Best of our wild blogs: 22 Apr 09


27 Apr (Mon): Public Seminar on “Status of Coral Reefs in Asia and the World" on the wild shores of singapore blog

Hantu coral survey 14 Mar 09
on the Blue Water Volunteers blog

St. John's Island Recee
on the Urban Forest blog

Ferocious monkey goes shopping at Elias Mall
on the Lazy Lizard's Tales blog

Squirrel drowning at Swiss Club: an update
on the Lazy Lizard's Tales blog

Red-legged Crake hit by a car
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

How is garbage collected from ships in Singapore?
on the wild shores of singapore blog


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Earth Day Facts: When It Is, How It Began, What to Do

John Roach, National Geographic 20 Apr 09;

From not-so-humble beginnings in 1970, when 20 million participated across the U.S., Earth Day has grown into a global tradition, with a billion expected to take part in 2009. Find out when it is, how it started, how it's evolved, and what you can do.

When Is Earth Day?

Every day, the saying goes, is Earth Day. But it's popularly celebrated on April 22. Why?

One persistent rumor holds that April 22 was chosen because it's the birthday of Vladimir Lenin, the founder of the Soviet Union.

"Lenin's goal was to destroy private property and this goal is obviously shared by environmentalists," the Capitalism Magazine Web site noted in a 2004 article perpetuating the theory.

Kathleen Rogers, president of Washington, D.C.-based Earth Day Network, which was founded by the original organizers of Earth Day, scoffs at the rumored communist connection.

She said April 22, 1970, was chosen for the first Earth Day in part because it fell on a Wednesday, the best part of the week to encourage a large turnout for the environmental rallies held across the country.

"It worked out perfectly, because everybody was at work and they all left," she said.

In fact, more than 20 million people across the U.S. are estimated to have participated in that first Earth Day.

(PICTURES: The First Earth Day--Bell-Bottoms and Gas Masks.)

Earth Day is now celebrated every year by more than a billion people in 180 nations around the world, according to Rogers.

Mad People and a Frustrated Politician

Earth Day's history is rooted in 1960s activism. The environment was in visible ruins and people were mad, according to Rogers.

"It wasn't uncommon in some cities during rush hour to be standing on a street corner and not be able to see across the street" because of pollution, she said.

Despite the anger, green issues were absent from the U.S. political agenda, which frustrated U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, whose campaigns for the environment through much of the 1960s had fallen flat.

First Earth Day "Took off Like Gangbusters"

In 1969 Nelson hit on the idea of an environmental protest modeled after anti-Vietnam War demonstrations called teach-ins.

"It took off like gangbusters. Telegrams, letters, and telephone inquiries poured in from all across the country," Nelson recounted in an essay shortly before he died in July 2005 at 89.

"The American people finally had a forum to express its concern about what was happening to the land, rivers, lakes, and air—and they did so with spectacular exuberance."

Nelson recruited activist Denis Hayes to organize the April 22, 1970, teach-in, which today is sometimes credited for launching the modern environmental movement.

By the end of 1970, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency had been born, and efforts to improve air and water quality were gaining political traction.

"It was truly amazing what happened," Rogers said. "Blocks just tumbled."

Earth Day Evolves

Amy Cassara is a senior associate at the World Resources Institute in Washington, D.C., who analyzes global environmental trends.

She noted that, since Earth Day started, environmentalism has moved from a fringe issue to a mainstream concern. "As many as 80 percent of Americans describe themselves as environmentalists," Cassara said.

Environmental issues today, however, are less immediate than dirty air, toxic water, and a hole in the ozone layer, she added.

For example, the impacts of global climate change are largely abstract and difficult to explain "without coming off as a doomsday prognosticator," Cassara said.

"As we become more industrialized and our supply chains become less transparent, it can be more difficult to understand the environmental consequences of our actions," she noted.

Earth Day Network is pushing the Earth Day movement from single-day actions—such as park cleanups and tree-planting parties—to long-term commitments.

"Planting a tree, morally and poetically, requires taking care of it for a really long time, not just sticking it in the ground," Earth Day Network's Rogers said.

To help make the transition, the organization is aligned with a hundred thousand schools around the world, integrating projects with an environmental component into the year-round curriculum.

"They announce the results on Earth Day, so Earth Day becomes a moment in time," Rogers said.

Cassara, of the World Resources Institute, said her organization uses Earth Day to convene with leaders in the movement and assess progress in their campaigns.

"[Earth Day] doesn't raise awareness among the general public in the same way that it used to. But it still provides a benchmark for reflection among those of us in the environmental community," she said.

What to Do on Earth Day?

For those whose inner environmentalist speaks loudest on April 22, Earth Day Network's Rogers encourages them to make a public commitment to take an environmental action.

"We are headed for a billion commitments to do something green," Rogers said. "And that doesn't mean think about it—it means do something."

Commitment ideas promoted by the Earth Day Network include pledging to educate friends and family on global warming or buy green products such as energy-saving compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs).

The commitments are part of a yearlong initiative called the Green Generation, which leads up to the 40th anniversary of Earth Day in 2010.

(See pictures of quirky Earth Day stunts.)

According to Rogers, everyone is part of this generation, which marks the transition from the industrial revolution to the green revolution.

"It is also about the green generation of energy and the generation of green jobs. ... The name [Green Generation], whenever I say it to people, they have their own idea of what it means, which is exactly what we want."


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Is it time to retire Earth Day?

Every Day Is Earth Day?
If only it were so. Why it may be time to give up the one-day-a-year celebration
Daniel Stone, Newsweek 21 Apr 09;

It's widely debated how exactly it started, but the roots of the modern environmental movement trace back to the 1960s. Early in the decade, Rachel Carson published her nonfiction work "Silent Spring" as a wake-up call to current and impending environmental concerns. Several years later, U.S. Sen. Gaylord Nelson (of Wisconsin), one of the government's first eco warriors, sought to harvest general awareness and turn it into a movement. He hit on the idea of an event, modeled after the anti-Vietnam war teach-ins of the day, to raise eco consciousness nationwide. The event that turned into the first "Earth Day" took place on April 22, 1970, and became the catalyst for a series of nature-based legislation and eventually the emergence of a mainstream environmental movement.

Back then, the issues were only broadly understood.

There was some talk about extinctions of wildlife, scarce groundwater supplies and a niche-but-growing theory about something called climate change (Was the Earth, NEWSWEEK wondered in the 1970s, getting colder—or was it getting warmer?). Still, there was an emerging consensus that our planet's resources are not infinite, and if the exploitation of them remained unaddressed, bigger problems awaited. The takeaway for the 20 million people who participated that first Earth Day in 1970 was simple: we all live on the same rock; let's not foul our nest.

The first Earth Day was like the sounding of a bullhorn for the people to unite and get moving, which worked. But this year, 39 years later, the original intent has long eroded. The one-day demonstration that started a movement lost most of its luster decades ago. Yet we still have it—and that has alarming implications for our environmental progress. What was originally intended as a sounding alarm has been reproduced each year in the exact same way. The problem is, it's hard to be motivated by a screeching alarm when you've been hitting the snooze button for the last four decades. Even worse, maintaining an old solution to a problem that changes by the minute seems to compartmentalize a movement that, by now, should be much broader, more frequent and much more inclusive.

Ardent environmentalists hold some contempt at the idea of still having an annual, one-day celebration. As a friend who's an environmental researcher told me last week, Earth Day for environmental professionals is like Easter for Christians: it's a good excuse to have a party, but the real discipleship is supposed to happen all year. In other words, the eco roar that once captivated the world's attention somehow turned into an annual whimper of corporate sponsorships and moving yet empty speeches about the future of our children. "It's been reduced to planetary sound bites," says Chip Giller, the editor of the environmental online magazine Grist.org, which this month launched a "Screw Earth Day" campaign. "It's not about a single day, dude, it's about living green every day," reasoned David Roberts, one of the site's writers, in response to criticism of the site's irreverent take on the celebration.

In that sense, it's safe to think of modern celebrations of Earth Day as an annual tradition, something akin to, say, Mothers Day, when we're supposed to celebrate on one day how much we love mothers all year. And there's great virtue in annual celebrations, even an annual ode to Mother Nature. In a larger sense, it marks a recognition of where the conservation movement has come from, and where it's going.


EARTH DAY 2009
environmentalist judy bonds at 2005 rally at Goal Coal
'Slaves to Industry'
Daniel Stone

In the middle of coal-producing Appalachia, the daughter of a miner is standing up for the environment.
Activist: Green the Ghetto and Forget Polar Bears
Green for God: Religious Environmentalism
A Green Latino Movement in South Los Angeles
Is It Time to Retire Earth Day?
Photos: It Ain't Easy Being Green


Loud advocacy on the National Mall and assembly fields across the country do indeed spread awareness of what people can do to help. It also opens the tent of the movement and encourages people to modestly change their lifestyle. Some thinkers, like environmental historian William Cronon, see an undeniable value in how, given the intricacies of environmental issues—inner city health, global warming, renewable energy—an annual day of environmental reckoning brings everyone to the table to take stock of the broader movement.

But when it comes to environmental progress, shouldn't we be further along in 2009? And if we're not, it's certainly a signal that we've got to move faster. "We've got to accept that we're never going to solve a problem as big as global warming as individuals," says Adam Rome, a Penn State professor of human interaction with nature, who's working on a book about the first Earth Day. "Expecting present-day Earth Day to change society is ridiculous." Having an annual open house implies that there are still people on the outside who have yet to come in. And when they see environmentalists going big one day of the year, it suggests the rest of the days they go home, which doesn't quite attach urgency to the issue.

No one can belittle the accomplishments of the modern environmental movement. As the science has advanced, so too has the sheer number of groups and dollars devoted to conservation and activism. Yet a singular Earth Day—the same kind that we had in 1970 when we knew much less—suggests that we still haven't moved much, or at all. It makes it appear that environmental protection is still a franchise issue, one of many, that we don't have time to address as our busy lives race, so we make time to celebrate once each year.

The mantra that developed in the years following the original Earth Day was that "Earth Day is Every Day," or at least that it should be. That kitschy statement (who can disagree?) hung on a poster in my elementary school, two decades ago. The fact that we still, 39 years later, have one loud day devoted to environmental prudence belies that pursuit of diligent year-round conservation. As we approach the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, t's a contradiction worth noting.


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Great Barrier Reef: Astonishing recovery from 2006 bleaching event

Reef boom beats doom
The University of Queensland Australia 21 Apr 09;

Marine scientists say they are astonished at the spectacular recovery of certain coral reefs in Australia's Great Barrier Reef Marine Park from a devastating coral bleaching event in 2006.

That year high sea temperatures caused massive and severe coral bleaching in the Keppel Islands, in the southern part of the Great Barrier Reef. The damaged reefs were quickly smothered by a single species of seaweed � an event that can spell the total loss of the corals.

However, a lucky combination of rare circumstances meant the reefs were able to achieve a spectacular recovery, with abundant corals re-established in a single year, said Dr Guillermo Diaz-Pulido, from the Centre for Marine Studies at The University of Queensland and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies (CoECRS).

Dr Diaz-Pulido said that the rapid recovery was due to an exceptional combination of previously-underestimated ecological mechanisms.

"Three factors were critical," he said.

"The first was exceptionally high regrowth of fragments of surviving coral tissue. The second was an unusual seasonal dieback in the seaweeds, and the third was the presence of a highly competitive coral species, which was able to outgrow the seaweed.

"But this also all happened in the context of a well-protected marine area and moderately good water quality.

"It is rare to see reports of reefs that bounce back from mass coral bleaching or other human impacts in less than a decade or two.

"The exceptional aspect was that corals recovered by rapidly regrowing from surviving tissue," said Dr Sophie Dove, also from CoECRS and The University of Queensland.

"Recovery of corals is usually thought to depend on sexual reproduction and the settlement and growth of new corals arriving from other reefs," she said.

"This study demonstrates that for fast-growing coral species asexual reproduction is a vital component of reef resilience."

Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg of the CoECRS and The University of Queensland said that coral reefs globally were increasingly being damaged by mass bleaching and climate change.

Their capacity to recovery from that damage was critical to their future, he said.

"Our study suggests that managing local stresses that affect reefs, such as overfishing and declining water quality, can have a big influence on the trajectory of reefs under rapid global change," Professor Hoegh-Guldberg said.

"Clearly, we need to urgently deal with the problem of rising carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, but managing reefs to reduce the impact of local factors can buy important time while we do this."

Understanding the different mechanisms of resilience is critical for reef management under climate change.

"Diversity in processes may well be critical to the overall resilience and persistence of coral reef ecosystems globally," said Dr Laurence McCook, from the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority.

The research was partially funded by a Pew Fellowship in Marine Conservation awarded to Dr McCook, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority as well as the ARC Centre of Excellence program.

"This combination of circumstances provided a lucky escape for the coral reefs in Keppel Islands, but is also a clear warning for the Great Barrier Reef," Dr McCook said.

"As climate change and other human impacts intensify, we need to do everything we possibly can to protect the resilience of coral reefs."

The research was published this week in the paper Doom and boom on a resilient reef: Climate change, algal overgrowth and coral recovery, in the journal PLoS ONE, by Guillermo Diaz-Pulido, Laurence J. McCook, Sophie Dove, Ray Berkelmans, George Roff, David I. Kline, Scarla Weeks, Richard D. Evans, David H. Williamson and Ove Hoegh-Guldberg.


'Lucky escape' for Australian coral reef
AFP Yahoo News 23 Apr 09;

SYDNEY (AFP) – A section of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, which scientists have warned could be killed by global warming within decades, has regenerated itself in record time, a scientist said Thursday.

But Laurence McCook, head of research for the authority that preserves the World Heritage-listed reef, said the giant organism remained at serious threat of climate change and labelled the partial regeneration a "lucky escape.".

The badly damaged stretch of coral at Keppel Island, at the reef's southern end, became strangled by seaweed after it began bleaching in 2006 due to elevated sea temperatures and acidity, the results of global warming.

Bleaching occurs when the plant-like organisms that make up coral die and leave behind the white limestone skeleton of the reef.

Bleached coral usually takes up to 10 years to regrow by a process of "reseeding," when larvae from a distant reef is carried by currents to repopulate the damaged area.

But in an unusual combination of circumstances, McCook said, the Keppel reef managed "asexual regrowth" from surviving tissue fragments and had returned to abundance in just 12 months.

"This is very unusual because it was a single species of seaweed and it's a species that dies back in winter," McCook told AFP.

"Then some of the coral had actually maintained enough surviving tissue that they were actually able to grow much faster than we would normally expect."

But he urged caution about the finding, describing it as an unusual and rare combination of the perfect conditions.

"If the reefs had been heavily polluted, if the area had been overfished, if tourism wasn't being well managed, all of those things could lead to the reef failing to recover," he said.

While the overall health of the Great Barrier Reef was "relatively good on a global scale," McCook said it was under very serious threat from climate change and other human impacts.

"This is a timely warning of just how serious the damage (can be) that climate change can cause. We had a lucky escape because of these unusual circumstances and that is a rare event," he said.

The reef, which is treasured as the world's largest living organism, stretches for 345,000 square kilometres (133,000 square miles) off Australia's northeast coast.

Coral growth has slowed markedly on the reef since 1990, believed to be caused by warmer seas and higher acidity.


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On Earth Day, support farms here by choosing locally-grown produce

Go local to go green
Teh Jen Lee, The New Paper 22 Apr 09;

FOR Earth Hour, there was the call to switch off lights and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

For Earth Day tomorrow, the call is to become part of 'The Green Generation'.

The Earth Day Network website states: 'With negotiations for a new global climate agreement coming up in December, Earth Day 2009 must be a day of action and civic participation, to defend The Green Generation's core principles.'

The three principles are:

# A future based on renewable energy that will end dependency on fossil fuels

# Individuals committed to responsible, sustainable consumption

# The creation of a new green economy.

How can Singaporeans be part of The Green Generation?

By choosing to buy locally-grown produce and reducing their food miles.

Food miles refers to the distance food is transported from where it is produced to the consumer.

It is a factor used in assessing the environmental impact of food production.

Buying local produce meets all three principles of The Green Generation.

Firstly, there is less dependence on fossil fuels because there is less transporting and less air-conditioned storing of the produce to be done.

Locally-grown food can be harvested and put on supermarket shelves within hours.

Compare this with cabbages from China, which have to pass through Beijing and Guangzhou before reaching Singapore.

Mr Tai Yee Seng, group marketing manager for Zenxin Agri-organic Food, a company based in Malaysia and Singapore, said: 'Reducing the food miles can also ensure freshness. When food is fresher, it's more nutritious.'

Secondly, buying local represents responsible consumption because there is greater accountability over the food that is grown here.

Farms in Singapore produce seafood, eggs and vegetables. Quite a few of these farms grow organic produce.

Even those that do not, limit the amount of chemical pesticides and fertilisers used because they are closely monitored by the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA).

AVA said it checks local farm produce for pesticide residues up to six times a year, depending on the crop cycle.

Eating locally is also more sustainable because there is less waste.

Mr Tai said: 'Up to half of the harvest could end up being wasted when produce is exported, because only the best are selected for export.'

He added there's more packaging as well to ensure that produce does not move too much when they are transported over long distances.

Support local farms

Finally, supporting local agriculture goes towards the creation of a new eco-friendly economy.

There are enterprising local farmers like Mr William Ho, 43, who is an in-house guide at the Farmart Centre in Sungei Tengah, which showcases Singapore's farms.

Mr Ho is one of the 28 'farmpreneurs' in the Kranji Countryside Association (KCA), a group which promotes agri-tainment - the merging of agricultural production with recreational activities and public education.

He said: 'There is a great variety of local produce. We have the best quality of chicken and quail eggs available because AVA checks on us every day.'

While there is a price premium for local produce, he said it is worth it due to the many food safety measures put in place.

Mr Ho, director of Lian Wah Hang Farm, which produces poultry like quail, added: 'The more people buy from us, the more we can do mass production and bring costs down.'

Ms Ivy Singh-Lim, president of KCA, agreed: 'When some people see agriculture, they see poverty instead of food.

'We should have the kampungs back, not just small plots of greenery. Stop importing bromeliads from Africa and start having food plants all around.

'To paraphrase a popular slogan in the 1960s, we should make gardens, not war.'


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Electric vehicles yet to win hearts in Singapore

Straits Times 22 Apr 09;

SALES of the first commercially available electric vehicle here have not been exactly electrifying.

The E-Max scooter was approved by the Land Transport Authority last month. But so far, only one has been registered although distributor Zeco says it has received 10 orders.

Sources blame its low speed - it struggles to hit 50kmh - and its exclusion from the expressways.

The Straits Times understands the Government is not convinced that such vehicles are feasible yet.

A key reason is range anxiety - worry over running out of power.

An electric car being developed by Nissan Motor, for instance, can do 150km between charges. But in a jam on a hot day, with the aircon blasting, the range may plunge.

Electric cars take several hours to recharge from a home power socket. Quick charges require heavy-duty infrastructure, which is not readily available.

Battery lifespan and safety are also concerns. Finally, the carbon footprint of electric cars may be substantial if they are recharged by coal-fired power stations.

But proponents say they are ideal for a small city state like Singapore, where drivers clock an average of only 50km a day.

CHRISTOPHER TAN

Electric cars to cruise on Singapore roads
Govt to test the green vehicles which are set to arrive by early next year
Christopher Tan, Straits Times 22 Apr 09;

MOTORISTS could start breaking free of the tyranny of the pump as soon as early next year, when the first all-electric cars are set to arrive.

The Straits Times understands the Government will launch a new initiative soon to test these high-tech, environmentally-sound vehicles to see how they perform under local conditions.

The first all-electric cars are expected to be brought in by Acceleron EDS, a Sydney-based manufacturer of electric vehicles that is majority owned by Singapore brothers Irving and Ivan Yuen.

It will be followed by major manufacturers, starting with Nissan, Renault and Volkswagen.

Owners of all-electric cars will not need to visit petrol stations - the cars are fully battery-powered and are recharged via a normal household electric socket.

The cars will produce no tailpipe emissions, offer near silent operation and will be far cheaper to maintain than conventional cars: Power is cheaper than petrol, and there is no need to replace engine oil, spark plugs or filters, for instance.

A Toyota Corolla-sized electric car will cost around five cents per km to run based on today's electricity tariff - one-third that of an equivalent petrol car.

The downside is electric cars will cost more upfront: Acceleron expects its cars to retail at $20,000 to $25,000 more than a petrol model of the same size.

This is after the current green vehicle rebate, which grants a 40 per cent reduction on the additional registration fee, the main car tax.

Nissan, Renault and Volkswagen do not have price details.

But the Japanese company indicated that its electric car would cost 'at least 1.5 times' as much as a conventional model. As a result, the company is hoping to get a leg-up via bigger tax breaks. It has been in talks with various government agencies on this, sources said.

Renault and Nissan, for example, have already secured governmental support in various countries, including Ireland, Monaco and China.

Singapore's Economic Development Board, which has been trying to encourage the use of electric vehicles here because they could form the basis of a new high-tech industry, is expected to help defray the cost of the initial batch of 'test-bed' cars.

The EDB may place these cars under its Transport Technology Innovation and Development Scheme, which would exempt them from car taxes. It is unclear whether more grants would be given to cars that arrive at showrooms.

The board would only say it 'has been working with partner agencies to develop Singapore as a 'living laboratory' to develop, test, and implement innnovative solutions here for global markets'.

Acceleron's Mr Irving Yuen is all ears. The brothers, he said, chose to set up operations in Australia because 'it has a 20-year history in electric vehicles and it has automotive engineers with extensive knowledge on electric vehicles'.

But if given a boost by the Government, it is willing to set up operations in Singapore and use it as a springboard to enter other markets in the region.

Acceleron does not make its cars from scratch. Rather, it takes a conventional car and replaces its internal combustion system with an electric drive one.

This, explained Mr Yuen, is faster and cheaper than designing and making a car from scratch. It also allows customers a wide choice of models.

The race to get alternative fuel vehicles on roads throughout the world is heating up. Among the early leaders are small companies like Tesla, whose all-electric Roadster is already on American roads. Chevrolet's Volt will hit US showrooms next year.

The latest incarnation of Toyota's hybrid Prius is also due out in Singapore later this year.


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Earth Day Message from Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary

General and Executive Director, UN Environment Programme
UNEP website 21 Apr 09;

Nairobi, 21 April 2009 On April 22, we celebrate the Anniversary of the first Earth Day in 1970, a landmark in the history of the environmental movement - a movement, which gave birth to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in 1972.

The first Earth Day was conceived partly out of frustration that basic issues like air quality and water pollution still had not been addressed. Today, intelligent management of the planet has to be a fundamental issue taking center stage, as the international community faces the twin challenges of dealing with the most serious global economic crisis since the 1930s, and negotiating an equitable and definitive agreement on climate change in Copenhagen in December.

Many major economies have introduced "green" stimulus packages. Various programs, such as UNEP's Green Economy Initiative, seek to re-focus the global economy towards investments in clean technologies and "natural" infrastructure such as forests and soils, as the best bet for real growth, combating climate change and triggering an employment boom in the 21st century.

However, this is just the beginning. Sealing the climate deal at the crucial UN climate convention in Copenhagen will not happen without a groundswell of public pressure for action on climate change ? in developed and developing nations alike. The message to world leaders is simple and urgent: "Seal the Deal! - Work together to find a solution that is scientifically-credible, equitable and economically-defensible.

The past few years have seen renewed interest from the public in engaging in environmental stewardship. Bridging the gap between Earth Day on April 22nd, and World Environment Day, 6 weeks later on June 5th, is one of the principal vehicles through which the United Nations mobilizes this enthusiasm, enhancing political attention and action. The theme for WED 2009, Your Planet Needs You. UNite to Combat Climate Change, reflects the urgency for nations to join in addressing climate change, by reducing their carbon footprint, and improving the management of forests and other valuable natural resources.

Earth Day initiatives demonstrate how responsible governments, civil society, and the private sector can catalyze this energy, by promoting an enhanced understanding of the challenges we all face in safeguarding our own survival and that of future generations.


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Marine turtles victims of Southeast Asian fishing nets: WWF

Yahoo News 21 Apr 09;

MANILA (AFP) – Endangered marine turtles and sharks are being killed each year by Southeast Asian fishermen who throw them away as "unwanted catch", the World Wildlife Fund said Tuesday.

The international conservation group estimated in a new study that millions of kilograms (pounds) of marine species are caught in fishing nets and discarded every year in the so-called Coral Triangle.

The triangle, which spans the seas of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands, is considered by scientists to contain the most diverse collection of marine species anywhere on earth.

It is also home to six of the world's seven known species of marine turtles, including three that are listed as "endangered" under the so-called "Red List" of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and three on its "Critically Endangered" list, WWF said in a statement.

The study co-authored by the fund found at least 38 million tonnes of fish, consisting of at least 40 percent of the world's recorded fish catch, is unused, wasted or not accounted for.

In the Coral Triangle where fishing is highly unregulated, this translates into many millions of kilograms of so-called bycatch, it added.

"In many cases, fish and marine animals are thrown back to sea dead or dying and currently even if bycatch is used there is no way to tell whether it was sustainable to remove it in the first place," said WWF Coral Triangle specialist Keith Symington.

"It is an insidious and invisible form of over-fishing," he added.

"The at-sea bycatch of marine turtles, for example, is one of the greatest threats to the future existence of these highly endangered animals. Marine turtle populations in this region have plummeted over the past decade due to indiscriminate fishing methods."

WWF said it is introducing circle hooks that can greatly reduce turtle bycatch from tuna longlines, without compromising fishing efficiency.

"Circle hooks or C-hooks are a better alternative to the currently used J-hooks because of their round shape, which makes it difficult for turtles to swallow as opposed to the sharper-ended J-hook that can cause severe damage to turtles when accidentally ingested," Symington said.

He said bycatch is "a major killer of marine wildlife, putting several species at risk of extinction and drastically altering the sensitive balance of marine ecosystems."

The paper is to be published in an upcoming edition of Marine Policy, a journal of ocean policy studies.

The paper's figures go well beyond previous global estimates, which focus mainly on catch which is thrown away and vary from between seven and 27 million tonnes a year.

Millions of kilos of marine species wasted every year
Ellalyn B. De Vera, Manila Bulletin 22 Apr 09;

The international conservation group World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has estimated that “millions of kilograms” of marine species, including highly-endangered marine turtle and threatened fish species such as sharks, are wasted every year in the Coral Triangle.

The Philippines is one of the countries bordering the "global center of marine biodiversity" known as the Coral Triangle.

In a scientific paper entitled “Defining and Estimating Global Marine Fisheries Bycatch,” co-authored by the WWF, it cited that most of the marine species caught are being thrown back to sea “dead or dying” because they are considered “non-target” or unintentional catch.

This has resulted to nearly half of the world’s recorded fish catch to be “unused, wasted, or not accounted for.”

“In the Coral Triangle where fishing is highly unregulated, this translates into many millions of kilograms of marine life wasted,” the paper stated.

It estimated that each year, 38 million tons of fish worldwide, which constitute at least 40 percent of what is taken from the ocean through fishing activities, is unmanaged or unused and should be considered bycatch.

“Bycatch” or “discards” are part of the catch that is not marketed and discarded at sea during the sorting process.

“In many cases, fish and marine animals are thrown back to sea dead or dying and currently even if bycatch is used there is no way to tell whether it was sustainable to remove it in the first place. It is an insidious and invisible form of overfishing,” WWF Coral Triangle Bycatch strategy leader Keith Symington said.

“The at-sea bycatch of marine turtles, for example, is one of the greatest threats to the future existence of these highly endangered animals. Marine turtle populations in this region have plummeted over the past decade due to indiscriminate fishing methods,” Symington added.

WWF noted that the Coral Triangle, bordered by the Philippines, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Malaysia, Solomon Islands, and Timor Leste, is home to six of the world’s seven known species of marine turtles.

The group said three species of marine turtles are listed as “endangered” under the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List and three as “critically endangered.”

Symington said to help address the problem of turtle bycatch in the Coral Triangle, circle hooks, a simple yet innovative fishing hook, should be used.

He explained that using circle hooks, as an alternative to J-hooks, can greatly reduce turtle bycatch from tuna long lines, without compromising fishing efficiency.


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WWF Eggs On To Save The Turtle Egg

Bernama 21 Apr 09;

PETALING JAYA, April 21 (Bernama) -- The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF-Malaysia) has embarked on an 'eggs-traordinary' campaign to bag 40,000 signatures in support of preserving the beleaguered turtle eggs.

Its executive director, Datuk Dr Dionysius S. K. Sharma, said the campaign sought support to regulate laws to ban the sale and consumption of turtle eggs nationwide and establish comprehensive and holistic federal legislations to conserve marine turtles.

"Through this campaign, we aim to improve the protection of our marine turtles.

"So, when they sign on to the campaign, they pledge to themselves that they would not eat turtle eggs anymore," he told a media briefing on the campaign here today.

The public can start signing up for the campaign from between tomorrow and Sept 30, by logging in www.wwf.org.my.

Sharma said, marine turtles were now threatened with extinction due to various factors, including consumption of turtles eggs, those accidentally caught in fishing gear, poorly planned coastal development, nesting beach and illegal trade of turtles parts.

"We want to tell the public that we need your support, and with just one signature, maybe they can support us to save the turtles," he added.

-- BERNAMA

WWF wants turtle eggs off Malaysian menus
AFP 22 Apr 09;

KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) — Environmental group WWF Wednesday launched a campaign to stop Malaysians eating turtle eggs, in a bid to help save the marine creatures from extinction.

Turtle eggs are openly sold in markets in parts of Malaysia. Turtles once arrived in their thousands to lay eggs on Malaysian beaches, but are now increasingly rare thanks to poaching and coastal development.

The five-month online campaign aims to collect 40,000 signatures from Malaysians pledging to stop consuming the eggs and halt the trade in turtles and their parts.

"Turtles play a critical role in keeping marine ecosystems healthy," WWF-Malaysia executive director Dionysius S.K. Sharma said in a statement.

"Marine turtles are threatened with extinction due to various factors, including the practice of consuming turtle eggs, becoming accidentally caught in fishing gear, poorly planned coastal development, marine and nesting beach pollution as well as illegal trade of turtles and their parts," he said.

Sharma said that some 10,000 leatherback turtles nested in northeastern Terengganu state every year in the 1950s but that this had been reduced to just 10 a year at present.

Malaysian authorities said last year that they are carrying out night patrols near endangered hawksbill turtle nesting sites in southern Malacca state after 4,000 eggs were stolen.

Under Malaysian law, it is illegal to collect turtle eggs without a permit from the fisheries department, but steady demand for turtle products and eggs in Southeast Asia continues to drive the illegal trade.

The turtles' cause needs to be egged on
New Straits Times 23 Apr 09;

KUALA LUMPUR: Despite years of campaigning, environmentalists are struggling to keep turtle eggs off the dinner table.
An unpublished report by World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Malaysia said 90 per cent of those who buy and eat turtle eggs were Malaysians.

WWF (Coral Triangle) senior adviser Kevin Hiew said consumers bought turtle eggs in Terengganu, Pahang and Malacca.

The consumption of turtle eggs, together with poorly planned coastal development, pollution, the illegal trade in the animal and its parts, and getting caught in fishing nets threatened the existence of all four species that nest in Malaysia -- the leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea), green turtle (Chelonia mydas), hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata), and Olive Ridely (Lepidochelys olivacea).

WWF executive director Datuk Dr Dionysius Sharma said this issue could not be ignored any longer.
"The threats are all bearing down on the turtles, driving them to extinction."

He said action must be taken now to save the green turtle, hawksbill and Olive Ridely from the fate of the leatherbacks.

"There were more than 10,000 leatherback nests at Rantau Abang, Terengganu in the 1950s. Now there are fewer than 10," he said at the launch of WWF's "Egg > Life" campaign, which runs from today till Sept 30. The goal is to get 40,000 pledges not to eat turtle eggs.

"We're also calling on the government to look into comprehensive and consistent federal legislation to conserve marine turtles," he said.

The laws against the trade and consumption of turtle eggs varied from state to state.

Since WWF began campaigning to save turtles in the 1970s, only Sabah and Sarawak have banned the sale and consumption of turtle eggs.

In Terengganu, only the sale and consumption of leatherback eggs is banned. Trade in green, hawksbill and Olive Ridely eggs are allowed.

Other states, such as Malacca, grant licences to turtle egg collectors who are allowed to sell them only to the state Fisheries Department.


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Rare 'mountain chicken' frogs airlifted from path of deadly fungus

One of the world's rarest species of amphibians, the mountain chicken frog, has been airlifted to safety from Montserrat in a last-ditch attempt to save it from extinction
Jessica Aldred, guardian.co.uk 21 Apr 09;

Conservationists have rescued a number of critically endangered "mountain chicken" frogs from the path of a fatal disease which has hit their Caribbean island home of Montserrat.
The decision to remove 50 mountain chicken frogs (Leptodactylus fallax) from their natural habitat was taken in the face of the spread of the chytrid fungus, which is devastating amphibian populations worldwide.

The Zoological Society London (ZSL) and the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, based in Jersey, have each provided a home for 12 of the frogs which have been removed from Montserrat. Another 26 have gone to Parken zoo in Stockholm.

The plan is to breed the rescued frogs in captivity in a bid to save the species from extinction.

Montserrat is one of only two sites where the once-common mountain chicken is found, but hundreds of the frogs - one of the world's largest species - have been killed in the last few weeks by the disease.

The mountain chicken - named because its flesh is said to taste like chicken - is threatened by hunting for food and loss of habitat, and most recently by outbreaks of the chytrid fungus.

Chytrid fungus is a disease which infects the skin through which many amphibians drink and breathe. In recent decades it has spread rapidly, and some scientists believe the situation is worsening as temperatures rise due to of climate change.

The other stronghold of the species, Dominica, saw populations crash from around 2002 onwards as a result of the disease, which is thought to have spread to Montserrat late last year or earlier this year.

Dr Andrew Cunningham, a senior ZSL scientist, said: "Chytridiomycosis has already decimated the mountain chickens on Dominica and within a few weeks of the disease being diagnosed on the neighbouring island of Montserrat, its impact has been catastrophic. The mountain chicken frog has been virtually wiped out on the island and the number of surviving frogs decreases every day."

Director of conservation at the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, John Fa, said the drastic action to remove the frogs was taken "simply because we know from other experiences that chytrid will completely decimate populations of frogs".

Scientists working with the Montserrat government were able to reach the main healthy population, which they knew would be soon by hit by the spreading chytrid, and remove individuals before it was too late, he said.

The Durrell trust has housed its rescued mountain chickens in a bio-secure unit at its wildlife park in Jersey and hopes to breed from the frogs to create a population which can be reintroduced in as little as two years.

ZSL London zoo will now house mountain chicken frogs from both Dominica and Montserrat in its captive breeding unit which includes temperature controlled rooms, automated spray systems and dedicated areas for rearing live food.

Bio-security measures including full paper suits, masks and gloves worn by keepers, ensure that no pathogens - such as the chytridiomycosis - can enter from the outside.

The mountain chicken is difficult to keep and breed in captivity because of its voracious appetite and its unusual breeding behaviour in which the frog creates a foam nest in the ground for the tadpoles which the female then feeds regularly with unfertilised eggs.

The plan is to reintroduce the frogs to a part of Montserrat which has not been affected by the chytrid fungus, while also maintaining a "safety net population" in captivity in case wild populations are hit by future outbreaks of chytrid.


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Brussels seeks to reel in overfishing

Yacine Le Forestier Yahoo News 21 Apr 09;

BRUSSELS (AFP) – The EU Commission is set to unveil its vision for a sustainable fishing industry on Wednesday, seeking cuts in fleets and proposing a fishing quota trading system that is not to everyone's taste.

The ideas are included in a draft paper, seen by AFP on Tuesday, that is due to be formally adopted by the EU executive on Wednesday.

While seeking to fix more long-term methods to tackle the growing problem of overfishing, the Green Paper on reforming the European Union's fisheries policy risks inflaming discontent which has already led to French fishermen crippling English Channel ports with a three-day blockade last week.

The need for a policy overhaul is underlined in the paper.

"European fish stocks have been overfished for decades and the fishing fleets remain too large for the available resources," said the draft paper.

"Too many vessels chase too few fish," it added.

"The community's fishing fleet is now two-thirds bigger than the sea can offer in resources," explained one commission official, commenting on the report which could yet be tweaked ahead of its formal publication.

One remedy which the commission would like the 27 EU member states to consider is to liberalise the quota system to encourage sustainable fishing.

Under the current system, EU nations haggle at the end of each year on how to share out fishing quotas among themselves that are then distributed among their national fishing fleets.

Brussels is now leaning towards a system already used in Australia, New Zealand, Norway and Iceland whereby governments hand out "individual and transferable" quotas to fishermen on a one off basis.

These can then be bought and sold on the private market.

Supporters of this kind of system say it encourages fishing boats to operate in a more responsible manner, aware that the stocks of fish they are managing are their nest-egg, for when they retire and sell up for instance.

Such a mechanism could also lead to a gradual reduction in fishing fleet numbers, with the smaller, less profitable operators selling their rights to the bigger more efficient fleets.

"Use of market instruments such as transferable rights to fishing may be a more efficient and less expensive way to reduce overcapacity and one for which the industry has to take more responsibility," the commission opines.

At the same time the commission wants to retain "coastal, small-scale and recreation fishermen alongside larger industries," by using different management schemes with more of a social focus for the small operators.

At present, the commission says 88 percent of European fish stocks are being overfished, with 30 percent already "outside safe biological limits," meaning they may not be able to replenish.

Some EU nations including Denmark and the Netherlands are in favour of the tradeable quotas scheme.

However others, notably France, oppose the idea of turning fisheries into another vehicle for the speculators.

"There is too much risk, possibilities for speculation, of elimination of small fishing outfits," one French diplomat complained.

The Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) calls the Green Paper "commendably honest" in admitting that radical reform is needed to save Europe's fish stocks and create a profitable fisheries sector.

Up till now the EU Commission and nations "have failed our fisheries and failed our industry. But now they can no longer preach an agenda of reform and ignore their own words when hard choices need to be made," the group said.

At present in Europe, nearly two-thirds of fish stocks are in decline, WWF added, including some of the most popular species like cod, plaice and sole.

Environmental group Greenpeace set out its own blueprint including the rule that "fishing activities should only be licensed subject to a prior assessment of their environmental impact."


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Indonesia to allow underground mining in forests

Fitri Wulandari, Reuters 21 Apr 09;

JAKARTA, April 21 (Reuters) - Indonesia plans to issue a presidential decree to allow miners to carry out underground mining in its protected forest, a government official said on Tuesday, alarming green groups.

Indonesia has some of the world's largest reserves of minerals and is keen to increase revenue from the mining sector, which hosts international firms such as Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and Rio Tinto (RIO.AX: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz).

The decree, which is expected to benefit dozens of mining firms, clarifies Indonesia's forestry law issued in 1999 that prohibited open-pit mining in protected forest areas but did not specify whether underground mining was permitted.

"The presidential decree will give legal basis so that underground mining is allowed in protected forest areas," Bambang Setiawan, director general of mineral, geothermal and coal at the country's energy ministry, told reporters.

"The existing law only forbids open-pit mining in protected forest areas," he said, adding that the decree was awaiting approval by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Indonesia's conflicting mining and forestry regulations have resulted in considerable confusion over which areas are protected and which may be opened for exploitation.

Only 13 mining companies are now allowed to carry out open-pit mining in protected forest areas after former President Megawati Sukarnoputri issued a decree in 2004 allowing the firms, including a local unit of Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold (FCX.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), to resume mining activities, including exploration, development and production in these areas.

The companies had obtained mining permits before the 1999 forestry law was issued and had proved that their projects were economically viable and had mining reserves.

The new decree would help attract mining investment, while protecting the environment, said M.S. Marpaung, director of engineering and environment at the energy and mines ministry.

"It will encourage miners to carry out exploration to find new mineral resources that are often located in the forest," Marpaung said, adding that underground mining was suitable for Indonesia, given its extensive forest.

While acknowledging that underground mining has less impact on the environment, green groups said it should be limited to production forests designated for commercial purposes such as pulp and paper mills or timber companies.

"The government has given up protected forests for open-pit mining to 13 mining firms. It should not worsen the situation by allowing underground mining in the areas," said Pius Ginting, mining campaigner of the Indonesian Environmental Forum (Walhi).

"Protected forest still has rich biodiversity and we need it to reduce carbon emission," he said. Indonesia is estimated by conservation groups to have one of the world's swiftest deforestation rates.

Indonesia has mineable nickel reserves of 547 million tonnes, 112 million tonnes of bauxite and 43 million tonnes of copper, data from the mining and energy ministry showed.

Mineable reserves of tin stand at 336,911 tonnes, measured in terms of refined tin, while gold reserves were 4,341 tonnes, it said. (Editing by Ed Davies and Clarence Fernandez)


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"Greener" palm oil: pricey and not green enough?

Catherine Hornby, Reuters 21 Apr 09;

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - A drive to improve the green credentials of palm oil, used in foods and cosmetics but tainted for some by links to deforestation, could make it too expensive for shoppers and may anyway be of limited environmental benefit.

The first palm oil certified in the new scheme Round Table for Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) unloaded in Rotterdam in November, but some environmentalists said the system was not doing enough to tackle issues such as deforestation and peatlands clearance.

Industry players said this sceptical response from green groups would leave companies with little incentive to switch to the pricier oil as a way to improve their ethical image.

"Palm oil doesn't have a good image and it's not likely to be improved by this sustainability push, it doesn't seem to make any difference," said Ernesto Zamudio, a trading manager at oils and fats manufacturer AarhusKarlshamn (AAK).

Certification can add a premium of around $50 (34.38 pounds) a tonne to palm oil in the wholesale market.

Palm oil is produced mostly in Indonesia and Malaysia where it has led to the rapid clearing of millions of hectares of rain forest. It is used as cooking oil, in products such as margarine, biscuits, crisps, lipstick and soap, and for biofuel.

Producers and buyers of the tropical oil established the RSPO in 2004 to develop an ethical certification system including commitments to preserve forests and wildlife and to deal with local communities in a responsible way.

About 1.5 million tonnes of palm oil production capacity is now certified as sustainable and about 100,000 tonnes is available per month, said RSPO President Jan Kees Vis.

But he estimated that less than 100,000 tonnes of certified palm oil had traded so far, while in November some industry leaders had forecast that up to 750,000 tonnes could be sold by the end of 2008.

"Uptake is slow, which is related to the economic crisis at the moment. Companies are not really willing to pay the premium -- anything that increases cost is out of the question," said Vis.

CONTENTIOUS

Overall, about 35 million tonnes of palm oil are exported globally annually, German oilseeds analysts Oil World estimate.

Demand for palm is also seen holding up in the recession as it tends to be cheaper than other oils. It trades at roughly $700 a tonne in Europe, compared with more than $800 for soy oil.

"Due to the downturn, people are becoming more reliant on palm oil as it trades at a relative discount, so actually the recession is a good thing for palm," said Ambrian analyst Dougie Youngson.

AAK's Zamudio said palm oil demand was about 10 percent lower than expected in the first quarter of 2009, but had not fallen as much as demand for premium oils such as olive oil.

But he said the firm had not been able to sell on the majority of the 1,000 tonnes of certified sustainable palm oil they had bought so far.

Vis, who is also sustainable agriculture director for Unilever said the RSPO was trying to stimulate trade by asking members to publicly state their commitment to converting to sustainable palm oil, though he added not many had done so.

Unilever has committed to using only fully traceable palm oil by 2015, and firms including British retailer J Sainsbury and Dutch supermarket group Ahold have made similar pledges.

But many companies are shying away from publicly discussing their palm oil use, as the issue remains contentious and some conservation groups argue that the RSPO's voluntary rules for the group's 266 members are ineffective at protecting the environment.

Business goals to expand the lucrative industry -- which can necessitate more forest clearances -- are also incompatible with the position of vocal environmental groups such as Greenpeace, who say the RSPO needs to toughen up.

"If a company is RSPO certified at one plantation, it does not stop them from continuing unacceptable practices elsewhere," said Andy Tait, forest campaigner for Greenpeace.

"Palm oil producers and firms that buy palm oil need to ensure no further forest is cleared for palm oil production -- that's the biggest sustainability issue connected to the trade."

(Reporting by Catherine Hornby, editing by William Hardy)


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Pakistan Offers Farmland To Foreign Investors

Amena Bakr, PlanetArk 22 Apr 09;

DUBAI - Pakistan is offering one million acres of farmland, protected by a special security force, for lease or sale to countries seeking to secure their food supplies, an official from the ministry of finance said on Monday.

Gulf Arab countries, mainly reliant on food imports, have been seeking farmland in developing nations to secure supplies and have expressed interest in Pakistan's offer.

Donors including the United States, Japan, Europe, Saudi Ararbia and Iran pledged more than $5 billion in aid over two years at a conference in Japan this month to help Pakistan as it battles militants and repair its economy.

"We are offering one million acres of land across Pakistan for investors who want to buy or lease the land for a long period of time," said Waqar Ahmed Khan, the Federal Minister of Investment in Pakistan.

Pakistan's government is now in talks with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and other Arab states, said Khan.

"And very soon we will be signing the deals," he added.

The ministry, which was formed in October to promote foreign investment in Pakistan, will also provide investors with a legislative cover to protect them from changes in the government, Khan said in an interview to Reuters and a local newspaper.

"We want to give Pakistan a corporate style and corporate look and with that we also want to protect investors from any changes that happen politically, which never used to happen before," he said, adding parliament would approve this within three months.

"For the first time I can say that whole government including the upper and the lower house and the opposition are on board for this project and are supporting the idea of improving Pakistan's economic situation."

Khan said the ministry will also make sure that all machinery being brought in will be exempted from duty charges.

It will also hire a new security force of 100,000 men to be split among the country's five provinces to help stabilize the investment environment, said Khan.

"This will cost us about $2 billion to pay the salaries and train these people who will be from local towns and provinces," said Khan. "We are now seeking funds from donor associations to help us with this amount."

Asked how will farmers' rights will be preserved -- a concern raised this year by the United Nations Human Rights Council -- Khan said all land that will be for sale or leased is currently unused. He said provincial farmers will learn new techniques to help increase their produce.

"It's really a win-win situation," said Khan.

(Editing by William Hardy)


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Climate change, wars could sink aid system: Oxfam

Megan Rowling, Reuters 21 Apr 09;

LONDON (Reuters) - The world's relief agencies will be overwhelmed by a rise in the number of people affected by climate-related disasters by 2015 unless the quantity and quality of aid improves, a report said on Tuesday.

"There is nothing inevitable about a future in which greater numbers of people die and are made destitute by natural hazards and conflict," the report by international aid group Oxfam said.

"In a future of climate change, rising hazard and a proliferation of disasters, the world can still mitigate threats and reduce people's vulnerability to them."

Climate crises are projected to affect more than 375 million people each year by 2015, up from nearly 250 million now, as global warming leads to more extreme weather including droughts and floods and the poor crowd into city slums, the report said.

The figure does not include people hit by other disasters such as earthquakes and wars.

To cope with the unprecedented need for assistance, spending on humanitarian aid needs to rise to at least $25 billion a year from around $14 billion in 2006, Oxfam said.

The report also urged rich nations to give aid more fairly, rather than according to political and security interests.

"The humanitarian system is a post-code lottery on a global scale," Oxfam GB Chief Executive Barbara Stocking said in a statement. "The response is often fickle -- too little, too late and not good enough. There must be a fundamental reform of the system so that those in need are its first and foremost priority."

The agency warned that climate change threatened its work to overcome poverty, and called on rich nations to commit themselves at U.N. talks to cuts in greenhouse gas emissions that will keep global warming below a rise of 2 degrees Celsius. It also wants them to provide at least $50 billion a year to help poor countries adapt to unavoidable climate change.

Jane Cocking, Oxfam's humanitarian director, told Reuters the aid system also faced a heavy burden from long-running conflicts in places like Sudan's western region of Darfur.

"When you look at where international humanitarian assistance goes, places like Democratic Republic of Congo, Chad and Darfur are dropping so far down the political agenda, it's appalling," she said.

The report notes the inequality in the amounts of aid given to different emergencies -- for example, in 2004, $1,241 was spent on each survivor of the Asian tsunami, while those caught up in Chad's humanitarian crisis received only $23 each.

Oxfam also criticized the global aid system for being too Western and focused on centralized responses to large, high-profile disasters. It said humanitarian aid must become more appropriate for local needs, and be delivered faster.

(Reporting by Megan Rowling, editing by Richard Williams)

Oxfam predicts millions more victims of climate
Yahoo News 21 Apr 09;

LONDON (AFP) – Hundreds of millions of people will become victims of climate change-related disasters over the next six years, Oxfam said Tuesday, urging governments to change the way they respond to such events.

The British-based aid and development charity estimated the number of people affected by climatic disasters would rise by 54 percent to 375 million people a year on average by 2015, based on data on similar disasters since 1980.

In a new report, it warned that humanitarian aid spending and the way it was allocated was far from prepared to meet the challenge.

"The response is often fickle -- too little, too late and not good enough," said Oxfam chief executive Barbara Stocking.

"The system can barely cope with the current levels of disasters and could be overwhelmed by a substantial increase in numbers of people affected. There must be a fundamental reform of the system."

The report, "The Right to Survive", says governments can take action to mitigate the effect of climatic disasters, citing investment by Bangladesh in cyclone protection measures which has reduced the death toll from storms.

"While there has been a steady increase in climate-related events, it is poverty and political indifference that make a storm a disaster," Stocking said.

Oxfam is also launching a new campaign urging rich countries to cut their greenhouse gas emissions by at least 40 percent on 1990 levels by 2020 to tackle the source of global warming.

Oxfam analysed data from the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) at Louvain University in Belgium, which covered more than 6,500 climate-related disasters since 1980 and the numbers of people affected.

It defines people "affected" by a disaster as those suffering physical injury or illness, those made homeless or who required immediate assistance.


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Green and mean: The downside of clean energy

Fred Pearce, New Scientist 21 Apr 09;

YOU can understand the frustration on both sides. Environmentalists worldwide are clamouring for bold action to end the burning of fossil fuels and plug the world into renewables. Politicians throw their weight behind a $14 billion scheme that would replace the equivalent of eight coal-fired power stations with tidal power. What do they get for their pains? Green outrage.

"This massively damaging proposal cannot be justified," said Graham Wynne, chief of the UK's normally staid Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB). Friends of the Earth said it was "not the answer". What is going on here? Have greens lost the plot? Has environmentalism been hijacked by big construction companies? Or do we simply have to learn that even environmental energy comes at an environmental cost?

The project causing all the controversy is the Severn barrage on the west coast of Britain, but similar stories are playing out across the world. As greens gradually win the argument for switching to renewable energy, they are finding that they don't always like the look of the new world they are creating.

The problem is one of scale. Bigness is often an issue for greens, many of whom grew up reading one of the movement's key texts: E. F. Schumacher's Small Is Beautiful. They liked biofuel while it was about recycling cooking fat, but not when it became growing millions of hectares of palm oil in former Borneo rainforest. Solar panels on roofs are good, but covering entire deserts with them is another matter. They like small wind turbines and even small wind farms, but get very jumpy as wind power reaches industrial scale.

Small may be beautiful, but it won't change the world. You can't generate vast amounts of green energy without large-scale engineering projects, which inevitably do some damage to the natural environment.

Greens have been here before, to some extent. Once, long ago, they loved large dams. From the 1930s to the 1960s, hydroelectricity was regarded as the new, clean and cheap source of electricity. Nobody cared about climate change then, but they did care about the killer smogs from burning coal. From the Rockies to the Alps, from Scandinavia to the Tennessee valley, nature would be harnessed to provide clean power for the masses. Woody Guthrie once wrote a song about the splendours of the Grand Coulee dam on the Columbia river: Roll along, Columbia, you can ramble to the sea, but river, while you're rambling, you can do some work for me he sang in 1941.

All that started to change in the 1960s after engineers tried to dam the Grand Canyon on the Colorado river and hikers rebelled. By the mid-1990s opposition to large dams had grown so intense that the World Bank stopped funding them for several years. Even after green projects became a major priority for most government aid agencies, none of them would touch China's Three Gorges dam on the Yangtze river, even though it replaces some 20 large coal-fired power stations. Projects like the Severn barrage are now provoking similar opposition.

The Severn estuary is a natural marvel. The British coastline has some of the highest tidal ranges (the difference between high and low tides) in the world, and the long funnel shape of the estuary gives it a tidal range that peaks at more than 13 metres, the largest in the world apart from the Bay of Fundy on the east coast of Canada. The tidal surge is so strong that spring tides create a wave running upriver, known as the Severn bore.

In January, the UK government announced its intention to go ahead with a major project to extract energy from the Severn's tidal range. The most likely option is a giant 16-kilometre barrage across the estuary, though the shortlist includes four smaller projects (see map and diagram).

First proposed 35 years ago, the full barrage would trap more than 400 square kilometres of tidal estuary behind a wall of concrete and sand. As the tide rises, sluice gates would be opened to let water in. At high tide the sluices would be slammed shut and the outrushing water forced through turbines. The barrage's theoretical peak generating capacity would be 8.6 gigawatts, enough to supply 5 per cent of the UK's electricity and 35 times as much as the largest existing tidal power plant, on the Rance estuary in France. Its lifetime might be more than a century, several times that of a conventional power station.

Ironically, the estuary's enormous tidal range is also key to what the RSPB calls its "truly exceptional ecological value" - hundreds of square kilometres of intertidal mud flats, sand banks and salt marshes, around half of which the barrage would obliterate.

In the parts of the estuary enclosed by the barrage, low tide would be about 5 metres higher than before, meaning that much of the intertidal zone would be permanently flooded, including 190 square kilometres of treasured wildlife habitat that is home to 70,000 birds in winter. The surviving flats might compensate by hosting more wildlife, but nobody can be sure. The barrage would also be a barrier to migrating eels and salmon. Even the famous bore might disappear. Friends of the Earth says the barrage will "wreck one of the most important wildlife sites in Europe".

Unfortunately there is nowhere like it for a tidal barrage. Engineers have identified other potential sites to tap the UK's exceptional tidal range, including Morecambe Bay, the Solway Firth and the Wash. But because the electricity-generating potential of tides is equivalent to the square of the tidal range, the exceptional range of the Severn estuary means it has about 80 per cent of the potential national resource.

One alternative is to ditch the full barrage and replace it with lagoons along the estuary's coasts, which would generate electricity while saving some habitats. Lagoons are on the shortlist, but engineers advising the government say they would deliver less.

Or how about directly tapping tides for their strong currents? The idea is to create an underwater version of a wind farm, with turbines attached to the sea bed in areas where strong currents flow, such as through channels and around headlands. The engineering company Metoc has identified 20 coastal areas where this could be done around Britain, the best sites being the Pentland Firth between mainland Scotland and Orkney, and around the Channel Islands.
Jewel in the crown

The problem is, nobody knows for sure how much power might be generated from tidal currents. The upper theoretical limit from all 20 sites combined is about the same as from the Severn barrage alone, but the technology is at a much earlier stage of development, and the most promising sites are remote from the transmission grids that carry power to customers. Nonetheless, the Scottish government has singled out the Pentland Firth as the "jewel in the crown" for its plans to exploit renewable energy.

There appears to be no getting away from the fact that only big projects can deliver big quantities of renewable energy, and this inconvenient fact is dividing green opinion. The UK government's Sustainable Development Commission, chaired by the former director of Friends of the Earth Jonathon Porritt, has come out in favour of the barrage. It concluded at the end of 2007 that, provided alternative habitat could be created for the birds, the barrage should be built. Porritt said "the enormous potential to reduce our carbon emissions" outweighed the environmental harm. He made some enemies that day.

Wind power is another front line. Studies of the windiness of onshore Europe have showed that most of the wind is in upland regions loved for their scenic beauty. This is particularly true in the UK, which has an estimated 40 per cent of Europe's exploitable wind and could make a big contribution to European Union targets for generating a fifth of its power from renewables by 2020. But most of this wind blasts into the Scottish Highlands, and tapping it means putting big turbines on highly visible hilltops.

Many say the solution for wind is to put it offshore. The winds are stronger, there are no neighbours, and turbines can be bigger. One bit of sea usually looks much like another. But even then the issues don't go away.

Again the UK exemplifies the problem. Plans for 10 wind farms off the coast of Scotland received a preliminary go-ahead this year. But Scottish waters have 45 per cent of Europe's breeding seabirds, many living around the reefs and shallows favoured for wind farm sites. Another concern is noise. There is good evidence that piledriving during turbine construction frightens away marine mammals and maybe fish too.

In the US, too, offshore wind farms are creating dilemmas. The 130-turbine Cape Wind project for Nantucket Sound, off the coast of Massachusetts, promises to be the US's first offshore wind farm - as soon as an already decade-long permit process is completed. The delay has been caused largely by objections from influential residents, including the Kennedy family, who say their view of the ocean will be spoiled. The battle has split the local environmental movement, culminating in Greenpeace organising street protests against Robert Kennedy Jr, an environmental lawyer and prominent opponent of the project.

Another emerging battleground is transmission. Scotland is debating whether to build a £300 million high-voltage power line linking the wind farms of the Highlands to the population centres of lowland Scotland and England. The cheapest way to do this would be to run overhead cables through the Cairngorms National Park. Undersea cables would be aesthetically preferable but would cost much more.

Scotland's dilemma will soon be writ large elsewhere. Most renewable sources of energy are intermittent. The wind is a byword for variability. The tides are predictable, but they ebb and flow to their own rhythm. Solar too comes and goes: the sun's rise and fall may be predictable, but clouds are not. If renewables are to be more than a niche source of power, this variability will have to be evened out to meet patterns of demand.

The only real solution is monumental transmission systems that link up renewable energy sources so they can substitute for one another. To work well, these systems need to be built on a continental scale.

One idea on the table is a European supergrid linking big population and industrial centres in countries such as Germany, France and the UK with the continent's great potential sources of green energy, which are mostly on the periphery. They include geothermal energy from Iceland, hydroelectricity from Scandinavia, wind power from the North Sea, and solar energy from the Iberian peninsula and even the Sahara desert (New Scientist, 14 March, p 42).

Such a network could guarantee renewable electricity for most, if not all, Europe's needs. When the sun goes down in the Sahara, Germany could switch to geothermal from Iceland. If the wind was blowing fiercely in the North Sea, spare power could be used to pump water uphill between reservoirs on Norwegian rivers, ready for release to generate energy when the winds dropped. But there could be huge battles ahead if local environmentalists object to the power lines passing through, and watch out for a "save the deserts" campaign when the solar power people get serious.

"This could be a blueprint for India, too, or north-east Asia, southern Africa or North America," says Nick Dunlop, founder of e-Parliament, an online global network of parliamentarians that is backing the plan. In the US, President Barack Obama is already on the case. He has promised to devote tens of billions of dollars to a national electricity grid. The idea is to link up desert states like Nevada, with their huge potential for solar power, and the Midwest states with their wind, to the power-hungry markets of the east. Again, though, battles lie around the corner.
Green schism

All these recurring disputes have to do with scaling up cuddly green technology to the point where it makes a real difference to the climate. They expose an emerging schism in the environmental movement. On the one side are the "sustainable developers", for whom nature is a resource to be managed. On the other are the "preservationists", who hold nature sacrosanct and for whom any damage by mankind to natural ecosystems is a defeat. Radical British environmentalist Paul Kingsnorth, who cut his teeth opposing road construction in the 1990s, now says: "To me, a wind farm on a mountain, a tidal barrage that turns a great river into a glorified millstream, or carpeting the Sahara with giant solar panels... are a similar desecration." For the preservationists, trade-offs are impossible. For sustainable developers, they are the essence of environmentalism.

There are many more disputes ahead. If more and more of the world decides to opt for renewable sources of electricity, the drive to do it faster and cheaper will grow. More large corporations with their eyes on the bottom line will get involved. More corners will be cut. Environmentalists will inevitably find themselves on the barricades defending the natural world from other environmentalists intent on generating clean energy.

The bottom line for greens is that these dilemmas and contradictions are the fruits of success. And the more successful their arguments for cutting greenhouse gas emissions are, the greater and more frequent will be the dilemmas. Rarely will there be a right or wrong answer. All visionaries imagine that once they get their way, it will be plain sailing. It rarely is.

Fred Pearce is New Scientist's environment correspondent


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Asia Governments Dangle Carrots To Attract Green Money

Leonora Walet, Reuters 22 Apr 09;

HONG KONG - Asian governments are warming to the idea of offering incentives for green investment and could help attract billions of dollars in funding for solar and wind power industries struggling under tight credit conditions.

Major Asia-Pacific markets from Australia to China and Japan to South Korea are at various stages of refining sweeteners to encourage renewable energy projects. Some are raising renewable energy targets to boost large-scale green projects.

Boosted by such incentives, Asia could overtake the Americas and Europe to be the biggest market for renewable projects by 2012, analysts say.

"As governments spend their way out of the financial crisis, part of that cash is being used as incentives for green projects mobilizing increased private investment," said Edgare Kerkwijk, managing director for Asia Green Capital, a renewable energy and commodity-focused investment management firm.

While the credit crunch has discouraged private investment in some industries and markets, Asia's renewable and environmental sectors should benefit from government stimulus packages.

HSBC estimates spending on green-related investments, including railways used as alternatives to carbon-intensive air transport and energy-efficient power grids, to account for 20 percent, or $272 billion, of stimulus spending in Asia -- more than double the amount earmarked for green projects in the Americas and five times bigger than Europe's.

"We believe these commitments are but the first installments of further efforts by governments to use low-carbon growth as a key lever for economic recovery," HSBC analysts Nick Robins and Robert Clover said in a report.

In Australia, analysts expect private and government investments in clean energy projects to reach A$20-A$30 billion ($27.6-$41.4 billion) by 2020.

The country plans to introduce the world's broadest emissions trading scheme, which will be its primary policy tool to drive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and boost investment in clean energy.

As part of the biggest stimulus package to date, China has also earmarked the most to green-related projects. HSBC estimates green-related investments will account for 34 percent, or $200 billion, of China's total stimulus package of $586 billion.

That will be on top of solar subsidies Beijing announced last month aimed at helping local manufacturers who face sagging international demand.

Japan and South Korea are also ramping up green investment, with Tokyo recently announcing plans to install solar systems in about 37,000 schools and offer subsidies of 100,000-250,000 yen ($1,009-$2,521) for each purchase of energy-efficient cars.

South Korea has set a target for alternative energy to account for 11 percent of total energy demand by 2030, compared with just 2.6 percent now. Investment required to meet that target is estimated at 111.5 trillion won ($88.3 billion).

The country has various policy initiatives, including a price support scheme for electricity from renewable sources similar to Germany's feed-in tariff, benefiting green energy suppliers.

HURDLES AHEAD

Asian renewable companies, including China's largest solar company, Suntech Power Holdings, and South Korean polysilicon firm DC Chemical, should benefit as governments push harder for the development of clean energy.

Analysts said incentives for the solar sector will go a long way to driving regional demand for solar energy systems, helping create bigger businesses for companies involved in the entire solar supply chain.

Makers of solar cells in Taiwan including Motech Industries Inc, E-Ton Solar Tech Co and Gintech Energy Corp should benefit, while boosting business opportunities for panel makers like Japan's Kaneka Corp, Sanyo Electric Co Ltd and Sharp, and China's Yingli Green Energy Holding Co Ltd and JA Solar.

Industry experts say most investments may go to wind power projects, which are the cheaper option, benefiting wind turbine makers such as India's Suzlon Energy Ltd and China's Xinjiang Goldwind Science & Technology Co Ltd.

Governments' green push should also help smaller alternative energy companies like China Solar Photovoltaic SA.

"We were very encouraged by China's new policy, though it is too early to say what the impact will be as the detailed guidelines have yet to come out," said Veerraju Chaudary, chief operating officer at China Solar.

Analysts say there are hurdles ahead, however.

Most investors want to see clarity in regulations for government incentives, and tight credit and strained government budgets could limit the flow of funds to some projects.

"The subsidies showed the government is committed to supporting the industry, but that's not enough," said Zhenhua Pan, deputy general manager of solar firm Jetion Holdings Ltd. "Subsidies should also apply to solar power stations, especially in the remote inland areas not covered by the national power grid."

China's offer of a subsidy of up to 20 yuan ($2.93) per watt on rooftop and building-integrated solar projects still lacks detail on how it will be implemented, and it's unclear if the same level of financial incentive will be available to other types of solar projects.

A sharp fall in the price of carbon-based energy, meanwhile, has discouraged investors from spending more on expensive renewables, but industry experts believe government incentives could win businesses back to green projects.

"Cheap oil may have discouraged investments in alternative energy, but subsidies and tax breaks are helping make these projects commercially viable," said Asia Green's Kerkwijk.


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China says planning more dams on troubled Yangtze

Yahoo News 21 Apr 09;

BEIJING (AFP) – China will build at least 20 more reservoirs or hydroelectric projects in the Yangtze river system by 2020, the government said Tuesday, despite growing concerns over dam construction there.

The figure was contained in comments by a top water resources ministry official on plans for the Yangtze, China's longest river, and its upper reaches that were posted on the ministry's website.

"At least 20 (new) reservoirs will be put into operation by 2020," vice minister Hu Siyi was quoted as saying in a report on the website.

The increase was aimed primarily at further harnessing the hydropower resources of the Yangtze, the report said.

A proliferation of dams in the Yangtze drainage basin has drawn heavy criticism from domestic and overseas experts who have warned of a range of environmental and seismic risks.

Much of the criticism has been centred on the massive Three Gorges Dam project in Hubei province.

Government reports in recent years have warned that the dam's huge reservoir had trapped massive amounts of pollution dumped into the river system and that the reservoir's weight on surrounding terrain was triggering landslides.

The state-run China Daily newspaper said Tuesday the government's plans were aimed at tapping 60 percent of the river's hydroelectric potential by 2030.

It quoted Yangtze Water Resources Committee director Cai Qihua as telling a water conference in Shanghai on Monday that currently just 36 percent of that potential was now being harnessed.

But it also noted the proliferating dams and reservoirs -- aimed at meeting China's skyrocketing electricity needs and flood control -- were "posing threats to the ecology of the Yangtze River."

Chinese experts have warned that one of the many dams along the Yangtze river system may have triggered the massive earthquake last May that left 87,000 people dead or missing.

However government officials have rejected those assertions.


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Climate Change Drying Up Big Rivers, Study Finds

Maggie Fox, PlanetArk 22 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON - Rivers in some of the world's most populated regions are losing water, many because of climate change, researchers reported on Tuesday.

Affected rivers include the Yellow River in northern China, the Ganges in India, the Niger in West Africa, and the Colorado in the southwestern United States.

When added to the effects from damming, irrigation and other water use, these changes could add up to a threat to future supplies of food and water, the researchers reported in the American Meteorological Society's Journal of Climate.

"Reduced runoff is increasing the pressure on freshwater resources in much of the world, especially with more demand for water as population increases," Aiguo Dai of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, who led the study, said in a statement.

"Freshwater being a vital resource, the downward trends are a great concern."

Dai's team looked at records of river flow in 925 big rivers from 1948 to 2004, finding significant changes in about a third of the world's largest rivers.

Rivers with decreased flow outnumbered those with increased flow by 2.5 to 1, they said.

For instance, annual freshwater discharge into the Pacific Ocean fell by about 6 percent, or 526 cubic kilometers -- about the equivalent volume of water that flows out of the Mississippi River each year.

Annual river flow into the Indian Ocean dropped by about 3 percent during the 56-year period, or 140 cubic kilometers.

The Columbia River in the U.S. Northwest lost about 14 percent of its volume from 1948 to 2004, largely because of reduced precipitation and higher water usage in the West, Dai's team said.

But the Mississippi River drains 22 percent more water because of increased precipitation across the U.S. Midwest since 1948, they said.

Annual discharge from melting ice into the Arctic Ocean also rose about 10 percent, or 460 cubic kilometers.

"Also, there is evidence that the rapid warming since the 1970s has caused an earlier onset of spring that induces earlier snowmelt and associated peak streamflow in the western United States and New England and earlier breakup of river-ice in Russian Arctic rivers and many Canadian rivers," the researchers wrote.

"As climate change inevitably continues in coming decades, we are likely to see greater impacts on many rivers and water resources that society has come to rely on," said NCAR scientist Kevin Trenberth, who worked on the study.

(Editing by Vicki Allen)

Rivers shrinking: Flow of many rivers in decline
Randolph E. Schmid, Associated Press Yahoo News 22 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON – The flow of water in the world's largest rivers has declined over the past half-century, with significant changes found in about a third of the big rivers. An analysis of 925 major rivers from 1948 to 2004 showed an overall decline in total discharge.

The reduction in inflow to the Pacific Ocean alone was about equal to shutting off the Mississippi River, according to the new study appearing in the May 15 edition of the American Meteorological Society's Journal of Climate.

The only area showing a significant increase in flow was the Arctic, where warming conditions are increasing the snow and ice melt, said researchers led by Aiguo Dai of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.

"Freshwater resources will likely decline in the coming decades over many densely populated areas at mid- to low latitudes, largely due to climate changes, Dai said. "Rapid disappearing mountain glaciers in the Tibetan plateau and other places will make matters worse."

Added co-author Kevin Trenberth, "As climate change inevitably continues in coming decades, we are likely to see greater impacts on many rivers and water resources that society has come to rely on."

While Dai cited climate change as a major factor in the changes, the paper noted that other factors are also involved, including dams and the diversion of water for agriculture and industry.

Nonetheless, he said, "long-term changes in streamflow should be a major concern under global warming."

Indeed, the researchers wrote that "for many of the world's large rivers the effects of human activities on yearly streamflow are likely small compared with that of climate variations during 1948-2004."

"This is an important paper with new findings that are relevant to the health of river ecosystems and the people who live near or rely upon rivers to meet water needs," said Margaret A. Palmer, director of the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science.

"What is important from this study is these authors show that these decreases are due to a changing climate, not human activities like extractions or dam building, yet these changes will have impacts on humans and ecosystems because many of these regions have large populations and drought-stressed ecosystems," said Palmer, who was not part of the research team.

Among the rivers showing declines in flow, several serve large populations. These include the Yellow River in northern China, the Ganges in India, the Niger in West Africa and the Colorado in the southwestern United States.

On the other hand, areas with rising streamflow near the Arctic Ocean tend to have small populations.

There was considerable year-to-year variation in the flow of many rivers, but the overall trend over the period showed annual freshwater discharge into the Pacific Ocean fell by about 6 percent, or 526 cubic kilometers of water. That's close to the 552-cubic kilometer average annual flow of the Mississippi, the researchers reported.

The annual flow into the Indian Ocean dropped by about 3 percent, or 140 cubic kilometers. In contrast, annual river discharge into the Arctic Ocean rose about 10 percent, or 460 cubic kilometers. There was little change in inflow to the Atlantic Ocean, where increases in the Mississippi and Parana rivers were balanced out by decreases in the Amazon River.

A cubic kilometer is a cube one kilometer on each side. A kilometer is about six-tenths of a mile.

Discharge of river water into the oceans deposits sediment near the river mouth and also affects worldwide ocean circulation patterns, which are driven by variations in water temperature and salinity.

In the United States, the flow of the Mississippi River increased by 22 percent over the period because of increased precipitation across the Midwest. On the other hand, the Columbia River's flow declined by about 14 percent, mainly because of reduced precipitation and higher water usage.

Major rivers showing declines in flow included the Amazon, Congo, Changjiang (Yangtze), Mekong, Ganges, Irrawaddy, Amur, Mackenzie, Xijiang, Columbia and Niger.

Declines in the Niger River in the 1970s and 1980s in particular reflected the Sahel Drought, the paper said. In addition, the periodic El Nino cooling of sea surface waters in the tropical Pacific led to lower flows in the Amazon and higher ones in the Mississippi when the phenomenon was in effect.

The research was supported by the National Science Foundation.


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