, which WWF's Williams calls the Shangri-la of the north.

In its first toxic sweep, the oil spill killed about 250,000 seabirds, 4,000 sea otters, 250 bald eagles, and more than 20 orca whales, according to WWF.

Today, one of the orca pods that lost family members has not recovered.

Sea otters and harlequin ducks continue to die by digging into the sand for food and releasing buried oil.

At the bottom of the food chain, pink salmon eggs and small invertebrates such as mussels and clams are not yet back to their original population levels.

And local fishers, who lost more than U.S. $286 million after the herring fishery collapsed in 1989, are still waiting for the fishery to rebound.

Stake in the Heart

Solutions exist to clean up the oil, Temple University's Boufadel said: For instance, increasing water flow to the most isolated patches could help the oil-hungry microbes do their job.

But the focus now should be on how to prevent spills in the future, said Takahashi-Kelso, now executive vice president at the Ocean Conservancy.

"Twenty years out, the real value of what we've learned is what decisions we make and how wise we are in managing risk," he said.

For instance, the disaster inspired the 1990 Oil Pollution Act, which, among other measures, requires that by 2020 all oil tankers like the Exxon Valdez have double hulls—a layer of protection that may prevent oil spills.

But the U.S. government's recent plan to sell offshore oil-drilling leases is risky, especially when the region is already threatened by climate change, WWF's Williams said.

For instance, oil drilling could hurt Bristol Bay, "the little engine" of the Bering Sea that produces up to half of the United States' wild seafood, Williams said.

"To add new carbon dioxide emissions by developing petroleum resources," she said, "is driving another stake in the heart of America's Arctic."

Exxon Valdez Case Gives Arctic Oil Lessons: Witness
Deborah Zabarenko, PlanetArk 25 Mar 09

WASHINGTON - "A thick pancake of shiny black" covered the still waters of Prince William Sound in the hours after the Exxon Valdez split open in an ecological disaster that offers lessons for any future forays for Arctic oil, eyewitness and conservationist Dennis Kelso recalled.

As Alaska's environment conservation chief 20 years ago, it was Kelso's job to enforce clean-up standards around the supertanker on March 24, 1989, as it leaked oil into prime fishing grounds.

The Valdez ultimately spilled 11 million gallons of crude oil into Alaskan waters, fouling 1,300 miles of coastline and disrupting or killing marine wildlife.

The clean-up cost more than $2 billion and is still proceeding. Exxon, now known as ExxonMobil, paid some $1 billion in damages, and state and federal governments are seeking $92 million more.

Kelso, now with the environmental group Ocean Conservancy, remembered traveling to the spill site in a small Coast Guard vessel with Alaska's then-Governor Steve Cowper, about six hours after the Valdez hit Bligh Reef.

"There's a thick pancake of shiny black, it was really calm," Kelso said in an interview. "We were right next to the vessel, the Coast Guard (boat) nosed up against the Exxon Valdez, which was listing and hanging on the reef, and the governor and I climbed up the rope ladder ... up to the deck.

"There was a skeleton crew there, but no one from Exxon," he said.

What struck him, apart from the pungent smell of newly spilled oil, was that Exxon's legally approved clean-up plan was not under way as it should have been. But he found plenty of Exxon personnel at an "incendiary" town meeting in the town of Valdez.

RUBBER BOOTS AND THREE-PIECE SUITS

"The governor and I walked into this meeting and were the only ones who've been on the tanker," Kelso said. "We're obviously oily ... we're both wearing rubber boots ... and the Exxon officials are there but they're wearing three-piece suits."

Kelso saw the Valdez spill and its aftermath as a systemic failure.

"It was the breakdown of an industrial system that the public had been assured would not break down," he said. "And because it was thought to be so reliable, some of the safeguards had been dismantled."

Beyond the ecological devastation, Kelso said, the damage from the Valdez disaster calls into question whether Arctic offshore drilling should be part of U.S. energy strategy. Clean-up and recovery of oil has never been successfully accomplished in rough, ice-laden Arctic water, he said.

The Bush administration's decision to offer millions of acres (hectares) of oil and gas leases in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas and Bristol Bay were based on 40-year-old information that failed to take the effects of global warming into account, Kelso said.

Climate change spurred by human activities -- such as the emission of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from coal-fired power plants, oil refineries and fossil-fueled vehicles -- has hit the Arctic region roughly twice as hard as temperate areas. Arctic summer sea ice has decreased dramatically in the last two years.

"At a time when the entire set of ecosystems is under deep stress from global climate disruption, we would be well advised to go carefully when we think about extending these industrial activities," Kelso said.

(Editing by Vicki Allen)

Twenty Years After Valdez Spill, Exxon Grows In Alaska
Mike Blake, PlanetArk 25 Mar 09;

ANCHORAGE - Twenty years ago, when crude oil was gushing out of the wrecked Exxon Valdez supertanker and Prince William Sound was being blackened by what would become the nation's worst tanker spill, oil giant Exxon Corp was vilified in Alaska.

Bumper stickers said the corporation's name was the "sign of the double-cross." A sarcastic T-shirt took jabs at the company's perceived arrogance, proclaiming: "Exxon: We Don't Care. We Don't Have to Care."

Today, Exxon Mobil Corp, as the company is now known, is expanding in Alaska and officials are striking a conciliatory tone about the tanker disaster that has defined the company in Alaska and much of the world.

"The event around Valdez, you can't overstate how tragic it was and how it was such a low point for the company in our 125-year history," said company spokesman Alan Jeffers. "We understand the feelings of the people of Alaska about the spill itself and the continuing impact that it had and recognize how difficult it was."

As economic malaise forces other oil companies to cut back, delay projects and lay off employees, Exxon has embarked on this season's biggest new project in Alaska's petroleum-rich North Slope region -- a 50-mile (80-kilometre) ice road, and a two-well drilling program at the long-dormant Point Thomson field.

The company has put over 250 employees and contract workers on duty at Point Thomson, despite a legal dispute in which the state is trying to revoke leases for nonperformance.

Exxon has tripled its Anchorage office space, said Craig Haymes, the company's Alaska production manager. It is actively examining options for a massive natural gas pipeline, he said.

And it has boosted its community contributions. This year, Exxon became one of the four prime sponsors of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, ponying up $1.25 million over five years.

This is all part of a move into a higher-profile role as an oil-field operator rather than a mere investor in the North Slope's Prudhoe Bay and other properties operated by other oil companies such as BP Plc or ConocoPhillips, according to Exxon officials.

"We've been in Alaska for 50 years. We'll be here for another 50 years," Haymes said.

DAMAGE REMAINS

But with still-pungent oil lingering on some beaches, Prince William Sound herring stocks nearly wiped out by an epidemic that fishermen believe was triggered by the spill, various animal populations depleted and residents exhausted by long years of still-unresolved litigation, many Alaskans are still bitter.

A June 25 U.S. Supreme Court decision, which shrank a punitive award that had originally been $5 billion to a mere $507.5 million, was devastating to fishermen, Alaska Natives and other spill litigants. Meanwhile, Exxon is prospering, with more than $30 billion in cash on its balance sheet.

"Exxon is very, very healthy, unlike Prince William Sound," said state Senator Hollis French, an Anchorage Democrat. "I think Alaskans for several generations will have a bad taste in their mouths from that incident."

Some political experts say lingering anger at Exxon has been reflected in state policy.

A year ago, Governor Sarah Palin suggested Exxon was unwanted as a partner in a long-desired but as-yet-unbuilt North Slope natural gas pipeline.

"The sentiment shared by a lot of Alaskans is, you know, Exxon, don't let the door hit you in the stern on your way out if you choose not to participate in progressing development of Alaska's resources," Palin said at a news conference a year ago.

Alaska's Natural Resources Commissioner Tom Irwin, who has been in the forefront of the battle to revoke Point Thomson leases so that they can be sold to other companies, once issued a statement saying he "did not trust" Exxon to follow through with its promises.

Still, French said, if Exxon is trying to improve its operations and make more contributions to Alaska's economy and nonprofit organizations, the move should be welcomed.

"They shouldn't be punished or excoriated for that," he said.

(Editing by Bill Rigby and Marguerita Choy)


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City dwellers have smaller carbon footprints, study finds

Greater use of public transport and denser housing make urbanites more eco-friendly than their rural counterparts
Adam Vaughan, guardian.co.uk 23 Mar 09;

The image of cities is often traffic-clogged, polluted and energy-guzzling, but a new study has shown that city dwellers have smaller carbon footprints than national averages.

The report by London-based International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) looked at 11 major cities on four continents, including London, Tokyo, New York and Rio de Janeiro.

It found per capita greenhouse gas emissions for a Londoner in 2004 were the equivalent of 6.2 tonnes of CO2, compared with 11.19 for the UK average.

The rural northeast of England, Yorkshire and the Humber, were singled out for having the highest footprints per capita in the UK.

In the US, New Yorkers register footprints of 7.1 tonnes each, less than a thrid of the US average of 23.92 tonnes.

The use of public transport and denser housing are two of the reasons for urbanites' comparatively low carbon footprints, the authors said, adding that the design of cities significantly affects their residents' emissions.

"Tokyo has considerably lower emissions per person than either Beijing or Shanghai and this shows clearly that prosperity does not lead inevitably to greater emissions," said report author David Dodman. "Well-designed and well-governed cities can combine high living standards with much lower greenhouse gas emissions."

The report coincides with a study published today by the UK's Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment, which called for more spending on parks and trees in cities to create jobs and cut climate change emissions.

The IIED is not the first organisation to suggest city living is greener than living in the countryside: last summer the Brookings Institute said residents in US cities had 14% lower footprints than the US average.

The authors of this new report, however, admit that assessing emissions is not an exact science because different countries and cities employ different methodologies for counting CO2 emissions, making a precise like-for-like comparison difficult.

Most city dwellers' emissions are also still too high to curb climate change, despite being low compared with national averages. "With the exceptions of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, all of the cities surveyed already exceed the per capita figure" needed to keep CO2 levels below 450 parts per million, warned Dodman.

City-dwellers emit less CO2 than countryfolk: study
Michael Szabo, Reuters 23 Mar 09;

LONDON (Reuters) - Major cities are getting a bad rap for the disproportionately high greenhouse gases they emit even though their per capita emissions are often a fraction of the national average, a new report said on Monday.

Published by the International Institute for Environment and Development, the report found that urban residents generate substantially lower greenhouse gas emissions, which scientists blame for global warming, than people elsewhere in the country.

"Although the concentration of people, enterprises, vehicles and waste in cities is often seen as a 'problem', high densities and large population concentrations can also bring a variety of advantages for ... environmental management," said the report.

The report brought together the findings of several studies published in the past 13 years to determine if cities have a disproportionately negative effect on global emissions.

"The real climate change culprits are not the cities themselves but the high consumption lifestyles of people living across these wealthy countries," said report author David Dodman.

He analyzed the per capita emissions from major cities in Europe, Asia, North America and South America.

According to the report, London emitted 44.3 million tons of CO2 in 2006, or 8 percent of the national total.

With a population of around 7 million, per capita emissions in London were only 6.18 tons per person, or 55 percent of the UK's 2004 average of 11.19 tons.

In the United States, New York City had emissions of 58.3 million tons in 2005, or around 7.1 tons per person. U.S. per capita levels were more than triple at 23.92 tons in 2004.

The report noted the density of New York's buildings, the smaller-than-average dwelling sizes and the reliance on public transportation as reasons for the large difference.

Washington DC's per capita emissions of 19.7 tons were closer to the national average due to a high number of government office buildings versus a small metropolitan population, the report said.

Brazil's Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, the only two South American cities analyzed, both had substantially lower per capita emissions due to the country's widespread deforestation and large amounts of livestock.

PRODUCTION VERSUS CONSUMPTION

The report analyzed only the emissions emitted directly by a city rather than those generated by the production of the goods consumed by its residents.

"Production-oriented" centers like Beijing and Shanghai, which house many factories outsourced by rich countries, were the only cities with higher per capita emissions than the national average.

"Many polluting and carbon-intensive manufacturing processes are no longer located in Europe or North America, sited elsewhere in the world to take advantage of lower labor costs and less rigorous environmental enforcement," the report said.

Anna Tibaijuka, executive director of UN-Habitat, said in a presentation last week that cities emit 50-60 percent of greenhouse gases, rising to 80 percent if you include the indirect emissions generated by city-dwellers.

She said more than half of the world's population now lives in cities but they consume 75 percent of global energy.

(Additional reporting by Alister Doylein Oslo; Editing by Michael Urquhart)

City dwellers 'harm climate less'
Nora Schultz, New Scientist 23 Mar 09;

City lights may burn bright, but overall the greenhouse gas emissions of large cities are far below those of rural areas, a new report finds.

David Dodman at the International Institute for Environment and Development in London, who led the study, says previous claims that cities contribute disproportionately to global climate change are unfounded.

"Historically, people have associated pollution and environmental damage with cities and, as far as climate warming goes, it is true that urban areas have large energy consumption," he says. "But many emissions come from rural areas, and methane is a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide."

To discover just how bad city life is for the climate, Dodman compared greenhouse gas emissions in 12 large cities around the world with the average emissions of their respective countries. He found that, on average, city dwellers emit fewer greenhouse gases than the average for their country (see the complete list at bottom).
'Critical mass'

In terms of per-capita emissions, the most environmentally unfriendly city of those studied is Washington, DC. With 19.7 tonnes of CO2 equivalent per head, the carbon footprint of each citizen there is nearly three times that of other large cities in developed nations. Dodman blames this on the amount of office space in the city. However, residents of DC still emit only 82.4% of the US average.

This holds true for other wealthy cities. Per capita emissions in New York, Toronto and Barcelona are only a third of their national average, and the emissions of Tokyo, London and Seoul come in at about half of their countries' level.

"There are density-related advantages for both travel and heating," says Dodman. "When you have a critical mass of people like in London or New York, public transport becomes a feasible option for many, while people in more rural areas rely more on cars. And a flat that is surrounded by others is more efficient to heat than a free-standing house."

On paper, citizens of the Brazilian cities Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo have small carbon footprints, emitting only 28 and 18% of the country's average. But according to Dodman, this is "more because the Brazilian national profile is heavily dominated by deforestation and agriculture, not because those cities are doing particularly well".

Beijing and Shanghai, in contrast, emit more than double China's national average, but this most likely results from their thriving manufacturing industries and city boundaries encompassing more rural areas than elsewhere, he says.
'Outsourced emissions'

Jim Hall at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in the UK says that, although dense cities may reduce transport emissions and act as "hugely beneficial" hubs of innovation, their total effect on the climate also depends on measures that were not captured by the current analysis.

"Cities where the service sector dominates have outsourced carbon intensive industries to developing countries, yet are still voracious consumers of industrial products," Hall says. "There is a large discrepancy between production-based and consumptions-based metrics of emissions."

Dodman agrees. "The emissions for a pair of shoes made in China and sold in the UK are currently allocated to China, not to [the UK], so it is fair to ask whether we should count emissions according to the location of production or the location that is driving the consumption."

Dodman also stresses that despite comparing well to their nations' average carbon footprint, western cities have room for plenty of improvement. In the list of top climate offenders, their emissions still dwarf those from cities in developing nations.
Dirty dozen?

The following list shows the greenhouse gas emissions per person in the 12 cities analysed – in descending order of emissions. The cities were chosen on the basis of good data being available for comparison and to cover Asia, Europe and North and Latin America.

1. Washington, DC, US – 19.7 tonnes of CO2 equivalent

2. Glasgow, UK – 8.4 tonnes

3. Toronto, Canada – 8.2 tonnes

4. Shanghai, China – 8.1 tonnes

5. New York City, US – 7.1 tonnes

6. Beijing, China – 6.9 tonnes

7. London, UK – 6.2 tonnes

8. Tokyo, Japan – 4.8 tonnes

9. Seoul, South Korea – 3.8 tonnes

10. Barcelona, Spain – 3.4 tonnes

11. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – 2.3 tonnes

12. Sao Paulo, Brazil – 1.5 tonnes

Journal Reference: Environment & Urbanization (DOI: 10.1177/0956247809103016)


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Urban areas offer hidden biodiversity

Alvin Powell PhysOrg 23 Mar 09;

(PhysOrg.com) -- Urban areas around the world are places of hidden biodiversity that need to be protected and encouraged through smart urban design, said an authority in green city design.

Kristina Hill, associate professor and director of the Program in Landscape Architecture at the University of Virginia, said considering biodiversity in urban design is particularly important as human density in coastal areas continues to increase.

These areas are not just attractive for their beauty, they’re also critical transition zones from marine to terrestrial and freshwater habitats, and are the sites of nurseries for a host of marine species in the form of salt marshes and eelgrass beds.

New urban plans have to take into account the additional danger of global-warming-induced sea level rise, which threatens to swamp these sensitive areas around the world.

Hill spoke to a standing-room-only crowd at the Geological Lecture Hall on March 18. Her talk, “Designing the Urban Ark: Biodiversity and the Future of Cities,” was the inaugural lecture in a new series sponsored by the Harvard Museum of Natural History (HMNH).

The annual series, called “New Directions in EcoPlanning,” presents an opportunity for an exchange of ideas among scientists, urban planners, architects, and experts in other fields, according to HMNH Executive Director Elisabeth Werby. Werby, who introduced the talk, called Hill “one of the foremost practitioners of ecologically sustainable planning." Hill earned master's and doctoral degrees in landscape architecture at Harvard before becoming a faculty member at the University of Washington and the University of Virginia.

In her presentation, Hill discussed studies that showed that urban biodiversity — the number of different species living in cities — was actually higher than that of agricultural regions. Not only was overall biodiversity higher, the biodiversity of native species was also higher, perhaps due to agricultural practices that favor turning large tracts of land over to monoculture of specific food plants and animal species.

One particular area of traditional urban design that Hill targeted for reform is the handling of storm water runoff. As an example, she showed a slide of pristine Northwestern coastal forest, which originally stood where major cities such as Seattle are now. Those forests not only held a great deal of timber, they also served as natural sponges, absorbing and holding water in the litter on forest floors, filtering sediments out and slowly releasing water to streams and rivers.

The city that replaced them, by contrast, is a place of asphalt and concrete, building roofs and downspouts, drainage pipes and culverts. The entire point of the urban system of handling rainwater runoff is to pump it out of the city and into streams and rivers as quickly as possible. This causes not only enormous pulses of water resulting from periodic storms, it also stirs up and carries large amounts of sediment. The sediment both clouds the formerly clear water and settles over gravel beds that are critical habitat for spawning salmon.

Hill showed examples of how smart design can manage rainwater, using man-made depressions in roadside landscaping, diversions through small, thickly planted roadside patches, and partial barricades in drainage pipes to slow water down, clean it up, and allow sediments to settle before the water hits the streams.

“The whole strategy … is to make cities less like an umbrella and more like a sponge,” Hill said.

Innovative thinking about water management is critical in this warming world, Hill said, since projections of climate change suggest sea levels will be rising in the coming decades. She showed a variety of different ways to handle enhanced storm surges, suggesting that New York City copy a barricade used in Rotterdam (the Netherlands) to protect its lowest-lying waterfront.

She also suggested an idea to use floating man-made structures that would provide an artificial foundation for planting coastal aquatic vegetation. The structures could be raised or lowered to keep the plants at an appropriate depth, providing additional nursery space for marine creatures or replacing critical areas that are swamped as sea levels rise.

Provided by Harvard University (news : web)


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Environmentalists in a Clash of Goals

Felicity Barringer, The New York Times 23 Mar 09;

WHITEWATER CANYON, Calif. — As David Myers scans the rocky slopes of this desert canyon, looking vainly past clumps of brittlebush for bighorn sheep, he imagines an enemy advancing across the crags.

That specter is of an army of mirrors, generators and transmission towers transforming Mojave Desert vistas like this one. While Whitewater Canyon is privately owned and protected, others that Mr. Myers, as head of the Wildlands Conservancy, has fought to preserve are not.

To his chagrin, some of Mr. Myers’s fellow environmentalists are helping power companies pinpoint the best sites for solar-power technology. The goal of his former allies is to combat climate change by harnessing the desert’s solar-rich terrain, reducing the region’s reliance on carbon-emitting fuels.

Mr. Myers is indignant. “How can you say you’re going to blade off hundreds of thousands of acres of earth to preserve the Earth?” he said.

As the Obama administration puts development of geothermal, wind and solar power on a fast track, the environmental movement finds itself torn between fighting climate change and a passion for saving special places.

The conflict began playing out almost a decade ago in places like Cape Cod, Mass., where a plan to place 130 wind turbines in Nantucket Sound has pitted energy-conscious environmentalists against local residents who fear harm to aquatic life and the view.

It has spread west to Mojave-area locales like flatland near the Ivanpah Valley, 130 miles northeast of here here, where a proposal to install three clusters of 50,000 solar mirrors has prompted anxiety over the fate of endangered tortoises.

Terry Frewin, a local Sierra Club representative, said he had tough questions for state regulators. “Deserts don’t need to be sacrificed so that people in L.A. can keep heating their swimming pools,” Mr. Frewin said.

For traditional environmentalists, industrial intrusions have always been anathema. They have fought such encroachment since John Muir opposed the dam that inundated the Hetch Hetchy Valley next to Yosemite almost a century ago. Similar opposition governs today’s campaign against drilling in parts of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

At a national level, that strategy is meshing with support for new policies intended to change how electricity is generated, how cars are made and how people live. “It’s not enough to say no to things anymore,” said Carl Zichella, a Sierra Club expert on renewable power. “We have to say yes to the right thing.”

So environmentalists like Mr. Zichella and Johanna Wald, a lawyer and longtime ecowarrior at the Natural Resources Defense Council, have joined an industry-dominated advisory group that makes recommendations to California regulators on where renewable-energy zones should be created.

“We have to accept our responsibility that something that we have been advocating for decades is about to happen,” Ms. Wald said. “My job is to make sure that it happens in an environmentally responsible way.”

The nation’s new interior secretary, Ken Salazar, called this month for a task force to map potential energy sites. To counter those efforts, Mr. Myers has proposed that Congress put hundreds of thousands of acres of federal land in the Mojave Desert off limits as a national monument. The monument would stretch from Joshua Tree National Park to the National Park Service’s Mojave Preserve and would include the Sleeping Beauty Mountains.

The domain would encompass 960 square miles that the Wildlands Conservancy donated to the federal Bureau of Land Management for safekeeping plus a few hundred more.

Last week, Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, also proposed a national monument to protect much of the same land.

“I’m a strong supporter of renewable energy and clean technology, but it is critical that these projects are built on suitable lands,” said Mrs. Feinstein, who heads a subcommittee that oversees the Interior Department budget.

There is particular urgency to the hunt for renewable-energy sites in California. A 2006 state law requires utilities to produce 20 percent of the California’s electricity from renewable sources by 2020.

The goal is already a stretch, experts say, but Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wants to increase it to 33 percent. Getting there will mean rapid construction of plants and power lines.

To balance that goal against guarding the habitat of endangered species like the desert tortoise, Mr. Zichella, Ms. Wald and other environmentalists have shuttled between Sacramento, San Francisco and desert communities to learn about the specifics of power grids, solar technologies and desert ecosystems.

They are not always greeted warmly.

“We’re environmentalists,” said Jim Harvey, whose Association for a Responsible Energy Policy represents a coalition of activists in the Mojave area. “These people, who are supposed to be sitting next to us, are sitting across from us.”

Mr. Harvey’s group says that rooftop solar panels could be vastly expanded in heavily populated areas around Los Angeles. With energy conservation that would make desert clusters of solar plants unnecessary, it says.

Mr. Zichella and others counter that a wide embrace of expensive rooftop panels will be slow in coming. “The most prudent course is not to put all our renewable eggs in one basket,” Mr. Zichella wrote recently.

A reconciliation between the two environmental camps seems likely. As national and state targets mandate more and more renewable-energy projects, many say, environmentalists will have an incentive to work jointly to broker solutions with politicians and the energy industry.

“We are learning and understanding the trade-offs between things, and they are hard,” said Pam Eaton, deputy vice president of the public lands campaign of the Wilderness Society, who has been working to bridge gaps between environmentalists.

“You’ve got the short-term impact of a project versus a long-term problem, which is climate change,” Ms Eaton said.

In the Mojave, the biggest fight centers on high-voltage lines that are needed to reach areas where energy will be produced. The likely spots fare separated from customers by two large national park properties, several wilderness areas and military bases like the Twenty Nine Palms Marine Corps reservation.

Finding a route for a project called Green Path North, which traverses those installations, fragile ecosystems and angry communities has been difficult. One path “goes right between my house and the mountains,” Mr. Harvey said.

That is the kind of strife that Mr. Zichella and Ms. Wald are trying to ease.

Aware that internal debate is unavoidable, Carl Pope, the executive director of the Sierra Club, suggests a greater effort to balance competing priorities.

“What you have to do,” Mr. Pope said, “is show that you’ve done the best job you can.”


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Setback for "ocean fertilisation" as climate technical fix

Richard Black, BBC News website 23 Mar 09;

The biggest ever investigation into "ocean fertilisation" as a climate change fix has brought modest results.

The idea is that putting iron filings in the ocean will stimulate growth of algae, which will absorb CO2 from air.

But scientists on the Lohafex project, which put six tonnes of iron into the Southern Ocean, said little extra carbon dioxide was taken up.

Germany's environment ministry had tried to stop the project, which green campaign groups said was "dangerous".

Leaders of the German-Indian expedition said they had gained valuable scientific information, but that their results suggested iron fertilisation could not have a major impact, at least in that region of the oceans.

"There's been hope that one could remove some of the excess carbon dioxide - put it back where it came from, in a sense, because the petroleum we're burning was originally made by the algae," said Victor Smetacek from the Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven.



"But our results show this is going to be a small amount, almost negligible."

Previous experiments, which have been going on for at least a decade, had indicated that iron particles could stimulate the growth of phytoplankton - algae - and that when the phytoplankton died, they fell to the sea floor, meaning that carbon taken from the air was effectively locked away on the bottom of the ocean.

Following fertilisation of a 300 sq km patch of ocean, Lohafex, too, saw a burst of algal growth.

But within two weeks, the algae were being eaten by tiny creatures called copepods, which were then in turn eaten by amphipods, a larger type of crustacean.

The net result was that far less carbon dioxide was absorbed and sent to the sea floor than scientists had anticipated.

"What it means is the Southern Ocean cannot sequester the amount of carbon dioxide that one had hoped," concluded Professor Smetacek.

Growing concerns

One key issue appears to be the type of algae that grows in response to the extra iron.

Earlier experiments had found diatoms blooming - organisms with a protective silica casing.

But in the Lohafex area, the diatom population could not increase because the waters were depleted of silicic acid, the substance that is later converted to silica.

Some scientists have long argued that the iron fertilisation vision was flawed because lack of iron was not always the factor limiting growth; and this result appears to provide some backing for that contention.

But Kenneth Coale, director of Moss Landing Marine Laboratories in California, who has led several iron fertilisation experiments, said the initial burst of phytoplankton growth was consistent with previous findings.

"To date we've conducted experiments in what amounts to 0.04% of the ocean's surface," he told BBC News.

"All have indicated that iron is the key factor controlling phytoplankton growth, and most have indicated that there is carbon flux (towards the sea floor) - this is one that didn't."

A key aim for the future, he said, was to understand better the various ecosystems contained in the ocean in order that fertilisation could be conducted in areas containing the "right" kinds of organism.

The Lohafex expedition, which used the German Polarstern ship, was controversial from the outset, with Greenpeace leading demands that it be stopped.

The campaign group said tipping iron filings into the sea amounted to pollution, and was forbidden under international agreements including the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, which at its 2008 meeting had called for a de facto moratorium on such experiments except at small scale in coastal waters.

"There are two things that concern us," said Greenpeace scientist David Santillo.

"Firstly, there's the direct impacts from the experiments themselves, and as the scale of the experiments has gone up and up there's much greater potential for those direct results," he told BBC News.

"But a second and broader concern is that if we're going to be pursuing this as a climate mitigation strategy, then we're looking at a state of the world where we rely on manipulating the ocean on a truly huge scale and that would undoubtedly have large and possibly irreversible effects on ocean ecosystems."

The German government put the expedition on hold earlier this year because of these concerns, but subsequently allowed it to proceed.

A commercial company, Climos, is planning a much larger experiment that could cover up to 40,000 sq km of ocean.

It hopes eventually to receive funding through the global carbon market if it can demonstrate that the technique can sequester large quantities of the greenhouse gas.

Compared with other "technical fixes" for climate change, an added benefit of iron fertilisation in principle is that it would also combat ocean acidification, which appears likely to threaten marine organisms such as coral and snails in decades to come.

Climate scientists defeated in ocean experiment
Yahoo News 24 Mar 09;

BERLIN (AFP) – Indian and German scientists have said that a controversial experiment has "dampened hopes" that dumping hundreds of tonnes of dissolved iron in the Southern Ocean can lessen global warming.

The experiment involved "fertilising" a 300-square-kilometre (115-sqare-mile) area of ocean inside the core of an eddy -- an immense rotating column of water -- with six tonnes of dissolved iron.

As expected, this stimulated growth of tiny planktonic algae or phytoplankton, which it was hoped would take out of the atmosphere carbon dioxide, the principal greenhouse gas blamed for climate change, and absorb it.

However, the scientists from India's National Institute of Oceanography (NIO) and Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) did not count on these phytoplankton being eaten by tiny crustacean zooplankton.

"The cooperative project Lohafex has yielded new insights on how ocean ecosystems function," an AWI statement published on Monday said.

"But it has dampened hopes on the potential of the Southern Ocean to sequester significant amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) and thus mitigate global warming."

Earlier projects with iron fertilisation were more successful because they used algae protected by hard shells that do not thrive in the Southern Ocean, the AWI said.

The team set sail from Cape Town on January 7 and spent an "ardous" two ad half months conducting the experiments, buffetted by the treacherous waves of the notorious "Roaring Forties" and twice having to escape approaching storms.

Spicy Indian curries at each meal "contributed to the good atmosphere" however in an "exciting experience laced with the spirit of adventure and haunted by uncertainty quite unlike other scientific cruises," the AWI said.

The experiment is one of several schemes collectively known as geo-engineering which have been getting a closer hearing in recent years in the absence of political progress to roll back the greenhouse gas problem.

But these projects have been heavily criticised by environmentalists for failing to tackle the human behaviour that causes global warming and for having unforeseen and potentially catastrophic consequences.

Other geo-engineering ideas include sowing sulphur particles in the stratosphere to reflect solar radiation and erecting mirrors in orbit that would deflect sunrays and thus slightly cool the planet.


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Economic Recovery May Rekindle Food/Fuel Debate

Karl Plume, Reuters 23 Mar 09;

CHICAGO - The steep drop in energy prices from last year's peaks has cooled the food-versus-fuel debate for the moment, but the battle may be rekindled by an eventual global economic recovery or energy price rebound.

The push to produce more biofuels like corn-based ethanol or biodiesel made from soybean oil or palm oil helped drive prices of raw food commodities to record highs last year, prompting double-digit food price inflation in some countries.

It also set off a debate over the morality of using food crops to make fuel while millions around the world go hungry.

Now, initiatives to expand the production and use of renewable fuels in the name of national security, domestic job growth or to combat climate change may further fan the controversy, according to several food and agriculture company executives and industry analysts speaking at the Reuters Food and Agriculture Summit in Chicago and elsewhere.

"At the moment, the food-versus-fuel debate has been put on the back burner given what we have seen in the commodities markets," said Doug Whitehead, a soft commodity analyst at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd.

"But it (biofuel) is still a very significant demand source for the feed grains and ... it is likely to increase with the US government looking to increase their ethanol blending mandates," he said, referring to recent calls to raise the percentage of ethanol allowed in US gasoline blends.

Food and energy prices have retreated since last summer amid wider global economic woes, but with a large biofuels industry now in place and poised to expand once economic conditions allow, competition for the limited supply of food crops will heat up again.

With next-generation biofuels made from non-food sources including grasses and agricultural waste still years away from widespread commercialization, food crop based fuels will be the primary source of bioenergy for now.

HIGHER US ETHANOL BLENDS

US ethanol makers were projected to use nearly a third of corn output this year, up from about a quarter last year, according to the latest US Agriculture Department data.

Ethanol supporters in the United States recently petitioned the Environmental Protection Agency to increase the amount of ethanol that blenders can mix into the US fuel supply from the current 10 percent to 12 to 13 percent or more.

Industry sources said higher blends would consume 200 million more bushels of corn, given current fuel demand.

Meanwhile, global demand for both food and fuel will continue to accelerate as a growing middle class in developing nations like China and India consumes higher quality foods while industrialization increases energy demand.

"We keep adding mouths to feed. As long as you don't have another collapse in some of the major economies like China or India, we will see continued demand growing in those areas," said Mark Palmquist, executive vice president and chief operating officer of US farmer cooperative CHS Inc.

Demand for energy will also continue to grow as countries emerge from the current grim economic climate.

"The world's demand for energy is going to continue to increase at an accelerating rate," said Brett Begemann, executive vice president of global commercial businesses at seed company Monsanto. "We ought to be pursuing all alternatives for producing energy."

He said advances in biotech seed technology can help boost grain yields needed to increase ethanol output.

BIOFUEL PROFITABILITY

But the future of renewable fuels is murky in some parts of the world as a lack of government support for the industry in some producing nations clashes with price-distorting import tariffs and government subsidies elsewhere.

The biodiesel sector needs high oil prices and low vegetable oil prices to remain competitive with traditional diesel made from crude oil.

"Without subsidies and without support from the government, I can't see how biodiesel production is at all economically viable," said Martin Bek-Nielsen, executive director at United Plantations in Kuala Lumpur.

"The only reason why first-generation biofuels are economically viable in Europe is because of the enormous subsidies."

(Reporting by Karl Plume, additional reporting by Naveen Thukral in Kuala Lumpur, editing by Matthew Lewis)


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US Installed Solar Capacity Up 17 percent In 2008 - SEIA

PlanetArk 23 Mar 09;

LOS ANGELES - Installed solar power capacity in the United States rose by 17 percent to 8,775 megawatts in 2008, the strongest growth in a single year, solar advocate Solar Energy Industries Association said in an annual review issued Friday.

It was the third straight year of record growth for the solar industry. It is widely expected that 2009 will be another record year. There are more than 6 gigawatts of concentrating solar power plants in the development pipeline, SEIA said.

"Despite severe economic pressures in the United States, demand for solar energy grew tremendously in 2008," said Rhone Resch, SEIA president and chief executive

"Increasingly, solar energy has proven to be an economic engine for this country, creating thousands of jobs, unleashing billions in investment dollars and building new factories from New Hampshire to Michigan to Oregon," said Resch.

Solar lags behind wind energy in terms of installed US capacity. Wind energy grew in 2008 by 8,538 MW, more than the total installed solar capacity. The annual survey by the American Wind Energy Association issued in January showed total installed capacity of about 25,170 MW.

The top states in wind power were Texas at 7,116 MW, Iowa at 2,790 MW and California at 2,517 MW.

California has the most installed photovoltaic (PV) panels that are tied to the power grid, and increased its share by 179 MW in 2008.

Overall US grid-connected PV capacity is about 800 MW. The top states for PV panels tied to the grid are California with 530.1 MW, New Jersey with 70.2 MW, Colorado with 35.7 MW and Nevada with 33.2 MW.

A megawatt of power can serve about 800 average US homes, and about 650 average homes in California.

PROMISE OF CONCENTRATING SOLAR

Concentrating solar power plants are seen as a major source for solar power in coming years because they can be built to utility scale and some have the ability to store water heated during the day to offer some nighttime generation. Such plants are planned for the Mojave Desert in California and also in sunny states Arizona and Florida.

Solar power is an intermittent source of power but it also generates most of its power during hot sunny days when air-conditioning demand is highest and regional power grids are most stressed.

On Friday, the US Department of Energy offered its first loan guarantee, worth $535 million -- to PV solar manufacturer Solyndra Inc -- under a long delayed advanced clean energy program created by a 2005 energy law.

Solyndra says the construction of a production plant in Fremont California financed by the loan will create 3,000 construction jobs and more than 1,000 plant positions once production begins. If the loan is finalized, plant construction can begin later this year with production by late 2010 or early 2011, the company said.

The federal government in 2008 extended by eight years the solar tax credit, which the SEIA says has sparked solar power development in the past three years. This tax credit will make it easier for companies to make long-range plans.

The Obama administration has pledged to double renewable energy production in three years and to generate 10 percent of US electricity from renewable sources by 2012.

(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; Editing by Marguerita Choy)


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