Best of our wild blogs: 13 Jun 09


New nature blog: Nature's Wonders blog
with entries about big sisters island and pulau hantu and changi

Cat's Night Out at Jurong Point!
on the Midnight Monkey Monitor blog

Super trooper
on the annotated budak blog

Pasir Ris-visited
on the compressed air junkie blog

Exploring Pandan mangroves
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Black-winged Stilt brooding chicks
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Semakau public walk
on the wonderful creations blog on the NaturallYours blog with part 2 and urban forest blog and discovery blog

Project Semakau Transect Survey
on the Manta Blog

Olive Back Sunbird and its nest
on the For the Future of Our Forest blog

Interesting stuff at Kampung Ubin Walk
on the Cicada Tree Eco-Place blog


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Clean up Pangkor

Zeeneeshri, The New Straits Times 13 Jun 09;

R. ZEENEESHRI tags along with a group of students who learnt the importance of marine conservation

CHONG Kin Lam expressed his disgust with the sanitary conditions at Pulau Pangkor in two words: “Smelly la!”

An unpleasant whiff may well be the only thing the 19-year-old and a group of KDU College students took home after their visit to the island recently.

The Diploma in International Hotel and Tourism Management students’ marine conservation field trip gave them an insight into the poorly maintained facilities at the boat-making and fishing villages, snorkelling spots and eateries.

“Pangkor is a very natural island but the authorities need to improve its public facilities if they want to maintain the flow of tourists,” says Chong, adding that a good start would be to have proper toilets along the beaches.
“Taxis at the island do not want to take passengers who are wet but there are no restrooms for tourists to change,” he says.

Student Tung Mei Gee, 18, says the island authorities should improve their rubbish disposal.

“The locals seem ignorant about the pollution that they are creating.

“Businesses by the beach need to care for it instead of polluting it with rubbish. We found an abandoned boat by the beach that was filled with water and garbage. Just imagine it as a breeding haven for mosquitoes,” she adds.

The tourist attractions that the group visited included the Pasir Panjang Segari Turtle Sanctuary, Lumut mangrove swamp, the Dutch Fort and Coral Island off Pangkor.

Nkosana Ncube, 21, from Zimbabwe, feels Pangkor has the potential to be the next Caribbean but is failing in its hygiene.

“It is a beautiful island but it is poorly maintained. It needs to be developed — European-style,” he says, adding that the transportation system is poor.

“Boats that were taking tourists to neighbouring islands for snorkelling were overloaded with people. It is sad that when something bad happens, such as if a boat overturns, will they think of changing their mindset.”

Nkosana says people in Pangkor do not speak much English so his local friends acted as translators.

Raising the sanitary standards and promotion of the island’s attractions should help increase the number of tourists, he adds.

“The taxi and boat drivers should be educated in marine conservation and English, so they can guide professionally. You need to be knowledgeable if you want to promote tourism,” he says.

“People here are not exposed to a clean and professional environment. I think in years to come, pollution will kill this place if things don’t change.

“At the boat-making area, things were floating in the water. From steel and wood to odds and ends, waste was strewn all over the shore as well as bobbing in the water.

“Their toilet is a sight to remember — it consists of a hole in the ground so that waste falls into the sea. There is no water, tissue or sewerage system.

“There’s nothing wrong with Pangkor, it’s just that the locals are not educated enough on pollution,” says Nkosana.

Lecturer and academic advisor Anand Raj Supramaniam was happy that his students experienced the unpleasantness as it probably gave them more points to ponder for their assignments.

Anand says there is obvious resort development in Pangkor but the marine conservation can be improved.

“The locals must be willing to change. When they are ready, then education can come into the picture.

“If we have a healthy and clean environment, we can build up tourism. And with a place such as Pangkor which depends on its surroundings for tourism, the Marine Department plays a vital role in ensuring the conservation and preservation of the sea, beach and land.

“For instance, the boat village was polluting the sea. I’m sure this is a prolonged act. Self-economy was taken into consideration, but environment was neglected. People there thought only of producing important materials and whatever they contributed to the sea was irrelevant.”

Concurring with him, student Nicole June Paul, 18, says people on the island were not thinking of the consequences of their actions.

“The entire sea is connected,” she says, “if one part is polluted, then the other section will also be, sooner or later, slowly but surely.

“During our snorkelling trip, the guide found a plastic bag in the water. He caught a fish with the bag and he threw the bag back into the water.

“I was thinking where did the bag come from? And if rubbish was so ‘easily available’ we can only imagine how much more we have not seen.”

Nicole says her visit to Pangkor made her realise that there are parts of Malaysia that are underdeveloped.

Travelling to Lumut and Pangkor has exposed her and her fellow classmates to a side of Malaysia outside of urban Kuala Lumpur.

She thinks that the upgrading of sanitary conditions on the island needs to be done before promotion of the island’s heritage would boost tourism there.

Anand says Pangkor need not be as developed as other parts of the country to attract tourists but certain measures must be taken.

The challenge for his students would be to come up with a way to improve the sanitation and promote tourism on the island while preserving the local identities.

The students’ assignments require them to make a study of the environment, give an overall view of the past and present and come up with a proposal for the future.

The proposals would then be vetted by the lecturer-in-charge and then sent to the relevant tourism board for its evaluation.

“We are not forcefully telling them that these (proposals) are things they need to follow,” says Anand.

The proposals are recommendations that the students make based on their observations during their study trip.


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Rubbish major cause of Sabah seafront pollution

Daily Express 13 Jun 09;

Kota Kinabalu: Natural Resources and Environment Deputy Minister Tan Sri Joseph Kurup Friday said rubbish still being discarded from the KK Market into the sea is among the major causes of pollution on Sabah's seafront.

He said this is aggravated by rubbish thrown by people into the three big rivers that flow into the sea, namely Putatan River, Tuaran River and Papar River.

"Sabah Parks is still facing this problem (of rubbish thrown into the sea and from the rivers)," he said to reporters after attending a briefing by Sabah Parks and Malaysia Marine Park Department at Manukan Island.

He said whenever the rivers are flooded, rubbish in the form of plastic, waste and plant debris, among others, would be washed into the sea.

He said the Ministry would be conducting awareness campaigns on the importance of preserving and conserving the marine environment with focus particularly on children.

He said the conservation and preservation awareness campaign is aimed at children because they tend to be more receptive compared to adults.

According to him, there are two issues prioritised by the Ministry, which is conservation of marine life and cleanliness of the environment.

To achieve this, he said they would be stressing the necessity to enforce the law and to educate the people on marine life conservation and protection.

He said these are common issues that both the State and Federal governments are very concerned about.

Kurup assured that his Ministry would continue to assist the State Government on the environment, particularly that the marine environment in the State is cared for.

"We have our regular programmes and we also have our centre to provide talks (to the participants)," he said.

On other developments, he said some 250 people in the peninsula have been issued with summonses for encroachment into prohibited areas.

"Although we don't have anyone from Sabah issued with summons for encroachment, there have been many cases of encroachment by illegal immigrants," he said.

To another question, Kurup said boats are allowed to seek refuge in islands such as Pulau Tiga that have been gazetted as prohibited areas when they encounter heavy storms.

However, he said they must strictly abide by the rules and leave the island once the storms subside.

Also present were Sabah Parks Director, Paul Basintal and Director-General of Malaysia Marine Park Department, Abd Jamal Mydin.


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Malaysia Ready To Help Indonesia Douse Forest Fires

Bernama 13 Jun 09;

SHAH ALAM, June 13 (Bernama) -- Malaysia is ready to help Indonesia put out its raging forest and open fires, the wind-blown smoke of which has caused a haze in some parts of Malaysia and reduced visibility and air quality.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak made the offer of assistance when asked whether Malaysia was prepared to help out, especially to extinguish the fires in Sumatra.

Malaysia had special aircraft, owned by the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA), which could drop water bombs to put out the fires, he told a news conference after chairing a meeting of the Selangor Umno Liaison Committee, here today.

The air quality in Peninsular Malaysia, particularly in Cheras, Kuala Lumpur, and Port Klang, Selangor, had dropped due to the haze.

"The air quality has dropped but has yet to reach a dangerous level. However, we could reduce outdoor activities," Najib said.

In August 2005, a team of 125 Malaysian fire-fighters and members of the special disaster assistance and rescue team helped to douse more than 1,000 forest fires in Riau and northern Sumatra in Indonesia.

-- BERNAMA

Malaysia to aid Indonesia ahead of haze season
AFP 14 Jun 09;

KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) — Malaysia has offered to help Indonesia curb forest fires blamed for the choking haze that shrouds the region each year, media reports said, as air quality fell in the country.

In the dry season, Indonesian farmers burn forests to clear land for agriculture, causing a smoky haze that spreads across the region, affecting tourism and increasing health problems.

"We have special aeroplanes which can be used to carry out water bombing," the Sunday Star quoted Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak as saying.

"It is up to the Indonesian government to accept it," the premier told the newspaper, as he urged Malaysians to avoid open burning.

Malaysian environment authorities said air quality and visibility in parts of the country over the past week fell from "good" to "moderate."

On Sunday morning, the environment department said 22 out of 49 areas it monitored were "moderate," an improvement from Friday when three areas including capital Kuala Lumpur were "unhealthy."

The Indonesian government has outlawed land-clearing by fire but weak enforcement means the ban is largely ignored.

Environment ministers from Singapore, Malaysia and other regional nations have urged Indonesia promptly to ratify a regional treaty aimed at preventing cross-border haze pollution.

Malaysia said last year that it will help Indonesian farmers practise safer farming methods, to help curb the forest fires, by sending experts to the fire-prone Riau region on Indonesia's Sumatra island.

The haze hit its worst level in 1997-98, costing the region an estimated nine billion dollars by disrupting air travel, tourism and other business activities as smoke enveloped the region.

Offer to help Jakarta fight forest fires
New Straits Times 14 Jun 09;

SHAH ALAM: The government is willing to assist the Indonesian government in putting out its forest fires, which have contributed to the worsening haze condition in the peninsula.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak said Malaysia had the facilities and equipment, including a special amphibious plane with water bombing capability, to help fight the forest fires in the republic.

"I hope the Indonesian government will consider this offer. We can offer our assistance but it is up to them to accept it," he said after chairing the monthly Selangor Umno liaison committee meeting, here, yesterday.

Najib, who is also state liaison commitee chairman, said the air quality in the country was worsening but had not reached a dangerous level.

"We can cut down on activities that can expose us to polluted air. We also need to monitor the situation.
"This is to determine what other steps can be taken, including conducting internal meetings and reducing other active activities that can worsen the air quality."

On Friday, Kajang, Cheras, Shah Alam and Klang recorded unhealthy Air Pollutant Index (API) of between 100 and 136.

The Meteorological Department detected 57 hotspots in Sumatra while six isolated hotspots were detected in Peninsular Malaysia and 10 in Sabah and Sarawak.

The number of hotspots in central and northern Sumatra have increased due to the dry weather.

Malaysia received its first amphibious plane, the Bombardier CL415, from Canadian manufacturer Bombardier Aerospace, to be used by the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (Malaysian Maritime) in January.

The first of its kind in Southeast Asia, the plane can carry water, fly low and land on water, which makes it suitable for fire fighting duties, among others.

Malaysia will receive its second amphibian plane by the end of the year.


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Air quality declines in Klang Valley

The Star 13 Jun 09;

PETALING JAYA: Air quality in parts of the country have deteriorated due to local peat fires in Selangor and forest fires in Indonesia bringing over haze to Malaysia.

At 5pm Friday, Port Klang and Cheras recorded unhealthy API readings of 136 and 109 respectively. Shah Alam’s API reading went up to 120 from the 95 recorded at 11am.

Overall, 21 areas recorded good air quality while 26 areas recorded moderate air quality readings.

Other areas close to heading into the unhealthy quality range of between 101 and 200 include Kajang (100), Batu Muda (99), Petaling Jaya (93) and Putrajaya (92).

Compared to Thursday, yesterday’s API readings showed a general decline in air quality in the Klang Valley.

Thursday’s API readings for Petaling Jaya was 76 while Cheras recorded a reading of 73.

The three peat fires identified in Klang and Sepang coupled with trans-boundary haze from Indonesia has led to unhealthy Air Pollutant Index (API) readings in Port Klang, Shah Alam and Cheras.

The fires are a regular occurrence in Sumatra and Borneo during the dry season due to fires being started to clear land before the planting season starts.

The dry season also occurs in Malaysia which tends to ignite peat fires that compounds the annual haze problem.

As of 5pm, visibility in Subang was at 5km. Petaling Jaya recorded visibility readings of 2km at 9am which later improved to 4km at 5pm.

Visibility at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport went to as low as 3km to which an airport spokesperson said the situation was being monitored.

Haze a whiplash of El Nino effect
Veena Babulal, and V. Shankar Ganesh, The New Straits Times 13 Jun 09;

The people will have to put up with hazy skies and starless nights until there is more rain to disperse the pollutant particles and lift the dry weather, Meteorological Department Climatologist Dr Wan Azli Wan Hassan said yesterday.
He said the grainy skies, weak winds during the southwest monsoon period from June to August, the low average rainfall and rising surface temperatures in the Pacific ocean were a whiplash of the El Nino effect.

The rainfall for the period June to August is 100 to 200mm, but there has been less rain because of these conditions.

Wan Azli declined to forecast when enough rain would fall to clear the skies.

Port Klang, Shah Alam and Cheras in Kuala Lumpur were the hardest hit areas.
Port Klang recorded an unhealthy API (Air Pollutant Index) reading of 136, Shah Alam (120) and Cheras with 109 as of 5pm yesterday. This compared with a reading of 125, 82 and 73 respectively at 5pm on Thursday.

AnAPI reading of 101 and above is unhealthy, 51 to 100 is moderate and 50 and below is good.

Kajang with a reading of 100, Nilai (96), Petaling Jaya (93) and Putrajaya

(92) narrowly missed the unhealthy level. The API readings of these areas have increased steadily along with the readings at Port Klang and Cheras over the past three days.

Other areas that recorded moderate readings included Port Dickson (74), Seremban (71), Miri (73), Muar (70) and Malacca (71).

The API reading of Tanjung Malim dropped from 93 as of 5pm on Thursday to 61 yesterday.

Areas with the cleanest air as at 11am yesterday included Kangar (28), Sandakan (28), Kuching (29), Limbang (29) and Tawau (36).

There were 57 hot spots in Sumatra yesterday, a drop from 98 on Thursday.

The number of hot spots in central and northern Sumatra had increased due to the dry weather.

There were six isolated hot spots detected in the Peninsular and 10 in Sabah and Sarawak.

On a heartening note, Wan Azli said the cloudy skies could bring rain.

“Once the clouds return, it means there is moisture in the air and the rain could come soon.”

In Kuantan, the state government, environment and health committee chairman Datuk Hoh Khai Mun said the haze situation in Pahang remained under control, especially after heavy rainfall in several places.

“Yesterday, the Air Pollution Index for Balok Baru, Kuantan recorded a moderate reading at 56, followed by Jerantut at 53 and in Indera Mohkota, Kuantan the air quality was good with a reading of 41,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Department of Environment (DOE) director-general Rosnani Ibarahim said that it was still unnecessary for the wearing of face masks for residents in areas where the API reading showed unhealthy air quality.

“The DOE will issue further directive if it is necessary for residents to wear face masks,” she said when contacted by Bernama.

She said the department would continue to conduct frequentmonitoring of the air quality level nationwide and take necessary measures to address the problem.

In Klang, Selangor executive councillor for environment, Elizabeth Wong, said 70 per cent of the haze was caused by trans-boundary factors such as forest fires on the Indonesian island.

She said the authorities here were doing their best to control local contributory factors like open burning and forest fires.

At the moment, she said there were only a few local hotspots in Johan Setia here, Jalan Kebun in Shah Alam and Tanjung Dua Belas in Kuala Langat.

The situation in Klang and Port Klang was bad with API readings reaching 138 at 11am yesterday.

Port operations were continuing as normal but visibility at sea was

drastically reduced. The usual visibility range is about 10 nautical miles for ships but this was down to 0.8 miles yesterday morning.

Wong said strict enforcement to curb open burnings would be carried out with the help of the police.

The dry weather could worsen the haze situation, especially from September as the El Nino sets in.

State executive councillor in charge of health Dr Xavier Jayakumar

said all hospitals were prepared for an increase in the number of haze related illness.


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Indonesia forest fires flare, Malaysia hit by haze

Reuters 12 Jun 09;

PEKANBARU, Indonesia (Reuters) - The number of forest fires raging in Indonesia's Sumatra island has increased, with wind blowing choking smoke over parts of Malaysia and slashing visibility, officials said on Friday.

The fires are a regular occurrence during the dry season in areas such as Sumatra and Borneo, but the situation has deteriorated in the last decade, with timber and plantation firms often blamed for deliberately starting fires to clear land.

The worst haze hit in 1997-98, when drought caused by the El Nino weather phenomenon led to major Indonesian fires. The smoke spread to Singapore, Malaysia and south Thailand and cost more than $9 billion in damage to tourism, transport and farming.

Risks for another bad period appear to have risen with the prospect of a return of El Nino this year.

An Indonesian official said 47 hotspots were recorded in Riau province in Sumatra by Thursday based on satellite surveillance, and temperatures were abnormally high at 35 degrees C (95 F).

"There is a potential for the number of fire spots to rise and haze conditions to worsen if there is no rain," said Blucer Dolok Saribu, head of the meteorology, climatology and geophysics agency in Riau's provincial capital of Pekanbaru.

The haze is likely to remain a threat until August at least. The rainy season usually begins in September.

The city, which frequently suffers from haze, had been shrouded in unpleasant yellowy, smoke earlier this week, although by Friday visibility had improved after some rains.

Rahmad Tauladani, a meteorological analyst in Pekanbaru, said wind had blown the haze over neighboring Malaysia, but said that no flights had been canceled so far, with visibility of 6,000 meters, above the minimum to allow flights of 1,000 meters.

In Malaysia, the haze had reduced visibility in some areas surrounding the capital Kuala Lumpur to as low as 5,000 meters, the Department of Environment (DOE) said.

Two out of 51 areas in the country monitored by the department recorded air readings that were unhealthy.

"We are monitoring the situation. We will decide later if any action should be taken," the DOE's Director-General Rosnani Ibrahim told Reuters by telephone.

Spurred on by the 1997-98 fires, Southeast Asian countries signed the ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution in 2002, but Indonesia has yet to ratify the pact.

It is illegal to carry out slash-and-burn land clearing in Indonesia, but prosecutions take time and few have stuck.

Weather expert Tauladani said the current high temperatures had increased the risk that fires could spread to peatland areas.

Environmentalists are particularly concerned over an increasing trend toward converting peatland forests.

Once these areas are drained, peat soil is highly flammable, producing more smoke and carbon emissions than other soil types. Indonesia's neighbors have been frustrated by Jakarta's failure to stop the annual fires.

Indonesia has identified the ASEAN haze pact as one of six "crucial" bills that should be passed before the current session of parliament expires at the end of September.

But with politicians distracted by the July 8 presidential election, it is unclear whether there will be time in the current parliamentary term to pass it. The pact calls for signatories to work together on monitoring and combating haze.

(Additional reporting by Telly Nathalia in Jakarta and Julie Goh in Kuala Lumpur; Writing by Ed Davies; Editing by Bill Tarrant)


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Poor farmers to guard Earth's crop riches

Andy Coghlan, New Scientist 13 Jun 09;

IF YOU like potatoes, chances are you will one day owe some measure of thanks to the Quechua Indians of Peru. That's because they will be making sure that potatoes continue to be available whatever the vagaries of future climate change. The Quechua are among the first recipients of a new global fund, established last week, to make poor farmers the custodians of all the world's threatened crops.

Importantly, the move could provide valuable options should the world find itself in another food crisis.

The Peruvian farmers will be paid to look after the most diverse collection of potatoes in the world. They will try growing varieties at different altitudes and in different climatic conditions so that if today's commercially available potato varieties start to fail anywhere in the world, replacement varieties will be ready and waiting.

The aim of the new fund is to achieve the same level of readiness for all the world's staple food crops. It is a key practical element of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, which aims to provide an "insurance policy" for crops. The fund has two main goals - to prevent the loss of neglected or underutilised crop varieties, and to sustain the full diversity of common crops.

Though the treaty was agreed in 2001 and came into effect in 2004, the rich and poor factions of the 120 signatory nations have been haggling until now over who should pay, and how much.

During tense negotiations last week in Tunis, Tunisia, rich countries of the world finally agreed to bankroll the five-year $116 million "Benefit-Sharing Fund" that will finance projects like the one in Peru. In essence, the fund will compensate farmers so they carry on growing unusual or traditionally grown crops instead of switching to more profitable, commercial varieties.

By keeping as many food varieties as possible ticking over as usual on small-scale farms throughout the world, the hope is that they will be available if needed in a climate crisis, or a food shortage like last year's. "In Peru, the aim is to react to climate change," says Bert Visser of the Centre for Genetic Resources in Wageningen, the Netherlands, and a key negotiator.

Visser points out that the treaty has already enabled the establishment of an international vault containing 1.1 million seed varieties, which opened last year in Svalbard, Norway. The new fund aims to secure the food varieties which cannot be banked in this way, and that can only be preserved if farmers carry on growing them.

Norway, Spain, Italy and Switzerland have already contributed $500,000 to the fund, which was last week divided between 11 recipient projects. Crucially, rich signatories to the treaty have now committed to supplying the remaining millions over the next five years. The US is currently considering signing up. If it does, China, Mexico and Japan are likely to follow suit.


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White paper inspired by beetles

Straits Times 13 Jun 09;

THE dazzling white shell of the Cyphochilus beetle has shown researchers how to use new techniques to produce brilliant white paper.

The beetle, which is found in South-east Asia, is believed to have evolved its white colouring as camouflage to help it blend in with local white fungi.

The work was done by minerals group Imerys Minerals and the University of Exeter in Britain.

In 2007, the team's research, published in journal Science, revealed how the beetle produced its brilliant whiteness using a unique surface structure.

New research, published in the journal Applied Optics, shows how some of the beetle's shell structure can be mimicked to produce coatings for white paper, said the university in a statement.

The beetle's scales are 1/200th of a millimetre thick, about 10 times thinner than a strand of human hair, it said. Good quality white paper would need coatings twice as thick to be as white.

The team found, however, that through careful mineral selection and processing, it is possible to mimic some of the structure of the white beetle's shell to produce an enhanced paper coating. This could lead to lighter paper that could be cheaper to produce and better for the environment.

'It is interesting to consider that clues found in a small, obscure beetle could find application in large-scale industry,' said Dr Benny Hallam, application support manager of Imerys Pigments for Paper Europe Technology Group.

The company is looking at producing the beetle-inspired white coatings on a large scale.

Colour in both nature and technology can be produced by pigmentation or by regularly arranged structures.

Whiteness, however, is created through a random structure, which scatters all colours simultaneously. The beetle's body, head and legs are covered in long flat scales which have two highly random internal 3-D structures.

The university is looking at the many different ways that animals and plants produce whiteness.

Said the university's Professor Pete Vukusic: 'Natural systems are packed with inspirational designs that have evolved to serve key biological functions. Developing scientific knowledge about where to look and then how to take technological or industrial insight from them is an increasingly important practice, especially in this financial climate.'

CHANG AI-LIEN


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Obama gives US first national ocean policy

Yahoo News 12 Jun 09;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – President Barack Obama on Friday set up a task force to craft the first US national policy for sustainably managing the country's oceans, drawing praise from environmentalists who said the move was long overdue.

"We are taking a more integrated and comprehensive approach to developing a national ocean policy that will guide us well into the future," Obama said in a proclamation declaring June "National Oceans Month."

The proclamation was issued along with a memorandum setting up the high-level Ocean Policy Task Force.

"Our nation's economy relies heavily on the oceans ... They support countless jobs in an array of industries including fishing, tourism and energy," the president said.

The task force will be led by the chair of the Council on Environmental Quality -- the main environmental policy adviser to the US president -- Nancy Sutley, the memorandum said.

Made up of senior policy-level officials, it will draft several recommendations and draw up a "comprehensive, integrated, ecosystem-based" framework for sustainably using the resources of US oceans, coasts and the Great Lakes.

"This is something that two US national commissions have called for," said Sarah Chasis, director of the Ocean Initiative at the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

"The Pew Oceans Commission and the US Commission on Ocean Policy in 2003 and 2004 came out and said we really need an ocean policy to bring together all the disparate authorities that manage our oceans and have a cohesive vision of what we want for the oceans and how to manage them," Chasis told AFP.

The United States, which has the largest ocean area of any country in the world, currently has 140 laws and 20 agencies managing its oceans.

Obama's plan, which would pull together all the different authorities and laws and focus attention on the problems and challenges facing the oceans, their riches and those who manage them.

"There's increasing recognition of the problems of the ocean. It's three-quarters of our planet; it's something we depend on for the air we breathe, the food we eat, for jobs, recreation," said Chasis.

"There's more scientific understanding of the ocean: it's becoming more acidic with global warming and countries are beginning to understand the seriousness of the threat.

"This action by the president is a step in the right direction for the US," she said.

Obama launches ocean protection plan
Doug Palmer, Reuters 12 Jun 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama launched a plan on Friday to protect the oceans, U.S. coasts and Great Lakes from the threats of climate change, pollution and overfishing.

"The oceans are critical to supporting life," Obama said in statement designating June as National Oceans Month. "The base of the oceanic ecosystem provides most of the oxygen we breathe, so oceans are critical to our survival."

Obama set up a task force led by chief White House environmental adviser Nancy Sutley to recommend a national policy to protect and restore "the health of ocean, coastal and Great Lakes ecosystems and resources" within 90 days.

The initiative comes as Obama is pressing Congress to pass sweeping new legislation to reduce the use of fossil fuels that emit carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases blamed for global climate change.

Oceans cover 70 percent of the Earth's surface and are a major source of jobs, food and energy resources. They are also critical to the transportation of people and goods and the mobility of U.S. armed forces.

Oceans "not only affect climate processes, but they are also under stress from the impacts of climate change," the White House said in a statement.

Other challenges are pollution, degraded coastal water quality, habitat loss, fishing impacts, invasive species, disease, rising sea levels and acidification, it said.

The environmental group Oceana praised Obama's action, hoping it would bring a "unifying vision" to the 140 U.S. laws and 20 federal agencies involved in oceans management.

"With the oceans facing the triple threats of overfishing, pollution and climate change, they need attention at the highest levels of government," Oceana chief executive Andy Sharpless said.

(Reporting by Doug Palmer; editing by Anthony Boadle)


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New York declares war on geese to prevent airport bird strikes

Authorities will cull 2,000 Canada geese in public parks in Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan and the Bronx
Suzanne Goldenberg, guardian.co.uk 12 Jun 09;

Authorities in New York have declared war on the large flocks of Canada geese that congregate around the city's airports, and will cull 2,000 in an attempt to prevent a recurrence of the bird strike that forced a passenger plane to ditch in the Hudson river earlier this year.

The cull will target geese at open areas and more than 40 public parks in Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan and the Bronx within five miles of regional airports.

The city's mayor, Michael Bloomberg, said the effort was justified by the dangers the geese pose to aircraft. In January, the pilot of a US Airways flight was forced to make an emergency water landing after a bird strike, with his passengers making a miraculous escape from the aircraft as it floated on the freezing waters of the Hudson.

"The serious dangers that Canada geese pose to aviation became all too clear when geese struck US Airways Flight 1549," he said in a statement on Thursday. "The incident served as a catalyst to strengthen our efforts in removing geese from, and discouraging them from nesting on, city property near our runways."

The authority managing New York's three airports, Kennedy, LaGuardia and Newark, had already had a programme to control bird populations through shooting and trapping birds, and removing their nests.

LaGuardia, which has a particularly bad history with birds, has had a programme of evicting geese for the last five years, and has removed 1,250 during that time. In the past, some of the offending geese were donated to food banks. That practice will not continue.

Jason Post, a spokesman for the mayor, told reporters the geese would be herded to a collection point, and then taken off site where they would be put down using carbon dioxide in methods approved by the American Veterinary Medical Association.

Conservation officials say there is a permanent population of about 20,000 Canada geese in the region. Another 25,000 are believed to pass through the area during the migration season. It is believed that the US Airways flight was brought down by migrating birds.

The cull is the first step in a major action plan to prevent birds strikes in the aftermath of the US Airways near-disaster, involving representatives from the city, airport authorities in New York and New Jersey, and the US agriculture department.

Bird strikes have been rising across the US, from 1,750 in 1990 to 7,666 in 2001 according to the federal aviation authority. Canada geese, whose population have risen to 5.5m last year, have emerged as a particular culprit. There have been 77 collisions between planes and geese in the New York area over the last decade, according to the federal aviation authority.

The city is planning to fill in a large hollow at Rikers Island, just north of LaGuardia, that had been popular among geese. At JFK airport, the authorities are also installing a new bird radar system, and have taken on an additional wildlife biologist to step up safety measures. The city will erect signs in parks warning people against feeding geese, and will teach wildlife supervisors in the field how to fire shotguns.


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China environmental watchdog halts dam projects

Yahoo News 12 Jun 09;

BEIJING (AFP) – China's environmental watchdog has halted the construction of two dams on the Yangtze river, putting in jeopardy a 29 billion dollar plan to harness the waterway, state press said.

The Ministry of Environmental Protection shelved the plan after discovering that construction of the two dams in southwest China's Yunnan province had started without the mandated environmental approval, the China Daily said.

The Ludila and the Longkaikou dams, both of which were already under construction, were being built by China's two biggest power companies, China Huadian Corporation and China Huaneng Group.

The Yangtze is China's longest river.

"Building dams without proper designs and environmental protection measures would damage the water ecology, both upriver and downriver, and negatively impact local communities," the report quoted a ministry official as saying.

The two dams are part of a 200 billion yuan (29 billion dollar) plan that calls for eight cascading hydropower stations to be built on a 560 kilometre (350 mile) section of the river, it said.

The dams were slated to produce 20 gigawatts of electricity, equal to the output of the Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest hydroelectric project, the paper said.

The environmental assessment reports of two of the other dams have already been approved, it added.

China is in the process of building at least 20 new hydroelectric projects or reservoirs on the Yangtze by 2020, the government said earlier this year, as the nation seeks to diversify its energy mix away from polluting coal, its main source of power.

But environmentalists and rights groups have warned of ecological damage and the forced relocation of residents.


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U.S. revives nation's first clean coal power project

Jasmin Melvin, Reuters 12 Jun 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced on Friday plans to restart the country's first clean coal power project, scrapped by the previous Bush administration as too expensive.

Under an agreement with the non-profit FutureGen Alliance, the Energy Department will take the first steps toward developing the first U.S. commercial scale-carbon capture and storage project, to be located in Mattoon, Illinois.

"Not only does this research have the potential to reduce harmful greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., but it also could eventually result in lower emissions around the world," Chu said.

The FutureGen project was scrapped by the Bush administration due to a ballooning price tag of some $1.8 billion. But a congressional report released in March accused the Bush administration of inflating the cost in order to scrap the project.

President Barack Obama and other Illinois politicians have expressed support for the project in their home state.

"For nearly a year and a half, the people of Illinois have endured delays, reversals and disagreements over costs and funding of FutureGen," Illinois Senator Dick Durbin said.

"Today, patience and perseverance pay off -- FutureGen at Mattoon is finally ready to move forward," he said.

The new agreement calls for a restart of preliminary design activities and updating the cost estimate, the department said.

Once these activities and others are completed in early 2010, the department and the alliance will decide whether to continue with the project.

The Energy Department expects to spend about $1.07 billion on the project, with $1 billion from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

Not all environmental groups, however, embrace the concept of clean coal.

Several groups, including the Alliance for Climate Protection, Natural Resources Defense Council and the League of Conservation Voters, launched a multi-million dollar campaign last winter against clean coal, calling it a myth.

They contend that coal-fired power plants are major carbon emitters contributing heavily to climate change. The technology to capture and store carbon in an environmentally safe way is commercially untested and not yet cost competitive, they say.

(Reporting by Jasmin Melvin; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)


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Nations may form global CO2 market without U.N. deal

Timothy Gardner, Reuters 12 Jun 09;

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Rich countries may act on their own to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by developing a carbon market they hope will lure in poor nations even if U.N. climate talks get bogged down, experts said.

Nearly 200 countries have been trying to reach an agreement to replace the Kyoto Protocol on global warming with a December deadline at a meeting in Copenhagen approaching.

But there remains a large rich-poor divide. Developing countries want industrialized countries to make deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions in the international agreement. Industrialized countries want poor countries to take on binding commitments.

To get past the differences, the rich world, including the European Union and the United States, may form a carbon market outside or parallel to the U.N. talks. Rapidly developing countries like China may be inspired to join the market to sell emissions offsets such as clean energy projects.

One reason such a development would be attractive "is because countries like the United States, and other countries like China, South Korea, and Mexico may very well do more on their own domestic binding agreements than in a binding international agreement," said Nathaniel Keohane, director of economic policy and analysis at the Environmental Defense Fund.

The largest polluting countries have never agreed to binding cuts in an international agreement. The United States pulled out of the Kyoto Protocol, which did not require big developing emitters like India and China, the world's top greenhouse gas polluter, to make cuts.

A McKinsey study this year found that financing new energy technology, efficiency and forestry projects to control global warming may take more than $260 billion a year by 2030,

"There's a growing consensus that in order to mobilize the capital you have to bring in markets in a serious way," Keohane told an Environmental Finance conference on Thursday..

A global market could fit in easily with the climate bill being debated in the U.S. Congress. The bill would allow U.S. polluters to purchase up to 1 billion tons per year of international offsets.

"Getting everyone to agree with everything (in Copenhagen) is going to be very difficult," said Peter Fusaro, a carbon trade expert at Global Change Associates.

"So I don't think the possibility of a market developing outside of the process is out of whack at all. I think it's very possibly an outcome."

(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by David Gregorio)


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Climate Change Treaty, to Go Beyond the Kyoto Protocol, Is Expected by the Year’s End

Elisabeth Rosenthal, The New York Times 12 Jun 09;

The world is on track to produce a new global climate treaty by December, the top United Nations climate official said Friday as delegates from more than 100 nations concluded 12 days of talks in Bonn, Germany.

The delegates issued a 200-page document that they said would serve as the starting point for treaty negotiations that open in Copenhagen in December.

“Time is short, but we still have enough time,” the official, Yvo de Boer, who is the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, said at a briefing. “I’m confident that governments can reach an agreement and want an agreement.”

The goal is a climate treaty that would go beyond the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, a climate-change agreement that set emissions targets for industrialized nations. Many of those goals have not been met, and the United States never ratified the accord.

The document issued Friday outlines proposals for cutting emissions of heat-trapping gases by rich countries and limiting the growth of gases in the developing world. It also discusses ways of preventing deforestation, which is linked to global warming, and of providing financing for poorer nations to help them adapt to warmer temperatures.

But many environment advocates and politicians suggested that delegates had not made enough progress in winnowing down those options. “Of course we have to respect the way the United Nations works,” Denmark’s minister for climate and energy, Connie Hedegaard, said in a statement after the talks ended. “But to me, there is no doubt that things are moving too slow.”

Representatives of poor countries complained repeatedly in the talks that developed nations had not made an adequate commitment to reduce their emissions. They expressed particular dismay over Japan’s announcement this week to reduce emissions by only 8 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.

Shyam Saran, India’s envoy on climate change, called such targets “unsatisfactory.” China and other developing countries have demanded that richer nations reduce emissions by 40 percent below 1990 levels in that period.

Experts described some of the back-and-forth as predictable jockeying in the months leading up to the make-or-break talks to negotiate a treaty in December.

Jonathan Pershing, who led the American delegation at the Bonn talks, said the discussions had unfolded about as fast as could be expected given the number of nations involved and the size of the task. He predicted a treaty would emerge in December.

He said that American negotiators acknowledged at the talks that “climate change is an urgent problem and it needs a global and immediate response.”

Despite the shortage of specific commitments, environmentalists took heart from the strong involvement of many nations, especially the United States and China, which jointly produce 40 percent of the world’s heat-trapping emissions. (In declining to ratify the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, the United States cited China and India’s lack of participation.)

“There are a lot of options to work out, but we have come a long way,” said Alex Kaat, a spokesman for Wetlands International, which fights the destruction of rainforests and decaying bogs. “There is now text on paper, and that’s progress.”

UN climate talks advance, poor urge more CO2 cuts
Alister Doyle and Gerard Wynn, Reuters 12 Jun 09;

BONN, Germany (Reuters) - Climate talks made progress on Friday toward a new U.N. treaty to curb global warming but ended far short of calls by developing nations for the rich to make deeper cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.

Four years of talks to widen the existing Kyoto Protocol have struggled to agree on how to share the cost of efforts to curb greenhouses gas mainly emitted by burning fossil fuels.

The United States and Europe warned in closing remarks on Friday that the private sector would finance the climate fight, not their governments.

"I look back on this as a significant session that has advanced our work in important ways," Yvo de Boer, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, told a news conference at the June 1-12 talks among 183 nations in Bonn.

He said governments staked out far clearer views after their first review of a draft legal text of the treaty due to be agreed in Copenhagen in December to succeed Kyoto.

But developing countries called for more, despite the global recession.

"We finally managed to have a positive exchange on the numbers" for developed nations, China's climate ambassador Yu Qingtai told Reuters. "But still we hear repeated statements resisting calls for further meaningful cuts."

China and many developing nations want the rich to cut by at least 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 to avoid the worst effects of global warming such as droughts, floods and rising sea levels.

Offers made by developed countries so far work out at cuts of between 8 and 14 percent below 1990, according to the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

FUNDS

The United States and Europe poured cold water on hopes for major public funds, such as the 1 percent or more of national wealth demanded by many poor nations to help them avoid a model of high-carbon growth dominant since the Industrial Revolution.

"The key issue is not the number," said Jonathan Pershing, head of the U.S. delegation, referring to "marginally" bigger investments to improve efficiency or to install low-carbon instead of polluting coal plants.

"We'd like to change that" view of developing countries that governments would bankroll the fight against climate change, he said, adding that carbon offset markets could play a big role.

The European Union also underscored that private finance would dominate in the climate change fight.

Pershing said progress in Bonn had been "slow," and the European Commission's Artur Runge-Metzger said "enormous effort" was required to get a deal in Copenhagen in December.

The United States expected China to undertake action, such as setting renewable energy targets, but not be legally bound to prove curbs. China and the United States are top emitters.

"We have advanced perhaps a couple of miles toward Copenhagen. We still have thousands to go," said Jennifer Morgan of the London-based E3G think-tank. The next meeting will be in Bonn in August.

Outside the talks in a Bonn hotel, protesters brought along two live camels and laid out some sand to illustrate fears of creeping desertification. "We spit on weak targets," one banner said, another said: "Shrinking targets, growing deserts."

The chair of a group looking at new actions to curb emissions by all countries said a draft text had swollen with new ideas from about 50 pages to 200. Big breakthroughs were likely to happen only in Copenhagen, he said.

"This is like the evolutionary process in reverse. The Big Bang comes at the end," said Michael Zammit Cutajar, of Malta.

(Editing by Richard Balmforth)


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