Best of our wild blogs: 23 Apr 09


Draft Blue Plan seeks your feedback
on the Singapore Celebrates our Reefs blog

Doing something "special" for Earth Day
on the Midnight Monkey Monitor

12 May 2009: Rhett Butler (Mongabay.com) on “Communicating conservation science online” on Otterman speaks

Dove in green
on the annotated budak blog

Tiger Shrike takes a moth
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Red-bearded Bee-eater taking a cicada
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Towards a Cleaner Electricity Supply
on AsiaIsGreen

Earth Day with the Public Service Division
on the wild shores of singapore blog

National Environment Agency’s 3R Fund Opens For Applications
on the Zero Waste Singapore blog

Gallup Polls on Public Awareness of Global Warming
on AsiaIsGreen

Singapore named best seaport in Asia
on the wild shores of singapore blog


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Singapore continues to grow on everybody else's land

Mister Sandman, Bring Me Some Sand
Janeman Latul, Asia Sentinel 23 Apr 09;

It may just have been that Lee Kuan Yew wanted to be more than the mayor of a relatively small Asian city, befitting his status as an Asian statesman, but for four decades, the Lion City has been growing inexorably. Indonesian companies want to help. They are fighting a 2007 ban on sand extraction and, according to the country's trade ministry, they may be getting some traction. The ministry is reviewing the ban.

"So far we are trying to get responses from the public," said Albert Yousuf Tobagu, director of mining export commodities at the ministry. "We are including regional administrations and relevant government institutions as part of our recommendation to the ministerial meeting to make a decision on whether or not to lift the export ban on sea sand."

Surrounded entirely by water, Singapore has grown from only 581.5 sq km in 1960 to at least 650 sq km today, and it expects to grow by another 100 sq. km by 2030, according to the government. The city-state's population has grown inexorably as well, from 1.67 million in 1960 to well over 4 million today, with the government seeking leibensraum to expand for housing estates and other facilities and for commercial and recreation space.

The sand is being hauled in by the barge-load from Indonesia, Cambodia and Malaysia, although Indonesia has banned sand exports as environmentally catastrophic, with entire islands being turned into atolls and is said to be growing concerned that Singapore's burgeoning growth will threaten the national boundaries set by its sprinkling of nearby island.. Malaysia has also banned sand sales to Singapore.

The Singapore embassy in Jakarta declined comment to Asia Sentinel in March that it is taking sand from either Cambodia or Indonesia although the government acknowledges that it needs sand to grow. Asked where the sand was coming from, an embassy official said: "We have our own sand stockpile," although he wouldn't say where that was located.

The environmental protection organization Global Witness wrote the government in Singapore last October asking about its role in Cambodian sand extraction. In a bid to show plausible deniability, Global Witness was told: "Singapore uses land sand for construction purposes, and sea sand for land reclamation projects. Both types of sand are imported by contractors from other countries. The import of sand is a purely commercial activity and the Singapore Government is not involved.

"The Singapore Government does not impose restrictions on where the sand contractors source for supplies, but we expect the contractors to abide by the laws of the source country governing the extraction, processing and transport of sand, as well as environmental regulations. Our trade records show that some of the imported sand used in construction and reclamation projects originate from Cambodia. Singapore ceased imports of land and sea sand from Indonesia since 2007 and 2003 respectively."

In what grew into a diplomatic flap, Indonesia banned sea sand shipments to Singapore in 2007 in what insiders said was an attempt to force the island republic into signing an extradition treaty so that Indonesia could reel in a flock of bankers who stole as much as US$13.5 billion dollars in bank recapitalization funds in the wake of the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis. Although the treaty was agreed in the wake of the sand embargo, it was never signed after objections in the Indonesian legislature.

Singapore has long styled itself as an Asian equivalent of Switzerland, maintaining strict banking secrecy laws that have allowed Burmese generals to bank there with impunity. More than that, Singapore has been leery of Indonesian intentions ever since Indonesia's then-president, Sukarno, staged what he called "konfrontasi" in an unsuccessful attempt to take over the entire island of Borneo between 1962 and 1966. Singapore was part of Malaysia at the time.

Singapore denies the extradition treaty or a corollary defense treaty had anything to do with the sand ban. The bankers have never come home.

When Trade Minister E Mari Pangestu instiuted the ban in 2007, as many as 24 sand-exporting companies threatened a class-action lawsuit against the government in an effort to reverse the ban then, and has been fighting it ever since. At that time, sand was also being exported to South Korea, Japan and the Philippines, causing environmental havoc in Indonesia.

And, while exports may have dipped from Indonesia, they haven't stopped by any means, environmentalists say. Wahana Lingkungan Hidup Indonesia, or Walhi, a local environmental watchdog, says that the entire Nipah and Sebaik islands have almost disappeared in the Riau region. Before the ban, Tulang in the Karimun Island chain, hs lost 32 meters of beach to sand thieves. Illegal activity in North Sumatra — particularly on the Cermin and Labu beaches — has continued despite the ban, with dredgers sucking up as much as 7,000 cubic meters of sand per hour, environmentalists say. Dredging has also gone on unabated in the Benkulu, Bangka Belitung, Lampung and West Sumatra, according to Walhi.

Environmentalists say Indonesia shouldn't even discuss the possibility of lifting the ban.

"This is a nightmare for Indonesians and the environment, how could they do that?" said Muhammad Tegus Surya, chief advocate for Walhi. "We cannot let this happen. The damage is really huge and it is not equal to the profit."

When the restriction was imposed, sand was also being exported to South Korea, Japan and the Philippines, causing environmental havoc in Indonesia. As many as 24 sand-exporting companies threatened a class-action lawsuit against the government then.

"The sea sand exporters association has pushed the government to lift the ban," said Aji Sularso, director general for sea resources at the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries in a telephone interview. "However, I think several ministries, including the Foreign Ministry, have not agreed to it because we have to evaluate whether the damage from lifting the ban is smaller compared to keeping it."

The association was unavailable for comment on Wednesday.

As exports dropped from Indonesia, they appear to have increased dramatically from Cambodia, according to a report by the environmental group Global Witness, in a detailed report issued in February and titled "Country for Sale."

In the report, Global Witness estimated sand dredging in Cambodia's Koh Kong Province to be worth US$8.6 million in Cambodia and retailed for US$35 million a year in Singapore, with the entire operation controlled by Ly Yong Phat, a Cambodian senator and tycoon.

"When Global Witness investigators visited the area, they found a complex situation with multiple sand suppliers and buyers. The common denominator, however, was that all those interviewed claimed that sand taken from the area was destined for Singapore," the report said.

In three days, the report said, the giant vacuum pumps could suck up enough sand to fill a 15,000-tonne ship.

According to reports from local residents and workers, the ships appeared to be operated by mainland Chinese in military uniforms without insignia. However, Global Watch reported, the Chinese are not the only operators exporting to Singapore from Koh Kong. Malaysian and Korean companies are involved in sand extraction for Singapore as well, the report said.


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Indonesia debating whether to continue ban of sand exports to Singapore

Tide Turning On Sea Sand Export Debate?
Janeman Latul & Teguh Prasetyo Jakarta Globe 22 Apr 09;

Indonesia’s Trade Ministry on Wednesday said it was evaluating whether or not to continue a 2007 ban on the export of sea sand to Singapore, a prohibition which has strained relations between the two countries.

“So far we are trying to get responses from the public,” said Albert Yousuf Tobagu, director of mining export commodities at the ministry. “We are including regional administrations and relevant government institutions as part of our recommendation to the ministerial meeting to make a decision on whether or not to lift the export ban on sea sand.”

When the restriction was imposed, sand was also being exported to South Korea, Japan and the Philippines, causing environmental havoc in Indonesia. As many as 24 sand-exporting companies threatened a class-action lawsuit against the government then.

“The sea sand exporters association has pushed the government to lift the ban,” said Aji Sularso, director general for sea resources at the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries in a telephone interview. “However, I think several ministries, including the Foreign Ministry, have not agreed to it because we have to evaluate whether the damage from lifting the ban is smaller compared to keeping it.”

The association was unavail able for comment on Wednesday.

Although Aji said exports have fallen dramatically, environmentalists say illegal dredging has hardly abated since Trade Minister Mari Pangestu instituted the ban on sand barges.

Wahana Lingkungan Hidup Indonesia, or Walhi, a local environmental watchdog, said that the entire Nipah and Sebaik islands have almost disappeared in the Riau region. Before the ban, Tulang in the Karimun Island chain, has lost 32 meters of beach to sand thieves.

Illegal activity in North Sumatra — particularly on the Cermin and Labu beaches — has continued despite the ban, with dredgers sucking up as much as 7,000 cubic meters of sand per hour. Dredging has also gone on unabated in Benkulu, Bangka Belitung, Lampung and West Sumatra, according to Walhi.

Environmentalists say Indonesia shouldn’t even discuss the possibility of lifting the ban.

“This is a nightmare for Indonesians and the environment, how could they do that?” said Muhammad Tegus Surya, chief advocate for Walhi. “We cannot let this happen The damage is really huge and it is not equal to the profit.”

Surrounded entirely by water, Singapore has grown from only 581.5 sq km in 1960 to at least 650 sq km and expects to grow by another 100 sq km by 2030 to accommodate housing estates and other facilities. The country has been using Indonesian sea sand to expand their land area.

Widespread reports in 2007 said the country had banned sand exports in an attempt to force Singapore into signing an extradition treaty so Indonesia could have access to corrupt bankers who fled Jakarta in the wake of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. These bankers took with them millions of dollars in funds meant to recapitalize Indonesia’s banks.

Singapore has steadfastly denied that Indonesia used the ban in an attempt to force them to sign an extradition treaty and said it has observed the ban.

Albert said his office on Tuesday met with government officials from the Bengkulu regional administration, one of the major sea-sand producing regions, and representatives from the Coordinating Ministry for Political, Legal and Security Affairs. Some regional administrations, especially from sand-producing coastal regions oppose the lifting of the ban because excavation has led to silting of their ports.


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Indonesia wants climate change efforts to pay more attention on ocean

Erwida Maulia, The Jakarta Post 22 Apr 09;

Indonesia expects the upcoming World Ocean Conference (WOC) in Manado in May 11-15 to produce a joint declaration incorporating the importance of sea into climate change adaptation program.

It also expects that the country participants will agree on technology transfer and corporation, as well as information exchanges, to help each country adapt with the ongoing climate change.

A total of 121 countries have confirmed their participation in the event, which is one of the world's biggest environmental events of the year.

Over 4,900 people, including heads of states, senior government officials, experts and observers, and NGO activists will gather in the North Sulawesi capital of Manado for the conference, which will be followed by the regional environmental event Coral Triangle Initiative (CTI) Summit.

The CTI Summit will be attended by heads of six nations home to the so-called coral triangle, comprising Indonesia, East Timor, Papua New Guinea, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Solomon Islands.

"We hope that (what is produced in) the Manado Ocean Declaration will be incorporated into talks during the UNFCCC COP 15 meeting in Copenhagen in December," Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Freddy Numberi said in a press conference after a Cabinet meeting on the WOC and CTI Summit preparation at the Presidential Palace on Wednesday.

"Surely we have to work hard in this context; to determine what's next after the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012. With the Manado Ocean Declaration, we hope that the ocean dimension will later on play a more significant role in (any new agreement) after the Kyoro Protocol," he added.

Freddy added that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had hoped that the country's organization of the two events would improve the current image of Indonesia as one of the biggest emmittors of greenhouse gases.

Regarding the CTI, Freddy said donor countries had granted US$70 million through the Global Environmental Fund (GEF) for the conservation of coral reefs, marine resources and ecosystem of the region.

Indonesia, he added, has received $40 million from the United States alone for the same purpose, and aims at getting the largest portion of the GEF funds for being an initiator to the CTI.

Indonesia also wants the secretariat of the CTI to be built in North Sulawesi.

The CTI Summit is expected to produce regional action plans that can be implemented in each country member.

North Sulawesi governor HS Sarundajang said his region was ready to welcome participants of the two big events, saying infrastructure and facilities such as roads, bridges, electricity, clean water, as well as land, sea and air transportation had been prepared.

He added that the number of flights to and from Manado would be also increased.

Guests will be served in 18 star-rate hotels with 1,862 rooms and 24 nonstar-rate hotels with 719 rooms.

Sarundajang also said the two big events were expected to boost economic growth of eastern Indonesia, particularly that of North Sulawesi.

Placing Oceans on Climate Agenda Major Goal of WOC
Fidelis E. Satriastanti, The Jakarta Globe 24 Apr 09;

The government hopes to lobby foreign delegates to incorporate marine and coastal issues into the global climate change agenda during the upcoming World Ocean Conference in Manado, North Sulawesi Province, an official said on Friday.

Up to 5,000 people from 121 countries are expected to attend the conference, to be held May 11-14. A summit for the six-nation Coral Triangle Initiative follows on May 15.

“In one part of the [draft agreement for the conference], we urge the Adaptation Fund Board of the UNFCCC [United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change] to incorporate oceans and coastal areas into climate change adaptation programs,” said Gelwynn Jusuf, deputy secretary of the WOC.

“However,” he continued, “this is just an initial idea which would require the support of all delegations.”

The Adaptation Fund was established under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol to help provide developing countries with the technologies needed to cope with the effects of climate change.

The Kyoto Protocol, which aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in developed countries to 5 percent below 1990 levels, is due to expire in 2012.

A climate change conference to be held in Denmark in December is expected to produce an international agreement on the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions that would replace the Kyoto Protocol.

Gelwynn said that further discussions about what kinds of marine or coastal adaptation measures would be needed, or what kind of funding scheme would be required, had not been formally hammered out by delegates.

“We have not really come to terms on what kind of adaptation scheme would be suitable, but the issue will be open for discussion at the conference,” he said.

“The adaptation scheme is much more open for debate because developed countries are quite resistant to talk about mitigation if there is still no solid proof” of a connection between oceans and climate change.

Gelwynn said that Indonesia had recently been conducting climate change-related marine research to prepare the country for the Manado conference.

“We have been doing lots of research on oceans, which included many areas, like the impact on people’s livelihoods, rising sea levels, and fish populations,” he said.

“Our researchers will be presenting their studies along with other world ocean experts at the symposium” attached to the WOC.

The International Ocean Science Technology and Policy Symposium is expected to run in Manado from May 12-14.

So far, 860 delegates from 30 countries have confirmed their participation in the symposium.

Gelwynn said that climate change research on oceans and coasts had mainly focused on the ocean’s potential to emit carbon, rather than on the potential for oceanic carbon absorption.

“We all know that is still debatable, but the symposium would be a good opportunity to listen to what experts have to say,” he said.


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Activities held in Singapore to celebrate Earth Day

Otelli Edwards, Channel NewsAsia 22 Apr 09;

SINGAPORE: Several "green" activities were rolled out in Singapore on Wednesday to inspire environmental awareness on Earth Day, an important event that was celebrated worldwide.

Among the activities were free rides for the day on bus services 16, 70, 100. These buses ply the densely populated heartlands and central business district from morning to midnight.

Electronic maker Panasonic kicked off the fare-free day to encourage an alternate green commute. The aim was to slash carbon emission.

The bus-ride will also initiate a drive to collect "eco ideas" on ways to save the environment.

Over at Pasir Ris Park, 120 students from Woodlands Ring Secondary took part in a cleanup exercise of mangrove swamps.

Also looking to do its bit is CHIJ St Nicholas Girls' School, by saying 'no' to plastic bags.

It will give out iPledge cards to track the number of plastic bags saved when students refuse them when making purchases.

- CNA/ir


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Recycling efforts get $8m boost

NEA launches fund on Earth Day, marked by tree-planting, clean-ups
Amresh Gunasingham, Straits Times 23 Apr 09;

THE National Environment Agency (NEA) yesterday launched an $8 million 3R (Reduce, Reuse and Recycle) Fund for Earth Day, to encourage waste minimisation and recycling projects here.

It can be used to offset up to 80 per cent of the cost, capped at $1 million, of starting projects for recycling waste in landed homes, food and beverage outlets, and schools.

It can also be used to start projects to recycle waste like used household batteries, which are currently not recycled.

Speaking at the fund's launch, Environment Minister Yaacob Ibrahim, said: 'Just as we have relied on technology to solve our water challenge, we will also take this route to encourage recycling.

'Ultimately, we hope to change the perception of waste to that of a resource that can be utilised.'

A spokesman for the NEA told The Straits Times that 20 companies, including waste collectors and recycling companies, had expressed interest in applying for the fund.

Dr Yaacob hailed Earth Day, marked yesterday, as a 'very important day in the environmental calendar'.

'Singapore is no different from other countries in facing environmental challenges,' he said.

'On this day, I ask all Singaporeans to play their part and continue to find ways and means to maintain the environmental achievements that we have achieved over the last 40 years.'

A slew of activities to mark the occasion were organised yesterday.

Some 120 students from Woodlands Ring Secondary School helped clean up the mangrove swamps at Pasir Ris Park.

More than 165 trees were planted around the island in activities organised by the National Parks Board.

Footwear and apparel company Timberland Singapore also had a team of 110 volunteers, customers and employees plant 100 trees, including the Tembusu species, at MacRitchie Reservoir.

Households also got in on the act.

Over the last three months, the South West District has held a reality TV-style competition that saw five shortlisted families transform their homes into greener living spaces.

Organised by 3M Singapore in partnership with the South West Community Development Council, the homes were retrofitted with energy-efficient appliances.

These actions saved the five families $430 in utility bills altogether.

Mr Tan Chuan Shin, whose family walked away with a cash prize of $3,000 yesterday, said the competition was an opportunity to learn more about environmental conservation and reduce his bills at the same time.

'We are thrilled to receive the cash prize and will continue to practise the simple energy-saving habits at home,' he said.

$8m recycling fund
Channel NewsAsia, Today Online 23 Apr 09;

An $8-million Reduce, Reuse, Recycle Fund has been launched as part of Earth Day, to co-pay up to 80 per cent of the costs of new projects that can lead to waste minimisation and product recycling.

The fund is open to all companies and Singapore-registered organisations. The Regent Singapore, for one, plans to apply. Since it launched its recycling programme in 2007, the hotel has cut the amount of waste by more than 40 per cent and seen disposal costs reduced by 12 per cent a year.

The hotel’s director for engineering Lee Baharuddin said: “We are looking for machinery that can compact all the recycled waste, as we currently use almost 200 waste bins in the hotel.”


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Success Stories: Cleaning Up Planet Earth

Robin Lloyd, livescience.com Yahoo News 22 Apr 09;

Cleaner air, cleaner water and cleaner-burning gasoline - which means less brain-toxic lead in our blood - are the major achievements of the modern environmental movement, but global climate change looms as the elephant in the living room, experts say.

Let's start with the good news on this anniversary of Earth Day.

"After almost 40 years, the environment is significantly improved in many ways from the condition it was in on the first Earth Day in 1970," said Eric Goldstein, a lawyer with the National Resources Defense Council.

Not everyone agrees with this level of optimism but here is where progress has been made.

Thanks to the Clean Water Act, which went into effect in the 1970s, more of the nation's rivers and lake waters are swimmable, fishable and drinkable. The laws limit the discharge of toxic chemicals and sewage from factories and industry into the nation's water, including wetlands, sloughs and prairie potholes.

The air you breathe

Thanks to the Clean Air Act, legislation started in the '50s and strengthened in the '60s, '70s and beyond, more of our air is breathable, or healthier to breathe. The laws limit allowable emissions of CO2, CH4, N2O, and other gases from motor vehicles and gasoline (via evaporation). They also deal with reducing smog and acid rain.

Thanks to efforts to phase out leaded gasoline (as part of the Clean Air Act), fewer children suffer from lead-induced retardation and other developmental problems. Tetraethyl lead was a gas additive that made engines run smoother, but it also built up in the soil and air, and thus caused harmful, toxic levels in children's blood stream. Leaded gasoline was phased out totally in the United States by the mid-1990s. Blood lead levels have been cut in half.

Thanks to the banning of the insecticide DDT and the Endangered Species Act, both initiated in the early 1970s, numerous bird species have been protected from extinction, including the bald eagle.

Numerous federal regulatory oversight and safety agencies - such as the Environmental Protection Agency, the Nuclear Regulatory Agency, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) - have helped forge more federal laws and policies to protect the environment.

"And millions of acres of parkland and other ecological sensitive places have been protected," Goldstein added.

But it's hard to get straight optimism from anyone who studies or advocates for the environment.

"Of course, you can see the glass as half full and half empty, because there are many significant challenges that remain," Goldstein said. "And of course global warming is first and foremost, and the most critical. And despite the progress, there has also been increasing loss of species around the world, threats to the health of our oceans; there is water scarcity in many parts of the world and haphazard development patterns."

A little-discussed downside: U.S. gains in clear air and water often come at the expense of other nations, Drexel University sociologist and environmental scientist Robert Brulle said. We export our toxin-producing manufacturing to places such as Canada, Mexico and China where there are looser environmental policies. We clean up our act, their air and water gets dirtier.

And lately?

Most of the above landmarks were primarily achieved starting in the 1970s, leaving some to ask, "What have you done for me lately?"

The hold-up in progress these days is that early tree huggers tackled the low-hanging fruit first, Brulle says. Now the harder stuff - global issues like global warming, biodiversity loss, deforestation - remains to be solved. Also, the grass-roots movement is less powerful and less empowering. It's hard to get on the board of a lot of these organizations, other than say the Sierra Club, National Audubon Society or the Center for Health, Environment & Justice.

Nowadays, a lot of organizations - there were 1,339 that operated nationally and reported to the IRS in 2003, according to Brulle - give citizens a "free ride." Just give money. No need to write a letter, attend a rally or lecture, or change one's lifestyle.

Meanwhile, the environmental movement has a total annual income of $2.7 billion, Brulle said.
And some of the organizations do good work by focusing on buying and preserving land to protect ecological habitats, but this does nothing today for the more pressing issue of global climate change, he says.

"You can buy an ecosystem, but shifts in climate change will destroy the ecosystem as it exists," Brulle said.

As an example, Brulle points the finger at the Nature Conservancy, which commanded about 19 percent of all environmental income dollars in 2003 by his calculation.

"Do we want to be putting 19 percent of [donations] income on a strategy that is really about buying land?" Brulle said. "That is not going to address global climate change and biodiversity losses ... the strategy has failed."

Brulle's picks for where to put your environmental dollars - the Sierra Club (for which he is an unpaid advisor; he likes how they effectively connect individuals with national concerns), Center for Health, Environment & Justice (he likes their highly local work) and 350.org.

The real challenge

About 62 percent of Americans refuse to accept that global climate change is a problem, despite a consensus among scientists that it is. And that's a problem.

"The biggest challenge that the environmental movement faces in the next two to three years - climate change, climate change and climate change," Brulle said.

Sure, shrinking global biodiversity and the link between toxic chemicals and human health loom, but these pale in comparison to the threat of climate change, he said.

It's easy to see that oil spills are bad for the environment. The trick with climate change is getting people to visualize it, the goal of a new book, "Climate Change: Picturing the Science" (W. W. Norton & Co., 2009), which shows photos of melting ice and permafrost, and of rising sea levels in Venice and Miami, as well as other evidence that brings the problem to life.

An exhibition of the photos is on display today in Manhattan on the outside corner of the Port Authority Bus Terminal at 42nd Street and Eighth Avenue.

History and what's to come

Environmentalism was a non-partisan issue for most of the nation's history. Richard Nixon and Theodore Roosevelt both were environmentalists. The gulf between the two parties' positions on the environment started in the mid-1970s and has widened steadily ever since, an analysis by Brulle shows.

Brulle is less than optimistic about significant or major changes, except in a few areas. A big wilderness preservation bill was passed last month in Congress. And we'll soon become a more energy efficient nation, as part of President Obama's push for more "green jobs."

Also management of overfishing is improving and will continue to do so with Oregon State University marine biologist Jane Lubchenco as the new chief of NOAA, he said.

Ohio State University sociologist J. Craig Jenkins also is guardedly optimistic for our environmental future.

"Trying to run a transportation system based on 'Hummers" took a long time to develop and will take equally long to restructure," he said.

He predicts significant changes in our energy use and patterns in the areas of transportation, home heating and industrial energy use, if only due to rising energy costs. The United States currently ranges from non-competitive to among the worst in the world in these areas (especially in transportation and domestic energy use).

New housing designs, new methods of generating electricity and new transportation methods are on the horizon, he said, also due to rising costs.

"These will also have global warming benefits," he said. "The big unknown is whether the latter benefits will be enough to matter."

Perhaps an even bigger overhaul, not a bigger or better movement, is required to solve our environmental woes, according to "Bridge at the Edge of the World" (Yale University Press, 2008) by James Gustave Speth, dean of Yale University's School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

Efforts to deal with environmental deterioration are failing across the board, Speth says. His solution is to look at capitalism and our political system, reorient our values away from economics and toward human and natural ecology, and reinvent a new way of living on the planet.


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Illegal wood soon excluded from EU markets

WWF 22 Apr 09;

Strasbourg / Brussels – WWF has welcomed today’s decision by the European Parliament to support strict rules to eliminate illegally harvested wood from the European market.

Based on today’s vote all companies in the wood supply chain will have to provide information about the source of the products they trade in the EU, one of the main markets for wood products. This will contribute to stop trade of illegally harvested wood and related products.

“Illegal logging is a major culprit for the increasing destruction of precious tropical forests and takes away a valuable source of income from local communities,” says Anke Schulmeister, Forests Policy Officer at WWF. “As a major producer and importer of timber, the EU has a key role to play for preservation of forests worldwide. It is only fair that companies are requested to install systems proving that the timber they sell is legal, respect the environment and the rights of local people. This must go together with adequate sanctions.”

Worldwide, approximately 13 million hectares of natural forest, particularly in the tropical area, are lost every year. The urgency for a strong European law is further demonstrated by the increasing demand for wood and wood products. According to recent UN data, demand for paper products in Europe is expected to increase by 80% by 2030.

The debate on a timber law for Europe started more than five years ago and has now reached its crucial phase. WWF urges the EU Agriculture Council, meeting in June in Luxembourg, to support the EU Parliament’s position and vote on a strong legislation to stop trade of illegal timber. If adopted in June, new measures should come into force in 2010/2011.

EU Lawmakers Call For Tough Watch On Illegal Timber
Jeremy Smith PlanetArk 24 Apr 09;

STRASBOURG - Europe should push for tighter laws to curb the illegal timber trade by making both importers and exporters get licenses to show their wood does not come from endangered rainforests, lawmakers said on Wednesday.

EU countries are an important market for both legally and illegally harvested timber -- the largest importers of plywood and sawnwood from Africa, the second largest from Asia, and a key market for Russia. Much of that wood is suspect.

The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, wants to make licenses obligatory only for exporters, with other measures to reduce the risk of illegally sourced timber entering EU markets. Green groups, and MEPs, say that doesn't go far enough.

"The Amazon-sized hole in the Commission's proposal is that it does not actually prohibit the import and sale of illegally logged timber," said Green MEP Caroline Lucas, whose legal report was backed by the full European Parliament on Wednesday.

Lucas, calling the Commission's timber proposal "vitally important but distressingly weak," said all market operators should be responsible for trading only legally sourced wood.

That report will go before a June meeting of EU farm ministers in Luxembourg, where the issue will be thrashed out.

Debate on a European timber law began more than five years ago and restrictions are currently limited to the terms of voluntary partnerships the European Union has signed with exporters like Ghana. Very few countries have signed up.

Environmental groups say Europe buys 1.2 billion euros ($1.55 billion) worth of illegally felled timber a year, some 20 percent of its imports, and the trade can lead to more forest degradation, fires and poaching.

The WWF estimated last year that nearly a fifth of the wood imported into the European Union is felled illegally or comes from suspect sources, mostly in Russia, Indonesia and China.

"As a major producer and importer of timber, the EU has a key role to play for preservation of forests worldwide," Anke Schulmeister, WWF Forests Policy Officer, said in a statement.

"It is only fair that companies are requested to install systems proving that the timber they sell is legal, respects the environment and the rights of local people," the statement said.

(Editing by Tim Pearce)


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Kenya wildlife devasted by increasing human impact

Yahoo News 22 Apr 09;

NAIROBI (AFP) – Wildlife populations in Kenya's Maasai Mara National Reserve have declined massively over the past quarter century due to pressures from a rapidly expanding human presence, according to a study released Wednesday.

Between 1989 and 2003 the giraffe population in the Maasai Mara declined by 95 percent, warthogs by 80 percent and impalas by 65 percent, according to a report by the International Livestock Research Institute, which tracked serious declines in four other hoofed mammals.

"These losses are widespread and substantial," Joseph Ogutu, who led the ILRI study, said in a statement. "And they are likely linked to the steady increase in human settlements on lands adjacent to the reserve."

The Maasai are a tribe of semi-nomadic herders, but they have increasingly settled in recent decades, upsetting the historic harmony that previously existed between the human and animal communities around the reserve.

Large scale crop cultivation, the massive expansion of permanent human settlements, and increased presence of livestock have deprived wildlife of grazing areas, leading to a decline in numbers.

"We know from thousands of years of history that pastoral livestock keeping can co-exist with Africa's renowned concentration of big mammals," ILRI director general Carlos Sere said in a statement.

He said it was in the interest of the Maasai to preserve the wildlife as they receive a share of the revenue generated by tourists who visit the reserve largely to see the animals.

The researchers alleged that years of policy neglect by Kenyan governments have forced the Maasai into an environmentally unsustainable lifestyle.

"One of the problems is that the pastoralists own the land but the government owns the wildlife," Joseph Ogutu told AFP.

But changes to Maasai life have in part brought on by changing weather patterns and rise in periods of prolonged drought.

The Maasai Reserve covers 1,500 square kilometres in western Kenya and is central to the country's wildlife driven tourism industry.

Mara wildlife in serious decline
James Morgan, BBC News 23 Apr 09;

Wild grazing animals in Kenya's Masai Mara National Reserve are steadily disappearing, a study has found.

Numbers of giraffe, warthog, impala, topi and hartebeest fell by 50% or more between 1979 and 2002.

The falls are linked to rapid growth of Maasai settlements around the reserve, say scientists from the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI).

Their analysis is published in the British Journal of Zoology.

"The situation we documented paints a bleak picture and requires urgent and decisive action if we want to save this treasure from disaster," said Joseph Ogutu, the lead author of the study and a statistical ecologist at ILRI.

"Our study offers the best evidence to date that wildlife losses in the reserve are widespread and substantial.

"These trends are clearly linked to the increase in human settlements on lands adjacent to the reserve."

The loss of grazing animals is already having an impact on lions, cheetahs, and other predators, according to researchers.

"The carnivores which depend on these wildlife are the first casualties," said Dr Ogutu.

"The numbers of lions are going down. The cheetah numbers are declining. The wild dogs in the Mara system have become extinct."

Increasing threat

The Masai Mara and the neighbouring Serengeti are world-famous for their exceptional wildlife population - including an annual migration of nearly two million wildebeest.

The Mara itself was recently voted one of the "seven modern wonders of the world".

But during recent decades, many species have come under threat from severe droughts, increased poaching, and more intensive grazing by Maasai pastoralists in the "ranchlands" at the fringes of the reserve.

Between 1989 and 2003 the ILRI scientists carried out monthly ground counts of seven ungulate species - giraffe, hartebeest, impala, warthog, topi, waterbuck, and zebra.

They found significant declines in giraffe, impala and topi, and even greater declines in warthog and hartebeest.

The trends they observed are backed up by a separate, aerial count of wildlife undertaken between 1979 and 2002, by the Kenyan government Department of Resource Surveys and Remote Sensing.

By 2002, numbers of giraffe in the reserve had fallen to 20% of their 1979 levels, the bulk of those losses occurring before 1989.

Topi and hartebeest in the reserve fell to less than half their 1979 levels, and almost disappeared in some of the neighbouring ranchlands where they once grazed.

Impala fell by 70% in the Mara itself, while warthog fell by more than 80%, although their numbers appeared steady since 1989.

Habitat erosion

The wildlife losses were most pronounced in the areas where human settlement has increased, even after factoring out the influence of drought.

"Wildlife are constantly moving between the reserve and ranchlands, and they are increasingly competing for habitat with livestock," said Dr Ogutu.

"In particular, more and more people in the ranchlands are allowing their livestock to graze in the reserve - an illegal activity the impoverished Maasai resort to when faced with prolonged drought and other problems.

"The steady erosion of wildlife habitat caused by this intrusion is a key factor in the declines we observed.

"And since 2002 [when the survey ended] the number of settlements, human population and agriculture have continued to expand, so the declines can only be expected to accelerate."

Traditionally, most Maasai were semi-nomadic herders who co-existed easily with the wildlife in the region.

In the right circumstances, Maasai settlements can actually benefit populations of wild grazing animals, the researchers have found.

This is because human settlements can act as safe havens for wild grazing animals because human activity repels lions and other predators.

Safe havens

"The traditional livestock livelihoods of the Maasai, who do not consume wild animals, actually helped maintain the abundance of grazing animals in East Africa," said co-author Robin Reid, of Colorado State University in the US.

"And where a pastoral approach to livestock grazing is still practiced, it continues to benefit wild populations."

But the growing communities of pastoralists and their exclusion from development of land policies have made their traditional way of life difficult to maintain.

Over the last few decades, many Maasai have left their traditional mud-and-wattle homesteads, known as bomas, and gravitated to more permanent settlements - a large number of which now crowd the "ranchlands" at the border of the reserve.

In just one of these ranchlands, the Koyiaki ranch, the number of bomas surged from 44 in 1950 to 368 in 2003, while huts increased from 44 to 2,735 in number.

As these permanent settlements increased, the abundance of wildlife decreased significantly, researchers note.

The ILRI scientists are helping to promote schemes where Maasai living next to game reserves receive rent payments from private game lodges in return for allowing wildlife to continue to roam on their property.

In one such conservancy, at Olare Orok, the numbers of lions "increased almost immediately", said Dr Ogutu.

"We know from thousands of years of history that pastoral livestock-keeping can co-exist with East Africa's renowned concentrations of big mammals. And we should look to these pastoralists for solutions to the current conflicts," said Carlos Seré, ILRI's Director General.

"With their help and the significant tourism revenue that the Mara wildlife generates, it should be possible to invest in evidence-based approaches that can protect this region's iconic pastoral peoples as well as its wildlife populations."


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Bird war breaks out over Italy's hunting legislation

Peter Popham, The Independent 22 Apr 09;

Animal protection groups in Italy are braced for a bitter struggle with members of Silvio Berlusconi's party who want a wholesale liberalisation of Italy's hunting laws.

Led by Franco Orsi, a senator from the Liguria region and a keen hunter, the hunt lobby wants to expand the open season so that bird shooting can begin as early as August and continue through February.

They are also keen to expand the areas where hunting is allowed, to include hunting nature reserves, and to permit people as young as 16 to shoot, among other measures. Mr Orsi says he wants "a serious hunting law".

"We would like to go hunting according to European rules, from 1 August to 28 February," he said. This is the period during which hunting can take place in France, Greece and Portugal.

Sara Fioravanti, a spokeswoman for WWF Italy, said: "The season has to be shorter here because Italy is the motorway for migratory birds, there is a huge flow of birds flying down the peninsula on the way to and from Africa and shooting must be banned during the period when they are migrating."

Wildlife protection organisations claim 11 bird species, including the tufted duck, pintail duck, and lapwing, are already at risk of extinction because Italians shoot "too much and badly".

Yesterday, 20 of the organisations made a joint appeal to throw out an attempt by the hunt lobby to abolish the beginning and end dates of the hunting season, which would allow Italian regions to set their own dates, with potentially devastating consequences for migratory birds. Parliament's decision will be known today or tomorrow.

Although the hunters enjoy robust support within Mr Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PdL) party, a new opinion poll commissioned by WWF indicates that in the country as a whole, they are a small minority – 69 per cent of those polled opposed all the liberalising proposals, 86 per cent rejected an expansion of the hunting season and 93 per cent opposed the shooting of migratory birds.

Ms Fioravanti said: "We hope that in this time of crisis, after the earthquake in Abruzzo, the government will not allow the hunt lobby parliamentary time to push through this bad law."


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European Commission admits failure of fishing policy

Europe's Common Fisheries Policy has failed and a completely new fishing management system is needed, the European Commission has admitted.

Bruno Waterfield, The Telegraph 22 Apr 09;

A new Brussels position paper highlighted severe problems with fisheries and urged a complete rethink of a key European Union policy.

EU officials have been forced to admit that, despite the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP), 88 per cent of European fish stocks are over-fished, compared to 25 per cent elsewhere in the world.

Almost a third - 30 per cent - of managed fisheries are "outside safe biological limits, they cannot reproduce at normal because the parenting population is too depleted", said the paper.

"Yet in many fisheries we are fishing two or three more times more than what fish stocks can sustain."

Joe Borg, the European fisheries commissioner, said: "We are questioning even the fundamentals of the current policy. We are not just looking for another reform - it is time to design a modern, simple and sustainable system for managing fisheries in the EU."

The commission has blamed fishing fleets for over-fishing and national governments for failing to enforce catch quota limits agreed annually under the CFP.

The frank admission that previous reforms have failed was seized on by critics of the EU policy, who have long demanded the return of fisheries to national control.

Struan Stevenson, a Scottish Conservative MEP and fisheries spokesman in the European Parliament, has called for fishing policy to be decentralised.

He highlighted figures showing that British fishermen have seen 60 per cent of their whitefish fleet scrapped and thousands of jobs destroyed.

"This paper represents the most dramatic overhaul of fisheries management since the CFP was born and is a clear indication that the commission now accepts that micro-management by eurocrats in Brussels has failed," he said.

Nigel Farage, leader of the UK Independence Party, said: "It is time to scrap the CFP in its entirety and look to successful national fisheries policies like Iceland and Norway."

The British Government is backing "ambitious reform" to "devolve appropriate powers and responsibilities".

Huw Irranca-Davies, the British fisheries minister, said: "We also need to tackle the waste of dead fish being thrown back in the sea and to enable fishermen to land more fish whilst catching less."

We've got it all wrong on fishing strategy, says EU
David Charter, The Times 23 Apr 09;

Europe’s fishing industry is on the brink of suicide and several species are in danger of extinction after 25 years of policy failure,the European Commission said yesterday.

Officials admitted five key failings in the EU’s Common Fisheries Policy as they prepared to tear up the idea of a centrally dictated strategy. They launched the search for an alternative, saying that much of the responsibility for fishing must be returned to EU member states.

One key failing that has led to the near-extinction of stocks of cod, bluefin tuna and anchovy is the “deep-rooted problem” of fleet overcapacity, with campaign groups arguing for a 40 per cent cut in the EU’s 90,000 vessels. Its admission that Europe’s controversial fisheries policy had failed was broadly welcomed by the fishing industry.

The Commission said that 88 per cent of EU stocks were overfished, compared with only 25 per cent worldwide.

“Most of Europe’s fishing fleets are either running losses or returning low profits,” said Joe Borg, the EU Fisheries Commissioner, in a Green Paper published yesterday. “There is chronic overcapacity, of which overfishing is both a cause and a consequence — fleets have the power to fish much more than can safely be removed without jeopardising the future productivity of stocks.”

He said that cuts in fleets of only 2 to 3 per cent a year had been offset by increases in catching capacity.

Ministers from individual EU states were given much of the blame in the Green Paper. They meet every December to set fish quotas and every year they override expert scientific advice, which, for example, has been calling for cod fishing to be closed in the North Sea to allow it to recover.

Last year 93 per cent of cod was caught before the fish were mature enough to reproduce. But a higher cod quota was set for this year, under pressure from member states.

“Sustained political and economic pressure has led industry and member states to request countless derogations, exceptions and specific measures,” the Green Paper stated.

Many EU fishermen then receive subsidies to help them to stay in business — for instance, those involved in the anchovy grounds that have been closed to save the species. “European citizens almost pay for their fish twice: once at the shop and once again through their taxes,” said the Paper.

One of the most senior European Commission fisheries officials added: “The sector is overfishing and, if you like, committing suicide.”

Spain has the biggest fleet in terms of tonnage, but its 11,350 boats are still outmatched by Greece, which has 17,350, and Italy with 13,700. France, which traditionally is at the forefront of industrial action against EU fishing restrictions, has almost 8,000 boats.

Britain has 6,763 fishing vessels, according to an official survey in 2007, compared with 8,458 ten years earlier.

The EU consultation, which will run to the end of the year, will be followed by studies next year, but it will be 2011 or 2012 before decisions must be taken.

Campaigners called for the politicians to be taken out of detailed quota-setting. “Cod in Newfoundland never came back after it was fished to extinction and bluefin tuna is going the same way ,” said Julie Cator, of Oceana, a marine conservation organisation. “We cannot keep fishing down the ecological chain until we are left with jellyfish.”

Bertie Armstrong, chief executive of the Scottish Fishermen’s Federation, said: “Reform is very necessary indeed — by anyone’s standards the Common Fisheries Policy has failed.”

Richard Lochhead, Scotland’s Fisheries Minister, said: “Those who are best placed to protect our precious fishing stocks are those with the greatest interest in them. Therefore, it is fundamentally wrong for landlocked member states, and others with no interest in crucial Scottish fisheries, to have a decisive say over how that resource is managed.”

Aaron McLoughlin, head of the European Marine Programme at WWF, said: “The Commission have produced an admirably honest critique of a dysfunctional fisheries policy.” He said the successful fisheries of Alaska, New Zealand and Norway, based on long-term management plans for fish stocks and cuts in fleet capacity, could be copied in Europe.


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Air pollution helps plants blunt climate change: study

Marlowe Hood Yahoo News 22 Apr 09;

PARIS (AFP) – Cleaning up skies choked with smog and soot would sharply curtail the capacity of plants to absorb carbon dioxide and blunt global warming, according to a study released on Wednesday.

Plant life -- especially tropical forests -- soak up a quarter of all the CO2 humans spew into the atmosphere, and thus plays a critical role in keeping climate change in check.

Through photosynthesis, vegetation transforms sunlight, CO2 and water into sugar nutrients.

Common sense would suggest that air pollution in the form of microscopic particles that obstruct the Sun's rays -- a phenomenon called "global dimming" -- would hamper this process, but the new study shows the opposite is true.

"Surprisingly, the effects of atmospheric pollution seem to have enhanced global plant productivity by as much as a quarter from 1960 to 1999," said Linda Mercado, a researcher at the Met Office Hadley Centre in Britain, and the study's lead author.

"This resulted in a net ten percent increase in the amount of carbon stored by the land," she said in a statement.

Global dimming was especially strong from the 1950s up through the 1980s, corresponding to the period of enhanced plant growth, notes the study, published in the British journal Nature.

Research published last month found that dimming has since continued almost everywhere in the world except Europe.

The explanation for this botanical paradox lies in the way particle pollution reflects light.

Even if plants receive less direct sunshine, the presence of clouds and pollution scatter the light that does filter through such that fewer leaves -- which is where photosynthesis occurs -- wind up in total shade.

"Although many people believe that well-watered plants grow best on a bright sunny day, the reverse is true. Plants often thrive in hazy conditions," said colleague and co-author Stephen Sitch.

This process of diffuse radiation is well known. But the new study is the first to use a global model to calculate its impact on the ability of plants to absorb CO2.

The findings underline a cruel dilemma: to the extent we succeed in reducing aerosol pollution in coming decades, we will need to slash global carbon dioxide emissions even more than we would have otherwise.

"Aerosols offset approximately 50 percent of the greenhouse gas warming," Knut Alfsen, research director at the Centre for International Environmental Research in Oslo, Norway, said by phone.

Without this particle pollution, he said, average global surface temperatures would have increased by 1.0 to 1.1 Celsius (1.8 to 2.0 Fahrenheit) since the start of industrialisation, rather than 0.7 C (1.25 F).

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

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

To stay below that threshold, carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere must be kept below 450 parts per million (ppm). The current level is about 385 ppm.

"As we continue to clean up the air -- which we must do for the sake of human health -- the challenge of avoiding dangerous climate change through reductions in CO2 emissions will be even harder," said Peter Cox, a researcher at Britain's University of Exeter and a co-author of the Nature study.

A major scientific review released last week at the United Nations showed that warming is itself limiting the capacity of plants to take up CO2, and that an increase in two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) would transform forests from a sink into a net source of CO2.

When plants die, the carbon they store is released into the air.

Could Cleaning Up Air Pollution Actually Speed Up Global Warming?
Scientific American 23 Apr 09;

Taking the haze out of the atmosphere may make plants less efficient at absorbing and storing carbon dioxide

Do plants prefer the hazy skies brought on by pollution to the clean atmosphere envisioned by environmentalists, regulators and the public? That's the implication of a new study of exactly how much plants, ranging from broadleaf trees to grasses, have been benefiting from the pollution brought on by the particles—from soot to sulfur dioxide molecules—that burning fossil fuels leaves in the air.

That apparent benefit is because plants do their best photosynthesis—the chemical process that uses chlorophyll in their leaves to turn sunlight and carbon dioxide (CO2) into plant food and oxygen—under so-called diffuse radiation, or hazy skies, that scatters the sunlight, thereby distributing it more evenly. Ecosystem modeler Lina Mercado from the Center for Ecology and Hydrology headquartered in Wallingford, England, and her colleagues' study, published in Nature, found that plants stored 23.7 percent more CO2—the leading greenhouse gas causing climate change—between 1960 and 1999 thanks to more efficient photosynthesis brought on by air pollution scattering sunlight. Less CO2 storage in the plant "carbon sink" means more in the atmosphere, accompanied by more global warming.

"Plants often thrive in hazy conditions such as those that exist during periods of increased atmospheric pollution," Mercado says. But as the skies are cleaned up, "the contribution of diffuse radiation to the land carbon sink could disappear by the end of the 21st century."

The modeling results mimic the impact of the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines that increased atmospheric haze and resulted in lower global atmospheric concentrations of CO2 in 1992 and 1993. All told, polluted skies resulted in the uptake of an extra 440 million metric tons of carbon per year between 1960 and 1980, declining to just 300 million metric tons of carbon per year between 1980 and 1999. Further declines are expected as skies clear going forward as U.S. and European Union regulations reduce sulfur dioxide and particulate emissions by attaching scrubbers to smokestacks, among other efforts. Although the scrubbers and other pollution controls are being added to combat aerosols, among other air pollution problems, few such measures are in place for CO2. "We conclude that steeper cuts in fossil-fuel emissions will be required to stabilize the climate if anthropogenic aerosols decline," the researchers wrote.

To be clear: there is no doubt that aerosols are bad for human health. The tiny particles contribute outsize health effects ranging from asthma to heart disease. That's why environmental regulators have focused on reducing and removing the aerosols from the atmosphere.

And aerosols have other environmental impacts, which this modeling study did not examine. "Aerosols and clouds affect not only diffuse and direct-beam forms of radiation but also other factors such as temperature and precipitation that are also important for the dynamics of the terrestrial carbon cycle," says environmental scientist Lianhong Gu of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, who first showed the effect of the Pinatubo eruption on photosynthesis. This "indicates that the two most uncertain factors in projecting climate change—clouds and aerosols—are more uncertain than we thought."

And that points up the complexity of trying to design policies to mitigate both air pollution and climate change. Hazy interactions can be important, both for carbon-sink reasons and the link between irrigated agriculture and declining rainfall, says climatologist Dev Niyogi of Purdue University. Further studies will be needed and the lifetimes of the various pollutants taken into account—aerosols last just a few weeks at most in the atmosphere, whereas CO2 can linger for a century—and atmospheric changes must be examined as a whole, he notes.

But it now seems clear that "global dimming" "has acted to increase the uptake of carbon by the land [plants], which has helped to slow the rate of increase in atmospheric CO2," Mercado notes. And her co-author climate modeler Peter Cox of the University of Exeter in England adds: "As we continue to clean up the air in the lower atmosphere, which we must do for the sake of human health, the challenge of avoiding dangerous climate change through reductions in CO2 emissions will be even harder."


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China's Forests Have Role In Soaking Up CO2: Study

Alister Doyle, PlanetArk 23 Apr 09;

OSLO - China's forests and other vegetation absorbed around a third of its greenhouse gases in the late 20th century, but the rate may now be falling because of a surge in industrial emissions, scientists said.

A study by Peking University said that increased summer rains, efforts to plant forests, an expansion of shrubland, shifts in crop use and higher bamboo mass soaked up between 28 and 37 percent of industrial emissions in the 1980s and 1990s.

The study gave the first estimate of the impact of plants in offsetting carbon dioxide emissions in China, which has recently overtaken the United States as top emitter. Plants soak up carbon as they grow and release it when they burn or rot.

The report, in the journal Nature, also said that China's plants and soils soaked up more carbon per square meter than in Europe but less than in the United States.

But a U.S. scientist said the percentage of emissions absorbed by plants was falling because a surge in economic growth in recent years meant China's industrial emissions were expanding faster than vegetation.

"It's dropping like a rock," Kevin Robert Gurney, a carbon expert at Purdue University in Indiana, said of the percentage absorbed. He wrote an opinion piece accompanying the Chinese study in Nature.

For 2007, vegetation would have offset just 10-15 percent of China's emissions, he told Reuters. China is opening a coal-fired power plant at a rate of more than one a week, U.N. officials say.

And projections of Chinese energy use in 2030 by the International Energy Agency would cut the level to 6-8 percent, assuming stable rates of vegetation uptake.

Vegetation worldwide absorbs between 10-60 percent of greenhouse gas emissions from human sources.

The Chinese-led study also said that a shift by people to cities meant that less firewood and charcoal was being burned in the countryside, but people were also burning more fossil fuels.

Forests cover about 14 percent of China.

Gurney welcomed the study as helping understanding of China. "We haven't had a really good handle on Chinese emissions until now," he said.

More than 190 nations aim to agree a new U.N. climate treaty by the end of 2009 that may include credits for policies to slow deforestation. Under the new treaty, Gurney said that China could only claim credit for a tiny amount of the absorption -- from deliberate forest plantings.

The U.N. Climate Panel says that greenhouse gases are heating the planet and will bring heatwaves, more powerful storms, extinctions of animals and plants and rising ocean levels.

(Editing by Louise Ireland)


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Lab Finds New Method To Turn Biomass Into Gasoline

Jasmin Melvin, PlanetArk 22 Apr 09;

WASHINGTON - U.S. scientists have combined a discovery from a French garbage dump with breakthroughs in synthetic biology to come up with a novel method for turning plant waste into gasoline, without the need of any food sources.

A synthetic biology lab at the University of California San Francisco identified a compound able to use biomass to produce a gas that can be converted into a gasoline chemically indistinguishable from fossil-fuel based petroleum.

Their method allows for a variety of feedstocks to be used that are nonfood sources, such as agricultural waste products like corn stover and sugar cane bagasse.

Critics charge that making ethanol from corn helps drive up food prices and is not an environmentally sound way to produce a so-called green fuel.

The scientists said gasoline they were able to produce carried the same chemical and molecular makeup as gasoline from oil refineries.

"You could fill your car up with it right now, so there's no difference in engine technology or anything like that," said Chris Voigt, who led the research.

Voigt added that the United States could look to biological sources for a large percentage of its gasoline when oil prices are high.

"Then if the sugar price goes high and the oil price goes down, you could flip it and the consumer would not know any difference," he said. "You can't do that with ethanol."

With improvements in the rate of production from genetic engineering, Voigt estimates that gasoline could be produced at $1.65 per gallon from sugar cane bagasse.

He expects fuel from cellulosic sources like poplar would be cheaper at $1.10 to $1.30 a gallon. But creating reliable cost models at this point is hard since there are no cellulosic fuel crops in production to base an estimate on, he said.

Scientists previously tried to find an enzyme that could break down the cell walls of plants to help make biofuels but "failed miserably," Voigt said.

"So we started looking at organisms that can do that naturally," he said. "We then found this one that we realized was unique."

Voigt's lab used a bacterium discovered in the early 1980s living in a French garbage dump. They combined the bacterium with yeast, which can make different chemicals.

When mixing this compound with biomass like switchgrass, the bacteria eats the grass and produces the chemical acetate. The yeast eats the acetate and converts it into methyl halides, molecules traditionally used as agricultural fumigants.

The methyl halides come off as a gas that can be collected and converted into gasoline.

Voigt noted that by using different catalysts the methyl halides can also be converted into other useful chemicals, such as the ethylene used to make plastic bags.

Methyl halides are naturally produced by marine algae, fungi and other organisms, according to the UCSF lab's paper in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. But it's produced in such low yields that it was not of use to industry.

These results demonstrate the potential for industrial production of methyl halides from nonfood sources to make gasoline. The first large-scale pilot plant could be built in three years, Voigt estimates.

The lab's discovery was helped by breakthroughs in synthetic biology over the past few years, Voigt said.

Labs can now design a piece of DNA on a computer, email it to a DNA synthesis company and have the actual DNA mailed to them in a matter of weeks.

(Editing by Christian Wiessner)


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Obama Pushes Renewable Energy, Climate Change Laws

Ross Colvin, PlanetArk 23 Apr 09;

NEWTON - President Barack Obama said on Wednesday the United States must lead the world on renewable energy and pressed Congress to set greenhouse gas limits deemed crucial for the success of global talks on climate change.

Obama, who has kept energy reform high on his priority list since taking office in January, used Earth Day to tout the need for a U.S. shift to less-polluting fuels and a concerted effort to reduce the nation's dependence on foreign oil.

"It is time for us to lay a new foundation for economic growth by beginning a new era of energy exploration in America," Obama told workers at a wind power technology plant in Iowa, the state that propelled his presidential campaign more than a year ago.

"The nation that leads the world in creating new energy sources will be the nation that leads the 21st century global economy. America can be that nation. America must be that nation."

U.S. negotiators are preparing proposals for international climate talks to be held in Copenhagen in December, aimed at agreeing a pact to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which sets limits on greenhouse gas emissions.

The U.S. Congress may hold the key to the Obama administration's credibility at those talks. It is mulling legislation that would put a cap on carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gas emissions, forming a so-called cap-and-trade system that is similar to the European Union's.

In Washington, senior Obama administration officials urged lawmakers to back the bill.

"There will be no new global deal if the United States is not part of it, and we won't be part of it unless we are on track in enacting our own domestic plan," Todd Stern, the top U.S. climate negotiator, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

"Unless we stand and deliver by enacting strong, mandatory nationwide climate and energy legislation, the effort to negotiate a new international agreement will come up short."

Washington is hosting a meeting of big economies next week to help forge a climate deal. In a reference to his predecessor, former Republican President George W. Bush, Democrat Obama said the days of a slow U.S. response to global climate talks were over.

TOUGH LEGISLATION IN THE WORKS

The House of Representatives is taking the lead in Congress on rules imposing tough new caps on CO2 emissions and other pollutants that are thrust into the atmosphere by big manufacturers, utilities and vehicles.

Last month House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman unveiled a bill that seeks to lower CO2 emissions to 20 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 and more than 80 percent by 2050.

The controversial measures could face trouble in the 100-member Senate, however, where 60 votes are required for passage. Republicans have criticized the cap-and-trade system as a backhanded energy tax.

An Environmental Protection Agency analysis of Waxman's bill found that it would raise electricity prices 22 percent by the year 2030 and cost American households an average of $98 to $140 each year through 2050.

EPA head Lisa Jackson said the cost to Americans from the bill would be "modest compared to the benefits that science and plain common sense tell us a comprehensive energy and climate policy will deliver."

The EPA declared CO2 and other tailpipe emissions a danger to human health and welfare last week, opening the way for government regulation by the Executive Branch of greenhouse gases, but Obama said in Iowa he preferred legislation to do the job.

The U.S. Interior Department issued long-delayed guidelines on Wednesday for leasing offshore areas for renewable energy production, opening the door to wind power generation off the coasts.

And the White House brought in fuel-efficient cars from U.S. producers Chrysler, GM and Ford for viewing as it prepares to replace cars in its 43-vehicle fleet.

Obama said the United States should increase domestic production of oil and natural gas in the short-term while emphasizing renewable energy such as wind power held the keys to the U.S. energy future.

(Editing by Philip Barbara)


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