Best of our wild blogs: 9 Apr 09


Animal lovers at Speakers' Corner! 18 Apr 2-5pm
join ACRES for ‘When sharks die, the oceans die’ on the wild shores of singapore blog

Field Day at Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve
on the Water Quality in Singapore blog

Weekday Woodlands Mangrove Muckabout
on the wild shores of singapore blog with surprises and mysteries: Brownlowia? and Sonneratia caseolaris?

Infanticide-cannibalism in Oriental Pied Hornbill
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Modified and mangled
on the annotated budak blog and bug off and the bite's worse than its bark

Semakau walk
on the urban forest blog

Why this bride is not having shark's fin soup at her wedding
on the Lazy Lizard's Tales blog

Fruit trees galore at Lim Chu Kang cemetery
on the Lazy Lizard's Tales blog

Giving a Guest Lecture on Environmental Groups
on the Midnight Monkey Monitor


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Botanic Gardens should be made World Heritage Site

Straits Times Forum 9 Apr 09;

LAST Saturday's articles about the 150th anniversary of the Singapore Botanic Gardens are both timely and evocative of the great historical significance of the site, which bore witness to scientific experimentation and commercialisation of numerous tropical plants and crops found across the British Empire.

Most notable were the efforts of the gardens' first director, Henry Ridley, who successfully planted rubber, which then transformed the economic and natural landscape of Malaysia and Indonesia.

It is worth noting that Ridley's experiments were conducted in conjunction with Kew Gardens of London, which is now a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) World Heritage Site.

The Botanic Gardens is not just a historical site, but today is a showcase of Singapore's efforts to conserve our rich natural and historical heritage, despite our densely populated urban reality. It is hence a site of 'outstanding universal value', the key listing requirement of localities as a Unesco World Heritage Site.

With Bukit Timah Nature Reserve, which contains more species of flora than the entire North American continent, the gardens belong not only to all Singaporeans, but also to the entire world. The National Parks Board and other government agencies should consider whether serious efforts should be made to have these sites declared World Heritage Sites.

Tan Wee Cheng


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Seal quota tops 63,000 as Canada hunt restarts

Yahoo News 9 Apr 09;

OTTAWA (AFP) – The second phase of Canada's annual seal hunt began on Wednesday with a kill quota of 63,500 seals set by authorities, amid a down market for their pelts.

The commercial hunt resumed along the west coast of Canada's island Newfoundland province and Quebec's lower north shore, said fisheries department spokesman Phil Jenkins.

But strong winds and freezing rain slowed the hunters, he said.

Previously, 19,411 seals were slaughtered in the southern Gulf of Saint Lawrence. Local aboriginals also met their full quota of 1,650 animals.

The main hunt is to start April 15 off the northeast coast of Newfoundland, with some 188,600 seals expected to be slaughtered during this last phase, for a total seasonal kill of 338,000 animals.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare said it welcomed news of fewer sealers taking part in this year's hunt due to a "lack of markets for seal fur."

"Of course we are pleased," IFAW researcher Sheryl Fink said in a statement. "If market conditions ultimately lead to the demise of this inhumane slaughter, that's fine by us."

According to the IFAW, seal skin prices have fallen to 15 dollars (12 US) from 100 dollars (81 US) in 2006.

Jenkins dismissed the price drop as "cyclical."

Canada's Fisheries and Oceans department valued the Canadian seal hunt at seven million dollars (six million US) last year, down from 12 million dollars (10 million US) in 2007 and 33 million dollars (27 million US) in 2006.

The seals are hunted mainly for their pelts, but also for meat and fat, which is used in beauty products.

Environmental groups last month condemned Canada's decision to boost its annual quota for seal hunting to 338,000, an increase of 55,000 animals over last year's quota.

The groups warned that with an expected European ban on any seal products, the increase makes little sense.


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Fish farms to fight back with EU help

Russell Padmore, BBC News 8 Apr 09;

The European Commission will unveil a new strategy later on Wednesday to revive the fish farming industry.

At a time when stocks of some species of fish in the world's oceans are dangerously low, the authorities in Brussels are concerned that Europe's aquaculture sector has stagnated.

Most of the seafood consumed within the EU is imported, but the Commissioner for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, Joe Borg, believes that can be reduced with the right strategy to encourage the industry to grow.

Among the key measures likely to be announced are plans to encourage more investment in the sector, by making it easier to open a fish farm. That, in turn, will create more jobs.

The commissioner also believes that the EU should offer more support for research and development.

"If we manage to strengthen aquaculture production within the European Union there could be a consequential effect of reducing pressure on fish," said Mr Borg.

Europe's farmed fish producers are facing increasingly tougher competition from Asia and Latin America. BIM, Ireland's state run body for fisheries, says the huge growth in imports of mussels from Chile and pangasius, a species of catfish, from Vietnam, shows how much pressure producers are under.

Job creation

The industry is not just focused on farming species, such as salmon, eel or trout. Production of shellfish, such as clams and oysters, also needs support. For the European Union, aquaculture is a sector that provides jobs for 65,000 people.

France, the UK, Italy and Spain are the leaders, but some countries are at the forefront of producing certain species.

For example, Greece is the dominant producer of farmed sea bass and sea bream, while Scotland and the Irish Republic lead the way in producing Atlantic salmon.

Long-term observers of the industry will recognise that from the European Commission's perspective, we have been here before.

Seven years ago, the decision-makers in Brussels reached the same conclusions that the industry needed help to develop and they set out a new strategy for aquaculture.

However, at the same time, another arm of the European Commission was setting in motion a directive that eventually undermined plans to give fish farming a boost.

The Habitat Directive was aimed at protecting certain rare species of wildlife in coastal areas and rivers. The subsequent regulations introduced across the EU to abide by the directive required anyone who wanted to set up a fish farm had to prove that it would not have a harmful impact on the local environment and the protected species.

That proved a tough barrier for aquaculture companies to overcome and provided a competitive advantage to fish producers in Asia, where local regulation is much more relaxed.

The Irish Republic's BIM has told the BBC that the European Commission should roll back the Habitats Directive to make it easier to open a fish farm.

Healthy option

So now it is back to the drawing board for the European Commission, although the powers in Brussels are putting a different spin on it, saying they want to give new impetus to the 2002 strategy.

There are several good reasons why the fish farming sector needs to be encouraged to develop.

The experts agree eating fish is a healthy option and as stocks are low in the world's oceans, farming the food is a good solution.

Then there is the economic argument that expanding the industry will create more jobs, at a time when much of the European Union is gripped by recession.

The European Commission has looked at Norway and believes lessons can be learned from the way the government in Oslo has successfully nurtured its own aquaculture industry.

Norway produces 800,00 tonnes of farmed Atlantic salmon every year, a far greater level of production than Scotland's 160,000 tonnes or Ireland's annual output of 12,000 tonnes.

However, EU competition rules prevent direct state aid, so an indirect way of boosting the industry will have to be adopted.

Image problem

Aquaculture has a battle on its hands to restore its image with some consumers. The industry has been accused of polluting rivers and of allowing disease to spread among caged fish.

The Netherlands-based company Nutreco is one of Europe's leading providers of food for fish farms.

One of its directors has told the BBC that the industry is hampered by too much regulation and it has to restore its image with worried consumers.

"Nobody is doubting whether a chicken or a pig is farmed, but still we have the choice for fish. I think that over time, it will be more and more accepted that fish is farmed, especially when you take it into consideration with biodiversity and protecting the wild stock in the oceans," he said.

As Mr Borg outlines a new strategy to reinvigorate fish farming, he is probably hoping that another remote arm of the authority in Brussels is not hatching another unrelated plan that could once again undermine aquaculture.


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Satellite images could be used 'to predict animal extinction threat from climate change'

Satellite images could be used by scientists to help predict which species are under the most severe threat of extinction due to global warming.

Louise Gray, The Telegraph 5 Apr 09;

The photographs from space show the amount of vegetation available in an area for animals like giraffe, buffalo or wildebeest to eat.

Already the information is being used to show the impact of climate change on great wilderness areas.

Now scientists at the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) want to use the information to predict which species may be worse affected if the temperature rises and the grassland becomes a desert.

Animals that rely on the vegetation include elephants, bushbuck and antelopes and, indirectly, carnivores like lions and cheetahs.

The study, due to appear in The American Naturalist, examined patterns for 13 herbivore species in 77 African national parks.

By comparing the images known as a "normalized difference vegetation index" or NDVI with traditional aerial and on-the-ground surveys of animal numbers, researchers were able to prove a correlation between healthy grasslands and wildlife.

It means there could be potential to predict which species will die out first if climatic conditions change, giving conservationists a chance to focus on those species before it is too late.

Dr Nathalie Pettorelli, ZSL researcher and lead author of the study, said images from space could show scientists which animals may need to be protected and even moved to a different area.

"Several climatic models can be used to predict changes in NDVI, allowing scientists to forecast how climate change might affect vegetation. The correlation discovered means that the effects of climate change on wildlife could also ultimately be predicted quantitatively," she said.

"This is a really important step forward in helping to determine conservation priorities in a changing climate."

Dr Pettorelli said not every species of animal studied showed a strong relationship between NDVI and abundance. However she was confident these differences were caused by additional factors including poaching, predation or competition rather than a problem with the data.

"Even though we were unable to correct for several factors such as poaching intensity, predator density or soil nutrient status, we were still able to report a relationship between satellite indices and wildlife abundance," she said.

"This suggests that the underlying relationship between satellite data and abundance might be even stronger than is apparent from our initial analysis."


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Pets may become latest victims of climate change

Matt Walker, New Scientist 8 Apr 09;

Pets are normally sheltered from the harsh realities of wild living. But across Europe, increasing temperatures will expose pets to new infectious diseases spread by ticks, fleas and mosquitoes, according to new research.

Tick populations already appear to be increasing with the change in seasons. As winters become milder, ticks are becoming active all year round.

The European dog tick is transmitting a malaria-like disease, canine babesiosis, into countries where it was once rare including Belgium, Germany, Poland and the Netherlands. Meanwhile, Ixodes ticks are living at greater densities across Europe, increasing their risk of passing tick-borne encephalitis to horses and dogs.

Cat flea typhus, still a rare disease, may also become more common in both cats and dogs, according to Frederic Beugnet of Merial Animal Health in Lyon, France.

In a separate paper, Claudio Genchi of the University of Milan, Italy, has found that dogs in central Europe will increasingly become vulnerable to the roundworm dirofilaria, spread by mosquitoes, as summer temperatures climb high enough for the parasite to incubate in its fly host.

Susan Shaw and colleagues at the University of Bristol, UK, have also found a significant reservoir of canine leishmaniosis in dogs living in the southern UK. If climate change allows sandflies to spread into the country, there is a real danger the disease could spread, they warn.


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Americas on alert for sea level rise

James Painter, BBC News 8 Apr 09;

Climate change experts in North and South America are increasingly worried by the potentially devastating implications of higher estimates for possible sea level rises.

The Americas have until now been seen as less vulnerable than other parts of the world like low-lying Pacific islands, Vietnam or Bangladesh.

But the increase in the ranges for anticipated sea level rises presented at a meeting of scientists in Copenhagen in March has alarmed observers in the region.

Parts of the Caribbean, Mexico and Ecuador are seen as most at risk. New York City and southern parts of Florida are also thought to be particularly vulnerable.

The 2007 IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report suggested that sea levels would rise by between 19cm (7.5 inches) and 59cm by the end of this century.

But several scientists at the Copenhagen meeting spoke of a rise of a metre or more, even if the world's greenhouse gas emissions were kept at a low level.

Melting of the polar ice sheets is one of the main drivers behind the new estimates.

"A rise of one metre will irreversibly change the geography of coastal areas in Latin America," Walter Vergara, the World Bank's lead engineer on climate change in the region, told the BBC.

"For example, a one-metre rise would flood an area in coastal Guyana where 70% of the population and 40% of agricultural land is located. That would imply a major reorganisation of the country's economy."

Mr Vergara and other experts are also concerned about the effect on the large coastal wetlands in the Gulf of Mexico.

"These new data on sea level rises are alarming," says Arnoldo Matus Kramer, a researcher on climate change adaptation at Oxford University.

"When combined with the exponential growth of urbanisation and tourism along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico and the Mexican Caribbean, it is extremely worrying."

A November 2008 study by UN-Habitat on the world's cities pointed out that in most Caribbean island states, 50% of the population lives within 2km (1.2 miles) of the coast. They would be directly affected by sea level rise and other climate impacts.

The Bahamas, the Guyanas, Belize and Jamaica have been pin-pointed by the World Bank as being particularly at risk from a one-metre rise.

The coastal plains around the city of Guayaquil in Ecuador, the country's main economic hub, are also known to be vulnerable to a combination of sea level rises, storms and sea surges.

A recent study by researchers at Espol, a science institute in Guayaquil, suggested that even a half-metre sea level rise would put the storm drainage system in the southern part of the city under severe strain, possibly causing it to collapse.

Fishing threatened

Ecuador's lucrative fishing industry, which is a mainstay of the economy, would also be threatened.

"A one-metre sea level rise would add another layer of threat to the shrimp and other fishing industries', says Espol's Pilar Cornejo, the author of a UN report on the issue.

According to a recent World Bank study of more than 80 developing countries, Ecuador features among the top 10 countries likely to be most affected by sea level rise when calculated as a percentage of its GDP.

Argentina, Mexico and Jamaica also appear in the top 10 when measured by the impact of a one-metre rise on agricultural lands.

Scientists stress that uncertainties remain about future sea level rises, including the behaviour of the giant polar ice sheets, the time span over which rises will take place, and their interaction with existing coastal conditions.

Another factor is the effect global warming will have on Amoc - the giant circulation of the Atlantic whereby warm sea water flows northwards in the upper ocean and cold sea water goes southwards in the deeper ocean.

New research led by Dr Jianjun Yin at Florida State University suggests that whereas South American coastal cities are not at threat this century from an extra sea level rise caused by Amoc, New York City and the state of Florida are.

New York would see an additional rise of about 20cm (7.8in) above the global mean due to Amoc by the turn of the century, according to Dr Yin's research published this year in the journal, Nature Geoscience. Florida would experience less than 10cm (3.9in).

"A one-metre rise could be a disaster for parts of Florida, particularly in the southern part of the state," Dr Yin told the BBC.

"Sea level rise superimposed on hurricane vulnerability makes for a very worrying situation."

Mr Vergara is not alone in stressing that sea level rises are "climate committed", in the sense that because of existing and projected greenhouse gas emissions, they will continue long into the future.

"The level and direction of change will destabilise extensive coastal areas in Latin America. Once flooded, there is no way back," he says.

Many scientists stress that it is not too late to mitigate the possible effects.

"We need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to reduce coastal developments," Dr Yin says.

"There is an urgent need for Latin American leaders to take account of these new figures on sea level rises in designing new policies," says Arnoldo Matus Kramer.

"They are not doing it at the moment."


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Plastic bag obsession is carrier for environmental ignorance

Monbiot blog The Guardian 8 Apr 09;

It's time to refocus; plastic bags are not the scourge of the planet, their biggest evil is to distract us from more pressing causes

Do you remember that unspeakably naff designer accessory, I'm Not A Plastic Bag? The "design", by Anya Hindmarch, involved thinking up the gauchest slogan ever contrived then printing it on a white shopping bag of the kind old ladies used in the 1960s. Tens of thousands were sold, at mind-boggling prices.

More to the point, does anyone still use one? There still seems to be a small market among collectors – there's one for sale on eBay at the moment for £179.99 – but when did you last see someone shopping with one? This excrescence was supposed to be the antidote to the throwaway society. Perhaps the bags haven't been thrown away, but no self-respecting celeb would be seen dead with one now. They are sooo last year. Anya Hindmarch doesn't sell them any more: now she markets a new range of granny bags (starting at £165), printed with glossy pictures of designer children, dogs and motorbikes.

As Oscar Wilde said: "Nothing is so dangerous as being too modern; one is apt to grow old-fashioned quite suddenly." These bags for life were discarded with all the other eco-bling as soon as something newer came along. But they served their purpose: they permitted the rich and famous to telegraph their green credentials while still running the Aga, the Range Rover, the yacht and the second and third homes in far-flung parts of the world. By buying the bag, they could tick another box: now, among their other attributes, they were environmentally conscious.

I was reminded of this when I saw the British government's new green initiative, the "Get a bag habit" campaign to encourage reuse of bags, which it launched yesterday with the British Retail Consortium. Not just because the slogan almost rivals Hindmarch's for naffness, but also because it highlights our fetishisation of the plastic bag as the root of all environmental evil.

Don't get me wrong – I don't like plastic bags either. We use too many of them, just as we use too many of all the earth's resources. They litter the countryside and cause problems for wildlife when they end up in the sea. But their total impact is microscopic by comparison to almost anything else we do. As environment writer George Marshall records in his excellent book Carbon Detox, our annual average consumption of bags produces 5kg of carbon dioxide a year. Total average emissions are 12,500kg.

Plastic bags aren't even a very large component of domestic waste. Plastics in general – according to a study by South Gloucestershire district council – account for 18% of total household waste. Plastic bags account for 18% of the plastic, which means 3.2% of total waste. Clingfilm (23% of domestic plastic waste) produces a greater proportion than plastic bags.

The British Retail Consortium, in helping to launch this campaign, says that "this is a symbolic step towards using resources more wisely." It's a symbolic step, but not a significant one. By no stretch of the imagination does it justify the hype it generates. We could eliminate every bag in the UK and make only the tiniest dent in our total environmental impact.

So why this fetishisation? Because dealing with plastic bags is easy. Easy for the government, easy for retailers, easy for shoppers. It threatens no one, makes money for the shops (if they charge for their bags) and ensures that everyone feels better about themselves, while continuing to trash the biosphere just as we did before.


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Study shows bioenergy benefits for rural poor

Small-scale projects scrutinised from jatropha electrification in Mali to animal waste biogas in Vietnam
FAO 8 Apr 09;

8 April 2009, Rome – Bioenergy, when produced on a small-scale in local communities, can play a significant role in rural development in poor countries, according to a new report jointly published by FAO and the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID).

The study, “Small Scale Bioenergy Initiatives: Brief Description and Preliminary Lessons on Livelihood Impacts from Case Studies in Latin America, Asia and Africa,” covers 15 different “start-up” bioenergy projects from 12 countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia involving a diverse array of technologies.

“The furious debate around bioenergy has largely concerned liquid fuels used for transport,” said Oliver Dubois, a bioenergy expert in FAO’s Natural Resources Department.

“Yet more than 80 percent of bioenergy usage in the world involves other sources, mainly wood, which are used for basic household cooking and heating in poor areas of the world.”

Concern over the impact these transportation biofuels will have on the environment, water resources and food security has obscured many of the positive benefits for poor rural people.

The study shows quite clearly that there are a number of huge possible benefits of using new technologies for biomass-based rural energy, some very basic, others more sophisticated.

Biofuel benefits for poor

Some of the possible benefits of bioenergy highlighted in the study include:

-an increase in natural resource efficiency as energy can be created from waste that would otherwise be burnt or left to rot is put to use

-the creation of useful by-products such as affordable fertilizer from biogas production

-the possibility of simultaneously producing food and fuel through intercropping

-the creation of new financial capital with growth cycles by making use of marginal land

“In all the cases covered, even those that sold on bioenergy products to a wider market, the local community benefited from improved energy access both for domestic and business use,” said Dubois.

Saving local resources

“Virtuous cycles are shown to develop within communities where people have access to the energy services needed for development without money flowing out of communities for fossil fuels or local natural resources used up”.

The study also shows how the use of bioenergy has often played a role in partially insulating poor rural people from the vagaries of the fossil fuel market used in times of an energy crisis, but then typically abandoned when the oil price drops.

In none of the cases studied did bioenergy production appear to jeopardise food security, either because the bioenergy is produced from crops not used for food or grown on very small plots or stretches of unused land.

Involving local people

“These initiatives have adequately involved local people in decisions on the bioenergy schemes, so if food security did suffer as a result they would have done something about it,” said Dubois.

Although bioenergy initiatives face implementation challenges, these challenges are similar to those of other production activities in rural areas such as technological constraints and lack of investment capital, the study found.

The research for the study was carried out between September and November 2008 as a joint initiative between FAO and the PISCES Programme funded by DFID.


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New era for fossil fuels as first carbon capturing power plant begins work

French power station leading the way in the world's sluggish move towards using environmentally vital CCS technology
Alok Jha, guardian.co.uk 8 Apr 09;

The world's first retrofit of a power plant with carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology will begin operating this month in the south of France.

At a power plant at Lacq, energy company Total has upgraded an existing gas-fired boiler with CCS technology – a crucial step towards reducing carbon emissions from fossil-fuel power plants worldwide.

With renewable energy sources a long way from covering the world's increasing demand for energy, many experts believe that developing reliable technology to allow countries to burn fossil fuels without releasing dangerous amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere is essential to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

Experts welcomed Total's achievement but added that it highlighted how Britain was being left behind in the development of an important technology to head off climate change.

"CCS remains the most important initiative that needs to be implemented both here and around the world in reducing emissions from coal, gas and oil-fired power stations," said Environment Agency chairman Chris Smith.

"[But this project] re-emphasises the importance of making sure that Britain takes an early opportunity to put itself in the lead worldwide in taking the technology forward."

Stuart Haszeldine, professor of geology and an expert in CCS at the University of Edinburgh, was more scathing. "The UK has been first to stoke up interest in CCS, in the 1990s. But since then, CCS has not received any significant government support to make any real projects happen."

He said the technology was essential for the UK to meet its climate change targets. "We have to completely clean up CO2 emissions from gas as well as coal by 2030, if the UK is to meet the legally binding decreases set by the climate change committee," said Haszeldine. "Projects like Lacq will help to make cleanup cheaper and bring that reality closer."

The 60m euro Lacq project will transport and store 60,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide every year in the nearby depleted gas field at Rousse – once the biggest onshore natural gas field in Europe, but which is now almost empty. It is the first to link together all parts of the carbon capture chain from burning natural gas to isolating CO2 from flue gases and burying it underground.

Reusing an existing pipeline that has been transporting natural gas from Rousse to Lacq for 50 years, Total engineers plan to push the carbon dioxide from the power plant in the other direction, injecting the gas into the Rousse reservoir at a depth of around 4,500m. The Lacq project will run for two years, after which engineers will monitor the Rousse gas field to demonstrate that the carbon dioxide remains safely trapped inside.

Last year, the Schwarze Pumpe power station in north Germany became the first demonstration experiment to build a a 12MW fossil fuel-fired boiler from scratch with full CCS – it will bury 100,000 tonnes of CO2 a year 3,000m below the surface of the depleted Altmark gas field.

CCS is seen as the technolology that could save the planet from the expected increased use of coal in power stations around the world. At its best, it could trap up to 90% of a power plant's carbon emissions and, though each element of the capture, transportation and storage process is already proven and in use, only the Schwarze Pumpe plant has put the chain together until now.

Despite agreement from almost all sides that CCS must be made commercial if the world can ever hope to meet its carbon-reduction targets, a full-scale system remains years away, largely because of the costs involved in its development. As a result, many leading power companies have been reluctant to fund CCS individually, arguing that governments should also shoulder some of the financial risks.

The UK government wants to fund a single demonstration plant using post-combustion capture technology and is running a competition to decide which new power station will get the go-ahead. Within the next few weeks, ministers are expected to announce proposals on how to fund further CCS projects in the UK beyond the competition.

But the British government's procrastination has forced many CCS projects planned in the past decade to be abandoned or moved abroad. These include BP's plans to build a carbon capture plant at Peterhead and Centrica's Eston Grange project.

Haszledine also criticised the lack of research effort in the UK, saying just over £6m has been spent on CCS research in the UK in the past decade compared with $2bn to date in Canada, and annual spends of around £40m in Norway and several hundreds of millions of dollars in Australia. New CCS demonstration projects are due to start operating later this year in the United States and Australia.

At Lacq, Total has fitted one of the plant's 30MW gas-fired boilers with oxyfuel technology, where the fossil fuel is burned in an atmosphere enriched with oxygen. The resulting exhaust gas is then composed almost entirely of carbon dioxide and water vapour, which can be easily separated and stored.

"Total needs to master this new technology," said Luc de Marliave, climate change coordinator at the energy company. "Oxycombustion had never been tested at this scale in such an integrated CCS scheme."

Philippe Paelinck of Alstom, the engineeering company that designed and built the CCS equipment at Lacq, said the experiment was an important milestone. "We first proved the feasibility of retrofitting an installation to carbon capture and storage, but also this will be the first demonstration in Europe of CCS with [existing] integrated CO2 pipeline transportation and storage."

De Marliave said Total chose to test oxyfuel because it could potentially save costs in future. "Our calculations showed that, with oxycombustion in that type of application, you could reduce the cost of capture – which is a large part of the cost of the CCS chain – around two-thirds of the cost roughly. For just capture, existing post combustion technologies would cost you something like 70 euros per tonne of CO2. Oxycombustion could reduce this to 35 euros per tonne."

Despite that, he said Total was still open to the investigating the other types of CCS technology, both pre- and post- combustion. "We are not set on one technology. We selected oxycombusiton for the pilot but it doesn't mean that we are not very much interested in post-combustion as well."

Plans for government-funded CCS demonstration plants across Europe have been moving slowly. The EU wants 12 demonstration plants in operation next decade and has reserved 300m carbon credits from the next stage of the European emissions trading scheme to help fund the technology.

In January, the European Commission proposed earmarking €1.25bn to kickstart carbon capture and storage (CCS) at 11 coal-fired plants across Europe, including four in Britain: the Kingsnorth plant in Kent, Longannet in Fife, Tilbury in Essex and Hatfield in Yorkshire would share €250m under the two-year scheme.


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Obama looking at cooling air to fight warming

Seth Borenstein, Associated Press Yahoo News 9 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON – Tinkering with Earth's climate to chill runaway global warming — a radical idea once dismissed out of hand — is being discussed by the White House as a potential emergency option, the president's new science adviser said Wednesday.

That's because global warming is happening so rapidly, John Holdren told The Associated Press in his first interview since being confirmed last month.

The concept of using technology to purposely cool the climate is called geoengineering. One option raised by Holdren and proposed by a Nobel Prize-winning scientist includes shooting pollution particles into the upper atmosphere to reflect the sun's rays.

Using such an experimental measure is only being thought of as a last resort, Holdren said.

"It's got to be looked at," he said. "We don't have the luxury ... of ruling any approach off the table."

His concern is that the United States and other nations won't slow global warming fast enough and that several "tipping points" could be fast approaching. Once such milestones are reached, such as complete loss of summer sea ice in the Arctic, it increases chances of "really intolerable consequences," he said.

Twice in a half-hour interview, Holdren compared global warming to being "in a car with bad brakes driving toward a cliff in the fog."

He and many experts believe that warming of a few degrees more would lead to disastrous drought conditions and food shortages in some regions, rising seas and more powerful coastal storms in others.

At first, Holdren characterized the potential need to technologically tinker with the climate as just his personal view. However, he went on to say he has raised it in administration discussions.

"We're talking about all these issues in the White House," Holdren said. "There's a very vigorous process going on of discussing all the options for addressing the energy climate challenge."

Holdren said discussions include Cabinet officials and heads of sub-Cabinet level agencies, such as NASA and the Environmental Protection Agency.

The 65-year-old physicist is far from alone in taking geoengineering seriously. The National Academy of Sciences is making it the subject of the first workshop in its new climate challenges program for policymakers, scientists and the public. The British Parliament has also discussed the idea. At an international meeting of climate scientists last month in Copenhagen, 15 talks dealt with different aspects of geoengineering.

The American Meteorological Society is crafting a policy statement that says "it is prudent to consider geoengineering's potential, to understand its limits and to avoid rash deployment."

Last week, Princeton scientist Robert Socolow told the National Academy that geoengineering should be an available option in case climate worsens dramatically.

Holdren, a 1981 winner of a MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant, outlined these possible geoengineering options:

• Shooting sulfur particles (like those produced by power plants and volcanoes, for example) into the upper atmosphere, an idea that gained steam when it was proposed by Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen in 2006. It would be "basically mimicking the effect of volcanoes in screening out the incoming sunlight," Holdren said.

• Creating artificial "trees" — giant towers that suck carbon dioxide out of the air and store it.

The first approach would "try to produce a cooling effect to offset the heating effect of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases," Holdren said.

But he said there could be grave side effects. Studies suggest that might include eating away a large chunk of the ozone layer above the poles and causing the Mediterranean and the Mideast to be much drier.

And those are just the predicted problems. Scientists say they worry about side effects that they don't anticipate.

While the idea could strike some people as too risky, the Obama administration could get unusual support on the idea from groups that have often denied the harm of global warming in the past.

The conservative think tank American Enterprise Institute has its own geoengineering project, saying it could be "feasible and cost-effective." And Cato Institute scholar Jerry Taylor said Wednesday: "Very few people would rule out geoengineering on its face."

Holdren didn't spell out under what circumstances such extreme measures might ever be called for. And he emphasized they are not something to rely on.

"It would be preferable by far," he said, "to solve this problem by reducing emissions of greenhouse gases."

Yet there is already significant opposition building to the House Democratic leaders' bill aimed at achieving President Barack Obama's goal of cutting greenhouse gas emissions 20 percent by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050.

Holdren said temperatures should be kept from rising more than 3.6 degrees. To get there, he said the U.S. and other industrial nations have to begin permanent dramatic cuts in carbon dioxide pollution by 2015, with developing countries following suit within a decade.

Those efforts are racing against three tipping points he cited: Earth could be as close as six years away from the loss of Arctic summer sea ice, he said, and that has the potential of altering the climate in unforeseen ways. Other elements that could dramatically speed up climate change include the release of frozen methane from thawing permafrost in Siberia, and more and bigger wildfires worldwide.

The trouble is that no one knows when these things are coming, he said.

Holdren also addressed other topics during the interview:

• The U.S. anti-ballistic missile program is not ready to work and shouldn't be used unless it is 100 percent effective. The system, which would be used to shoot down missiles from countries like North Korea or Iran "needs to be essentially perfect ... that's going to be hard to achieve."

• Holdren said NASA needs some changes. He said the Bush administration's plan to return astronauts to the moon was underfunded so money was taken from science and aeronautics. Those areas, including climate change research, were "decimated," he said.

The administration will "rebalance NASA's programs so that we have in space exploration, a suitable mix of manned activities and robotic activities," Holdren said. Doing that "will only get under way in earnest when a new administrator is in place."

Holdren, who advises the president on such decisions, said he hopes Obama will pick a new NASA boss soon.

Obama climate adviser open to geo-engineering to tackle global warming
Alok Jha, guardian.co.uk 8 Apr 09;

The global warming situation has become so dire that Barack Obama's chief scientific adviser has raised with the president the possibility of massive-scale technological fixes to alter the climate known as 'geo-engineering'.

John Holdren, who is a member of the president's cabinet, said today the drastic measures should not be "off the table" in discussions on how best to tackle climate change. While his office insisted that he was not proposing a dramatic switch in policy, Holdren said geo-engineering could not be ruled out.

"It's got to be looked at. We don't have the luxury of taking any approach off the table," Holdren said in an interview with Associated Press. He made clear these were his personal views.

The suite of mega-technological fixes includes everything from placing mirrors in space that reflect sunlight from the Earth, to fertilising the oceans with iron to encourage the growth of algae that can soak up atmospheric carbon dioxide. Another option is to seed clouds which bounce the sun's rays back into space so they do not warm the Earth's surface.

Such global-scale technological solutions to climate change may seem fantastical, but increasing numbers of scientists argue that the technologies should at least be investigated.

Holdren's comments do not mean that the US government is raising the priority of geo-engineering. A spokesman for the US Government's Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) - which Holdren directs - said "the administration's primary focus is still to seek comprehensive energy legislation that can get us closer to a clean energy economy, and can create green jobs while reducing dependence on foreign oil."

Advocates of the technology have welcomed the comments. Stephen Salter, an engineer at Edinburgh University and a pioneer of techniques to seed clouds so that they reflect the Sun's rays back into space, said: "Everyone working in geo-engineering works with some reluctance: we hope it'll never be needed, but we fear it might be needed very very urgently. Holden is echoing that exactly. It's very encouraging – we've had extremely negative reactions from the UK governments."

Salter said that geo-engineering techniques were the only methods that would lower world temperatures quickly enough. Even if the world stopped emitting CO2 tomorrow, he said, the world would continue to get hotter for several decades. "Opponents say it would take the pressure off getting the renewables developed. I've been working on renewables since 1973 and stopped because we're too late, we wasted too much time. We may have a panic very soon because of the way the Arctic ice is going."

Greenpeace chief scientist Doug Parr, however, has said: "The wider point is not the pros and cons of particular technologies, but that the scientific community is becoming so scared of our collective inability to tackle climate emissions that such outlandish schemes are being considered for serious study. We already have the technology and know-how to make dramatic cuts in global emissions - but it's not happening, and those closest to the climate science are coming near to pressing the panic button."

Holdren acknowledged that some of the potential geo-engineering solutions could have side effects, and that such actions should not be taken lightly.

Though cloud-seeding, for example, would cool the earth, it would also lead to more acidic oceans, since the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere - and therefore the CO2 absorbed into the seas - would keep increasing. But Holdren added: "We might get desperate enough to want to use it."

His comments seemed to go against those he made in a speech to the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2007. There, he highlighted geo-engineering's potential to help cool the atmosphere or to remove greenhouse gases, but acknowledged the methods would likely require significant investment, and also warned against expecting a single technological solution to solve energy and climate problems. "Belief in technological miracles is generally a mistake," he said.

Writing last year in a special edition of the Royal Society journal Philosophical Transactions that was dedicated to geo-engineering, Brian Launder of the University of Manchester and Michael Thompson of the University of Cambridge said: "While such geo-scale interventions may be risky, the time may well come when they are accepted as less risky than doing nothing. There is increasingly the sense that governments are failing to come to grips with the urgency of setting in place measures that will assuredly lead to our planet reaching a safe equilibrium."

In a series of papers, experts said that a reluctance "at virtually all levels" to address rising greenhouse gas emissions meant carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere were on track to pass 650 parts per million, which could bring an average global temperature rise of 4C. They called for more research on geo-engineering options to cool the earth.


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Rich countries must deepen carbon cuts: UN

Yahoo News 8 Apr 09;

PARIS (AFP) – Rich nations must commit to more ambitious targets for slashing greenhouse gases by 2020 in order to kickstart a new deal on global warming, the top UN climate official said on Wednesday.

"More ambition is clearly needed on the part of industrialised countries if we are to get a robust response to climate change," Yvo de Boer said at a webcast news conference on the final day of a negotiation round under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

More than 190 nations have set themselves an end-of-year deadline to hammer out a new climate treaty, to take effect from the end of 2012 when provisions of the Kyoto Protocol run out.

The 11-day meeting in Bonn was the first in a series this year -- and the first to be attended by US President Barack Obama's administration -- in the run-up to the climate summit in Copenhagen in December.

Citing the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), de Boer said rich nations must aim for carbon pollution cuts between 25 and 40 percent by 2020 compared with 1990 levels.

"The numbers that have been discussed so far are still a significant distance from that range," he said.

In Bonn, many developing nations -- which will be hit first and hardest by impacts ranging from rising sea levels to drought and extreme weather -- put forward a proposal calling for Europe, the United States, Japan and other advanced economies to cut emissions by at least 40 percent.

De Boer seemed to acknowledge that even a 25-percent reduction might be hard to reach, describing the IPCC's targeted range as a "guiding light" that negotiators should be "working toward."

Industrialised nations are prepared to take on the larger burden, but want emerging economies that are carbon polluters -- such as China, India and Brazil -- to undertake action of some kind.

These countries, in turn, say rich nations should take the lead in making deep cuts, and put money on the table to help them develop clean technology and adapt to climate change already under way.

Obama's entry into a process riven by deep divisions generated huge expectations after George W. Bush, who rejected Kyoto and nearly torpedoed the 2007 Bali agreement that set the negotiation path towards a new climate treaty.

Scrapping the bulk of Bush's policies, Obama has said the US will restore greenhouse gases to 1990 levels by 2020 and use a cap-and-trade system to achieve that goal.

While welcoming this change, some delegates have said the target still compares poorly with Europe's pledge to cut its own emissions by at least 20 percent by that date, and 30 percent if other advanced economies follow suit.

Another worry has been that the US target has yet to be backed by Congress and has not been officially put on the UNFCCC table.

"The other industrialised countries ... are very, very nervous in coming forward with concrete numbers without knowing what the US will come forward with," said Harald Dovland, who chaired one of the two main negotiating groups.

Green groups said the Bonn talks had gone nowhere.

"The diplomats and negotiators in Bonn have been treading water for two weeks," said Greenpeace International's Stephanie Tunmore.

"As things stand, this exact same meeting will be repeated in June. Heads of state need to give these talks some urgently-needed leadership and direction if we are to avert catastrophic climate change."

WWF's Kim Carstensen said leaders of rich countries urgently had to put a climate deal on "their personal agenda."

"Stringent targets for emission cuts will be the heart of the new global deal and finance for technology and adaptation (to the impacts of climate change) is the lifeblood," said Carsten. "But the heart is not beating and the blood is not flowing."


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Pragmatism's a cop-out in freezing global warming

Gwynne Dyer, Straits Times 9 Apr 09;

'WE WANT to be in (the new UN climate pact), we want to be pragmatic, we want to look at the science,' said Mr Jonathan Pershing, head of the US delegation, during the talks on cutting greenhouse gas emissions in Bonn last week.

So how will the Obama administration reconcile political 'pragmatism' with the scientific realities? 'There is a small window where they overlap. We hope to find it,' Mr Pershing explained. But it doesn't really exist.

Signing the United States up to the new climate treaty that will replace the Kyoto accord in 2012 is essential. The 1997 Kyoto Protocol was gutted to accommodate American objections, but even so then President Bill Clinton, who signed it, never dared submit it to Congress. His successor George W. Bush 'unsigned' it.

A dozen wasted years later, the climate problem has grown hugely, so this time everybody else is determined that the US must be aboard - and President Barack Obama also wants the US to be part of the treaty. But we recently learnt what he thinks is 'pragmatic': It is that the US should cut its emissions back to the 1990 level by 2020.

'Pragmatism' is the excuse you use when you do less than you should, because doing more is too hard. Taking a dozen years just to get US emissions back down to where they were in 1990 definitely qualifies as 'pragmatic', but it also qualifies as suicidal folly.

The Hadley Climate Centre in England, one of the world's most respected sources of climate predictions, recently released a study showing that even rapid cuts in global greenhouse gas emissions, turning the current 1 per cent annual growth into a 3 per cent annual decline within a few years, would still warm the world by 1.7 deg C by 2050.

That is dangerously near the 2 deg C rise in average global temperature which is the point of no return. Further warming would trigger natural processes that release vast quantities of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere from melting permafrost and warming oceans. These processes, once begun, are unstoppable, and could make the planet 4, 5 or even 6 degrees C hotter than the present by the end of the century.

At those temperatures, much of the planet will turn into desert, and the remaining farmland, mostly in the high latitudes, will be able to support at best 10 per cent or 20 per cent of the world's current population. That is why the official policy of the European Union (EU) is never to exceed 2 deg C of warming.

The Obama administration's offer falls far short of that goal. Under the Kyoto accord, the US promised a 7 per cent cut below 1990 emissions by 2012. But Mr Bush abandoned that target and American emissions are now 16 per cent above the 1990 level. Mr Obama is only promising to get back to the 1990 level over the next 11 years, and forget about the cuts that Washington signed up to a dozen years ago.

Mr Obama is clearly calculating how much he can get through Congress. As Mr Pershing said in Bonn: 'If we set a target that is un-meetable technically, or we can't pass it politically, then we're in the same position we are in now - where the world looks to us and we are out of the regime.'

But this isn't an ordinary Bill where you settle for what you can get through Congress after the usual horse-trading. If there's going to be a 40-day flood, you either build an ark or you learn to breathe underwater. Building half an ark is not a useful option.

Mr Obama's offer means that the US would be cutting its emissions not by 3 per cent annually, the minimum global target if we hope to avoid more than 2 deg C of warming, but by only half that amount. In the long term, that will lead inexorably to disaster.

The other two major climate delinquents among the industrialised countries are following similar tactics. Australia, which had long been in denial about climate change, ratified the Kyoto Protocol after its 2007 election, but the new government of Mr Kevin Rudd is offering emissions cuts of only between 5 per cent and 15 per cent by 2020. That is a target that makes even Mr Obama's offer look good.

Canada, which ratified the Kyoto Protocol long ago and promised a 6 per cent cut in emissions by 2012, simply ignored its obligations and its emissions are now 20 per cent above the 1990 level. It has no intention of trying to make up the lost ground, and has unilaterally moved its benchmark from 1990 to 2006.

Most other industrialised countries are on track to meet or exceed their modest Kyoto targets. The emissions of Britain and Germany will be 20 per cent below their 1990 levels by 2012, and Germany is promising a 40 per cent cut by 2020. The EU as a whole promises a 20 per cent cut by 2020, but will raise this to 30 per cent if other industrial countries do the same.

Even that would barely meet the annual 3 per cent cut in emissions we need if we are not to sail through the 2-degree point of no return and trigger runaway warming. And we have yet to figure out how to bring developing countries into the regime, for their greenhouse gas emissions, though starting from a low base, are growing very fast.

We are in deep trouble - and 'pragmatism' will not save us.

The writer is a London-based independent journalist.


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U.S. Plays Down Hopes At Climate Talks

Gerard Wynn, PlanetArk 9 Apr 09;

BONN - U.S. negotiators tried to dampen expectations on Wednesday of rapid progress on climate change after President Barack Obama vowed new U.S. leadership, on the closing day of U.N. talks in Bonn.

The 11-day meeting was the latest in a series meant to help prepare a deal to be sealed in Copenhagen in December to replace or extend the Kyoto Protocol after 2012.

Obama vowed U.S. leadership on climate change on a trip to Europe last week, raising hopes.

But in Bonn, Germany, the reality was complex negotiations with fewer than nine months left to sign a global deal to curb man-made climate change, and U.S. officials stressed how hard the job was.

"The negotiations are just starting, this is a complicated subject," said the new U.S. deputy special envoy for climate change, Jonathan Pershing.

"The simple headline that temperatures are rising captures the public imagination as it ought, but the difficulties, complexities, the nuance of what you do about it requires a great deal of time, energy and sophistication."

"Finding common ground will take some time."

Developing nations complained that the Bonn talks delivered neither an indication of emissions targets for rich countries nor pledges to fund emissions cuts in the South, as some had hoped.

MODEST

Poorer countries say the rich world has earned its wealth from two centuries of industrialization, spewing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere in the process. They want the North to act first and help pay for carbon cuts in the South.

"We're very disappointed," China's climate ambassador, Yu Qingtai, told Reuters.

"We came to Bonn this time hoping that we'll finally focus on the central mandate of this working group," he said, referring to a negotiating group meant to establish ranges of future carbon cuts by developed nations.

Pershing accepted that many developing countries needed help to cope.

"We take seriously our responsibility to work with those countries to move them forward," he said.

The Bonn meeting launched on Wednesday full negotiations on the text of a new climate pact, as expected, setting the scene for full negotiations on a new climate deal at the next U.N.-led meeting in June.

Obama set an election campaign target to bring U.S. greenhouse gases back to 1990 levels by 2020. It was "improbable" that the U.S. Congress would finalize that target by June, said Pershing.

The pace of progress in Bonn disappointed environmentalists and green groups.

(Reporting by Gerard Wynn)


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U.N. Climate Talks Threaten Our Survival: Saudi Arabia

Gerard Wynn, PlanetArk 9 Apr 09;

BONN - United Nations climate talks threaten Saudi Arabia's economic survival and the kingdom wants support for any shift from fossil fuels to other energy sources such as solar power, its lead climate negotiator said.

Contrasting interests of different countries are challenging faltering climate talks, meant to forge by December a new global deal in Copenhagen to curb man-made climate change.

Small island states say their survival is threatened by rising seas. But Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, says it could suffer from any pact which curbs oil demand by penalizing carbon emissions.

"It's a matter of survival for us, also. So we are among the most vulnerable countries, economically," Mohammad Al Sabban told Reuters on the fringes of talks which end on Wednesday, after the latest in a series of meetings meant to thrash out a deal to replace or extend the Kyoto Protocol after 2012.

"Saudi Arabia has not done that much yet to diversify."

Other divisions in the talks include rich versus poor, nations which contribute more to climate change than others, and countries more vulnerable to sea level rise, floods and droughts.

Saudi Arabia wants support, for example, to develop alternative energy sources and to earn credits for burying greenhouse gases underground in near-depleted oil wells.

Al Sabban said Saudi Arabia's solar power ambition was "much larger" than Abu Dhabi's $15 billion Masdar project to invest in renewable energy and build a carbon neutral city, but declined to put a dollar number on Saudi plans.

"We have a lot of sun, a lot of land. We can export solar power to our neighbors on a very large scale and that is our strategic objective to diversify our economy, it will be huge."

"We need the industrialized countries to assist us through direct investment, transfer of technologies," to ease the burden of a new climate deal, he added.

CASH

Developing nations want more cash from rich countries to help fund their fight against climate change but may have to wait until the final days and weeks of haggling in December.

Saudi Arabia wants to access an existing adaptation fund which the U.N.'s climate chief Yvo de Boer describes as a "pittance." The country may have to compete with others which want funds to prepare for sea level rise and extreme weather.

"Adaptation is not only to the impact of climate change but also the impact of climate policies," said Al Sabban.

Other Saudi demands from the U.N. talks include a re-vamping of fossil fuel taxes in industrialized countries to focus on carbon rather than energy, which may benefit oil because it emits less of the greenhouse gas compared to coal.

It also wants an elimination of subsidies for rival biofuels which it says harm the environment and hike food prices.

The new U.S. administration of President Barack Obama has called for an increase in the amount of corn-based ethanol to be used in gasoline in the United States.

Al Sabban said Saudi Arabia was "worried" about a "dangerous" threat to its economy but would cooperate.

Environmental groups say the country has obstructed the climate talks for years, filibustering with frequent interventions in debates involving up to 190 countries.

"We get used to these allegations," Al Sabban said. "We are faithfully engaging in these negotiations. Everybody here is coming to protect their interests, we are doing the same, the EU is doing the same, the United States."

(Editing by Dominic Evans)


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