Male leatherback turtles facing extinction

The Star 18 Apr 09;

KERTIH: The threat of leatherback turtles becoming extinct is getting more serious with no male turtle to incubate some 200 leatherback turtle eggs buried for hatching at the Rantau Abang Turtle Sanctuary.

Terengganu Fisheries director Munir Mohd Nawi said the leatherback turtle eggs could not hatch because they needed to be incubated by the male turtles first.

This was despite the landings by leatherback turtles at Rantau Abang, Dungun, on June 12 and 23 last year, he told reporters at a gotong-royong function at the Ma'Daerah Sanctuary Center here Saturday.

The programme, conducted with the cooperation of the BP Petronas Acetyls and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), involved the participation of 800 local residents and students.

On turtle landings recorded during the first three months of this year, Munir said there was an increase of five to 10 per cent from the corresponding period last year.

He said between 36,000 and 40,000 turtle eggs were laid in the state late year and most of them were laid by the green turtles.

Meanwhile, head of the WWF Terengganu Turtle programme, Rahayu Zulkifli, said WWF would launch a "Don't Eat Turtle Eggs" campaign to save the turtles from extinction. - Bernama


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Protecting Indonesia's ecosystems

Sudibyo M. Wiradji, Jakarta Post 18 Apr 09;

Environmental disasters that have hit Indonesia recently, especially in urban and forest areas, can in many cases be attributed to imbalanced ecosystems. The question to be addressed is whether it is possible to protect ecosystems.

Protecting urban and forest ecosystems is a real challenge for Indonesia amid the growing focus on economic rather than environmental issues. Protecting ecosystems entails two big jobs: First, repairing existing environmental damage; and second preventing future environmental damage.

Flooding caused by the collapse of the Situ Gintung sluice gate and, separately, the sudden appearance of critically endangered Sumatran tigers in Jambi and Riau provinces, both serve to illustrate how little attention authorities, officials, politicians and the general public pay to environmental issues in Indonesia.

As we have seen, placing too much emphasis on short-term economic gains will eventually be costly and jeopardize sustainability. Despite differences in location, extent of losses and the numbers of victims, these issues are essentially similar.

They were both the result of imbalances in ecosystems that were brought about by changes made to the environment. These tragedies were not caused by nature alone, but can be blamed in part on human interference in natural systems.

When it was first constructed by the Dutch colonial authorities in 1933, the 31-hectare Situ Gintung dam was surrounded by farms and its upstream area was dense with trees and served as a conservation area (part of Jakarta’s green belt) that prevented land erosion. Several decades later, however, these farms and forest areas have disappeared, replaced by human settlements, with many luxury houses built on the waterfront.

Similarly, large areas of forest ecosystems that tigers live in have been cleared uncontrollably over the years. Massive areas of forests in Sumatra, Kalimantan and Sulawesi have been cleared to make way for fiber plantations for pulp and paper industries, and since the biofuels boom have been cleared extensively for use as oil palm plantations.

Predictably, the scarcity of prey brought about by damage to their natural environment has led tigers to roam further to seek food before finally straying into human settlements.

Human and tiger conflicts in Muarojambi village, Jambi, left eight residents dead, and three tigers were found dead in another similar conflict in Riau, also in Sumatra – and there were possibly other casualties that were not reported.

Damage to tiger habitats threatens to lead tigers to extinction thus affecting the entire biodiversity of Indonesia’s tropical forests. Aside from the Sumatran tigers, the Javan rhinoceros and Borneo pygmy elephants are also on the brink of extinction due to destruction of habitat and poaching.

Through understanding why these problems are occurring, we can conclude without doubt that human interference with natural systems needs to be taken into consideration in formulating measures to prevent similar occurrences in future.

Imbalanced urban and forest ecosystems are the result of a range of complex and underlying causes involving many different parties.

A series of factors reflecting weak institutional and poor governance practices can be held partly to blame. Weak law enforcement coupled with corrupt officials has provided property developers and certain individuals with access to property in restricted water catchment areas surrounding Situ Gintung lake. Correspondingly, a lack of legal sanctions against illegal loggers with military backing has led Indonesia to become fertile ground for illegal logging.

To a certain extent, the prevalence of disasters, people’s lack of respect toward nature and deliberate violation of environmental laws is suggests we are sitting on a time bomb. At this point, those who deliberately violate the environmental regulations or law are indirectly paving the way for disasters and therefore, they should be held responsible for their wrongdoings.

It is high time we intensified our environmental campaigns, not only among students but all stake holders including those who are directly involved in any decision making processes. In this way, hopefully, the nature we have abused won’t strike back – or perhaps we can minimize the number of its strikes!

Can we do that?

The writer is a journalist at The Jakarta Post.


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Best of our wild blogs: 18 Apr 09


Works continue near Cyrene Reef: buoyancy tank removal operations on the wild shores of singapore blog

Seahuskying
on talfryn.net

Blue-naped Parrot eating sea almond fruits and flowers
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Mystery shore plant solved: Buas-buas!
on the wild shores of singapore blog


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Lamalera, subsistence whaling, and barter

J.B. Blikololong, The Jakarta Post 18 Apr 09;

The declaration of the Savu Sea as a national conservation area on the sidelines of the World Ocean Conference in Manado next month has sent the traditional whale hunting community of Lamalera in Lembata, East Nusa Tenggara, into great anxiety, as the plan was thought to imply a prohibition on whaling.

The community reportedly protested the presence of any NGOs presumed to be behind the issue of the whaling ban.

"The prohibition on whaling will lead to the death of the community," says Apol Korohama, head of Lika Telo Adat institution.

Earlier, East Nusa Tenggara Governor Frans Lebu Raya said the conservation of the Savu Sea should not wipe out the whale hunting tradition conducted for hundreds of years and fully laden with values of brotherhood and justice.

Lamalera, a fishing community with a population of 1,688 (comprising 483 families, 279 of them classified as poor), has extreme geographical conditions (with no productive farmland), forcing its people to depend wholly on marine resources. Sperm whales, the favorite catch among other big sea mammals, was their main catch.

Outsiders are mostly attracted by the traditional whaling, whereas it is only half of Lamalera's soul. The ignorance on the part of outsiders, even the government itself, could certainly make any efforts to help these whale hunters fruitless, even endangering their very existence. The outsiders do not know that kotekelema (sperm whale in their native language) and the barter system cannot be separated, both being the entire soul of Lamalera. Should whaling be stopped, the barter system would instantly disappear, thus bringing the whole village to misery.

From the sociological perspective, the "bravery" of the Lamalera whale hunters in subduing these sea leviathans using very primitive technology is as unimaginable as the resilience of the barter institution in the age of globalization. Lamalera, even Lembata Island, is a unique example of a dualistic society where barter (a pre-capitalistic element) and money (a capitalistic element) coexist in harmony.

One of my important findings in my doctoral field survey about bartering in Lamalera (2007-2008) was that sperm whales and other cetaceans are the main factor that allows bartering to survive amid today's "money mania". This is in connection with the peledang (whaling boat) institution collectively owned by the suku (clan) and the traditional pattern of whale redistribution.

The whales captured are enjoyed by all clan members, then through a traditional reciprocity pattern (bfene and lamma) are distributed to the whole village, and through a barter network finally distributed all over Lembata Island, even to Adonara and the eastern tip of Flores Island. The Lamalera people believe that whales and other big fish are "sent" by their forefathers to support the life of kide-knuke (poor people) and widows in Lamalera and all the people living around Labalekang Mountain. Bartering thus has a social character, in contrast with the calculating character of the money economy.

Small fish caught by means of modern instruments such as nets do not support the barter optimally because they are identical with money, as this kind of activity is more individualistic in nature (based on capital/cash credit). The saying "without whales, Lamalera will perish" should be understood in relation to the barter institution and peledang (whaling boats): without whales, the Lamalera people lack the best commodity to barter with foodstuffs from the hinterland with the implication that they will suffer immensely and could possibly "perish".

My field research in Posiwatu, Imulolo, Puor, and Boto (the nearest barter partners in the hinterlands) showed sperm whales could not be replaced by any other kind of fish. As fish from Lewoleba or Wulandoni are sold for cash, mountain people are more interested in bartering their food staples with sperm whale or other big fish from Lamalera. Moreover, they feel that bartering with Lamalera people is their traditional way of helping each other since ancestral times. So in Lembata, even in the entire Lamaholot community, bartering is not an economic system, but primarily part of the custom of reciprocity.

Whaling in Lamalera cannot be questioned because of three legal foundations: first, ILO Convention 169, the Brundtland Report (1992), the Rio Declaration (1992), and Agenda 21, which acknowledge the rights of aboriginal people to pursue and develop their way of life; second, Indonesia is not a member state of the International Whaling Commission (IWC), meaning it need not adhere to its rulings; third, the 1986 whaling moratorium is aimed at commercial whaling. Whaling in Lamalera is aboriginal subsistence whaling to meet local nutritional, subsistence and cultural needs.

Lamalera whaling is part of an effort to utilize the ecological richness to prosper. The Savu Sea with its rich biodiversity, such as big mammals, support the life of the Lamalera people in the same way as rich soil in the hinterlands supports that of farmers. In principle, the conservation of the Savu Sea should be hailed as benefiting the coastal communities, including Lamalera. The numbers of manta rays, sharks and turtles have decreased sharply for the past 10 years because of the use of explosives and poison by outsiders.

Traditional whaling in Lamalera is part of local wisdom to preserve the environment. The local taboo to hunt blue whales (an endangered species) is an expression of local wisdom to preserve big marine mammals. Traditional whaling in Lamalera waters is really the act of conservation itself. So the way the Lamalera people catch whales nowadays should be conserved too, which in turn conserves the barter system.

The writer is a PhD candidate in sociology from the University of Indonesia, conducting his doctoral research on the barter system in Lamalera between 2007 and 2008.


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Southeast Asian governments urged to address root causes of social unrest

Augustine Anthuvan, Channel NewsAsia 18 Apr 09;

SINGAPORE : UN Under-Secretary-General Dr Noeleen Heyzer has said that unless Southeast Asian governments make a concerted effort to address root causes of social unrest in places like Thailand, these tensions could have dire knock-on effects.

She was speaking at the ASEAN and Asia forum in Singapore on Friday.

The "red shirt" protests in Thailand may have subsided for now, but Dr Heyzer said that their underlying concerns should not be swept under the carpet.

Dr Heyzer, who is also Executive Secretary, Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, said: "...the root causes of the unrest are based very much in terms of disparities, not just in Thailand, that is within the country, but also among the ASEAN nations, and unless we address disparities - economic, social, political disparities - and issues of governance, there will be all these tensions that from time to time, will break out into social unrest, and will affect the politics of our nations as well.

"I think this is what ASEAN, especially in terms of its new charter, tries to do. It tries to give the vision of a people-centred regional community. It tries to bring in regional partnerships, it tries to ensure the voices of the marginalised, the common people, are heard, and one understands that we can be...citizens of not just our own nations, but that of ASEAN as well.

"But so far, all this is at the level of vision, of words of commitment; it is time to implement these values, and also these very good perspectives, pathways and directions. And unless they are seriously implemented, there will unfortunately be a question of trust."

Speaking at the public forum organised by the Singapore Institute of International Affairs, Dr Heyzer reiterated her call for Asian government leaders to look at development initiatives in a post-crisis world as an integrated whole.

She said: "So far, we have been looking at development sector by sector. It is time to look at it as a more inclusive sustainability. That brings back what I call 'the balances'. It has to balance the economic imbalances, the social and the ecological imbalances, and we can't look at it as separate items anymore. Because there is no way that we can do the economic growth agenda in a way that we have always done, without taking into account the effects of inequalities on the social population.

"And there is no way we can do both without looking at the ecological consequences of development. And so we need to look at it in terms of both short-term development strategies, as well as long-term sustainability, and this I think is what I will be pushing for."

Malaysia's Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin echoed similar sentiments at the ASEAN and Asia forum.

He said: "A people who are materially well-off but morally, ethically and environmentally bankrupt can have no greater ability to claim to being developed in any way."

Meanwhile, participants said the private sector is in a position to provide much of the lift needed.

Ambassador Michael Tay, executive director, APEC Secretariat, said: "The biggest employers in any economy are the private sector, and so the issue of confidence is quite critical.

"On the one hand, you have a bread and butter issue, people need to work in order to spend, so that you can create demand for manufactured goods or services. But to unlock that confidence is key, and I think the confidence goes beyond just financial institutions. It is actually leadership."

And the Ambassador said that this is where economic giants like the US, China and Japan can step up to the plate. - CNA/ms


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Singapore, Malaysia stress need to further improve water quality in Straits of Johor

Timothy Ouyang & Lau Joon-Nie, Channel NewsAsia 17 Apr 09;

SINGAPORE : Singapore and Malaysia have stressed the need to further improve water quality in the Straits of Johor.

The subject was raised at the 22nd Annual Exchange of Visits between the Environment Ministries of both countries.

Singapore's Minister for the Environment and Water Resources, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, led the host delegation, which comprised of Dr Amy Khor and other senior officials from the Ministry of Environment and Water Resources, National Environment Agency and PUB.

The visiting delegation comprised officials from Malaysia's Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, the International Trade, Industry, Energy, Water, Communication and Environment Committee for State of Johor, and other government agencies.

The ministers from the two countries and their delegations reviewed the progress of work carried out by the Malaysia-Singapore Joint Committee on the Environment.

The ministers on Friday also discussed the emergency response plan for chemical spills at the Malaysia-Singapore Second Crossing and in the East Johor Straits.

Both countries plan to conduct their first joint field exercise on managing a chemical spill in the East Johor Straits in 2010.

This follows the success of the Sixth Joint Emergency Chemical Spill Exercise at the Tuas Second Link in April 2008. The next emergency response exercise at the Second Crossing will be organised by Malaysia and could be held later this year. - CNA/ms/ls


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URA to spread wings

It will take expertise overseas while bringing places alive at home
Kalpana Rashiwala, Business Times 18 Apr 09;

AFTER 35 years of planning and shaping Singapore's physical landscape, Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) is ready for a bigger canvas. It has set set up a URA Consulting Group (URACG) to provide its planning expertise for projects overseas. Meanwhile, at home, it will make new places in Singapore come alive. After Marina Bay, the Singapore River could be the next to feel its energising touch.

At the URA Corporate Plan Seminar yesterday, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan spoke of how the master planner would step up its 'place management' role. This meant combining the resources of the public and private sectors to create places, districts and areas that are more vibrant economically and socially, he said.

In addition to URA's role as master planner and infrastructure provider, the stat board will also work with stakeholders on 'softer' initiatives such as branding, marketing and events programming, he said.

Mr Mah noted that URA is already undertaking the place management of Marina Bay. It will expand its portfolio to include the Singapore River. In addition, it will chair a coordinating forum to 'synergise the place management efforts of partner agencies at Orchard Road and also the Civic District-Bras Basah/Bugis areas', he added.

The formation of URACG would help URA playing a bigger role outside Singapore's shores.

'Our planning expertise is very much sought after outside of Singapore. In fact, it has played a leading role in the master planning of projects like the Tianjin Eco-City, which is now being built, which has drawn on Singapore's experience in integrated planning and urban management,' Mr Mah said.

Elaborating, a URA spokeswoman said URACG's priority will be to support the Singapore government in government-to-government level projects overseas which require master planning expertise. In addition, URA can partner local private companies, where suitable, to carry out consultancy work for big projects. URACG's scope of services will generally include concept and master planning, urban design and development control processes.

Another role of URACG is to provide professional development training on urban planning and related matters for both local and international participants under the Urban Leadership Programme. URA recently conducted a four-day training programme on integrated land use planning for participants from Brunei, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, China and Singapore.

Remaking goes on in good times and bad

New round of reviews begins this year on blueprint for Singapore's long-term physical development
Kalpana Rashiwala, Business Times 18 Apr 09;

THE Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) will begin this year a new round of reviews for Concept Plan 2011, a blueprint that maps out the long-term vision for Singapore's physical development.

URA's review, which will be done with various ministries and government agencies, will examine Singapore's land use and infrastructure needs to cater to an increased population and also the changing profile of its resident population and economy.

The Concept Plan review's 'ultimate aim must be to ensure that we will continue to have a good quality living environment in Singapore, one that will take into account the needs of not just the young, but also of the old, and a growing population which will consist of people from many, many different parts of the world', said National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan.

As part of Concept Plan 2011, URA will also actively seek views from the public, Mr Mah said in his keynote speech at the URA Corporate Plan Seminar yesterday.

He also highlighted that one of Singapore's key strengths is its long-term integrated planning approach. 'Few cities in the world have a holistic planning framework like ours . . . ,' Mr Mah said. He cited a case in point. Despite the dismal economic climate when URA started planning the development and infrastructure for Marina Bay, just before the start of the last downturn in 2000, the government remained focused on building up Marina Bay. 'And because we planned ahead, we were able to attract foreign investments into the Bay when the economy started to pick up and then when it boomed,' Mr Mah said.

He also also stressed that efforts to remake Singapore must continue in both good and bad times if the island is to be a key node in the network of global cities. It was as a result of forward planning, and effective and consistent implementation that a new Singapore city is taking shape fast. He painted a picture of the 'new iconic signature skyline' emerging at Marina Bay. The double helix bridge, Art Park, Gardens by the Bay and new waterfront promenade will be progressively completed by 2011. Then, there are the Marina Bay Sands Integrated Resort and the first phase of Marina Bay Financial Centre which will be operational by 2010. The government has invested nearly $5.7 billion in infrastructure works in Marina Bay so far and will continue to pump in more money to support its future growth and boost connectivity with the existing city, Mr Mah added.

The prime Orchard Road shopping belt is also being rejuvenated with new malls. Singapore will have a new generation of regional commercial districts, such as Jurong Lake District. And the island will become an even more exciting playground with a wider range of leisure and recreational options. Singapore's park connector network will be tripled to 300 km over the next five to 10 years, joining up into a continuous loop around the island. URA is also developing scenic walks along Singapore's coastline.

The Ministry of National Development and URA will be launching a programme called 'My New Singapore' to encourage Singaporeans to rediscover Singapore.

'The programme will comprise a series of events and activities which will reach out to Singaporeans. We invite everybody to see the new developments and visit new leisure destinations. We will show Singaporeans the plans that we have for their neighbourhoods, bring them to see the new Marina Bay, let them enjoy the parks and park connectors. And I hope that when Singaporeans rediscover Singapore, they will realise what a special little city we have, and perhaps, we will love our city even more,' Mr Mah said.

He even suggested Singaporeans may want to shop, eat and sightsee in Singapore. 'Perhaps during this downturn, it is timely for Singaporeans to take time to get to know our city better. Enjoy what we have to offer here in Singapore, and maybe save a little bit of money at the same time.'

URA will hold the 'My Endearing Home' roving exhibition at major malls between May and August this year to present Singaporeans a chance to learn about plans for their immediate neighbourhoods and for the city, and 'discover that there is much to treasure on our island'.

A Marina Bay Festival will be held in the later part of 2010 that will showcase the waterfront promenade and new developments to both locals and foreign visitors.

NParks will also press on with its efforts to green Singapore and conserve the island's natural heritage.

Getting to know Singapore's urban heritage
Business Times 18 Apr 09;

URA engages students with a workshop and competition to raise awareness

A BOHEMIAN artists' enclave in Tanjong Pagar, 'secret gardens' in Chinatown and skate parks at Duxton Hill Park. These are some of the winning ideas generated by the inaugural Challenge for the Urban and Built Environment or CUBE.

The event, organised by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), is aimed at raising awareness of the built environment and the dynamics of land use and urban planning among junior college and polytechnic students, and getting them familiar with Singapore's urban heritage.

The three-day workshop and competition is part of URA's Architecture and Urban Design Excellence Programme, an initiative to promote quality architecture and urban design. URA said yesterday that 10 teams, comprising about 100 students and teachers from seven junior colleges and three polytechnics, took part in the event.

The winning teams were Hwa Chong Institution, which clinched first prize, followed by Temasek Polytechnic and Serangoon Junior College.

URA chief executive officer Cheong Koon Hean said: 'URA turns 35 this year. Marking this milestone with an urban planning competition for students creates more awareness of Singapore's built environment and stirs interest among our bright young students in becoming the planners and architects of the future.'

During the three-day workshop, students aged 16-25 were introduced to the basics of architecture, urban planning and design. Interviews and observations were also conducted on the human and traffic patterns of parts of Chinatown. And a panel of judges from URA and industry provided critiques.

The teams were judged on sensitivity and relevance to site context and environment, creativity, clarity of ideas, execution of ideas, visual and verbal presentation skills and level of teamwork and cooperation displayed.

CUBE extends URA's efforts to engage the younger generation. Urban planning workshops - the Young Urbanist Programme and Design My Place - have previously been conducted with primary and secondary school students.

These activities are aimed at helping a growing number of students better appreciate Singapore's built environment and learn more about architecture and urban planning.

URA plans to get Singaporeans acquainted with new developments
By Hoe Yeen Nie, Channel NewsAsia 17 Apr 09;

SINGAPORE: The landscape of Singapore will soon look quite different as new developments spring up in the city centre and in the heartlands over the next few years.

By 2011 for instance, residents of Jurong will have more opportunities to live by the waterfront. Southern coastal areas like the Labrador Park and Bukit Chermin will also be made more accessible to the public.

These are on top of new projects coming up in the Marina Bay and Orchard Road areas.

Many of these plans were announced in recent years, but the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) wants to get more Singaporeans acquainted with them.

To do that, it is holding a series of activities and public exhibitions called "My New Singapore" from May this year.

Speaking at the URA Corporate Plan Seminar on Friday, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said: "We will show Singaporeans the plans for their neighbourhoods, bring them to see the new Marina Bay, and let them enjoy the parks and park connectors.

"I hope that when Singaporeans rediscover Singapore, we will realise what a special little city we have and perhaps, we will love our city even more."

Other activities include the Marina Bay Festival in the later part of 2010, which will comprise a series of activities and events to showcase developments in the area.

Next year, the Housing and Development Board (HDB) will also conduct a series of roving exhibitions from March till July to show how HDB neighbourhoods have evolved and improved over the years.

There will also be new plans for public housing in the future.- CNA/so


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Turn off your lights every day of the year to make a difference

No hour of power
Richard Hartung, Today Online 18 Apr 09;

EARTH Hour in Singapore last month energised thousands of people to take action and do their part to reduce the perils of global warming. But despite the mass participation, focusing on turning off the lights for just one hour may actually have been counter-productive. If Earth Hour made it seem like only a single hour of change is all that’s needed, it may also have sent a message that the other 8,759 hours of the year aren’t really so important.

The publicity for Earth Hour certainly did encourage action. Television commercials, signs at bus stops, advertisements, postcards and newspaper reports pushed people to do their part. The “60” logo — symbolising 60 minutes of darkness — seemed ubiquitous. Broadcasters picked up on the buzz, so listeners constantly heard about the need to turn off their lights. Many conversations the week before Earth Hour touched on “what will you be doing for Earth Hour?”

Hundreds of corporations and thousands of individuals chose to turn off the power for that one hour. Some schools and companies even turned off their lights for the entire weekend. At 8.30pm on March 28, lights were switched off in buildings around town, and thousands turned up for a celebration at Esplanade Park.

The actual impact, though, turned out to be limited. Power usage during the period dropped by less than 0.1 per cent, according to some estimates, though that figure could be higher if one counts the electricity not consumed for the entire weekend. While a walk around the CBD showed the lights were off in some buildings, lights remained on in so many restaurants, flats and offices it was a little hard to tell it was Earth Hour.

After all the hoopla, at 9.31pm, it was all over. And it’s when the lights came back on that the ideal behind Earth Hour started to show its cracks.

It was time to turn the lights back on for the rest of the next year. Unless participants understood that they need to do what they did during Earth Hour all year long, they could well feel they’ve already done their part for the entire year. And scheduling the hour conveniently on a weekend may have sent out the signal that all we need to do is lay off the lights once a year at a convenient time.

Earth Hour risks becoming a short-term annual fad rather than the first step of a longer-term solution to reduce global warming.

Not a fun run

It’s sort of like your doctor telling you to start exercising by signing up for a 10km charity fun run, then neglecting to say that you need to practice beforehand and continue afterwards. Running just once a year isn’t enough. Only by starting to exercise before the event and continuing to exercise afterwards are you likely to stay healthy. Similarly, only with continued efforts to reduce energy usage is the earth likely to become healthy again.

As conservation advocates like Nobel Laureate Al Gore have said, saving the planet requires changes to your daily routine. Every day!

More than 2,500 scientists gathered in Copenhagen in early March called for “sustained and effective mitigation” to avoid “dangerous climate change”. Saving the world is about reducing power usage and sustained action all year long.

Earth Hour organisers might contend, of course, that the event was a small but important step. As Carine Seror of World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said in response to one inquiry: “The larger objective of the Earth Hour campaign just might help us make a start” on saving the earth, and the event highlighted “a growing momentum all over the world to make change a reality”.

More than focusing on just the one hour, however, the clear message needs to be that continual action throughout the year is critical for reducing climate change. One solution could be to promote Earth Hour as a start and then show what to do every day — even after Earth Hour is over — to make a difference. Another could be publicising lessons like the Nature Conservancy’s “What You Can Do”, which shows what we can do every day — not for just one hour, but all year long — to make a real difference.

While money and resources to promote change are understandably scarce, re-examining the premise behind Earth Hour and using the event to promote long-term change could make sure that the actual message gets across.

Just like a 10km run, Earth Hour has the benefit of prompting some people to do something. To make a real difference, though, the message that change needs to happen throughout the year needs to sink in. While the intent of Earth Hour is good, it’s only a start, and the message should be that we all need to take action every hour of every day to save our planet. WEEKENDVTRA


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Between trash and treasure

Incinerator man is the unlikely face behind museum's exhibition
Ng Tze Yong, The New Paper 18 Apr 09;

HIS nights are spent at the incinerator plant where he works, destroying mountains of trash amid the heat, smell and roar of heavy machinery.

But when morning arrives, Mr Wong Han Ming, 38, sets off for quieter places to do a very different sort of thing.

In the solitude of rubbish dumps and abandoned houses, he picks up things to salvage.

Old bus tickets, posters, postcards and magazines - these are some of the things people throw away, but which Mr Wong saves from oblivion. To date, he has amassed about 100,000 of such items.

A selection of his collection is now the subject of the latest exhibition at the Singapore Philatelic Museum (SPM), titled Cinemas and Movie Stars.

Some see him as a hero, some dismiss him as a hopeless romantic. Others give him looks reserved for lunatics. But he is one of the lesser-known heroes behind the Singapore heritage scene, which has been bustling of late.

Last year saw a record 2.5 million visitors to the museums, a 45 per cent spike from 2007. Two museums also opened - the Peranakan Museum and 8Q, the contemporary art arm of the Singapore Art Museum.

Development funds

In February, amid Singapore's worst recession, the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts announced $29 million in development funds for three community museums - the Malay Heritage Centre, the Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall and the upcoming Indian Heritage Centre.

'Museums do not have the resources to acquire all items of historical significance,' said Ms Tresnawati Prihadi, the general manager of SPM.

'Collectors like Mr Wong help to fill in the gaps.'

It wasn't always like this.

'In the past, museums did not consider ephemeral things like bus tickets and posters worthy of collection, but more and more, that is changing,' said Dr Kevin Tan, president of the Singapore Heritage Society.

Mr Wong, a technical officer at Tuas South incineration plant, talks about the race against time, the need to pass knowledge on to the younger generation, and the buttressing of the Singapore identity.

At home, however, he fights a different battle.

He cringes when he talks about the scoldings he has to endure from his parents. His collection has taken up much of the space in their three-room flat in old Chinatown.

The stacks of folders which contain the painstakingly catalogued items take pride of place on the shelves.

He started collecting memorabilia in primary school, after listening to his grandmother's stories about her life.

He searches for them in rubbish dumps, buys them from antique shops, and often travels to Malaysia to hunt for the rarer ones. Occasionally, he gives public talks and holds exhibitions.

For his contributions, he was given the Supporter of Heritage award by the National Heritage Board in 2006, the same year it was introduced.

Collection on show

And in June this year, Mr Wong's collection will be on show at the Singapore Pavilion at the Venice Biennale.

Still, it's hard to shake off the taunts and jokes.

Said Dr Tan: 'In Singapore, when you start collecting stuff, people usually start wondering: Is it a sign of mental illness?'

It's a trait that, while not peculiar to Singaporeans, may be more pronounced here.

'We are such a small country and we live in such small flats. If you start collecting and taking up space, people think your priorities are screwed up because they think the space can be used for more 'productive' use,' said Dr Tan.

For collectors, the lure is in the intangible: a sense of stability and control in a fast-paced life.

'There is a collector in each of us,' said Dr Tan.

Every night, as the big trucks rumble into Tuas South incinerator plant, trailing their foul stench, Mr Wong watches silently, swaying between romanticism and practicality.

He didn't work there to salvage things - he's not allowed to. He ended up there by sheer coincidence, as he holds a diploma in engineering.

But it can be a painful place for a history buff to work.

Fortunately, the trash comes in black bags.

'I can't see what's in them, so it's okay...' he said.


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Live sales: No problem so long as animals aren't endangered species

Straits Times Forum 18 Apr 09;

I REFER to yesterday's letter by Mr Howard Shaw, 'Stop live animal sales, urge activists', and disagree with the view that the sale and consumption of live seafood pose ethical, environmental and economic problems beyond the initial impression of having a convenient source of fresh seafood.

The unfortunate truth is that if the human race has to eat to live, we have to kill animals from land and sea to survive. We cannot live on rice and vegetables alone. We cannot ignore the fact that fresh meats are more nutritious than frozen ones.

It is strange to consider the consumption of live frogs, soft-shell turtles, razor clams and eels as posing ethical and environmental problems, when we should logically consider them as complementary to live fish, prawns and other live animals. The increasing trend of more variety of live seafood made available is purely due to better transport and handling systems and business acumen of bosses.

I do not see a threat to local businesses like wet markets when most if not all food is imported. Importing from countries of abundance helps to balance the food chains and the ecosystem. In fact, killing whales and sharks is one of nature's ways to maintain the eco-balance because their consumption of sea creatures is horrendous.

If live animals sold in supermarkets are not endangered species, there is no reason to stop introducing better service to customers to complement the supply of wet markets. Yes, live animals should be kept in clean and non-crowded environments to prevent cruelty. Also, the slaughter of live animals in supermarkets should be more discreet and done behind the counter, out of sight of customers, and meat should be thoroughly cleaned before delivery.

Paul Chan

We don't need bloodcurdling experiences in supermarkets
Straits Times Forum 18 Apr 09;

I APPLAUD yesterday's letter by animal activists, 'Stop live animal sales, urge activists'.

I have started to avoid the Sheng Siong outlet near my home as I find it disturbing to see animals slaughtered right before my eyes.

I agree with Mr Howard Shaw that often, these animals are kept in inhumane conditions. I have also seen crabs and frogs kept in crowded cages at coffee shops, left without food and water for days until they are slaughtered.

I wonder if humans would like to be treated like this before they die?

Do animals suffer less pain because they cannot talk and protest against such treatment? No. The least we can do is to ensure that they are treated humanely until they are killed.

By bringing slaughtering back to the supermarkets, are we regressing to the old days of the wet markets in the 1970s?

These were times when chickens and ducks were kept in sordid conditions and slaughtered daily. Surely, we do not need that. Or are we trying to emulate the open-air markets in China where different kinds of animals can be bought and slaughtered if consumers so wish?

Singapore is progressing. Let us progress in our treatment of animals as well. We do not need bloodcurdling shopping experiences in supermarkets.

Elizabeth Ng (Mrs)


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Florida leads the way for freshwater turtles

IUCN 17 Apr 09;

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission voted unanimously to ban the commercial harvest of freshwater turtles throughout the state on Wednesday, April 15.

The move comes after several of the world’s leading turtle scientists called on Florida's Governor Charlie Crist to end the commercial hunting of turtles which supplies eastern Asia.

The experts, brought together by the Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group of IUCN’s Species Survival Commission, alerted the Governor that the state's turtles were at high risk of being wiped out by the expanding global trade in turtles which had recently begun to target Florida's fairly robust turtle poulations.

That trade has been driven by the almost insatiable demand for turtle meat and medicinal products in Chinese markets and led to the previously destructive Asian turtle trade, which has driven many populations of wild turtles in Asia into near extinction.

Governor Crist demonstrated true conservation leadership by coming out in public support of banning the turtle trade and instructed his Wildlife Commission to study the matter carefully and take appropriate action.

“This is a great victory for turtle conservation,” says Anders Rhodin, Chair of IUCN’s Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group. “The regulations will be the strictest in the US and mean the US is finally facing up to the growing threat of this global consumptive turtle trade. The IUCN Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group was central in helping to achieve this victory.”

Turtle biologists such as Matt Aresco first raised warnings about what was happening. "All the scientists who study Florida's turtles are unanimous: we believe that the mass commercial hunting of wild turtles must end," Aresco said in response to Wednesday's wildlife commission decision.

"If we allowed it, the Chinese - more than one billion Chinese - could and probably would eat every single turtle in existence in Florida in one year," says biologist Dale Jackson.

In China, one species of softshell turtle is down to the last two individuals, said Peter Meylan of Eckerd College in St. Petersburg. Scientists said Florida shouldn't wait for turtles there to disappear before taking action.

The Florida commercial turtle harvest ban will be enacted later this year. The draft rule would ban the commercial take or sale of wild freshwater turtles, and would also prohibit taking turtles from the wild that are listed on Florida's endangered species list. In addition, the collection of eggs would be prohibited.

Individuals would be allowed to take one freshwater turtle per day per person from the wild for noncommercial use. The transport of more than one turtle per day would be prohibited.

In a letter to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the turtle experts said: “The proposed new regulations will provide the best protection for freshwater turtles in any state in the U.S. and establish Florida as a leader on this issue in North America.

“Other states are watching Florida,” it continued. “As we noted in our earlier letter, Florida is one of the two centers of highest turtle diversity in the world, and it is important that we demonstrate our stewardship of this important natural heritage.”


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Predicting population change: How can a graph be so very wrong?

Different ways of seeing stats
BBC News 17 Apr 09;

Sir David Attenborough is now patron of the Optimum Population Trust, which lobbies to cut the number of people on Earth. But predicting population change is tricky, says Michael Blastland in his regular column.

A child watching Star Trek, open mouthed. The scene, a hideously overpopulated planet. A stirring caldron of people at the window. A privileged few who close the curtains.

But I grew up, not noticeably squashed.

The idea of overpopulation has been around a while. Let's not go there. Let's stick to a simpler part of the problem. How many of us will there be, a decade or two hence? We can decide later if so many is too many.

The answer, crudely, is that the track record of population projection is abysmal. It borders on being a statistical lottery.

People are not good at seeing the future, particularly the future of people. The problem is that people are changeable, they don't always do in the future what they do now. People, being people, know this - or should - but often carry on regardless.

Total population change in a country comprises three elements: migration, lifespan and fertility. In no case have people done what they were meant to. The numbers came out and then, drat them, people had the nerve to live even longer, just like that.

They had lots of babies and then stopped having lots of babies. Loads suddenly decided to turn up on the doorstep just when it was thought more people might leave.

It's hardly surprising that the UK projections for all three elements have repeatedly failed to hit a barn door. Here, just for fun (they serve little other purpose) are some past attempts at forecasting.

First, total UK population.

In 1965, the population at the turn of the millennium was projected to be about 76 million (the yellow line sticking up). That's about 16 million too many, or more than two extra Greater Londons.

The 1994 projection had UK population falling after about 2020. Ten years later, this was revised to point us above 70 million again. In general, the figures are all over the shop.

The next chart shows part of the explanation for at least some of the ups and downs: children.

In 1965, the total fertility rate (TFR) was about three - that is, women were having about three children each. Therefore, women in the future would do the same…

Except that in the past decade, the rate of fertility for UK-born women fell briefly to about 1.5, half the projected rate. The number of births in one year in the UK was at one point nearly a million fewer than projected. There's almost no need to study this chart - just marvel at the way it flails around like a cat o' nine tails - and you'll get the general idea.

Coming and going

The next component is migration. A good example of where migration goes wrong is that few people expected half a million Poles to arrive in the UK in the space of about two years in the mid-2000s. Nor that almost all would travel through ports and minor airports, where far less effort goes into monitoring migration.

So picture the official survey teams, mostly stationed at Heathrow, Gatwick and Manchester, as about 500,000 people tiptoe behind them on some other route. "Seen any Poles, mate?" "No mate, no Poles here."

Whether the authorities should have seen this change in the pattern of travel coming is another question. The fact is they didn't.

Not only did we not expect them, nor project meaningful figures for them, we didn't know they were actually arriving.
PROJECTED LIFESPAN IN 2001
# 1971: men 71.9, women 78.6
# 1975: men 70.4, women 76.7
# 1979: men 70.6, women 76.9
# 1983: men 72.3, women 79.3
# 1987: men 73.8, women 79.9
# 1992: men 75.4, women 80.6
# 1996: men 75.3, women 80.2
# 2000: men 75.7, women 80.4
# Actual: men 75.8, women 80.5

Source: ONS and Government Actuary

Finally, there is how long we live. In the past 30-odd years, projections of the typical lifespan in 2001 has varied considerably - see factbox on right. These got close in the end. Though by the end, of course, there's not much future left.

As the Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported a few years ago, projections for total population have been better recently but only because the errors on each of the components evened out.

The report said: "Demographic behaviour is inherently uncertain." Which is a restrained way of putting it.

It then continued: "The number of children we have, how long we live and the number of people who migrate from one country to another are variables that have changed continually in the past and will continue to do so in the future. Even if we understood perfectly the factors that have brought about past changes (which we clearly do not), our ability to predict the demographic future would inevitably remain limited."

What's more, not only do we not know where we are going, we don't really know where we are.

"We do not even know, with complete certainty, the size and age structure of the current population at the time a projection is made."

To be fair, the ONS beats itself up (and the government actuary's department, which used to do these projections) unnecessarily by reporting on the projections' accuracy. They were mostly not intended to be a prediction of the future. Projections are not predictions, but simply describe current behaviour and ask what the world would look like if this behaviour continued.

Here's a prediction: it won't.

All-seeing eye

To go back to where we started, people change, and they change not least in response to changes already occurring. If the birth rate rises fast, the resulting housing pressures and costs alone of 78 million people in the UK would probably do at least something to temper the attraction of large families.

As for population on a global scale, it does seem likely that it will go up, maybe even faster than the steepest projections, but here's a telling story. In the 1970s, a woman in Bangladesh typically had about seven children, of whom two died in infancy. Today, she typically has about three, who tend to live. Family size has fallen dramatically. In not much more than a generation, Bangladesh changed in a way that took the rich world 200 years.

One image of population is that people clock in and clock out, by birth or death or migration, that they do so in reliable, easily measured ways, and that we should be able to take the swirl of political, cultural, economic, scientific, social and personal influences, and somehow divine the mass human reaction.

Are we talking about the ONS, or God?


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Asia may see more conflicts over water

Claudia Parsons, Reuters 17 Apr 09;

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Asia may see more conflicts over scarce water resources in the coming years as climate change and population growth threaten access to the most basic natural resource, a report warned on Friday.

Water problems in Asia are already severe, with one in five people, or 700 million, not having access to safe drinking water and half the region's population lacking access to basic sanitation, according to the report produced by the Asia Society, a New York-based think tank.

Population growth, rapid urbanization and climate change are expected to worsen the situation, according to the report, "Asia's Next Challenge: Securing the Region's Water Future."

It said water disputes between hostile neighbors India and Pakistan and the complex relations governing the vast Mekong River, which is shared by China and its southern neighbors, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.

The report said while water issues have more often generated cooperation than conflict between nations in the past, demographic pressures and water scarcity would be unprecedented in the coming decades.

"The potential for conflicts sparked by the direct and indirect impacts of an increasingly volatile water supply should not be underestimated, particularly in the light of rising concerns about climate change," it said.

"No matter how we approach water resources -- whether it is on the basis of quality and quantity, or as the most potent manifestation of extreme climatic events -- hydropolitics is likely to be a growing force in Asian security," it said.

While Asia is home to more than half the world's population, it has less fresh water per person than any other populated continent, the report said. Asia's population is expected to rise by nearly 500 million within 10 years.

"The majority of Asia's water problems are not attributable to an actual shortage, but rather are the result of poor water governance," it said. "They are solvable through more effective governance and better management practices."

The report makes 10 recommendations to governments in Asia, including greater regional cooperation and ensuring that water management organizations work directly with those responsible for defense and diplomacy.

It also urged more investment, both public and private, in efficient water management and infrastructure.

Ecological leaders should not only look to governments for change, said Jeffrey Sachs, an economist and director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University. Civil action is needed to give rise to a movement for water access and quality, he said in an address to the Asia Society in New York.

"Our governments are incompetent ... in an institutional sense," said Sachs, a member of the society's leadership group on water security. "Our governments are overwhelmed. There's no use to calling on them to do things in the old-fashioned way."

(Additional reporting by Al Yoon, editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Eric Beech)


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Forests could flip from sink to source of CO2: study

Marlowe Hood Yahoo News 16 Apr 09;

PARIS (AFP) – Forests that today soak up a quarter of carbon pollution spewed into the atmosphere could soon become a net source of CO2 if Earth's surface warms by another two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), cautions a report to be presented Friday at the UN.

Plants both absorb and exhale carbon dioxide, but healthy forests -- especially those in the tropics -- take up far more of the greenhouse gas than they give off.

When they are damaged, get sick or die, that stored carbon is released.

"We normally think of forests as putting the brakes on global warming," said Risto Seppala, a professor at the Finnish Forest Research Institute and head of the expert panel that produced the report.

"But in fact over the next few decades, damage induced by climate change could cause forests to release huge quantities of carbon and create a situation in which they do more to accelerate warming than slow it down."

Authored by 35 of the world's top forestry scientists, the study provides the first global assessment of the ability of forests to adapt to climate change.

Manmade warming to date -- about 0.7 C since the mid-19th century -- has already slowed regeneration of tropical forests, and made them more vulnerable to fire, disease and insect infestations. Increasingly violent and frequent storms have added to the destruction.

If temperatures climb even further, the consequences could be devastating, according to the report by the Vienna-based International Union of Forest Research Organisations (IUFRO).

"The current carbon-regulating functions of forests are at risk of being lost entirely unless carbon emissions are reduced drastically," said Alexander Buck, IUFRO's deputy director and coordinator of the report.

"With a global warming of 2.5 C (4.5 F) compared to pre-industrial times, the forest ecosystems would begin to turn into a net source of carbon, adding significantly to emissions from fossil fuels and deforestation," he told AFP by phone.

The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicted in 2007 that average global temperatures would go up before 2100 by 1.1 C to 6.4 C (2.0 F to 11.5 F), depending on efforts to curb the gases that drive global warming.

Any increase of more than 2.0 C, the panel said, would unleash a maelstrom of human misery, including drought, famine, disease and forced migration.

Since the IPCC report, however, a growing number of climate scientists have said that this threshold is likely to be crossed no matter what actions are taken.

The forest assessment did contain what appears to be some good news: cold-clime boreal forests stretching across vast expanses of Russia, northern Europe, Canada and Alaska are set to expand rapidly as climate change kicks in.

But while this may be a boon for the timber industry, it is not likely to help curb global warming, it said.

"One might assume with the increasing growth in boreal forests that more carbon would be taken up by forest ecosystems and removed from the atmosphere," said Buck.

"But these positive effects will be clearly outweighed by the negative impacts on forest ecosystems."

The report urged international negotiators trying to hammer out a new global climate change treaty before the end of the year to take into account the potential impact of warming on forests.

Up to now, discussions on forests at the UN climate talks have focused almost exclusively on the impact of deforestation.

The destruction of vegetation straddling the equator -- some 130,000 square kilometers (50,000 square miles) disappear every year -- accounts for nearly 20 percent of total carbon emissions.

"But it is also important to keep in mind that those forests that remain will be affected by climate change to a degree that might exceed their capacity to adapt," Buck cautioned.

The IUFRO report will be submitted to the UN Forum on Forests.

Forests could become source of warming: report
Timothy Gardner, Reuters 17 Apr 09;

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The world's forests are at risk of becoming a source of planet-warming emissions instead of soaking them up like a sponge unless greenhouse gases are controlled, scientists said.

Deforestation emits 20 percent of the world's carbon dioxide when people cut and burn trees, but standing forests soak up 25 percent of the emissions.

If the Earth heats up 2.5 degrees Celsius (4.5 degrees F) or more, evaporation from the additional heat would lead to severe droughts and heat waves that could kill wide swaths of trees in the tropics of Africa, southern Asia and South America. And emissions from the rotting trees would make forests a source of global warming.

"If temperatures are growing at the current pace definitely this would happen at the end of this century or before," said Risto Seppala, chair of a report by the International Union of Forest Research Organizations, a nonprofit network of scientists.

The IUFRO will present the report to the U.N.'s Forum on Forests in New York next week.

Not all areas of the world would suffer immediately and pine forests in northern parts of the world could benefit at first.

"In the beginning it would mean some very positive consequences," for boreal forests such as those found in Northern Europe and Canada, said Seppala by telephone from his home in Finland north of the Arctic Circle. He said timber and paper industries in the North could prosper as warmer weather pushes growth of spruce and other trees.

Even forests found in more temperate parts of the world, such as the United States and Western Europe, could grow faster at first.

"Those who live in industrialized countries in the Northern Hemisphere won't suffer too much at first," he said.

People in many developing countries with forests tend to rely more on forests for food, clean water and other basic needs.

But eventually tree pests and parasites that until now have not appeared much in forests in colder parts of the world are likely to spread north as temperatures warm, the report said.

An example of pests already moving to the North is the pine beetle, which has devastated large parts of forests in British Columbia over the past decade and has moved into the province of Alberta. The pest can be killed by periods of extreme cold, but the 2007-2008 winter did not kill off the insects in Alberta.

Much depends on exactly how much temperatures will warm. A Reuters poll earlier this month of scientists showed that global warming is like to overshoot a 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 F) rise above pre-industrial levels seen by many countries as the maximum to avoid the worst of rising sea levels, floods, droughts and heat waves. Temperatures have already risen 0.7 Celsius.

Steps can be taken to protect forests and help them adapt to warmer temperatures, such as sustainable harvesting, the IUFRO report said. Perhaps even more important is cutting global emissions of greenhouse gases, said Seppala.

(Editing by Christian Wiessner)


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New limits to Antarctic tourism

Yahoo News 17 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US proposals for binding restrictions on Antarctic tourism have been adopted by countries with ties to the region, in a bid to protect the continent's fragile ecosystem, officials said Friday.

Signatories of the Antarctic Treaty, launched in Washington 50 years ago, capped 11 days of talks in Baltimore, Maryland by agreeing to impose mandatory limits on the size of cruise ships landing in Antarctica and how many passengers they can bring ashore.

Another resolution placed a mandatory shipping code on vessels in Antarctica, boosting shipping safety efforts underway at the International Maritime Organization, while a third enhanced environmental protection for the entire Antarctic ecosystem.

"We are happy with the results," said Evan Bloom, who led the US delegation at the summit, noting that the measures were largely in line with needs emphasized by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Although the measures were adopted by consensus without opposition, they were all subject to negotiation and will become legally binding once ratified by each of the 28 countries that have signed the Antarctic Treaty, he told reporters in a teleconference.

Although no specific mechanism was detailed to enforce the restrictions, signatories would be required to prevent ships with more than 500 passengers from reaching landing sites in Antarctica and allow up to 100 passengers on shore at any given time.

Nearly 400 diplomats, experts and polar scientists from 47 countries attended the meeting, which tackled environmental and territorial issues affecting the Antarctic.

The Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting (ATCM) also focused on promoting scientific research in the Antarctic, said its chair Tucker Scully.

He said there was "a major emphasis" on ensuring that the parties cooperated to support scientific research "to understand what is in fact happening to our planet with respect to climate."

In opening the first joint session of the ATCM and the Arctic Council on April 6, Clinton said Washington would work with other countries surrounding the region "to strengthen peace and security and support economic development and protect the environment."

The diplomatic chief said she and President Barack Obama were "committed" to having the US Congress ratify the Law of the Sea Convention, a United Nations text on maritime rights drafted in 1982.

The United States signed the convention in 1994, after securing changes to certain provisions deemed against US interests. But Congress never ratified the treaty, despite a lobbying effort by former president George W. Bush in 2007.

Clinton said Obama had provided the US Congress with an annex to the treaty for ratification. The annex set the obligations of signatories in case of an environmental catastrophe in the South Pole region.


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How great is the threat from melting ice sheets?

Reuters 17 Apr 09;

(Reuters) - The U.N. Climate Panel says seas could rise by 18-59 cms (7-24 inches) by 2100, without taking account the possible acceleration of a melt of ice sheets in Antarctica or Greenland.

Even a small thaw of Antarctica and Greenland would affect sea levels since together they lock up enough ice to raise sea levels by about 65 meters (215 feet) if they all melted.

Following are responses to questions from Reuters by a leading glaciologist as part of an ad-hoc global series of top climate change scientists, policy makers and academics.

Ian Allison is leader of the Australian Antarctic Division's Ice, Ocean, Atmosphere and Climate program and a researcher within the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Center.

He has been involved in Antarctic science for over 40 years.

HOW GREAT IS THE THREAT FROM ICE SHEETS MELTING?

"I think it is now unequivocal that warming of the world is occurring and I think the last IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) conclusively showed that a major cause of warming is greenhouse gas emissions from mankind.

We now know that the ice sheets are contributing to sea level rise and for the Arctic, at least, this is because the warming of this region is much greater than in other places on Earth.

We also know that glaciers in mountain areas are undergoing a very rapid retreat and they're a major contributor of sea level rise, too.

WHICH IS OF MORE CONCERN? GREENLAND OR WEST ANTARCTICA?

"Greenland is of more concern because of the warming of the Arctic. Greenland is at lower latitude than much of Antarctica and we've seen the direct effect of the melting.

We still don't understand many things about the dynamic response of the ice sheets but we do see direct melt exceeding snowfall in Greenland.

This might not mean a runaway effect but it does mean Greenland is contributing to sea level rise and will continue to add to sea levels at the present temperatures for many hundreds of years."

EXPLAIN THE THREAT FROM WEST ANTARCTICA

"Ice shelves and floating ice tongues can buttress the flow of grounded ice from the interior of the ice sheets. We've seen examples in both Greenland and Antarctica of floating ice disappearing, and the ice that sits on the land then flowing more quickly into the ocean.

"In addition, the West Antarctic may be inherently unstable. The West Antarctic forms what is called the marine ice shelf. The ice is resting on bedrock but that bedrock is below sea level. It's like if you load too many ice cubes in your gin and tonic, the bottom one touches the bottom of the glass even though it's well below the water level.

Where the bedrock under a marine ice sheet slopes down toward the interior, such as under parts of West Antarctica, the ice sheet may be unstable. If it thins, it will start to float at the edges, becoming an ice shelf.

For a bedrock that slopes backwards and becomes deeper further in, continued retreat of the grounded ice sheet may proceed very rapidly. A small retreat could in theory destabilize the entire West Antarctica ice sheet, leading to rapid disintegration."

WHAT ARE THE MAIN GAPS IN OUR KNOWLEDGE?

"There two areas. One, we need to improve our mathematical models of ice streams, ice sheets and ice shelves to be able to better project future changes. We also need more detailed measurements of how deep the bedrock is under the ice sheets to use in the models.

The other major gap in our understanding is what is happening at the bed of the ice sheets; how they react with liquid water at the base, what role water may have in sliding processes and the role of gravels and slurry at the base.

We now know there is a lot of liquid water under the ice sheets. But we don't really know how changes in this may affect the ice flow. Knowing what's under the ice sheets we really need to measure that with radar systems."

WHAT ARE YOUR MAIN MESSAGES TO POLICY MAKERS?

"The main thing is monitoring what's actually happening with sea level rise and the ice sheets. We've now got tools that can do that, we can improve those and make sure they keep going, particularly satellite-based systems.

We need better predictive tools to know just what is likely in the next 100 years. I don't think we should be rushing into building up coastal defenses until we know what we could be defending against. So our biggest requirement is to be able to refine our projections for what may happen in the future."

(Editing by David Fox)


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Lack of permanent Arctic ice surprises explorers

David Ljunggren, Reuters 17 Apr 09;

OTTAWA (Reuters) - The head of a British team walking to the North Pole on a mission to gauge how fast Arctic ice sheets are melting said on Friday he was surprised by how little permanent ice he had found so far.

Pen Hadow and two other adventurers set off in early March on a 1,000-km (620-mile) trek from Canada's Arctic to the North Pole. The team was set down in an area where scientists had been sure there would be permanent multiyear ice.

But so far, the average depth of the ice has been just under 1.8 meters (6 feet), suggesting they are finding predominantly new first-year ice that is likely to melt in summer months.

"My surprise is guided by the scientific community's expectations of what the ice should be here," Hadow told Reuters via satellite phone from about 620 km from the North Pole.

"In the opening section of the (journey), most would have anticipated multiyear ice, ice certainly more than 2 meters and really more than 3.5 meters thick."

The team said in a statement that the findings pointed to an ever-smaller summer ice covering around the Pole this year.

One top polar expert said last month the Arctic is warming so quickly that the summer sea ice cover could vanish as early as 2013, decades earlier than some had predicted.

The Arctic is warming at twice the rate of the rest of the world and the sea ice cover shrank to a record low in 2007 before growing slightly in 2008.

Scientists link higher Arctic temperatures to the greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming.

Hadow, saying he did not know what had caused the ice to be so thin, said possible reasons included warmer air and ocean temperatures as well as stronger winds that were blowing the ice out of position.

He also found that the snow cover on top of the ice was much thinner than the 35 cm (14 inches) he had expected.

"Thinner ice has less snow on it so the two measures support each other. It's not as though we have some weird anomaly going on," he said.

Summer ice tends to be concentrated around the North Pole while much of the thicker multiyear ice is clumped around the islands of Canada's Arctic archipelago.

Chip Cunliffe, the team's head of operations, declined in a separate interview to say what he thought might have caused the ice to be thinner than expected, saying he would let scientists analyze the data.

The team spends four hours a day drilling into the ice to take measurements. Hadow has a manual drill that can go down 5.2 meters and so far has hit ice that deep just four times.

"If we'd had more multiyear ice there it's more likely that he would have got (that deep) on more than just four occasions," Cunliffe said.

The team had planned to use an experimental portable radar set to measure the ice more accurately but had to resort to the drill after intense cold knocked out the radar's power supply. Hadow said he was optimistic it could be repaired soon.

The three explorers, who have covered about 380 km so far, are due to be picked up in late May.

The main sponsor for the 3 million pound ($5.4 million) expedition is British insurer Catlin

($1=0.56 pounds)

(Reporting by David Ljunggren; editing by Rob Wilson)


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Melting Arctic may be poisoning its people

New Scientist 17 Apr 09;

FOR Arctic peoples, global warming is not just transforming their land, it is also poisoning their food. Mercury levels in seals and beluga whales eaten by Inuit in northern Canada have reached levels that would be considered unsafe in fish.

Now, Gary Stern of Canada's Department of Fisheries and Oceans in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and colleagues have found that seal meat contains more mercury in low-ice years, suggesting the problem will only get worse.

The team sampled ringed seals caught by traditional hunters in the western Canadian Arctic between 1973 and 2007. Mercury levels were higher after summers with less sea ice. They think this is because Arctic cod flourishes in low-ice years. Because Arctic cod is higher up the food chain than the seals' other food, their tissues accumulate more mercury (Environmental Science and Technology, DOI: 10.1021/es803293z).

Arctic residents may well be exposed to other pollutants, too. Melting ice releases chemicals such as DDT and PCBs that leached from the atmosphere decades ago and became entombed in ice and permafrost, warns Philippe Grandjean of Harvard University. As the ice melts, its contaminants flow into streams, rivers and the Arctic Ocean.

It may already be too late to prevent a surge of pollutants from polar ice, says Grandjean. However, he notes, policy-makers can try to prevent the same thing happening again by reducing pollutants still in use, such as flame retardants.


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US environment agency deems CO2 a health risk

Jean-Louis Santini Yahoo News 17 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) shifted course Friday by deeming carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases a health risk, in a landmark turnaround that could impact climate change regulation.

"After a thorough scientific review ordered in 2007 by the US Supreme Court, the Environmental Protection Agency issued a proposed finding ... that greenhouse gases contribute to air pollution that may endanger public health or welfare," said an EPA statement posted on the agency website.

The move, which could open the door to stronger regulation on greenhouse gas emissions, marks a significant shift on climate change from the previous presidency of George W. Bush, which failed to heed EPA warnings on the possibly devastating consequences of inaction.

"This finding confirms that greenhouse gas pollution is a serious problem now and for future generations. Fortunately, it follows President (Barack) Obama's call for a low carbon economy and strong leadership in Congress on clean energy and climate legislation," said EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson.

"This pollution problem has a solution -- one that will create millions of green jobs and end our country's dependence on foreign oil.

"As the proposed endangerment finding states, 'In both magnitude and probability, climate change is an enormous problem. The greenhouse gases that are responsible for it endanger public health and welfare within the meaning of the Clean Air Act,'" she added.

Five out of the nine Supreme Court justices ruled in April 2007 that carbon dioxide was a pollutant under the Clean Air Act, in place since 1970.

They ordered the EPA to decide if the greenhouse gas endangered public health and welfare and said that if a so-called endangerment finding was made, the agency must draft rules to reduce vehicle emissions of carbon dioxide.

In December 2007, the EPA sent a draft finding to the Bush White House, presenting evidence that CO2 did endanger public welfare.

But the Bush administration failed to acknowledge the report and spent the remainder of its tenure resisting the Supreme Court decision.

Many environmental groups have criticized Bush's refusal for eight years to take action over the crisis and have accused his administration of manipulating or ignoring science to pursue inaction at any cost.

The EPA's action "is a wake-up call for national policy solutions that secure our economic and environmental future," said Vickie Patton, deputy general counsel at the Environmental Defense Fund, which called the agency's move an "historic step."

The Union of Concerned Scientists, a leading non-profit group on climate issues, said the EPA has acknowledged the "massive body of scientific research that shows that climate change is harming our health and environment."

Heat waves, the spread of tropical diseases and worsening air quality are all threats the EPA can help address, said the organization.

Opposing the EPA's endangerment findings, however, the fossil fuel-reliant industry representative Electric Reliability Coordinating Council (ERCC) said the development could have considerable, negative impacts on traditional industries throughout the United States.

"If reliance upon coal-fired generation were to diminish by a third as a result of EPA regulatory programs, GDP would be reduced by about 166 billion dollars, household incomes by 64 billion dollars, and employment by 1.2 million jobs," said ERCC director Scott Segal.

"To the extent green jobs are created, they would come only after severe trauma to the economy and would likely be lower-paying than the manufacturing jobs they displace."

Earlier this month in Prague, Obama vowed that the United States was "now ready to lead" on climate change.

The US Congress is examining a draft bill for clean energy development that aims to cut carbon emissions by 20 percent from their 2005 levels by 2020 and boost reliance on renewable sources of energy.

But although the US targets were unheard of before Obama took over from Bush, they were given an extremely cautious welcome in Europe because the base year for comparisons is 15 years after that of the EU.

The new US goals, though welcome, represent just a five to six percent reduction using the EU's baseline of 1990, EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas said earlier this month. German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel described them as "not enough."

New pollution limits seen for cars, big plants
H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press Yahoo News 18 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON – Cars, power plants and factories could all soon face much tougher pollution limits after a government declaration Friday setting the stage for the first federal regulation of gases blamed for global warming.

The Environmental Protection Agency took a big step in that direction, concluding that carbon dioxide and five other greenhouse gases are a major hazard to Americans' health. That was a reversal from the Bush administration, which resisted such a conclusion and said it would be costly for companies to meet new emission limits and therefore could harm the national economy.

"In both magnitude and probability, climate change is an enormous problem (and) the greenhouse gases that are responsible for it endanger public health and welfare," said the EPA, concluding the dangers warrant action under federal air pollution laws.

It was the first time the federal government had said it was ready to use the Clean Air Act to require power plants, cars and trucks to curtail their release of climate-changing pollution, especially carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels.

The agency said the science pointing to man-made pollution as a cause of global warming is "compelling and overwhelming." It also said tailpipe emissions from motor vehicles contribute.

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson cautioned that regulations are not imminent and made clear that the Obama administration would prefer that Congress address the climate issue through a broader "cap-and-trade" program that would limit heat-trapping pollution.

But she said it was clear from the EPA analysis "that greenhouse gas pollution is a serious problem now and for future generations" and steps are needed to curtail the impact.

Even if actual regulations are not imminent, the EPA action was seen as likely to encourage action on Capitol Hill.

It's "a wake-up call for Congress" — deal with it directly through legislation or let the EPA regulate, said Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., who chairs the Senate committee dealing with climate legislation. If Congress doesn't move, Boxer said she would press EPA to taker swift action.

Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., whose House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hopes to craft legislation in the coming weeks, called the EPA action "a game changer."

"It now changes the playing field with respect to legislation. It's now no longer doing a bill or doing nothing. It is now a choice between regulation and legislation," said Markey.

Republicans and some centrist Democrats have been critical of proposed cap-and-trade climate legislation, arguing it would lead to much higher energy prices. Such a measure could impose an economy-wide limit on greenhouse gas emissions but let individual companies or plants trade emission allowances among each other to mitigate costs.

House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio called EPA's move toward regulation "a backdoor attempt to enact a national energy tax that will have a crushing impact on consumers, jobs and our economy."

But environmentalists called the EPA action a watershed in addressing climate change.

"It's momentous. This has enormous legal significance. It is the first time the federal government has said officially the science is real, the danger is real and in this case that pollution from cars contributes to it," said David Doniger, climate policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council, an advocacy group.

Reaction from energy intensive industries was quick and critical.

"The proposed endangerment finding poses an endangerment to the American economy and every American family," declared Jack Gerard, president of the American Petroleum Institute.

A spokesman for the Edison Electric Institute, Dan Riedinger, said under the EPA approach "the process won't be pretty ... fraught with uncertainty." The group, which represents investor-owned electric utilities, prefers action by Congress rather than federal regulators.

The Bush administration strongly opposed using the Clean Air Act to address climate change and stalled on producing the so-called "endangerment finding" that had been ordered by the Supreme Court two years ago when it declared greenhouse gases pollutants under the Clean Air Act.

The court case, brought by Massachusetts, focused only on emissions from automobiles. But it is widely assumed that if the EPA must regulate emissions from cars and trucks, it will have no choice but to control similar pollution from power plants and industrial sources.

The EPA wants to unleash a "regulatory barrage that will destroy jobs, raise energy prices for consumers, and undermine America's global competitiveness," complained Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., one of Congress' most vocal skeptics of global warming.

In addition to carbon dioxide, a product of burning fossil fuels, the EPA finding covers five other emissions that scientists believe are warming the earth when they concentrate in the atmosphere: Methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and sulfur hexafluoride (SF6).

U.S. clears way to regulate greenhouse gases
Deborah Zabarenko and Tom Doggett, Reuters 17 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration opened the way to regulating U.S. greenhouse gas emissions on Friday by declaring climate-warming pollution a danger to human health and welfare, in a sharp policy shift from the Bush administration.

Environmental activists and their supporters in Congress were jubilant and industry groups were wary at the news of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's move. The White House said President Barack Obama would prefer legislation over administrative action to curb greenhouse emissions.

Congress is already considering a bill to cut emissions of carbon dioxide, which is emitted by cars, coal-fired power plants and oil refineries, among other sources.

EPA's declaration was seen as a strong signal to the international community that the United States intends to seriously combat climate change.

In its announcement, the EPA said, "greenhouse gases in the atmosphere endanger the public health and welfare of current and future generations" and human activities spur global warming.

"This finding confirms that greenhouse gas pollution is a serious problem now and for future generations," said EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson. "Fortunately, it follows President Obama's call for a low carbon economy and strong leadership in Congress on clean energy and climate legislation,"

"The president has made clear his strong preference that Congress act to pass comprehensive legislation rather than address the climate challenge through administrative action," a White House official said, noting that Obama has repeatedly called for "a bill to provide for market-based solutions to reduce carbon pollution."

The EPA's endangerment finding said high atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases "are the unambiguous result of human emissions, and are very likely the cause of the observed increase in average temperatures and other climatic changes." The document is available online at www.epa.gov.

The EPA's finding is essential for the U.S. government to regulate climate-warming emissions like carbon dioxide under the Clean Air Act. Regulation is not automatically triggered by the finding -- there will be a 60-day comment period.

But as that period proceeds, legislation is moving through Congress aimed at cutting carbon dioxide emissions with a cap-and-trade system, which would let those companies that emit more than the limit buy credits from those that emit less.

MAJOR SHIFT FROM BUSH

EPA scientists last year offered evidence of the health hazards of greenhouse emissions, but the Bush administration took no action. It opposed across-the-board mandatory regulation of climate-warming pollution, saying this would hurt the U.S. economy.

Senator Barbara Boxer, a California Democrat who shepherded climate legislation to the Senate floor last year, called the EPA's finding "long overdue."

"We have lost eight years in this fight," Boxer said in a statement. "... The best and most flexible way to deal with this serious problem is to enact a market-based cap-and-trade system which will help us make the transition to clean energy and will bring us innovation and strong economic growth."

"At long last, EPA is officially recognizing that carbon pollution is leading to killer heat waves, stronger hurricanes, higher smog levels and many other threats to human health," said David Doniger at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

But the National Association of Manufacturers said trying to regulate greenhouse emissions with the Clean Air Act would "further burden an ailing economy while doing little or nothing to improve the environment."

"This proposal will cost jobs. It is the worst possible time to be proposing rules that will drive up the cost of energy to no valid purpose," NAM President John Engler said.

Steve Seidel of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change said the EPA announcement is an important message to the international community, which is set to meet in Copenhagen in December to craft a follow-up agreement to the carbon-capping Kyoto Protocol.

"This decision sends a strong signal to the international community that the United States is moving forward to regulate greenhouse gas emissions," Seidel said by telephone.

However, he said this move alone is no guarantee of success in Copenhagen. Participants in that meeting will also look for progress in the U.S. Congress, and for movement from other developed and developing countries.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled two years ago that the EPA has the authority to make these regulations if human health is threatened by global warming pollution, but no regulations went forward during the Bush administration.

Carbon dioxide, one of several greenhouse gases that spur global warming, is emitted by natural and industrial sources, including fossil-fueled vehicles, coal-fired power plants and oil refineries.

(Additional reporting by Tim Gardner and Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by Eric Walsh)

EPA says CO2 emissions endanger human health
Ayesha Rascoe, Reuters 17 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Environmental Protection Agency on Friday unveiled a finding that greenhouse gases endanger human health and welfare, opening the door to federal regulation of carbon dioxide as a pollutant.

The finding does not "automatically trigger" new carbon rules but could allow the EPA to move forward with limiting greenhouse gas emissions under the federal Clean Air Act.

Rising levels of greenhouse gases "are the unambiguous result of human emissions, and are very likely the cause of the observed increase in average temperatures and other climatic changes," the EPA proposal said.

Environmentalists applauded the decision, while affected industries expressed concern.

* "With this step, Administrator Lisa Jackson and the Obama administration have gone a long way to restore respect for both science and law," David Doniger of the Natural Resources Defense Council said in a statement.

* Business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, have warned that the U.S. economy could grind to a halt if the EPA were to begin regulating carbon.

Bruce Braine, a vice president for policy analysis at American Electric Power, the country's largest burner of coal for electricity generation, said that AEP would rather see greenhouse gases regulated by legislation.

"The Clean Air Act was never really designed with carbon in mind, it was designed for air pollutants in the conventional sense," like acid rain and smog components and mercury and lead that are easier to control on a local basis, he said.

* Joe Mendelson, global warming policy director at the National Wildlife Federation, said "the EPA decision is historic and a game-changer for climate policy that will have political and policy repercussions domestically and abroad."

"This is the single largest step the federal government has taken to fight climate change," he said.

* Charles Drevna, president of the National Petrochemical and Refiners Association, said "such regulation would have an enormous impact on every facet of the economy, businesses large and small, as well as on the general population."

"Before moving forward with regulation, the United States must ensure that other major global contributors are similarly committed to reducing their ambient greenhouse gas concentrations," he added.

* The move to regulate carbon through the EPA will likely place pressure on Congress to pass legislation to limit greenhouse gases. The House Energy and Commerce Committee hopes to clear such a bill by the end of May.

With the economy faltering, such legislation faces an uphill battle as detractors say it will raise energy costs for businesses and consumers.

* The White House has said it prefers for Congress to pass a bill that caps carbon emissions and requires companies to acquire permits to release carbon into the atmosphere.

"Today's action by EPA should give the Obama administration more ammunition to get Congress to do its job correctly," said Frank O'Donnell, president of environmental group Clean Air Watch. "The Obama administration now has the legal equivalent of a .44 Magnum (firearm). The bullets aren't loaded yet, but they could be."

* The EPA will accept public comments on the finding for 60 days. The agency will also hold two hearings on the proposal.

(Additional Reporting by Tim Gardner; Editing by Paul Simao)


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