Best of our wild blogs: 28 Apr 09


Inter-Ministerial Committee for Sustainable Development Unveils Sustainable Singapore Blueprint on AsiaIsGreen

Importance of dead specimens to museums
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Cartoon slug at Changi
on the wonderful creation blog

Pregant Papas on the Beach
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Two of a kind
on the annotated budak blog and you'll grow into it and it's hard to be a hermit

A Casual Morning Walk In The Nature Reserve
on the Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature blog

The Dragonflies have Emerged!
on the Creatures in the Wild blog

An integrated trail at Envirofest 2009 @ Toa Payoh Hub
on the Toddycats! blog

Status of Singapore's reefs and what we can do: a talk by Dr Wilkinson on the wild shores of singapore blog

White-rumped Shama collecting nesting material
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Olive-backed Sunbird Nesting
on the Glorious Birds blog

The Plug of Nephilid Spiders - A Raffles Museum Fellowship Research on the Raffles Museum News blog


Read more!

Singapore government outlines resource, environment goals in $1b blueprint

Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

SINGAPORE'S policymakers have unveiled a sweeping blueprint, 15 months in the making, to help build a greener, more energy efficient and sustainable nation.

The $1 billion plan, to be implemented over the next five years, will change everything from the cityscape and landscape here, to the way Singaporeans live and the way businesses are run.

If successful, it will make energy usage here more efficient, reduce pollution and expand the nation's green spaces - even as the demand for resources rises along with economic growth.

The report of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Sustainable Development (IMCSD) - co-authored by five different ministries - also pledges to advance Singapore's ambition to be a clean technology and urban environmental solutions hub.

This sector is set to add an estimated $3.4 billion to economic output and create 18,000 'green collar' jobs by 2015.

Speaking at the launch of the 130-page report yesterday, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan acknowledged that the document comes amid Singapore's worst recession since independence.

'The temptation is to slow down our efforts in the area of sustainable development while we tackle the immediate economic challenges. However, the two are not mutually exclusive,' he said.

'If we want to face the challenges of the future, we really have to start now, today. It's going to take us a long time... but we're financially committed to it.'

The report outlines the findings and recommendations of the IMCSD, which was set up in January last year to look at ways to create a sustainable nation in the wake of increasing global awareness of the world's dwindling natural resources and climate change.

Over the past year, more than 700 people including members of the public, leaders of non-governmental organisations, businesses, grassroots organisations, academics, and media figures offered views through various focus group discussions.

Members of the public also submitted more than 1,300 suggestions in the process.

The feedback has resulted in some aggressive targets, including a 35 per cent improvement in energy efficiency from 2005 levels, as well as a recycling rate of 70 per cent, by 2030.

Singapore also wants to increase its proportion of environmentally friendly 'green' buildings from 1 per cent currently to at least 80 per cent by 2030.

Industry observers yesterday called the report 'comprehensive and impressive', but some also highlighted critical gaps.

Dr Geh Min, former president of the Nature Society, said the report was a 'a good reflection of extensive intra-governmental as well as community dialogue'.

She applauded the attention given to solar energy, alternative transport such as cycling, and biodiversity conservation.

Singapore Environment Council executive director Howard Shaw said the report was 'holistic in nature, capturing key areas'.

However, he said that it failed to include discussion of carbon emissions and 'cap-and-trade systems', a form of carbon trading where polluting industries have to buy carbon credits for the right to pollute.

The other IMCSD co-chair, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim, said yesterday that Singapore, which lacks natural renewable sources such as wind and geothermal energy, cannot realistically take on such emission targets.

However, the nation is 'betting big' on solar energy and is investing heavily in the sector, and will not rule out mass adoption of solar power when it becomes cost-effective to do so, he added.

In any case, the report is an 'evolving document' which will be reviewed every five years, said Dr Yaacob.

Responding to the recommendations, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said that he was encouraged by the participation of so many Singaporeans in the report.

'This issue concerns not just one or two ministries, but the whole country. Hence we will tackle it using a whole-of-government approach,' he added.

Key initiatives
Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

# $680 million has been set aside for research and development (R&D) and manpower training in clean energy, environment and water technologies.

The sector could create 18,000 jobs and boost gross domestic product by $3.4 billion by 2015.

# Programmes are available to train specialist manpower and research talent for the clean energy and water technology sectors.

For example, the National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University have set up several R&D centres such as the Singapore Membrane Technology Centre, the Singapore-Delft Water Alliance with the Netherlands, and the Solar Energy Research Institute of Singapore.

# Singapore also hosts global knowledge-sharing events, such as the annual Singapore International Water Week and the biennial World Cities Summit, and think-tanks like the Centre for Liveable Cities.

Green economy to add 18,000 jobs and $3.4b
Grace Chua, Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

MONEY does not grow on trees but the Government hopes a green economy will pay off by creating 18,000 more jobs and adding $3.4 billion to the Republic's gross domestic product (GDP) by 2015.

Yesterday, the Government released its sustainable-development blueprint which projects that environment and water technologies and clean energy solutions will each contribute $1.7 billion to GDP in the next six years.

Of these, 11,000 jobs will come from environment and water technologies, such as water-treatment plants, while 7,000 will come from the clean energy industry, such as solar-cell plants or biofuels.

To grow the clean technology - or 'cleantech' - sector, a $680 million fund has been set aside for research and development (R&D) and manpower training.

And January's Budget pledged an additional $1 billion for sustainable development over the next five years.

Though this figure is a small percentage of Singapore's $257.4 billion GDP last year, Minister for National Development Mah Bow Tan said: 'We are not looking at headline-grabbing numbers...We are looking at something that is doable in the Singapore context, that is practical, that will give us results.'

One strategy is to develop Singapore as a 'living laboratory' for companies to test-bed technologies here.

A 55-hectare cleantech park - about 25 per cent larger than Beijing's Tiananmen Square - will provide companies with a ready testing ground.

The first phase of the park will be ready at Jalan Bahar, near Nanyang Technological University, by 2011, and will be completed over the next 20 years.

The park will set standards for users in carbon emissions, energy use, and water and waste management, said the Economic Development Board (EDB), which is developing the facility with JTC Corporation.

The EDB said details are still being worked out and will be released in the third quarter of this year.

Mr Lee Thiam Seng, chief executive of environment-solutions provider eco- Wise, which operates a biomass co-generation plant, said the cleantech park was a good long-term strategy for Singapore.

'A lot of these things take time. For instance, hydrogen fuel cells may not be commercially viable within the next 10 years, but technology keeps on improving and advancing,' he said.

Another strategy to grow the cleantech sector here is to attract 'queen bee' companies such as Norway's Renewable Energy Corporation (REC), said Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry S.Iswaran.

Mega investments like REC's $6.3 billion solar cell plant in Tuas will in turn attract other supporting companies, he added.

Besides REC, other renewable-energy companies which are calling Singapore home include Finland's Neste Oil, which is building a $1.2 billion biodiesel plant in Tuas, and Danish wind-power firm Vestas, which last year set up its $500 million R&D centre at Fusionopolis.

Returns from investing in solar energy are expected in the next five to eight years, said Mr Iswaran.

But issues such as integrating solar power into the current electricity grid will have to be addressed if it is to be used on a large scale, he added.

Green blueprint
80% of buildings to be eco-friendly by 2030

More than a year in the making, the new blueprint for a sustainable Singapore sets out three key areas for a cleaner, greener environment
Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

GREEN buildings make up a paltry 1 per cent of buildings in Singapore today, but come 2030, that number will grow to cover 80 per cent of all buildings.

This is one of the most ambitious of the many targets outlined by the Inter- Ministerial Committee on Sustainable Development in its inaugural report released yesterday.

To help achieve this, property developers will be offered a carrot - free extra floor area if their new buildings are built in a way that meets high Green Mark standards. The Government has also set aside a $600 million fund to green existing public and private buildings.

Launched in 2005, the BCA Green Mark Scheme is a system that rates a building's environmental performance.

When fully implemented, all these initiatives under the Building and Construction Authority's (BCA's) second green building masterplan will help Singapore achieve annual savings of $1.6 billion in terms of energy cost reductions.

BCA's second masterplan expands on the first one, which focused on greening new buildings. A total of 245 buildings met the Green Mark standard.

But public feedback had urged BCA to do more with existing buildings, which make up majority of Singapore's physical landscape, said BCA's chief executive John Keung.

Under the new masterplan, the public sector will drive the transformation by requiring all new, large air-conditioned public buildings to achieve the highest Platinum standard from now on.

In addition, the Government will pump $500 million into greening all its public buildings to the GoldPlus standard - just one level below Platinum.

For the private sector, BCA will hand out $100 million in cash incentives to building owners to help them retrofit buildings to be more energy efficient.

Land sales to builders in strategic growth areas such as Marina Bay, Jurong Lake District, Kallang Riverside and Paya Lebar Central will also now come with a condition: Buildings constructed on the sites must achieve either a Green Mark Platinum or GoldPlus rating.

To provide incentives to the private sector, BCA is handing out free gross floor area (GFA) for new private buildings - a suggestion made by industry players during the report's feedback sessions.

Developers who build Green Mark GoldPlus buildings will get an extra 1 per cent of GFA, capped at 2,500 sq m; while Platinum buildings will get an extra 2 per cent, capped at 5,000 sq m.

Industry players such as City Developments' managing director Kwek Leng Joo have welcomed the move. Mr Kwek adding that this will 'help developers defray some investment in green technology and features'.

Even smaller developers, such as executive director Lim Yew Soon of Evan Lim & Co, said they would 'happily build green buildings despite the cost' if there were some incentives available.

Dr Keung said the masterplan will 'not only result in more of our buildings being able to achieve substantial savings in energy costs, but it also provides a boost to the 'green collar' job market'.

About 18,000 green specialists are expected to be trained over the next 10 years in the development, design, construction, operation and maintenance of green buildings.

In the longer term, BCA is considering mandating energy labelling for existing buildings so as to encourage building owners to green their physical assets to a high level of efficiency.

Making the Mark
Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

What makes a green building?

Through the use of cutting-edge green technology, occupants enjoy a cut in water and energy bills, as well as an improvement in indoor environmental quality for healthy living. This also reduces the building's impact on the environment.

One key target:

80 per cent of all buildings in Singapore to be certified Green Mark by 2030. The Green Mark scheme rates buildings on their environmental impact.

Initiatives:

# $100 million incentive for private building owners to upgrade existing buildings to meet green standards.

# Developers will be granted the right to extra floor area for new private buildings meeting green criteria.

# New buildings in strategic growth areas to achieve high Green Mark standards.

# All new public buildings will have to attain Platinum standard.

# All existing public buildings will be upgraded to meet the Goldplus standard at a cost of $500 million by 2020.

Solar power to light up 30 HDB precincts
Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

SOME HDB residents across Singapore can soon look forward to solar energy coming to their estates.

About 30 Housing Board precincts - 28 old and two new estates - are set to get a total of $31 million worth of solar panels installed over the next five years.

The locations are still being chosen and will be announced soon, said HDB yesterday. It added that the solar capacity will help build up the capabilities of local firms and workers.

The project will enable HDB to study the effects of location and different block configurations on solar electricity generation.

It also aims to reduce the energy usage of common areas in HDB estates by 20 per cent to 30 per cent within the next five years.

Solar power to light up 30 HDB precincts
SOME HDB residents across Singapore can soon look forward to solar energy coming to their estates.

About 30 Housing Board precincts - 28 old and two new estates - are set to get a total of $31 million worth of solar panels installed over the next five years.

The locations are still being chosen and will be announced soon, said HDB yesterday. It added that the solar capacity will help build up the capabilities of local firms and workers.

The project will enable HDB to study the effects of location and different block configurations on solar electricity generation.

It also aims to reduce the energy usage of common areas in HDB estates by 20 per cent to 30 per cent within the next five years.

Green blueprint
Look forward to much fresher air by 2020

More than a year in the making, the new blueprint for a sustainable Singapore sets out three key areas for a cleaner, greener environment
Yeo Ghim Lay, Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

THE air in Singapore will be cleaner by 2020 as the authorities have laid out plans to reduce pollution from the transport and industry sectors.

At the top of the hit list are the two main pollutants particulate matter (PM2.5) and sulphur dioxide, both of which are known to cause breathing problems and aggravate respiratory diseases such as asthma.

The Government hopes to reduce PM2.5 emissions from the current annual mean of 16 micrograms per cu m of air to 12 micrograms per cu m by 2020.

PM2.5 - the fine particles in the air - is emitted by diesel vehicles and has been linked to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.

Besides keeping PM2.5 emissions in check, the authorities also hope to cap sulphur dioxide levels at an annual mean of 15 micrograms per cu m by 2020.

Sulphur dioxide is known to worsen respiratory conditions. It is currently hovering at about 11 micrograms per cu m of air, but this level is expected to increase over the following years due to economic growth and increased demand for energy.

After 2020, the aim is to sustain these cleaner levels for another 10 years at least despite expected growth in the economy and vehicle population.

Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim said these targets were well within similar standards set by the United States' Environmental Protection Agency.

To meet these emission goals, the Government will work with transport operators and key industries such as oil and petrochemicals.

To tackle pollution on the roads, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) will carry out a trial of hybrid diesel buses with public and private bus operators.

A hybrid diesel engine makes use of an electric motor as a complement to diesel fuel. It can reduce PM2.5 emissions by 85 per cent, and improve fuel economy by 15 to 30 per cent, said the authorities.

The trial involving buses will determine if it is feasible to use such an engine on Singapore's bus fleets. There are more than 3,500 public buses in Singapore.

Public transport operators say they welcome the trial.

SBS Transit, which runs the majority of bus services here, said it is keen to work with the authorities. 'We are constantly looking at new developments in bus emissions technology.'

SMRT said it is also studying the possibility of greener alternatives, such as hybrid engines, for its bus fleet.

The LTA will also study the use of filters which can be fitted to diesel vehicles and can cut PM2.5 emissions by up to 85 per cent.

The trials involving hybrid buses and filters will be carried out at a new vehicle emissions test laboratory, which the LTA hopes to set up with the help of the private sector. No details are known yet.

Aside from buses, electric vehicles will also be tested by the authorities.

Outside of the transport sector, the Government will be working with major emitters like oil refineries and petrochemical plants to cut sulphur dioxide levels in the air. It will also roll out several plans to bring about greater energy efficiency in these industries.

Energy-related benchmarks will be set for key sectors, which will force companies to improve their energy efficiency.

The National Environment Agency will also start an Energy Efficiency Circle programme to get employees involved and to give recognition to companies that have made the effort in this area.

Clearing the air
Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

A BLUEPRINT for cutting the amount of particles and sulphur dioxide in the air includes the following moves:

# Boosting the use of public transport.

# Trials of diesel hybrid buses.

# Testing electric vehicles.

# Studying the use of filters for diesel particles.

# Setting up a vehicle-emissions test laboratory.

# Encouraging cycling with a $43 million network of bike paths and bike parks in five HDB towns.

Working with major industry emitters to cut sulphur dioxide levels.

Green blueprint
Green is the word - from ground to the sky

More than a year in the making, the new blueprint for a sustainable Singapore sets out three key areas for a cleaner, greener environment
April Chong, Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

ALREADY known as the Garden City, Singapore is making plans to become even more green, with new projects and incentives planned over the next two decades.

Under the sustainable development blueprint, 900ha of new parkland will be added in the next 10 years, bringing the total area of parkland to 4,200ha, or about 6 per cent of the nation's land area.

Upcoming parks include Gardens by the Bay at the Marina Bay area, the Coney Island park off the north-east coast of Singapore, and the expansion of the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve near Kranji.

By 2030, there will be 0.8ha of parkland for every 1,000 people.

Getting from one park to another will also be made easier when park connectors triple in length to 360km by 2020. This will complement a 150km round-island route, allowing people to cycle, stroll or jog closer to Singapore's coastline and tropical greenery.

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) has earmarked areas like Changi, Punggol and Lim Chu Kang to be developed into nature-based leisure sites with camping facilities, spas and chalets.

The green push is not only happening at ground level. Projects will extend skyward with another 50ha of skyrise greenery planned by 2030 - including 9ha of green roof projects, being developed on top of multi-storey carparks in residential estates, within the next three years.

Rooftop garden areas first began sprouting on top of multi-storey carparks in Punggol in 2003. They have now taken root at other estates in Sembawang, Seng Kang and Toa Payoh.

All new buildings here are now required to meet minimum green standards under the Building and Construction Authority's Green Mark scheme. The planting of green rooftops adds to a building's overall points, besides other aspects like water conservation and energy efficiency.

Changi General Hospital's new green roof, for instance, reduces energy consumption by up to a quarter by cooling the rooms directly underneath it.

The garden, which has a fountain and fitness facilities for staff amid the greenery, opened last week and is the size of about 20 tennis courts.

Apart from adding to Singapore's green belt, the Government is also introducing incentives to encourage private developers to grow green thumbs.

The National Parks Board will co-fund up to half the costs of setting up a green roof project in the Central Business District or Orchard Road area.

And existing buildings within the Orchard Road shopping area and downtown will get bonus gross floor area from URA for setting up rooftop outdoor refreshment areas if landscaping is included.

New developments in the Downtown Core near the CBD, Jurong Gateway and Kallang Riverside will also have to provide landscaped areas equivalent to the site area.

Blue spaces here will also increase with the opening of more reservoirs and waterways for recreation.

Currently there are 645ha of reservoirs and 66.9km of waterways for public use, this will increase to 900ha and 100km, respectively, by 2030.

The first two Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters projects by the Public Utilities Board located at Kolam Ayer and Bedok Reservoir were completed last year.

A further 27 water projects are in the pipeline for the next few years, with 130 to be implemented over the next 20 years.

Going green
Straits Times 28 Apr 09;

# Additional 900ha of parkland by 2020.

# 360km of park connectors by 2020.

# Additional 50ha of skyrise greenery by 2030, including 9ha of green roofs on HDB multi-storey carparks.

# Introduce initiatives such as co-funding for green roof projects, bonus gross floor area for rooftop outdoor refreshment areas and landscape replacement policy.

# 900ha of reservoirs and 100km of waterways for recreational use by 2030.

# Action plan to conserve biodiversity.

Singapore Government unveils sustainable development blueprint for next decade
Hasnita A Majid, Channel NewsAsia 28 Apr 09;

Dr Wong Liang Heng, HDB's deputy director for sustainability & building research, said: "It's actually part of HDB's big plans to try to reduce energy consumption for HDB estates. However, solar... is still quite expensive, but we still want to test it out to learn more about this technology and also to build capability in Singapore."

HDB will roll out this project to 28 existing precincts and two new ones. It will be the largest solar test bed programme in Singapore, costing some S$31 million.

This pilot project is part of an ambitious plan to reduce energy consumption by a third by 2030 and to raise the overall recycling rate and public transport share - both to 70 per cent.

Half a billion dollars is available to retrofit public sector buildings, while the private sector can tap on a S$100 million incentive scheme to do the same.

All new government sector buildings will have to achieve the highest Green Mark accolade - the Green Mark Platinum award.

And buildings in four new strategic growth areas will also have to meet the highest Green Mark rating. These areas are Marina Bay and Downtown Core, Jurong Gateway in Jurong Lake District, Kallang Riverside and Paya Lebar Central.

The requirement will reduce the areas' energy consumption by 25 per cent. The sustainable development road map allows for the building of more cycling tracks and greater use of clean transport and technology to make this possible.

For example, S$43 million will be invested into implementing cycling networks in selected HDB towns over the next five years.

The blueprint was unveiled by the Inter-Ministerial Committee for Sustainable Development, chaired by both National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan and Environment and Water Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim.

The committee, set up in January last year, consulted extensively with various groups to put together a clear national strategy in the context of emerging domestic and global challenges.

Mr Mah said: "This is a long-term commitment, we are facing economic difficulties, there is a downturn at the moment, but we need to launch this blueprint even in this not so good time because sustainable development is a long-term challenge.

"What we enjoy today is what was put in place many years ago. So if you want to face the challenges of the future, you really have to start now, you really have to start today and it's going to take us a long time."

Dr Yaacob said: "These targets are what we have worked out from the bottom up with various stakeholders and we are confident that we can achieve this. We will take a five-year period to review as we go along because things may improve, technology may offer new solutions and then we will revise it accordingly."

The spinoff to all this is a "green collar workforce", which will see some 18,000 "green specialists" trained over the next 10 years in the development, design and maintenance of green buildings.

They will form the core of the new "clean tech" sector, which will develop through an R&D park at Jalan Bahar for test-bedding such technologies.- CNA/ir

A long-term commitment
Committee makes its recommendations in the face of a downturn
Zul Othman, Today Online 28 Apr 09;

YOU could soon be living an eco-friendly lifestyle — your home could be a flat in any of the 30 housing estates to be powered by solar energy. And you would have more tracks to cycle on, as well as be able to ride diesel hybrid buses and electric vehicles that use clean transport technology.

Solar energy for homes and eco-friendly transport are some of the highlights in a blueprint rolled out by the Inter-Ministerial Committee for Sustainable Development (IMCSD) as it makes its recommendations for the next two decades.

In response, the Government has set aside $1 billion to implement them over the next five years.

At a media conference yesterday, Minister for National Development and IMCSD co-chair, Mr Mah Bow Tan said: “This is a long-term commitment ... there is a downturn at the moment but we need to launch this blueprint ... because sustainable development is a long term challenge.”

Mr Yaacob Ibrahim, the Environment and Water Resources Minister is the other co-chair of the committee formed in February last year. Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Transport Minister Raymond Lim and Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry S Iswaran are members. The team consulted extensively with various groups over a year.

Improving Singapore’s resource efficiency is part of what the IMCSD wants to achieve by 2030. Among its 10 goals are a 35-per-cent reduction in energy intensity (consumption per dollar GDP) from 2005 levels and reducing water consumption from 156 litres to 140 litres (about one bathtub) per person per day.

Perhaps the boldest initiative is the use of solar technology for housing estates as part of a $31 million large-scale solar test-bedding scheme.

Two new and 28 existing Housing and Development Board (HDB) precincts will be involved, making this the largest solar test bed in Singapore.

If it works, it would help reduce energy consumption. But it could take about 25 to 30 years before energy savings can recoup the costs of the solar panels and of the installation fees.

“We still want to test it out to learn more about this technology, and also build capabilities in Singapore,” said Dr Johnny Wong, from HDB’s Building Technology Department.

The knowledge gained will enable the HDB to see how it can optimise the costs of deploying solar energy should costs come down and become more viable.

Installation currently costs about $250,000 per precinct. Results have been promising and such panels have increased energy savings by another 10 per cent for Serangoon and Wellington precincts.

Besides $43 million to be invested into building cycling pathways in selected HDB estates, other initiatives include minimum performance standards to be set for electrical appliances.

New schemes to promote high-rise greenery will also be introduced, including a pilot grant scheme to be given to developers for the installations of green roofs.

A $100 million green carrot for buildings
Today Online 18 Apr 09;

A $100-million Green Mark incentive scheme will also be set up to encourage more eco-friendly buildings.

Under this, existing downtown offices and residential premises can be retro-fitted. The aim is for at least 80 per cent of all buildings to be energy-efficient by 2030.

To encourage new private buildings to attain higher tier Green Mark ratings — the Green Mark Platinum or Green Mark GoldPlus — incentives in the form of bonus Gross Floor Area will also be offered.

The higher Green Mark standards will also be set on projects developed on Government sale sites as land sale conditions in selected new strategic growth areas including the Marina Bay and Downtown Core, Jurong Gateway in Jurong Lake District, Kallang Riverside and Paya Lebar Central.

All medium or large new air-conditioned public sector buildings will also have to achieve the Platinum award.

These initiatives could result in a “green collar workforce” with some 18,000 “green specialists” trained over the next decade in the development, design and maintenance of green buildings.

The Jalan Bahar Tech Park will also be developed as the first business park to support research and development and test bed clean technologies.

Mr Kwek Leng Joo, managing director of City Developments Limited said the initiatives are “forward looking”. The building sector contributes some 16 per cent of Singapore’s greenhouse gas emissions, making it the third-largest contributor.

“Greenhouse gas from each home has increased 25 per cent as compared to a decade ago,” he added.

Clean, green blueprint to redefine Singapore
Business Times 28 Apr 09;

$1b to kickstart plan for energy-efficient buildings, lower emissions, cleaner transport, other solutions

(SINGAPORE) The government yesterday unveiled a blueprint for sustainable development for the next 10 to 20 years, adopting a 'light-touch' approach for now to spare businesses and households from higher costs at a time of economic hardship.

Even so, there will be huge implications for developers, the transport sector, oil refineries and even makers of airconditioners, refrigerators and clothes dryers.

A key target is a 35 per cent reduction in energy consumption per dollar GDP by 2030 (from 2005 levels), which is projected to potentially generate about $3.6 billion annual savings (net of the cost of investment).

New buildings in Singapore will be more energy efficient while existing ones will be retrofitted to conserve energy.

Electric vehicles and diesel-hybrid buses will be tested out. Minimum energy performance standards for household air-conditioners and refrigerators will be introduced by 2011. In short, the moves will touch all aspects of life in Singapore.

The government will provide 'incentives, information and educate the public, as opposed to other policy options of say legislation or even disincentives such as taxes' as National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan, co-chair of the Inter-Ministerial Committee for Sustainable Development (IMCSD), said at a media briefing yesterday.

For a start, the government has set aside $1 billion for the next five years - this was announced in the January Budget statement - to help implement plans in the blueprint.

Part of this sum will go towards helping businesses reduce the upfront costs of investing in resource-efficient buildings, systems and processes. The $1 billion sum includes $100 million set aside for the new Green Mark Incentive scheme to retrofit existing private-sector buildings to boost energy efficiency.

'The temptation is to slow down our efforts in the area of sustainable development while we tackle the immediate economic challenges. However, the two are not mutually exclusive. Even as we tackle the short-term challenges, we must build capability for our long-term development,' Mr Mah said.

The blueprint keeps open the option of mandating changes in the longer term. For instance, the government will study the experiences of countries that have legislated minimum energy-efficiency standards for major energy-consuming equipment and systems and see if it needs to use the law for this.

The 128-page document, available at www.sustainablesingapore.gov.sg, also elaborates on plans to build new R&D capabilities.

Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim, co-chair of IMCSD, highlighted that the 'concrete targets' set in the blueprint for 2020 and 2030 'reflect how serious we are about sustainable development'.

The targets will be reviewed every five years. 'These targets will be reviewed regularly, as technology improves and the cost-effectiveness of measures changes,' he added.

Energy-related benchmarks will be set for key industrial sectors.

Other specific targets include reducing daily domestic water consumption per capita from 156 litres currently to 140 litres by 2030. To improve air quality, ambient sulphur dioxide levels will be capped despite economic growth. Air emission standards for industry and transport will be regularly reviewed and Singapore will be benchmarked against top Asian cities - without imposing prohibitive costs on the players.

There will also be 50 additional hectares of skyrise greenery, and 900 hectares of water bodies and 100 km of waterways open for recreational activity by 2030.

Another important target set is for at least 80 per cent of Singapore's stock of buildings to achieve Building and Construction Authority's (BCA) Green Mark Certified Rating by 2030.

The government will promote more efficient pollution-control equipment for industries and the use of more efficient sulphur recovery systems for oil refineries.

Singapore will be positioned as an international knowledge hub in sustainable development solutions. Solar technology will be piloted at 30 public housing precincts across the island. Singapore will invest early in solar technology to prepare for using it on a larger scale when its cost falls closer to that of conventional energy.

BCA will develop prototype energy-efficient building designs that can more than halve energy consumption.

Clean energy and water technologies are projected to provide about $3.4 billion economic value-add per year by 2015 and to create a total of 18,000 jobs by 2015.

Most buildings to go green by 2030
Property owners can look forward to annual energy savings of $1.6b
Emilyn Yap, Business Times 28 Apr 09;

IT'S a red-hot target in going green - the government hopes to put the Green Mark stamp on at least 80 per cent of buildings here by 2030, and has come up with a slew of new measures for building owners to help meet this goal.

Not only does the environment stand to gain, property owners can look forward to annual energy savings to the tune of $1.6 billion in the long run. More jobs dedicated to the development and care of green buildings may also emerge. The new target was revealed by the Inter-ministerial Committee on Sustainable Development yesterday, as part of its 10-to-20-year blueprint for Singapore's growth. In conjunction with the plan's launch, the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) rolled out its second green building master plan to improve the environmental friendliness of buildings.

Existing buildings, in particular, came under the spotlight because they consume a third of national end-use electricity. To entice owners of some private non-residential developments to carry out retrofitting works, BCA will offer cash incentives through a $100 million Green Mark incentive scheme for existing buildings. The National Parks Board will also have a new 'sky-rise' greenery incentive scheme to encourage existing developments in the city centre to green up their roofs.

The government will play its part by requiring all large existing buildings owned by its agencies to attain the Green Mark gold plus standard by 2020, at an estimated retrofitting cost of about $500 million over the next 10 years. Gold plus is second to the top platinum rating, and ranks above the gold and certified ratings.

New buildings are also on BCA's radar, and the agency is working with the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) to offer bonus gross floor area (GFA) for private developments. Those that attain the Green Mark platinum or gold plus rating can receive up to 2 per cent or one per cent more GFA beyond the URA master plan gross plot ratio control respectively.

The bonus GFA, however, is subject to caps and the payment of a development charge (DC) or differential premium. While City Developments managing director Kwek Leng Joo believes the additional GFA will help developers defray some investment costs in green technology and features, he suggests 'the DC rate be pegged at the previous rate of 50 per cent instead of the current 70 per cent' to 'make the incentive more attractive and effective'.

New buildings in strategic growth areas will come under greater scrutiny. Those in the Marina Bay and Downtown Core area will have to meet Green Mark platinum or gold plus standards as part of land sale conditions, while those in the Jurong Lake District, Kallang Riverside and Paya Lebar Central will have to attain the Green Mark gold plus rating.

For Marina Bay and Jurong Lake District in particular, URA will introduce a landscape replacement policy to make up for greenery lost from ground development. New projects have to put in place sky-rise greenery or ground-level landscaping equivalent to the site area in size.

The government has also set a high benchmark for new public sector buildings - all medium or large air-conditioned ones have to achieve the Green Mark platinum rating.

'BCA's second green building masterplan will not only result in more of our buildings being able to achieve substantial savings in energy costs, but also provides a boost to the green-collar job market,' said BCA CEO John Keung.

According to BCA, the masterplan will reduce energy costs by $1.6 billion a year when it is fully implemented. Some 18,000 professionals, managers, executives and technicians may also be trained over the next 10 years in the development, design, construction, operation and maintenance of green buildings.

More can be done to boost energy efficiency
Business Times 28 Apr 09;

THE first-ever sustainable development blueprint launched by the Inter-ministerial Committee on Sustainable Development (IMCSD) won support from various quarters yesterday, but a few observers also felt that more could be done to push the green agenda.

The plan has outlined various programmes for Singapore's sustainable development and is 'a very good start to the whole process', said the Singapore Environment Council's executive director Howard Shaw. But he felt that it could have gone further to include caps on carbon emissions.

The blueprint set several goals in improving resource efficiency, such as a 35 per cent cut in energy consumption per dollar GDP from 2005 levels by 2030, but carbon emission caps were not part of them.

Environment and Water Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim, who is also co- chair of the IMCSD, shed some light on this at a media briefing yesterday. According to him, Singapore is constrained by the lack of alternative energy sources and the best strategy so far is to be resource-efficient.

'If you ask us whether we can really change our economic structure and replace all the fossil fuels that we import with alternative energy - not possible,' he said.

There were also questions at the briefing on whether Singapore is spending enough on sustainable development. The government committed in this year's Budget $1 billion over the next five years to this area.

To this, National Development Minister and also IMCSD co-chair Mah Bow Tan highlighted that it was more important to invest in measures that will yield the best results. 'We are not throwing money at the problem . . . If the $1 billion gives us results and it starts to show, we will be going back to the Finance Ministry to ask for more.'

The blueprint also rolled out a mix of rules and incentives for buildings to become more energy-efficient. BT understands that the idea for one scheme - which offers bonus gross floor area for new private developments which attain the Green Mark platinum or gold plus rating - came from CapitaLand boss Liew Mun Leong at a BCA event last year.

City Developments managing director Kwek Leng Joo said: 'With the public sector taking the lead in raising the standard of greening our buildings by some mandatory requirements coupled with strategic incentives, developers and building owners are likely to respond positively.'

Mr Kwek also suggested that the government look into 'greening' the existing stock of around 1.2 million public and private housing units in Singapore.

Air quality also came to the IMCSD's attention and it has set caps on levels of sulphur dioxide and fine particles in the air. ExxonMobil's Singapore refinery manager Darrin Talley said that the company shares the government's desire for good air quality.

Solar test bed scheme on wider scale by 2015
Teh Shi Ning, Business Times 28 Apr 09;

SOLAR panels will be fitted on the roofs of residential blocks and multi-storey carparks in 30 HDB precincts by 2015 in the largest solar trial rolled out here.

The $31 million trial will provide 3.1 megawatts peak of solar capacity in 28 existing HDB precincts and two new ones.

HDB is testing solar technology in preparation for greater use when the cost of it is closer to that of energy from traditional sources.

Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry S Iswaran said industry players expect to see returns from investments in solar technology in five to eight years.

But there are systemic issues involved in harnessing solar energy, he pointed out. 'It's not just about the cells being able to convert solar energy into electrical energy. Even if you're able to do that, after that, how does that integrate with your energy system, your electricity grid - those are important issues too.'

Last August, HDB installed rooftop solar panels on blocks in Serangoon North Avenue 3 and Wellington Circle, as part of the Energy Save Programme it is working on with the National Environment Agency and Energy Market Authority. Results so far show the panels installed on seven residential blocks and one multi-storey carpark in each precinct can generate about 220 kilowatt hours a day - enough to meet the common services power requirements in a single block.

HDB's first eco-friendly public housing development, Treelodge@Punggol, is designed to incorporate rooftop solar panels that are expected to generate enough energy to meet 40 per cent of the precinct's common services requirements. HDB said testing on a wide scale of 30 precincts will enable it to better assess the feasibility of different solar technologies in Singapore's environment, and gather technical knowledge on their installation and maintenance.

HDB also expects the programme to encourage global manufacturers to set up base in Singapore for R&D on solar panel technologies, which will help to drive down the cost of the panels.

Last year the government set aside $20 million for its Solar Capability Scheme to encourage the installation of solar technology in new building projects.

For a greener and cleaner home
Blueprint details goals to make S'pore more efficient in resource use
Teh Jen Lee, The New Paper 29 Apr 09;

WANT to know how Singapore will look like in 2030, that is, 21 years from now?

The Inter-Ministerial Committee for Sustainable Development (IMCSD) plans to make Singapore cleaner, greener and more efficient in its resource use than it is now.

But the key will still be you, and how you can make a difference.

At a media conference yesterday, the IMCSD unveiled a blueprint that detailed key goals and initiatives for the next 10 to 20 years.

Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources and co-chair of IMCSD, said the targets would be reviewed regularly as technology improves and cost-effectiveness of measures changes.

'The Government will play a catalytic role through setting aside $1 billion to implement IMCSD's recommendations. However, achieving our goals will require a whole-of-nation effort,' he said.

'Through our joint efforts, Singapore can also do its part to contribute to global environmental sustainability.'

The $1 billion budget will pay for projects like the $100-million Green Mark Incentive Scheme, to encourage the retrofitting of large buildings to include more green features, and the expansion of cycling networks, which costs $43 million.

One example of government initiatives that is already under way is the test bedding of solar panels in two HDB precincts in Serangoon North and Wellington Circle.

Promising results

Started last August, the project provides technical knowledge on how to incorporate solar energy in public housing estates.

So far, the results have been promising.

The solar panels installed in seven residential blocks and a multi-storey carpark generate enough electricity to power the common lighting, lifts and pumps of a single block.

Besides the public sector, ordinary people and companies also played a part in coming up with the blueprint, a process that took about a year.

More than 200 people contributed their views through focus group discussions, and the public submitted more than 1,300 suggestions.

For the layman, the blueprint document is explained in a much shorter brochure that will be distributed through community centres and schools.

Temasek Polytechnic lecturer Harith Fadhirlah Mohamad Ali, 34, and three students from the school's diploma course in visual communication, wrote and designed the full-colour brochure.

They were given about three weeks to come up with a brochure. They presented it yesterday.

Mr Harith said: 'We were impressed that the five ministries had cooperated to plan measures to achieve a sustainable future. Some of the items involved everyday actions like saving water and electricity.

'The layman's version of the blueprint is important to help ordinary people understand what sustainable development is, so they can play a part in reaching the goals.'


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Plans for artificial island in Lebanon make waves

Business Times 28 Apr 09;

(BEIRUT) Mohammed Saleh is convinced: If he builds it, Lebanese expatriates will come.

The Beirut-based developer envisions a 3.3 square kilometre artificial island shaped like a cedar tree as a major attraction off Lebanon's coast.

The massive chunk of dredged seabed or transported earth - converted into an US$8 billion paradise with luxury villas, apartments, shops, restaurants, white-sand beaches, parks, schools and hospitals - would nurture national pride, says Mr Saleh, chairman of Noor International Holding.

It is the kind of splashy megaproject that gave Arab boomtown Dubai its outsized profile but left it drowning in debt. And in Lebanon, a tiny country known more for war than tourism, critics see the project as folly.

But Mr Saleh said that Cedar Island is the kind of self-financed gamble that the nation needs to lure back wealthy Lebanese who moved abroad as they grew weary of conflict.

'I am not worried about the global crisis, because my main target is Lebanese expatriates who have nostalgia for their country and would like to invest in it,' said Mr Saleh. 'Unlike foreign investors, these people are used to Lebanon's system, its ups and downs.'

Mr Saleh - many of whose projects boast outsized stature, like the Rose Tower in Dubai which calls itself the world's tallest hotel - points in particular to a US$2 billion memorandum of understanding that he has signed regarding Cedar Island with Turkey's Ihlas Holding. The rest of the money will come from other developers and investors, Mr Saleh said.

He also pointed to stacks of correspondence that he has received from expatriate Lebanese interested in buying into the venture. 'I never expected such an outpouring of interest,' he said.

Dubai boasts several artificial islands, so the project, which is still far from securing Lebanese government approvals, is not unique to Lebanon. But it's drawing sharp criticism.

Sceptics run the gamut from a coalition of 25 groups worried about the environmental impact of dredging enough seabed or quarrying enough land to build an island to some prominent Lebanese economists such as Louis Hobeika, who doubts that funding will be stable. 'I cannot see who will do it and how the funding will be secured, particularly when states like Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have billions in reserves, are halting projects,' Mr Hobeika said.

Others worry that pursuing Cedar Island will threaten the nation's tradition of conservative investment, which many economists and Lebanese officials credit for the country's ability to weather the global economic downturn so far.

A group of American University of Beirut professors teamed up to protest Cedar Island, describing it in a statement released last month as an 'urban, economic and environmental disaster'. Jad Chaaban, professor of economics, said that it would bring Lebanon no significant public revenue or permanent benefit. 'The suggested artificial island would generate mostly unskilled construction jobs which are typically taken by non-Lebanese residents,' he said.

Hala Ashour, an engineer and one of the founding members of Green Line, an independent environmental awareness organisation opposing the project, doubts every aspect of the project.

'Tourists like Lebanon for its nature, its booming ecotourism,' said Mr Ashour. 'Why have an artificial island that would destroy marine life (and) cause more traffic and air pollution?'

Mr Saleh said that the project's planned artificial coral reefs, a sewage treatment facility, sand dune creation and new clam beds, eel grass plantings and beds for spawning fish will offset the environmental impact of building the island.

Because Cedar Island would involve public property on the coast, Lebanese law requires that the government have a minimum 20 per cent stake, the Cabinet approve the project and the president endorse it.

The process of seeking those sign-offs has begun, with Mr Saleh meeting and lobbying officials.

Tourism Minister Elie Marouny said that the government welcomed any projects which confirm that Lebanon can still attract big investment. He told The Associated Press that officials are still studying Cedar Island, but he is not worried that it will lead Lebanon into Dubai's footsteps.

'Every society has rich people and poor people,' he said. 'It is good to have something for everyone.' - AP


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Tsunami Aid Often Bypassed Conflict Victims - Report

Patrick Worsnip, PlanetArk 27 Apr 09;

UNITED NATIONS - Distribution of billions of dollars in aid after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami often ignored victims of conflicts raging in Sri Lanka and Indonesia at the time, a report on the lessons of the disaster said on Friday.

The report, commissioned by a consortium of five of the hardest-hit countries -- Indonesia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka and the Maldives -- said this was due in part to restrictions by aid donors on how their money could be spent.

The Dec. 26, 2004, tsunami, caused by an undersea earthquake, killed more than 228,000 people and provoked a huge international response, with some $13.5 billion pledged worldwide to fund recovery.

But the 105-page report, "The Tsunami Legacy: Innovations, Breakthroughs and Change," said that in Sri Lanka and Indonesia's Aceh region, both hard hit, there was a need to aid the victims of conflicts as well as those of the tsunami.

"However, most post-tsunami organizations largely ignored the post-conflict context, in part due to donor-stipulated restrictions on how they could use their funds," said the report. This led to local grievances over perceived inequalities in aid provision.

"If conflict sensitivity had been more widespread and funds not restricted to tsunami victims only, building back better could have been more equitable all along," the report said.

The report was presented to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and former US President Bill Clinton, former UN special envoy for tsunami recovery, at a conference at UN headquarters.

Commissioned by the Tsunami Global Lessons Learned project, the report also faulted authorities throughout the tsunami-hit area for other forms of discrimination, because it said the need to deliver aid fast outweighed the need for equity.

"Many tsunami-affected communities were still unable to adequately access assistance immediately after the disaster because of barriers associated with their gender, ethnicity, age, class, religion or occupation," it said.

LITTLE CORRUPTION

The report, however, also found much to praise in the aid operation, including a willingness by governments to delegate the task to local organizations and a determination to combat corruption.

"Despite the influx of billions of dollars in tsunami-affected countries, corruption levels across the board were kept remarkably low," it said.

"Key to this success was a commitment to view corruption, not as a nuisance or unfortunate side effect of the recovery, but as a core threat to the reconstruction effort as a whole."

Since the tsunami, governments and international agencies have set about creating national and regional early-warning systems, with 24 early detection buoys placed in the Indian Ocean.

In addition, 250,000 new permanent houses and more than 100 air and seaports have been built, 3,000 schools constructed and hundreds of hospitals rehabilitated.

Ban and Clinton told the conference lessons from the tsunami were important because the number and intensity of weather-related disasters were increasing.

Experience with the tsunami reinforces the importance of sealing a deal at a Copenhagen climate change conference in December aimed at setting new targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions, the UN chief said.

(Editing by Xavier Briand)


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Underground mining in forest areas not so simple

Alfian, The Jakarta Post 27 Apr 09;

The government's plan to issue a presidential decree allowing mining companies to mine underground in protected forest concession areas has resulted in mixed reactions from industry stakeholders.

Alwin Syah Loebis, president director of state-run mining company PT Aneka Tambang (Antam), praised the decree, saying it would benefit the company immediately.

"This (regulation) is very good. We expect it would enable our project operation in Dairi (North Sumatra ) to start immediately," Alwin indicated to The Jakarta Post during the weekend.

Antam and Australian exploration and mining company Herald Resources have a joint venture called PT Dairi Prima Mineral to develop a large lead zinc deposit in Dairi Regency, North Sumatra.

Part of this project is located in a protected forest. The project has been delayed since 1998 as the Forestry Ministry has yet to issue a permit for the project to operate.

Alwin expected the decree would clear the legal status of the project.

He was fully confident that Antam had sufficient technology and access to capital to carry out underground mining, (despite the higher costs involved and technical complexities), due to their experience in underground mining in other parts of Indonesia.

"We have an abundant experience with underground mining in Pongkor ( a gold mine in Bogor, West Java ) and in other areas," he said.

Having relied heavily on the nickel mining business, Antam is now trying to diversify into mining other commodities, especially gold, iron, and zinc.

Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro said last week that the government was deliberating the proposed presidential decree allowing underground mining activities in protected forest areas. He said this would benefit the sector as it would boost exploration activities as well as proven mineral reserves.

He gave the example of protected forests areas in Kalimantan where there were estimated to be very large reserves of coal. However underground mining requires quite different technologies and know-how, higher investment and stringent safety and environmental standards.

Bob Kamandanu, chairman of the Indonesian Coal Producers Association (APBI) said the decree would indeed boost coal reserves, but it also appeared that it might be quite difficult for the country's coal firms to suddenly adapt to the very different requirements of underground mining, compared to traditional open-cast mining commonly used in Indonesia.

"Underground mining requires high cost and advanced technology. This is even more difficult in Indonesia as our underground rock is often lose and not firm. Thus, I think Indonesia's coal companies will need some years to be able to fully tap the benefits of underground mining," Bob said.

There were higher possibilities of fires, explosions, floods and other accidents, with dangers in underground mining due to its complexity. The industry also would need to depend much more than open-cast mining on highly skilled miners. Furthermore, Bob added, at the moment domestic coal demand could still be adequately supplied from surface mining.

APBI estimated that Indonesia would produce 250 million tons of coal this year, up from about 240 million tons last year. The directorate general for coal, minerals and geothermal earlier estimated that domestic demand for coal would reach 66 million tons this year, up from 57 million tons in 2008.


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Controversial Vietnam mine project to proceed

Yahoo News 27 Apr 09;

HANOI (AFP) – Vietnam's most powerful ruling body has endorsed a controversial bauxite mining project but said it must be carried out with respect for the environment and local residents, state media said Monday.

The Politburo, comprised of top government and Communist party officials, said a decision to tap the country's abundant bauxite reserves was "correct", the Vietnam News reported.

In 2007 the government approved a plan for two major mining operations to be run by state-owned Vietnam National Coal and Mineral Industries Group (Vinacomin) in the country's Central Highlands.

In a one-party state where public protest is rare, the move triggered a public outcry from scientists, intellectuals and former soldiers whose opposition combined with denunciations from fierce critics of the regime.

They said the environmental and social damage from the mines would far outweigh any economic benefit, and pointed to security concerns because a Chinese company has been granted a contract to build one of the projects.

The most prominent opponent of the mining is General Vo Nguyen Giap, 97, who led Vietnam's defeat of French colonial forces.

Vietnam News said the Politburo "appreciated the opinions and contributions" made by scientists and former senior leaders.

"The bauxite industry therefore must consider any socio-economic effects and preserve the ecological environment while protecting national security and defence," it said.

Authorities should consider the environmental impact, "otherwise it would cause severe damage which would require much work and expense to correct", the Politburo said.

Experts estimate thousands of Chinese will arrive for the bauxite projects and say several hundred are already in Lam Dong province, where the ground is being cleared for one mine.

The Politburo said foreign expertise "will be endorsed when necessary" although most workers will be Vietnamese, Vietnam News reported.

Critics have warned the mines will threaten the lifestyle of indigenous people in the area but the Politburo said "adequate attention" must be paid to improving the native residents' living conditions and preserving their cultural identity.


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Reduce Bottlenose Dolphin Export: CITES Committee

Solomon Times 28 Apr 09;

The Animal Committee of the Convention on the International Trade of Endangered Species, CITES has recommended that Solomon Islands reduce its annual quota of live bottlenose dolphin export to 10.

Government had set the current annual export quota at 100 live bottlenose dolphins, as this particular species is now protected under CITES.

However, at its 24th meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, the Animal Committee has recommended that the quota be reduced to 10.

Chris Porter, owner of the Gavutu dolphin island in Central province welcomes the news.

Mr Porter says that by reducing the number of dolphins for export helps to not only conserve the species, but to increase the value of the dolphins in Solomon Islands.

He says the CITES Animal Committee recommendation will be formally presented to government and it should be highly regarded because CITES is the authority in this area.

He says what's exciting is that CITES has authorised the trade of dolphins in Solomon Islands and that has endorsed and supported all the work that his company has been doing for the last seven years.


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Dolphin Island at Solomon Islands to be sold

Solomon Star 28 Apr 09;

DEAR EDITOR – Your paper revealed the plannedsale of the controversial Dolphin island by $50 million.

One can envisage the reasons for its sale, let alone the owner.

However, my assumptions are:
1. The owner had made enough money out of it;
2. The increase pressure regarding the issue of exporting dolphins;
3. Selling the property for that huge sum is more than enough.

From the report, one can tell that the island was purposely established to export dolphin, not to attract tourists to the island and Solomon Islands, for that matter.

Tourism was not the intention, this was evident in the following statements that he intends to move to other tourism related operations and that dolphin export cost $2 million overseas.

As I said these are my personal observations.

S. Jone
Honiara

Dolphin island up for sale
Solomon Star 23 Apr 009;

THE controversial dolphin island of Gavutu in the Central Islands Province will be on sale as of next week for $50 million.

Director of Solomon Islands Mammal Marine Entertainment Centre (SIMMEC) and Marine Export Limited (MEL) Christopher Porter told the Solomon Star yesterday tenders will be out soon.

“There is still no potential buyer but once formalities are being made the tender will be issued,” he said.

Mr Porter said the sale will be done in consultation with all stakeholders and in a transparent manner.

He said the value of the property is reasonable considering the cost of a dolphin.

In the past it costs $150 per dolphin but now it costs $2 million for a dolphin overseas and its a lucrative business, the Canadian said.

Mr Porter said he’s selling the business into to move into other tourism related undertakings.
He said the price include all facilities, buildings and dolphins on the island.

Mr Porter said proceeds from the sale will benefit the employees and his local partners and will allow him venture into tnew business.

Mr Porter said the buyer may buy the operations based on certain conditions in which the new owner must maintain the current business and work with the local communities in community projects.

Plans for Tulagi ferry in Solomons take shape
Radio New Zealand 27 Apr 09;

A new tourism-related business that focuses on transportation is expected to open soon at Tulagi in Solomon Islands’ Central Province.

The Solomon Star reports the ferry business will operate between Tulagi and Honiara to cater for both locals and visitors.

The Director of Solomon Islands Mammal Marine Entertainment Centre and Marine Export Limited, Christopher Porter, has told the Solomon Star he plans to venture into the ferry business as soon as his dolphin business is sold.

The controversial Dolphin Island of Gavutu is up for sale at a 20-million US dollar price tag.

The package includes the island and its facilities and dolphins.

Part of the money will go towards the new business.

Mr Porter says Tulagi lacks basic infrastructures to support tourism industry and he hopes to invest in infrastructures and the new ferry business.


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Whale shark rescued by Cagayan fisherfolk in the Philippines

Manila Bulletin 27 Apr 09;

TUGUEGARAO CITY, Cagayan — Local officials and residents of Buguey town in this province rescued an endangered whale shark or butanding last week.

Buguey Municipal Secretary Arthur Pagador said the whale shark, measuring about 7 meters in length and weighing about 2 tons, was found entangled in a beach seine (daklis) along the shore of Barangay Centro West Saturday.

Pagador said Buguey Acting Town Mayor Licerio Antiporda III immediately directed the local police to secure the area and facilitate the release of the trapped animal into the sea.

After an hour or so, the whale shark was freed and was able to return towards the deeper portions of the sea.

“It is very fortunate that the fishermen made a move to save the animal instead of kill it,” Pagador said.

The whale shark, scientifically known as Rhincodon typus, is listed among the prohibited species under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species Appendix II.

Sec. 97 of RA 8550 and Fisheries Administrative Order 193 prohibits the catching of whale sharks and manta rays. Violation to the law carries 6 months to 4 years imprisonment as penalty.

Old folks in the coastal areas say whale sharks used to abound in great quantities but indiscriminate fishing might have drove them off. BFAR Regional Director Jovita Ayson said that recent sightings might be an indication of the re-emergence of whale shark population in Cagayan waters.

Recently, the fisheries bureau in the region initiated a briefing among members of the Regional Law Enforcement Coordinating Committee Sub-committee on Fishing and Marine Environmental Protection on the proper rescue procedure on stranded marine mammals to include whale sharks and other rare and threatened species, as part of the activities under the Region 02 Marine Mammal Stranding Network. (Max Prudencio, BFAR R02)


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Brazilian explorers search 'medicine factory' to save lives and rainforest

Quest for cancer cure may also protect rainforest by providing alternatives for those who once earned money by destroying it
Tom Phillips, guardian.co.uk 27 Apr 09;

The boat ploughs north along this vast, rust-tinted river. Ahead, a white haze of torrential rain and a task as immense as the Amazon rainforest itself: discovering a new treatment for cancer somewhere in the depths of the greatest tropical rainforest on earth.

Onboard three men prepare themselves for their mission into the jungle: Drauzio Varella, a gangly 65-year-old oncologist, broadcaster and best-selling author who is also Brazil's most famous doctor; Mateus Paciencia, 33, a fresh-faced botanist from São Paulo; and Osmar Ferreira Barbosa, 45, a former chainsaw operator turned mateiro or forest guide, armed with a machete and a life-time's knowledge of the rainforest.

"From an amoeba to an elephant… every living thing is a factory of substances, and plants aren't different," enthused Paciencia, as the boat edged ever closer to his group's scientific base, a small wooden shack on the banks of the Cuieiras river, around four hours' boat journey from Manaus, the capital of Brazil's Amazonas state.

"A plant or tree is a small medicine factory. All we need to do is try and find the application for these substances."

The boat is a floating laboratory belonging to São Paulo's Paulista University (Unip) and is on the frontline of a quest for the medicines of the future and part of an innovative drive to save the Brazilian rainforest by providing economic alternatives to those who once destroyed the forest.

The project is the brainchild of Drauzio Varella, a São Paulo-born oncologist who has dedicated much of his career to cancer patients, among them his younger brother, Fernando, a smoker who died of lung cancer in 1991, aged 45.

Today, spurred on by an obsession with the Amazon and nearly 40 years as an oncologist, Varella leads monthly expeditions up the Cuieiras river in search of natural medicines that he believes could change the future of his profession and eventually bring new hope to cancer victims around the world.

"[As a child] I didn't even know that [the Amazon] existed," Varella told the Observer during his latest mission to the group's base on the Cuieiras river. "I'd heard the children's stories, about the Indians with two feathers in their hair. But you didn't even talk about the Amazon back then. It was such a distant thing."

That changed in October 1992, during a trip to the Amazon with Robert Gallo, the US biomedical researcher credited with co-discovering the HIV virus. One afternoon, while visiting the rivers around Manaus, Gallo inquired if anyone was looking for new medicines in the plants and trees of the Amazon.

"You can see the biodiversity here ," recalled Varella. "And Gallo said to me: 'Who is studying this? [Who is] looking for activity in these species?' And I didn't know what to tell him. This idea stayed in my head."

In 1995 the idea became a reality with the first trip. Since then Varella's team has gathered more than 2,000 extracts from plants and trees in the rainforest. This year sees a step change in activity following a partnership with São Paulo's Sírio-Libanês Hospital, one of Brazil's leading research institutes. The team will explore a new area further up the Rio Negro towards the border with Colombia, and within two years they aim to have set up a third base.

After being plucked from the rainforest the samples are taken to Manaus, where they are dried and transformed into a powder before being shipped to São Paulo for testing. Over 70 extracts have demonstrated some impact on tumour cells while over 50 have shown results against bacterial infections.

"The advantage of these natural products is their unpredictability," said Varella. While molecular design techniques used by laboratories would remain crucial, natural products could suggest paths "we didn't even imagine existed," he said, citing Taxol, a drug which originated from the bark of the North American yew tree and is now widely used to treat ovarian and breast cancer. "You open the door to the unknown."

Paciencia believes medical research could also hold the key to slowing rainforest destruction. Environmentalists claim that almost 20% of the Brazilian Amazon has disappeared, mostly since the 1960s.

"Instead of replacing the forest with cattle we are studying a cure for cancer and for infectious diseases," said the botanist, sporting a goatie beard and a tattoo of Bob Marley on his bicep. "You don't need to chop a single tree down to obtain these resources. You cut a little piece of the plant… [and] next year it will have grown back. I can't see anything more environmentally correct than a project like this."

The group's guide is a case in point. Born in the remote Amazon town of Canutama, a notorious hotspot for illegal deforestation, Barbosa used to work for the loggers as a chain-saw operator. Now the father of three is employed to guide Varella's team through the labyrinthine jungle.

Currently the project focuses on two types of forest environment – the submerged forests or "igapós" and the "terra firme", or dry land. During each visit the team collects samples from families of plants that have shown positive results in the group's São Paulo laboratory, as well as new species.

"We don't know yet if the plants we are going to collect today have [these qualities]. But this group of plants has shown pretty positive results," explained Paciencia, picking his way towards an area of thick rainforest where his team has demarcated three different sectors in which specific trees and plants are monitored. Further on, the group's guide, Barbosa, shimmied up a towering tree and clipped off half a dozen branches. The branches crashed down through the rainforest canopy before settling on the damp earth and being separated into specially marked sacks.

Few doubt that the Amazon rainforest conceals an abundance of medical secrets. But, according to Varella, government bureaucracy is as dense as the forest itself, prompted by a deep fear of bio-piracy. It means foreign scientists or pharmaceutical companies find it hard to join the hunt for natural medicines in the Brazilian Amazon.

"If it is difficult for us, then imagine for people from overseas," says Varella, whose project is one of a tiny number that has official permission from the Brazilian environmental agency, Ibama. "They have no chance."

"Ten to fifteen years is the average time between finding the plant, [identifying its exact use] and patenting it into a drug [so] it is a long-term investment. It is commercially very uninteresting and it will create political problems for the business, so why do it?"

As a pair of toucans peer down at the expedition, their bright yellow beaks poking out from a green mesh of leaves, Pacienca reflects:"The Amazon has something like 20% of all the biodiversity in the world. Just in terms of plants with flowers, there are around 22 or 23 thousand."

"It is impossible to imagine that… not one of them will have an active substance for some disease."

The rainforest, he says, is "an infinite sea of possibilities".


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Eight extreme rescues of species on the brink

Catherine Brahic, New Scientist 27 Apr 09;

Swooping down in a last-ditch effort to thwart extinction, conservationists have airlifted 50 "mountain chickens" – frogs to us – from the Caribbean island of Montserrat.

While conservation biologists prefer to help a species survive in its natural environment, extreme cases like that of the chicken frog call for extreme rescue measures. Here we present eight of our favourite attempts at species' saving.

1. California condor

In 1987, the last remaining 22 California condors were brought into captivity and bred at the San Diego Wild Animal Park and the Los Angeles Zoo. The scientists removed the first-laid clutches to encourage females to produce more eggs, but this meant that roughly half the young had to be reared by humans. To make them as "wild" as possible, they were fed and reared using condor-shaped hand puppets.

The human effort didn't end there. When young condors released into the wild electrocuted themselves on power lines, the scientists installed mock pylons in their cages, delivering mild electric shocks to any bird that perched on them.

Even still, the released birds did not behave "properly" – they congregated in urbanised zones and played with garbage. One researcher said it was like "putting teenagers together without adult supervision. They were behaving like a bunch of hooligans". The researchers used the remaining captive wild birds to discipline the youngsters.

The scientists' work to help the species paid off, with 322 condors known to be living with 172 in the wild as of April 2009. Read about the plight of the condor here.
2. Whooping crane

Less than 20 of the enormous North American whooping crane were alive in 1940, and the bird was declared endangered in 1967. A captive breeding programme was implemented, which required scientists to dress in white sheets and wear arm puppets shaped like an adult whooping crane's neck and head when feeding them.

To further prevent extinction, the birds were taught to migrate along a safer route between Wisconsin and Florida. No problem – the scientists set up Operation Migration, whereby cranes followed an ultralight aircraft on the outward migration to Florida, spent the winter there and returned un-aided the following spring. This programme has been successfully building up the wild population since 2001.
3. Gaur

Captive breeding is one thing, but cloning an endangered species is an entirely different matter. Born on 8 January 2001, Noah was the first successful birth of a cloned animal from an endangered species. He died of dysentery after 48 hours, although the illness is thought to be unrelated to his cloning.

Noah was created by fusing skin cells from a gaur – a rare species of wild ox that lives mostly in India – that had died in 1993 with cow eggs stripped of their nuclei. The technique was the same as was used to create Dolly the sheep. Noah's foster mother was a cow called Bessie.
4. Przewalski's horse

In June 2008, veterinarians at the Smithsonian National Zoological Park in Washington, DC, performed the first successful reverse vasectomy on an endangered horse.

The lucky fellow, Minnesota, is a Przewalski's horse, a species native to China and Mongolia that was declared extinct in the wild in 1970. Before his transfer for the National Zoo, Minnesota's previous institution made the near-calamitous decision to vasectomise him in 1999 so that he could be kept with female horses without reproducing. Scientists later determined that he was far too genetically valuable to be kept out of the breeding programme and decided to reverse the vasectomy.

With the aid of specialists in horse anaesthesiology and Sherman Silber, a urologist who pioneered microsurgery for reverse vasectomy, the operation was a success. Minnesota's genes will increase the genetic diversity of the Przewalski's horse population, which is founded on only 14 animals.
5. Kakapo

The kakapo (Strigops habroptila) is a very unusual parrot. It can't fly, has the fat and puffy shape of a barn owl, and has a strong, sweet musky smell. It apparently evolved without any predators; accordingly, it is virtually defenceless. When European settlers introduced cats, stoats and rodents to its native New Zealand, the ground-dwelling Kakapo all but vanished.

When only 18 males were found in their native home in 1977 and populations around New Zealand were facing similar threats, a rescue plan was launched. In the late 1980s, the entire remaining population of the parrot was relocated on numerous occasions to various small islands that had to be re-vegetated and made free of feral cats and other predators.

Ralph Powlesland, a kakapo scientist, baited the birds to platforms on which he laid out grains, nuts, dried vegetables and commercial parrot feed to figure out what fatty foods they preferred. Using his results, the team have enriched the birds' diet. They also watch all nests and place electric blankets on the eggs to keep them warm when females leave the nest for food.

The population has stabilised and by 2000, was growing slowly.
6. Pyrenean Ibex

The notion of saving endangered species through cloning was taken one step further earlier this year. For the first time, a subspecies that had already been declared extinct was cloned from preserved frozen cells.

The Pyrenean Ibex (Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica) is a subspecies of mountain goat that became extinct in 2000 when the last surviving individual, a 13-year old female named Celia, was found dead. Before Celia's death, Jose Folch of the Centre for Agricultural and Technological Research in Aragon, Spain, collected and froze a sample of her skin cells.

In a process similar to the one that produced Dolly, the researchers combined Celia's nuclear DNA with domestic goat cells. This produced over 1000 embryos, 30 of which were implanted into the uterus of five domestic goats. One embryo came to term, was born and survived for a few minutes. Its lungs were malformed, which is a common problem in cloned animals.

Encouraged by this relative success, Folch and his colleagues are pursuing their attempts.
7. African Wild Dog

The African Wild Dog (Lycaon pictus) was declared endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature in 1990. The BioBoundary project has the pungent task of studying wild dog urine to identify the scents that demarcate territory and send a "no trespassing" message.

The hope is that these can be used to create invisible "bio-boundaries" that will keep the wild dogs away from areas where they are likely to clash with humans.
8. Black robin

Every one of the over 250 New Zealand black robins that are alive today descends from a single female, nicknamed "Old Blue" after the colour of the tag she was given by ornithologists (see The robin's return).

Old Blue was one of just seven black robins (Petroica traversi) that remained in the late 1970s. A team of conservationists led by Don Merton, then with New Zealand's Wildlife Service, were given permission to interfere in ways no one had ever dared.

Females usually lay only two eggs, but in 1979, Merton found that if it loses a clutch, it will try again, so the birds have the potential to produce many more offspring than they actually do. The team coaxed Old Blue into laying more eggs than she would normally by removing her first clutch and placing it under the foster care of another species of bird called Tomtit (Petroica macrocephala).

The method is now known as cross-fostering and has since been used to boost populations of other bird species.


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Tourists, hunters in quest for Iceland's whales

Delphine Touitou Yahoo News 28 Apr 09;

REYKJAVIK (AFP) – Tourists bundled up in heavy parkas board a whale-watching boat docked in Reykjavik's port, excited at the thought of glimpsing the mighty animal. Across the harbour, whalers prepare their ships for the hunting season.

"It's quite strange to have these two boats in front of each other," says Angela Walk, a 37-year-old tourist guide for one of nine Icelandic companies that offers whale-spotting tours off the coast of this island in the middle of the North Atlantic.

Walk, a native of Germany who settled in Iceland 12 years ago, says her company "is against whaling."

"We try to convince them to stop. It's not good for Iceland's image."

But whaling presents a paradox for the country: it's a precious resource both for the tourism industry, which wants to protect the animals, and whalers who want to hunt them in what they say is a traditional and cultural right.

Every day during summer's peak season, thousands of tourists spend 45 euros (60 dollars) each in the hopes of sighting a minke whale, or, if they're lucky, the more imposing fin whale.

"On a 60-tonne fin whale, 50 percent is blubber and 50 percent is meat," explains Olafur Olafsson, a 59-year-old fisherman and whaler who has worked at sea since the age of 14.

This burly redhead is the captain of the boat named "H", for "Hvalur" or whale in Icelandic which is also the name of the company. It is the only whaling company in Iceland licensed to hunt fin whales.

Olafsson says that after spending two decades docked in port due to Iceland's suspension of whaling, his 51-meter (167-foot) ship will soon be ready to set sail with its 15 crew on June 2 -- a day after the hunt officially begins on Monday, June 1.

"Mondays are unlucky," he says, citing local superstition.

Three years ago when Iceland, a country of 320,000 people, announced it was resuming commercial whaling it set a quota of nine fin whales and 40 minke whales.

In January of this year, the government sharply increased the quota to 150 fin whales and up to 150 minkes per year for the next five years, a move that sparked an international outcry.

Fisheries Minister Steingrimur Sigfusson, whose left-wing government inherited the quotas when it came to power in February, said Iceland was reconsidering the levels and may revise the numbers later this year.

He told AFP whaling was a "complex" issue, but "the majority of Icelanders see it as a natural thing ... We are a nation of farmers and fishermen."

The pro-whaling camp says the quotas are needed to maintain the balance of the ocean's ecosystem, and to protect fish stocks, since a whale devours several tonnes of fish a day.

Olafsson insists that the whaling industry is strictly regulated: "We don't hunt whales smaller than 20 meters (65 feet), nor mothers with calves."

And in 99 percent of cases, the whale is killed immediately, on the first try, with a harpoon that fires off two explosive charges within a fraction of a second.

"We don't want to hurt the animal because we want the meat to be healthy," Olafsson said.

Meanwhile, on board the whale-watching boat, captain Roland Buchholz steers with one hand, his other hand clutching binoculars that slowly scan the horizon.

"I'm looking at birds. It's the only way to know where food is, and probably whales."

Suddenly, a minke whale surfaces, breaking the water for a fleeting moment, to the delight of tourists -- who have mixed reactions to the whale hunt.

"We are very much against whaling. There's no scientific reason to justify it. It's simply for making money," says 50-year-old Martin Holway of Britain, who travelled to Iceland with his wife for a whale-watching tour.

Steve Feye, a 54-year-old from Boston, was meanwhile more understanding.

"It's cultural and a question of tradition."

"The whale show, with the whales coming up and down, is beautiful. But I can understand that whaling is also important for Icelandic people, especially during the economic crisis," he said.

The head of Iceland's conservative Independence Party, Bjarni Benediktsson, said whaling easily becomes an "emotional issue."

"It's a question of sovereignty to do whatever we want with our resources," he told AFP.

"We are following the rules of the game ... in concert with experts and scientists who set the quotas," he said.

And, he asks, why can't tourism and whaling co-exist?

According to Angela Walk, a large majority of Iceland's whale meat is eaten by tourists, "out of curiosity".

Iceland and Norway are the only two countries in the world that authorise commercial whaling. Japan officially hunts whales for scientific purposes, which are contested by opponents, and the whale meat is sold for consumption.


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Cameroon Forest Elephants Face Extinction - WWF

Tansa Musa, PlanetArk 27 Apr 09;

YAOUNDE - Forest elephants in Cameroon and the Congo Basin could be extinct within 10 years without measures to fight the illegal ivory trade and curb habitat loss, a WWF official said in an interview.

During the last 40 years, environmentalists estimate the forest elephant population has fallen 75 percent, standing at some 140,000 for the Congo Basin and 13,000-15,000 for Cameroon.

Only about 9 percent of the elephants in Cameroon and 33 percent in the region are inside protected areas, while the vast majority roam in the wild jungle and are difficult to monitor.

Environmentalists blame growing demand for ivory from Asia, particularly the emerging economies of China and India, for the pressure on the forest elephants in recent years.

"Cameroon forest elephants, and I would say elephants in all the Congo Basin rainforest, are under very serious threat. In fact the threat has never been as high as it is today," Martin Tchamba, WWF Cameroon country director told Reuters on Friday.

"They are declining in large numbers every day due to the booming lucrative international illicit trade in ivory and the disappearance of their habitat. If governments in the region do not take urgent measures to combat the illicit trade and habitat loss, they could be extinct within the next 10 years," he said.

A report in the local bi-weekly The Post said game guards confiscated 60 tusks from poachers in Cameroon's Boumba-Ngoko division in 2008 and have taken 20 since the start of 2009.

But environmentalists in the country believe the figure could be much higher, because control and monitoring are difficult and not very effective in the area's thick jungle, while game guards are few and poorly equipped.

LOGGING, MINING AND WEAPONS

"Thousands of elephants are killed every year to meet rising demand. The region is the principal source of ivory on the world market, supplying about 80 percent of the demand," said Tchamba.

"There is a preference for 'hard' forest ivory from Central African range countries including Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo Republic, Gabon and the DRC," he said.

Tchamba said the trade was fuelled by logging and mining companies building roads that open up access to the primary forest, the last strongholds for elephants. In the last two years, 60 permits have been granted for Boumba-Ngoko, a region thought to hold rich iron ore, gold and uranium deposits.

"Through their activities, these companies encroach on protected areas and decimate vast expanses of forests, resulting in the serious fragmentation of the habitat of this flagship animal species," said Tchamba.

Poachers are also using more sophisticated weapons such as AK47 assault rifles, making it hard for local game park wardens to take them on. The weapons are freely available in a region with porous borders and conflicts in neighbouring countries.

"The massive circulation of war arms is boosting elephant poaching. We recently confiscated a Kalashnikov and a grenade from poachers. This is a new phenomenon we are trying to get to grips with in this region," said Eitel Pandong, the government delegate for Forestry and Wildlife for Boumba-Ngoko.

(Editing by David Clarke)


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