Best of our wild blogs: 24 Jun 09


Got any? 1,300 balloons containing myths and secrets about a woman's body freed at Siloso from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

East Coast Rocks!
from wild shores of singapore and Living sands of East Coast Park and East Coast Lagoon is alive and Singapore Nature

Intertidals at Punggol
from Urban Forest

Return to Binjai Stream
from Water Quality in Singapore

Fauna Show @ USR Part 2
from Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature

White-crested Laughingthrush came crashing
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Lineated Barbet’s household chore
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Bat in my belfry
from wild shores of singapore

Singapore International Water Festival (SIWF) Environmental Quiz... at last! from Water Quality in Singapore

FULL VIDEO: Season of the Spirit Bear
from Lost in the Jungle


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PM Lee says Singapore's challenge is to sustain environment long-term

Hasnita A Majid, Channel NewsAsia 23 Jun 09;

SINGAPORE: Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has said Singapore's challenge is to sustain the environment as the city grows.

Speaking at the opening of Singapore’s largest water reclamation plant in Changi on Tuesday, Mr Lee said that to do so, the country must take a long-term view, prepare well ahead and align efforts across the government.

The launch of the Changi Water Reclamation Plant is another milestone in Singapore's overall strategy towards sustainable development.

Not only does the plant treat used water, it is also a feedstock for large scale production of NEWater.

Mr Lee said Singapore's basic attitude has been that environmental sustainability is not incompatible with economic development.

He added: "But far from degrading our environment, we have improved it. Singapore has become a clean and green city with a high quality living environment."

"Singaporeans enjoy fresh air, clean water and good public health, and almost half the island is covered with greenery, parks and nature areas."

But challenges on how to sustain the environment remain, which is why Singapore has set up an Inter-Ministerial Committee (on Sustainable Development) to develop a blueprint for a sustainable future.

"Community action is especially important, because we need everyone to play an active role," said Mr Lee.

"I am glad Singaporeans took an active interest in developing our Blueprint and come forward with many ideas and suggestions to improve our living environment. I hope Singaporeans will continue to contribute.

"Achieving sustainable development will call for each one of us to make an effort, to give our ideas and to adjust our lifestyles. Our Blueprint is meant to be an evolving and living concept.

"As we understand the sustainable challenge better, and as technology improves, we will continue to test out new solutions and push for higher standards."

Mr Lee said that to break new ground in sustainable development, cities will require a combination of far-sighted planning, sustained investment in infrastructure and breakthroughs in technology.

Hence, he said Singapore is keen to promote an international exchange of ideas on this.

Mr Lee added that Singapore's experience has shown that cities can overcome environmental and developmental changes by setting long-term goals and working consistently towards achieving them.

- CNA/yb

Key step to water adequacy
Changi water treatment complex plays a role in sustainable development
Clarissa Oon, Straits Times 24 Jun 09;

PRIME Minister Lee Hsien Loong unveiled a massive water treatment complex yesterday that symbolises Singapore's green policy, land-use approach and drive towards water self-sufficiency.

The $3.65 billion plant in Changi, connected to an underground tunnel system, will free up nearly 1,000ha of land now occupied by older plants in places such as Bedok and Seletar.

This land, to be developed for other purposes, is roughly three times the size of the Central Business District.

But the benefit goes beyond land use, said Mr Lee.

The Changi building will have a Newater plant built on its rooftop to turn the treated used water into water safe enough to drink.

When ready next year, the Newater plant, with the existing four, can double Newater capacity to meet one-third of Singapore's water needs.

These benefits were highlighted by Mr Lee at the opening ceremony of the Changi Water Reclamation Plant.

It was a main attraction of the Singapore International Water Week, attended by some 10,000 policy-makers and industry leaders from around the world.

Through the five-day annual conference, now in its second year, Singapore also hopes to promote an international exchange of ideas on innovative water solutions, Mr Lee said.

With rapid urbanisation and population growth draining the world's natural resources, 'cities will require a combination of far-sighted planning, sustained investment in infrastructure and breakthroughs in technology', he added.

In Singapore, the approach involves a network of underground tunnels that will pipe waste water from all over the island to two centralised treatment plants.

The Changi plant is the first in this deep tunnel sewerage system. A second plant in Tuas will be built over the next 10 to 20 years.

The Changi plant can treat 800,000 cu m of used water, piped daily from the northern and eastern parts of Singapore. This will form a vital feedstock for the Newater factory.

The Changi complex was 15 years in the making, and 'we pressed on despite economic downturns and the Sars crisis', Mr Lee noted.

The ultimate goal is to have an adequate supply of water for Singaporeans for years to come, he said.

Singapore imports 40 per cent of its water from Malaysia under two international agreements, one expiring in 2011 and the other in 2061. The rest of its supply comes from Newater, rainwater capture and desalination.

The plant is also significant in another way, noted Mr Lee.

It is part of Singapore's overall strategy for sustainable development, showing that environmental sustainability is not incompatible with economic development.

Although the population has soared from 1.6 million in 1959 to 4.8 million today, the environment has not suffered but improved.

Said Mr Lee: 'Singaporeans enjoy fresh air, clean water and good public health and almost half the island is covered with greenery, parks and nature areas.'

But a challenge awaits Singapore: sustaining the environment as the city grows and gets denser.

An inter-ministerial committee made its first recommendations in April on how Singapore can develop sustainably.

The water industry is a key plank of this green policy, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim said yesterday.

He pointed to the Changi plant as a good showcase of cutting-edge water technology, involving about 350 local and overseas contractors, consultants and suppliers.

Visitors touring the facility yesterday were keen to find out more about it.

India's S.R. Roop Kumar, a chief engineer of the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board, said he is planning for an underground waste water reclamation plant in the southern Indian city.

'Not at the cost of environment'
Today Online 24 Jun 09;

THE launch of the Changi Water Reclamation Plant shows that environmental sustainability - the challenge for Singapore as the city grows - is not incompatible with economic development, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said yesterday at the opening of the $2.2-billion facility.

Mr Lee said Singapore has systematically and resolutely tackled used water and other issues without degrading the environment, and the Republic must take a long-term view, "prepare well ahead and align efforts across the whole government" to sustain its environment.

The plant, part of the Deep Tunnel Sewerage System (DTSS), collects used water from the northern and eastern parts of the island and is vital for the large-scale production of Newater.

"By allowing every drop of used water to be collected, treated and further purified into Newater, the DTSS ensures an adequate supply of water for Singaporeans for many years to come," said Mr Lee.

"Achieving sustainable development will call for each one of us to make an effort, to give our ideas and to adjust our lifestyles ... As we understand the sustainability challenge better, and as technology improves, we will continue to try out new solutions and push for higher standards." 938LIVE

New water plant underlines old theme
It shows that environment and economy can go hand in hand
Lee U-Wen, Business Times 24 Jun 09;

(SINGAPORE) The Republic's population may have tripled over the last 50 years - from 1.6 million people in 1959 to over 4.8 million today - but the quality of the environment here has not suffered at all, said Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

Rather, the standards have improved over time because the government has adopted the basic attitude that environmental sustainability can, in fact, be compatible with economic development, he said last night before he officially commissioned the new Changi Water Reclamation Plant.

The ceremony was one of the highlights of the ongoing Singapore International Water Week, which runs until this Friday.

The $2.2 billion facility is the largest and most advanced of its kind in Singapore, and can treat 176 million gallons of water per day - equivalent to the volume of water in about 320 Olympic-sized swimming pools. It is another major step forward in Singapore's journey towards self-sustainability in water.

'This project is part of our overall strategy for sustainable development,' said Mr Lee. 'We have systematically and resolutely tackled used water and other issues faced by cities all over the world.'

'Singapore has become a clean and green city with a high-quality living environment. Singaporeans enjoy fresh air, clean water and good public health, and almost half the island is covered with greenery, parks and nature areas,' Mr Lee said.

A new NEWater plant - the fifth and the largest in Singapore - is currently being built on the rooftop of the Changi reclamation plant. And together with the other four NEWater plants, Singapore will have enough capacity to meet a third of the country's water needs by next year, said Mr Lee.

The challenge that the government is now meeting head on is how to sustain the environment as the city grows and gets even denser, said the Prime Minister. 'To do so, we must take the long view, prepare well ahead and align our efforts across the whole government.'

The Changi plant is part of the first phase of the Deep Tunnel Sewerage System, which will channel all used water through deep tunnels to two water reclamation plants, one at each end of the island.

'This will free up land occupied by the existing used-water plants and pumping stations, as well as the buffer land surrounding them,' said Mr Lee. In total, nearly 1,000ha of land - about the size of the Central Business District - will be released for development.


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Quiet beach enclave found deep in Punggol

All that glitters IN PUNGGOL
Desmond Ng, The New Paper 24 Jun 09;

THE discovery is not quite like finding gold in Punggol. But it is no less beautiful.

Hidden from human traffic is a quiet, undisturbed beach enclave in space-scarce Singapore.

Few people know about it. To find the spot, you need to go to the end of busy Punggol estate. But its attraction lies in its seclusion.

It is untouched by maddening crowds, unlike East Coast Park and Pasir Ris beach.

It used to be a wild, mangrove swamp, but it has since been transformed into a favourite spot of a few picnickers for its pristine, fine sand, calm waters and magnificent view of Pulau Ubin just across the waters.

Early teaser

It is also an early teaser of the Government masterplan to transform Punggol estate into a vibrant waterfront town.

When The New Paper discovered the beach yesterday, there was only a small group of no more than 50 sun-seekers relaxing along the short stretch.

Some were fishing, others were lazing next to their hastily set up tents, while children were playing and splashing nearby along the water.

There was also a small group of mountain bikers trying to tame the hilly terrain nearby.

One could almost drive up to the water's edge - that's how undeveloped it is.

There's no sense of urgency here, compared to the mad hustle and bustle of East Coast Park with its never-ending stream of cyclists, joggers, screaming children, BBQ smells and noisy seafood restaurants.

Here, most were content to just sit back and watch the setting sun beyond the fish farms on the horizon.

Do not expect the food stalls, amenities or toilets that you find at beach parks elsewhere.

Indeed, that is precisely why it is so precious - like finding gold in Punggol - if you can find your way there.


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World Bank-Singapore Urban Hub launched

Business Times 24 Jun 09;

Its aim is to share ideas on making cities liveable

THE World Bank-Singapore Urban Hub was launched on the sidelines of Singapore International Water Week yesterday. Its aim is to use Singapore's expertise in urban development and the World Bank's knowledge and operational experience to benefit developing countries.

The launch of the hub comes after Singapore and the bank signed a memorandum of understanding last year to expand cooperation on urban development solutions.

Using Singapore as a test-bed, the hub will bring together Singapore's public agencies, research institutes as well as private sector players to look into solutions for developing cities.

The hub will work with bodies such as International Enterprise Singapore, the Urban Redevelopment Authority, Public Utilities Board and Centre for Liveable Cities.

Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said: 'The Urban Hub is a major step forward in Singapore's strategic partnership with the World Bank. It allows Singapore to share its experience on a whole set of issues to do with making cities liveable - from water and waste management, to land use planning and urban conservation. Meanwhile, James Adams, the World Bank's vice-president for East Asia and the Pacific, said: 'We will now be able to develop a centre of excellence in Singapore to more effectively leverage our global knowledge and Singapore's recognised experience in urban management and finance to provide more timely advice and solutions to developing countries in Asia.'

Separately, Mr Adams also announced that the World Bank Office in Singapore will be led by Kamran M Khan from Aug 1.

Mr Khan, who is an American national, was most recently the bank's infrastructure finance adviser for East Asia and the Pacific.


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Local researcher wins $146k for cost-saving water 'health' sensor

Straits Times 24 Jun 09;

HE INVENTED a portable, easy-to- use filtration system that gave clean water to more than 100,000 people in Aceh after the 2004 tsunami.

Now, local researcher Adrian Yeo, 32, has developed another potential winner - a membrane sensor network that diagnoses the 'health' of a water treatment plant, to make sure it is performing at its peak.

His start-up - Membrane Instruments and Technology - has been given US$100,000 (S$145,800) to commercialise his latest invention, which will be tested at one of PUB's water treatment plants.

The device works via sensors that monitor the state of membranes used to produce clean water, highlighting where contaminants are concentrated, which could cause a drop in performance, said Dr Yeo.

The system could reduce a plant's maintenance costs by up to 10 per cent. This could add up to savings of $2 million a year in running the Tuas Desalination Plant, for example, added the research fellow at Nanyang Technological University, who set up his company six months ago.

The funding comes from a well- known figure in the water industry - Dr Andrew Benedek, the first winner of the $300,000 Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize last year, who was chosen for his pioneering use of membranes to treat water.

The 65-year-old Canadian announced the annual award at a Singapore International Water Week conference yesterday, and said the award would be given out over the next three years, after which he would 'assess its success' before deciding whether to continue with it.

Dr Benedek, executive director of UTS Biogas, a leading biofuel technology company in Germany, wants the award to go to start-up ventures in water treatment to help them commercialise fast.

He called the award the Don Quixote Fund - after the idealism of the fictional Spanish figure who relinquished his worldly possessions and travelled the world to right wrongs.

'Whenever people have a dream, society around them says that it is impossible,' said Dr Benedek. 'The guys who dream the impossible are like Don Quixote.'

AMRESH GUNASINGHAM

NTU researcher makes a splash with award
Lee U-Wen, Business Times 24 Jun 09;

SIX months ago, right in the heart of the global economic downturn, Singaporean scientist Adrian Yeo still took the plunge to set up his own company.

Called Membrane Instruments and Technology (Mint), the specialist firm aims to develop strategies for water treatment plants that use membrane technology.

But if the 32-year-old research fellow at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) ever worried about financing, he need not fret anymore.

Yesterday, Dr Yeo was named the inaugural recipient of the Don Quixote Fund award, a US$100,000 prize set up by Andrew Benedek, the winner of last year's Lee Kuan Yew Water Prize.

The new award provides start-up venture capital to enable graduate students and early-career scientists to develop new technology ideas that could impact the global water industry in future.

Speaking after receiving his award as part of the festivities at the ongoing Singapore International Water Week, Dr Yeo said he plans to use the money as seed funding to start commercialising his invention, the Membrane Integrity Sensor.

The device provides real-time information on the state of membranes used in the water purification process. It has already undergone pilot plant testing and Dr Yeo will use the prize money to install the sensor in water treatment plants.

'I've had good support from NTU, and they are providing my team with some office space to incubate. I have been able to tap on their business advice and things are moving along smoothly so far,' he said.

This will not be the first product that Dr Yeo has conceptualised. He previously invented a simple membrane-based water filter for the Indonesian market.

When the tsunami hit Aceh in December 2004, he trained locals there on the use and maintenance of the filters and personally delivered some 8,000 litres of drinking water to needy people.

Dr Benedek told BT that Dr Yeo stood out from the other applicants because 'his technology was interesting, the requirement was real, and he displayed entrepreneurial qualities'.

'He is a worthy recipient and he will receive the necessary coaching and mentoring to be successful. He is young and hungry and will go far,' he said.

Meanwhile, the National Research Foundation gave out 12 environmental and water technologies PhD scholarships yesterday to deserving students with a strong passion in clean water and energy research.

They received their scholarships at a lunch event from Environment and Water Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim.

Two of the winners will head to Cambridge University in the UK and Cornell University in the US, while the other 10 will pursue their research locally at NTU and the National University of Singapore.


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'Tap the power of used water': Singapore International Water Week

That will lead to reduced pollution and better sanitation: UN panel chief
Victoria Vaughan, Straits Times 24 Jun 09;

CLOSE to one in two people in Asia - 1.8 billion people - does not have proper sanitation, making diarrhoea the top health problem for children because they are forced to drink polluted water.

The situation can improve only through political will, public education and open discussion on the unpalatable subject of sanitation, said Holland's Crown Prince Willem-Alexander at the Singapore International Water Week yesterday.

'It is a very private matter and public discussion about toilets, sewage systems and personal hygiene can be challenging, said the prince, who chairs the United Nations Secretary-General's Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation.

In South-east Asia, 13 million tonnes of untreated faeces are released into inland water sources each year, along with 122 million cu m of urine and 11 billion cu m of grey water (water used in washing).

To improve the situation, his board, for example, has set up 'Water Operators Partnerships' to help public utilities providers connect and share experiences and knowledge on a non-profit basis.

A UN Millennium Development Goal is to halve, by 2015, the number of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.

Studies have found that while the world is on track to meet the drinking water target, based on current data, it will miss the sanitation target by more than 700 million people.

Noting that less than 5 per cent of consumed water is recycled, he said: 'The 95 per cent that is not recycled represents a tremendous opportunity to reduce pollution while simultaneously reclaiming the precious resources of water.'

Singapore is one of the best examples in the world where waste water is already being recycled on a large scale, he added during his speech at the ministerial plenary session attended by ministers and delegates from around the world.

'The fact that Singapore talks about used water instead of waste water is already a very important part of the perception that it is used and therefore reusable, - it's not waste,' he told The Straits Times later.

The Republic has an important role to play in helping other countries develop infrastructure capabilities, particularly for water treatment technology, said General Joginder Singh, governor of the state of Arunachal Pradesh in India. 'What countries like India have to learn from you is not to waste even a drop of water.'

Touching on the Influenza A (H1N1) outbreak, Environment and Water Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim said: 'Increasing access to clean water and sanitation is key to improving public health and hygiene, a basic yet vital aspect of keeping pandemics at bay.'

He stressed that countries should include infrastructure development in their packages, despite the financial downturn.

In fact, such infrastructure could even lead to profits.

According to the latest Joint Monitoring Programme report, conducted by the World Health Organisation and the United Nations Children's Fund, every dollar invested in sanitation yields a return of nine dollars.

Said Prince Willem-Alexander: 'So, in this era of global financial insecurity, sanitation technology and infrastructure is one of the most reliable long-term investment opportunities around.'

He pointed out that safe sanitation provides human health, dignity and development beyond value.

Mr Fehied Fahad Al Shareef, governor of the Saline Water Conversion Corporation, a utilities company based in Saudi Arabia, said: 'Many international experts agree that perhaps in the future, wars will be fought over water.'

The bad stuff in drinking water
Straits Times Forum 24 Jun 09;

CONTAMINATES that can be found in drinking water:

MICRO-ORGANISMS

# Giardia lamblia and Cryptosporidium, found in human and animal faecal waste - causes gastrointestinal illnesses such as diarrhoea, vomiting and cramps.

# Legionella, found in water and which multiplies in heating systems - causes Legionnaire's Disease, a type of pneumonia.

# Chlorite, a by-product of drinking-water disinfection - causes anaemia and can affect the nervous system in infants and young children.

# Chlorine, added to water to control microbes - causes eye or nose irritation and stomach discomfort.

INORGANIC CHEMICALS

# Arsenic, from natural deposits and in the run-offs from orchards and glass and electronics production wastes - causes skin damage or problems with the circulatory systems and may increase the risk of getting cancer.

# Copper, from corrosion of household plumbing systems and natural deposits - short-term exposure causes gastrointestinal distress and long-term exposure causes liver or kidney damage.

# Fluoride, a water additive which promotes strong teeth, can also enter drinking water from erosion of natural deposits and discharge from fertiliser and aluminium factories - it can cause bone disease (pain and tenderness of the bones) and children may get mottled teeth.

New technology can now detect substances like personal care products, pesticides and explosives, say experts from independent product safety certification organisation, Underwriters Laboratories.

SOURCE: U.S. ENVIRONMENT

PROTECTION AGENCY

Global facts on water access
Straits Times 24 Jun 09;

# More than 1 billion people lack adequate access to clean water and are vulnerable to many health hazards and diseases.

# Up to 5 million children die every year due to either shortage of water or polluted water; approximately one child dies every 5 seconds.

# Over 80 per cent of diseases in Third World countries originate from the consumption of polluted water.

# Each day, the gap between the world's demand and the supply of clean water is widening.

The United Nations and the World Bank expect this figure to triple over the next 20 years.

# In Asia, some 1.8 billion people have poor access to sanitation; worldwide, about 70 per cent of people lack proper sanitation.

# In South-east Asia, 13 million tonnes of untreated faeces are released to inland water sources every year, in addition to 122 million cu m of urine and 11 billion cu m of grey water.

# Less than 5 per cent of consumed water is recycled.

Hyflux inks tech pacts with ABB, Dutch group
Teh Shi Ning, Business Times 24 Jun 09;

HYFLUX has signed two agreements for technology collaboration - one with Swiss engineering company ABB, and the second, with the Dutch Technology Foundation.

Both agreements were inked yesterday, on the sidelines of the Singapore International Water Week (SIWW).

The first is with Zurich-based ABB, which has clinched a deal worth S$40 million from Hyflux to provide power to a seawater desalination plant in Algeria.

The two companies said their MOU on technology will enhance their existing collaboration, as ABB's energy efficient technologies and solutions can help increase the energy and operational efficiency of Hyflux's water processing plants.

Hyflux's second agreement, with the Dutch Technology Foundation (STW), will be to jointly fund a 3 million euros (S$6.1 million) partnership research programme on advanced membrane separation technologies.

This programme is expected to last two to four years, and aims to spur cooperation between the Netherlands' academic researchers and the industry, with Hyflux helping to commercialise technological advances.

In fact, one product of several years of collaboration between Hyflux and Dutch researchers, is Ino- Cep, a second-generation hollow fibre ceramic membrane which Hyflux also launched yesterday.

The membrane can withstand high temperatures and extreme pH conditions, and can thus be applied to a wide range of industries and processes, such as the treatment and recycling of laundry water, as well as separating emulsified oily water.

It is one of 16 new products and technologies which water companies will be launching globally, at SIWW 2009.

Another example of a product slated to be launched at the Water Expo's Innovation Corner, is a new anti-clog impeller technology for wastewater pumps by ITT Corporation, which also bought the largest exhibition space among individual company exhibitors, at this year's tradeshow.

In addition to the global product launches, 13 other new innovations will stage regional product launches at the Water Week.


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We only have ourselves to blame

Letter from Dr Tan Chek Wee
Today Online 23 Jun 09;

I have lived in a Housing and Development Board (HDB) estate all my life.

I am aware of the state of cleanliness, or rather the lack of it, in an HDB estate. I know the estate cleaners. I am in contact with the town council as I am part of the "cat management" team in my neighbourhood, who not only trap stray cats for sterilisation, but assist the property officers to look into complaints about cats.

The cleaners and the town council officers work very hard to keep the estate clean but it is an uphill task. The reason is simple. The majority of us, i.e. the residents, just do not care about our environment. We are only selfishly concerned with our own conveniences and can't even be bothered to walk even one metre to discard our rubbish into the garbage bin. We can not only boast of having the world's highest density of garbage bins, but also our "bochap" ("couldn't care less") and "boh hew" ("couldn't be bothered") attitude.

We have a well-established "complaining culture". As we become more educated, we are able to complain even more - not only through the usual channel of phone calls but also through emails, letters to the press, in Internet forums, etc. Some town council officers, in the belief that the speed at which a complaint is "resolved" equals efficiency, will resort to knee-jerk but ineffective solutions.

One clear example is the poisoning of pigeons when a complaint is received about a flock that gathers at foot of a block of HDB flats because some "bored" residents have thrown food down. It requires harder work to identify the culprit and to educate residents in general about refraining from such irresponsible deeds.

Repeated calls for residents to be engaged in the management of the estate is met with poor response. One reason could be that town council officers are so used to complaints as a basis to work from, that they do not know how to respond to residents who wish to be engaged in resolving communal issues.

One example being issues about cats. I am in the network of residents involved in "cat management", where residents volunteer their effort, time and money to reduce the stray cat population through sterilisation.

I have heard of "bad" treatment of some "cat caregivers" by some town council officers who view their effort as obstacles to resolving a complaint quickly - especially if the complainant is a "big shot" or has been "aggressive" by culling the cats in the vicinity of the complaint. Culling of cats is another knee-jerk solution.

My worry about recent calls to assess town councils will result in more "knee jerk" solutions being applied to resolve as many complaints as possible, and as quickly as possible. Never mind if the problems keep recurring.

Until we can treat the world as our home, and not just care about our physical homes, and develop a sense of respect for our environment and all other creatures that share it, our selfishness is only to be blamed for our poor state of hygiene.


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Why fine owner $6,000 for felling trees on his property?

Straits Times Forum 24 Jun 09;

MY FRIEND was recently fined $6,000 by the National Parks Board (NParks) for removing an old mango tree, old rambutan tree and old mangrove tree from his property in a Holland Road area.

He had engaged a contractor from the NParks' list of contractors who assured him that the felling of these common old trees should not be a problem at all.

Unfortunately, NParks thought otherwise.

Personal appeals by the owner, the contractor, and even a letter from an MP - all fell on deaf ears. To avoid an even a heftier fine of $15,000 if the case were to end up in court, my friend reluctantly paid up. It did not help that he had also been retrenched.

While we Singaporeans are generally appreciative of the efforts by NParks to transform Singapore into a Garden City, I feel rather uneasy at the draconian powers vested on it and the punitive manner in which these powers were brought to bear on an unwary citizen.

Patrick Low


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Another case of vivax malaria in Sungei Kadut area

Channel NewsAsia 23 Jun 09;

SINGAPORE: There is now another case of vivax malaria in Sungei Kadut/Mandai Estate area. This brings the total number of cases in the cluster to 14.

A joint release by the Health Ministry and National Environment Agency (NEA) on Tuesday said a 24-year-old foreign construction worker, who is staying at Sungei Kadut Street 2, has the disease.

He has no fixed worksite and no recent travel history outside of Singapore. His illness onset date was on June 11.

In the cluster, 12 of the cases are foreigners while two are Singaporeans, comprising one full-time national serviceman and one general worker.

The statement added that there are no new cases at Jurong Island and the total number of cases in this cluster remains at seven.

The NEA is continuing with intensive vector control operations in the vicinity of Sungei Kadut/Mandai Estate, while the Health Ministry is monitoring the situation closely and will update the public on any new developments.

- CNA/yb

Another worker down with malaria in Singapore
Lim Wei Chean, Straits Times 24 Jun 09;

YET another person has come down with malaria, bringing the number of locally transmitted cases in the current outbreak to 21.

The latest victim is a 24-year-old foreign construction worker whose symptoms first surfaced on June 11.

He lives in Sungei Kadut Street 2 and has no fixed work site. He had also not travelled out of Singapore recently, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said in a statement yesterday.

This brings the number of cases in the Mandai/Sungei Kadut cluster to 14, comprising 12 foreigners and two Singaporeans.

There have been no new cases found in the country's other malaria cluster in Jurong Island.

To date, seven cases have been found in that sector. All are male foreigners aged between 25 and 46.

The malaria parasite identified in the latest victim is once again the vivax, the most common in this region of the five types of malaria parasites.

Although the number of malaria cases is small compared with the number of dengue cases each month, it is taken very seriously as Singapore was declared malaria-free in 1982, when it eradicated sustained local transmissions of the disease.

This recent outbreak is the worst since 2006, when 13 people came down with it.

The National Environment Agency (NEA) was informed of the transmission on May 25 for Jurong Island and on May29 for the Mandai/Sungei Kadut area.

The NEA is still pressing on with intensive search-and-destroy operations on the ground in the Mandai/Sungei Kadut area. It is also continuing to trap adult Anopheles mosquitoes to monitor the population.

Some 137 mosquitoes were caught within the first week of operations, compared with 18 recently, indicating ground vector controls were taking effect, said NEA.

Dormitory operators in the cluster continue to fog and check for mosquito breeding. Workers housed in the dormitories have been provided with mosquito netting and repellent.

MOH reminds the public that malaria, like dengue fever, is a disease borne by mosquitoes.

The symptoms of malaria are fever, headache, chills and vomiting. If left untreated, malaria could lead to seizures and death.

Another confirmed malaria case in Sungei Kadut/Mandai cluster
Hasnita A Majid, Channel NewsAsia 16 Jul 09;

SINGAPORE: There is another confirmed case of malaria in the Sungei Kadut/ Mandai cluster.

The patient is a 55-year-old foreign construction worker who stays at Jalan Gali Batu in Mandai and works at the Seletar Camp. He travelled to Johor Bahru from June 13 to 15, and his symptoms started on July 1.

As the usual incubation period for the vivax parasite is 12 to 18 days or longer, it is possible that he could have been infected overseas. However, it is also possible that he was part of the original transmission at the Sungei Kadut/Mandai cluster.

As such, Singapore's National Environment Agency (NEA) - together with other stakeholders - said it will continue with intensive vector control operations in the implicated areas.

This includes oiling and Bti misting to destroy mosquito breeding, with chemical fogging and residual spraying to kill adult mosquitoes.

There are no new cases at Jurong Island and the total number of cases in this cluster remains at eight.

To date, the total number of locally transmitted cases of malaria stands at 23.

The construction site and dormitory operators have also equipped their workers with mosquito repellent as a precautionary measure.

No new breeding sites have been found since June 20.

- CNA/yb


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Islanders lament loss of lands to higher tides

Saipan Tribune 24 Jun 09;

Children sit on the edge of a porch, their feet dangling in the water. A two-story house sits apparently undisturbed, except for the seawater reaching up its doorway. Coral stretches across an ocean floor, its vibrant colors bleached a uniform white.

These were just a few of the images presented at yesterday afternoon's sessions on climate change at the 26th Pacific Islands Environmental Conference. Over 500 people attended nine sessions on the first official day of the forum.

Many were present to listen to Ben Namakin, executive director of the Pacific Islands Climate Revolution, as he spoke on why he seeks to spread awareness and engage youth on the issue of climate change.

“I just cannot see myself being relocated somewhere else,” he said. “I think it's not too late.”

Namakin's home of Pohnpei has been losing land as the sea level rises.

“One of my favorite places is now two islands,” said Namakin. “I visited the family who owns the land. The woman was crying because the place where her grandfather was buried is now underwater.”

Namakin described the need to educate and motivate Pacific island youth to make their voices heard.

“We contribute less than 1 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, yet we are paying the price,” he said. “Our very existence lies upon sea and land resources. We are still here. We can do something about it. It's never too late.”

Namakin joined other speakers who addressed climate change and the methods by which it can be confronted.

Trina Leberer, Micronesia program director of the Nature Conservatory, suggested site-based planning and the creation of protected area networks as two methods of helping the region adapt to change.

Yimnang Golbuu, chief researcher at the Palau International Coral Reef Center, described how Palau is working to manage coral bleaching on its northern reefs. He emphasized careful analysis and community involvement.

“You cannot say this is management and this is community,” he said, “because the management is the community.”

Ben Machol, manager of the Clean Energy and Climate Change Office of the Environmental Protection Agency Region 9, also spoke about the need for quantifying the environmental impact of greenhouse emissions.

“As you do an assessment, you can make better decisions,” he said.

He stressed the need for the Pacific to determine where the emissions are coming from in order to identify how they can be reduced. He presented a breakdown of California's emissions compared to a breakdown of U.S. emissions because similar information for Pacific islands is unavailable.

Peter Houk, a coral biologist who worked for the Division of Environmental Quality for many years, said the effects of climate change on the CNMI are already visible.

He cited climate-induced bleaching that occurred in 2000, 2003, and 2004 as one example. Receding shorelines and unusually large storms are further impacts, he said.

Houk said the CNMI can combat climate change by maintaining healthy water and fish and by reducing pollution.

“You have to create conditions where recovery can occur really easily,” said Houk. Spikes in water temperature that trigger coral bleaching occur in cycles, allowing a period of recovery to take place.

PIEC is sponsored by the U.S. EPA and the governments of the CNMI, Guam, and American Samoa. The conference will continue all day today and Thursday. (Anita Hofschneider)


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Haze starts to disrupt flights and threatens human health

Rizal Harahap, The Jakarta Post 24 Jun 09;

Smoke from forest and land fires has again blanketed most parts of Riau province, disrupting flight schedules and affecting the quality of human health, local officials said Tuesday.

Haze led to the closure of the Pinang Kapai airport in Dumai city on Monday due to poor visibility there, leaving at least five flights canceled.

Airport head Edi Supiatnadi said since the last two days a number of flights from and to the town were disrupted because of the smoke.

He said a Pelita Air plane serving the Jakarta-Pekanbaru-Dumai-Singapura route failed to land at the Pinang Kapai airport Tuesday morning as the visibility was less than 1000 meters.

"From Pekanbaru, the plane directly continued flying to Singapore. The airport would be reopened if the visibility was over 1000 meters."

A day earlier, he added, haze canceled at least five flight schedules from and to Pinang Kampai.

"Yesterday *Monday* the airport was closed for around six hours and all flights were rerouted to Pekanbaru."

The smoke also increased the cases of acute respiratory problems (ISPA) in several regions across the affected province.

Rokan Hilir health office head Muhammad Junaidi Saleh said the ISPA cases increased to 1,208 in April and 1,214 in May in his regency.

"During the normal conditions, an average of only 350 ISPA patients visit health centers for treatment," he added.

Junaidi said most cases of ISPA were recorded at Bangko subdistrict, which has been hit hard by haze.

"Data on the number of ISPA patients for this month is not yet collected. It is expected to continue increasing because smoke in June is thicker than the previous two months."

A similar increase of ISPA cases was also reported in Dumai.

Senior Dumai health official Marjoko said such an increase was recorded almost every week.

The regency worst-affected by haze in Riau was Rokan Hilir, where fires destroyed more than 4,000 hectares of forest and land areas.

Rokan Hilir forestry office head Tugiman Marto said forest fires extensively spread to Rantaubais in Tanah Putih subdistrict for the last three days, destroying almost 2,000 hectares of land.

"Currently all fire-fighting forces numbering 40 personnel are concentrated in Rantaubais to control the blazes."

Data from the Satellite National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), released by Pekanbaru's Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics (BMKG), showed at least 45 hot spots spreading in nine regencies across Riau on Tuesday, mostly in Palalawan (18), Rokan Hilir (10), Kampar (5), Siak (4) and Benkalis (3).

According to Pekanbaru's BMKG weather analyst Warih, the number of hot spots decreased Tuesday from 111 a day.

However, he warned the current dry season would worsen forest fires in the province next month due to a lack of rainfall.

Thick Smoke Chokes Riau As Illegal Fires Keep Raging
Nurfika Osman, Jakarta Globe 23 Jun 09;

Breakfast in Riau and other parts of Sumatra usually comes with a side of thick haze these days as swaths of jungle upwind are illegally burned to clear land, officials said on Tuesday.

Arditama, an analyst at the Meteorology and Geophysics Agency (BMG) in Pekanbaru, said morning smoke was hampering traffic in the provincial capital.

“People avoid traveling in the morning as the haze is so thick and produces a strong smell,” he said.

Arditama said the haze had greatly reduced visibility for commuters on their way to work, though it usually dissipated by noon.

“Visibility is only about one kilometer in the morning, but it gradually improves to six kilometers in the afternoon,” he said.

Despite low visibility in the morning, air traffic in the region was not disrupted on Tuesday. Air services to and from two airports in Riau — Pekanbaru and Dumai — were disrupted for several hours on Monday after thick haze reduced visibility to dangerous levels.

“Haze also affected neighboring North Sumatra as the wind blows toward that province,” Arditama said. “And I am afraid the haze will also affect neighboring Malaysia over the next couple of days.”

The local meteorology office on Tuesday detected 35 so-called hot spots, satellite indicators used to monitor forest fires, in wooded and plantation areas in the province. One district alone, Rokan Hilir, had nine hot spots, while the districts of Rokan Hulu, Siak and Bengkalis, each had six.

In satellite images, hot spots measure about one square kilometer and indicate a much higher temperature than the surrounding area. The number of hot spots in Riau accounted for more than a third of the total of 95 detected across Sumatra Island.

On Monday, the agency detected 45 hot spots in Riau, 18 of them in the district of Pelalawan, Arditama said.

The haze, mostly blamed on forest fires, has become an annual fixture at the end of the rainy season, when farmers and plantation companies clear land for new crops. Although the practice has been banned, enforcement has been lax with officials citing lack of funding and manpower for proper enforcement.

Indonesia is often criticized by environmental nongovernmental organizations for failing to prosecute those who illegally clear land with fires. Watchdog groups have pointed to large plantation companies as the biggest offenders.

Malaysia has offered to help fight the forest fires, but Foreign Ministry spokesman Teuku Faizasyah said on Monday that his office has yet to receive official notification of the offer.

Haze has become an annual event since 1990s, blanketing the sky in neighboring countries such as Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei Darussalam and Thailand and causing serious traffic and health problems.

Air quality in several areas remains at moderate level
New Straits Times 23 Jun 09;

KUALA LUMPUR, Tue: THE air quality in several areas in the country remained at the moderate level although the Air Pollutant Index (API) reading in other areas had increased.
As at 11am today, the Department of Environment (DOE) website's reported that 26 areas out of the 50 being monitored for their air quality level recorded a moderate API reading, while the air quality in the rest of the areas was reported as healthy.

Among the areas that recorded higher API reading were Kuala Selangor, Selangor at 80 from 66 recorded yesterday; Port Klang, Selangor (76); and Pasir Gudang, Johor (74).

Areas that recorded a moderate reading included Seberang Jaya Dua (73); Port Dickson, Negri Sembilan (71); Cheras, Kuala Lumpur (72); Batu Muda, Kuala Lumpur (71); Nilai, Negri Sembilan (70); Shah Alam, Selangor (69); Kampung Air Putih, Taiping, Perak (65); Bukit Rambai, Malacca (63); and Bintulu, Sarawak (62).

The API reading are categorised as: 0-50 (good), 51-100 (moderate), 101-200 (unhealthy), 201-300 (very unhealthy) and above 300 (hazardous).
Meanwhile, haze triggered by forest and plantation fires has continued to cover Pekanbaru, Riau Province's capital, over the past one month, Indonesia's Antara news agency reported.

The haze made the sky cloudy but it was not a sign that it would rain while visibility had dropped.

A number of Pekanbaru residents complained that the haze was affecting their health.

MQ Rudi, a local inhabitant, said he started to suffer from throat irritation and respiratory problem.

"Haze lingers on every day, and it gets worse in the evening and morning, when the haze produces a strong smell," he said.

However, the haze did not affect flights Pekanbaru's Sultan Syarif Kasim II airport on Tuesday morning, as visibility was more than 2km, according to the airport's duty manager, Ibnu Hasan.

"We can indeed see haze in the air but it's rather thin, and doesn't affect flights," Ibnu Hasan said.

Based on the latest monitoring of NOAA 18 Satellite, some 45 hot spots of forest and plantations fires were detected in several districts in Riau Province, according to information of the local meteorological, climatology and geophysics office.

The hot spots were detected in Pelalawan Districts (18 hot spots), in Rokan Hilir District (10), Kampar (5), Siak (4), Bengkalis (3), Indragiri Hulu (2), Rokan Hulu (1), Kuatan Singingi (1), and Dumai city (1).

On Monday, two airports in Riau Province were closed due to haze coming from plantation and forest fires.

The two haze-affected airports were Sultan Syarif Kasim (SSK) II Airport in Pekanbaru and Pinang Kampai airport in Dumai.

"We have to close the airport for 90 minutes because the visibility has dropped to only 500 meters," Taslim, traffic supervisor of the Pekanbaru SSK II airport, told ANTARA on Monday.

The minimum visibility required for the flight safety is 1,000 meters, and if the visibility is below the figure, the airport has to be closed, according to Taslim. - BERNAMA


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Thailand plans own carbon standard, official says

David Fogarty, Reuters 23 Jun 09;
* Thailand plans carbon standard to raise project quality
* Administration costs a hurdle to more emissions cuts

KUALA LUMPUR, June 23 (Reuters) - Thailand is developing a national standard for U.N.-backed carbon offset projects to boost quality and help developers earn a premium, a senior Thai official said on Tuesday.

Under the U.N.'s Kyoto Protocol rich nations can buy the right to emit greenhouse gases, and so meet binding caps on carbon emissions, by investing in clean energy projects in developing countries.

The environmental credentials of the scheme have come under increasing scrutiny, including the evidence that projects really avoided greenhouse gas emissions.

Projects that Thailand approves under the U.N.'s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) will now be ranked under a scoring system, and any that were above 50 percent would earn the national Crown Standard, said Sirithan Pairoj-Boriboon.

"Some projects get a low score, some a high score, so we want to make an incentive for the developer," Sirithan, executive director of the Thai government agency that approves CDM projects, told Reuters in the Malaysian capital at a carbon conference.

"If they get a high score we award the Crown Standard. This would indicate a good quality project, like the Gold Standard," he said, referring to an independent benchmark that is one of the toughest to attain for carbon offset projects.

Sirithan said projects would be ranked according to various criteria including economic benefit, community benefits and impacts on the environment.

He hoped that the Thai standard would be announced next month and incentives to meet the grade could include reduced project approval fees.

According to U.N. figures, Thailand has 17 U.N.-registered CDM projects. Some 82 had been approved nationally so far, a preliminary step in the approval process to full registration.

A major issue for developers is the administration cost of winning approval by auditors called designated operational entities (DoEs), particularly for smaller projects.

"In Thailand, transactions costs are considered high. It is 7 or 8 million baht per project because we have to import DoEs."

One attractive option was to roll up many small projects into one application, called a programmatic approach.

"It is good for small projects because they can share transaction costs." The nation's first, forthcoming programmatic project involves capturing methane from pig waste.

In other planned CDM projects, Sirithan's agency had received a letter of intent for investment in 4,000 buses in Bangkok powered by natural gas. The country's state-owned power producer EGAT was proposing a scheme to install 100 million compact fluorescent bulbs in buildings. (Editing by Gerard Wynn)


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Greenpeace calls for coal plant rethink in Thailand

Yuthana Praiwan, The Bangkok Post 24 Jun 09;

Greenpeace and its allies are calling on Thai energy policymakers to rethink building coal-fired power plants in a bid to cut carbon emissions, said Witoon Permpongsacharoen, director of Mekong Energy and Ecology Network.

They want the government to review the demand projection, the proportion of renewable energy used and the use of imported coal to fuel the power plant.

Coal-fired power plants also have social costs because they emit pollution and greenhouse gases, affecting the health of local people.

Greenpeace estimates the cost of power production from coal to be 2.75 baht per kilowatt/hour (unit), 0.78 baht for natural gas and 2.67 baht for oil. The figures include the costs of pollution control, greenhouse gas emission, health impacts and accidents in coal mines.

Power demand has sunk since 2007 and capacity utilisation of power plants stands at only 66% or 22,044 megawatts of a total capacity of 31,000 MW. The country will add another 12,000 MW from small and very small power producers in the next few years, he said.

The coal-fired power plants in Thailand will be built by National Power Supply Co and Gheco-One Co, with a total capacity of 1,000 MW. They are expected to emit 9 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year. Four other coal-fired plants producing 2,800 MW will be built by the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (Egat) for operation between 2015 and 2017.

Mr Witoon also expressed concern over the environmental standards of the coal-fired Hongsa Lignite project in Laos. As the plant is near the Thai border, Egat, as the only buyer of the plant's output, should be concerned about its production quality, he said.

"There are no environmental standards or health protection laws in Laos, and if the plant emits pollution, it will affect Thai villagers nearby," he said.

Environmentalists also don't believe advanced technology is a solution. Wanun Permpibul, a representative from the Thai Working Group for Climate Justice, said it was impossible for a carbon capture and storage system (CCS) to be commercially viable. He added the technology would never materialise as its cost is too high for the business sector.

Carbon capture costs in research projects in Norway and Algeria were reported at US$15-75 per tonne, with another $8 for transport. Carbon storage is $5-8 per tonne for onshore location and $5-30 per tonne for offshore.

Instead of putting effort and capital into developing CCS, global energy leaders should focus on supporting energy-saving equipment and new technologies for renewable energy, he said.


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Coral Reefs Face Increasing Difficulties Recovering From Storm Damage

ScienceDaily 22 Jun 09;

As global warming whips up more powerful and frequent hurricanes and storms, the world’s coral reefs face increased disruption to their ability to breed and recover from damage.

That’s one of the findings from a new scientific study of the fate of corals in the wake of large climate-driven bleaching and storm events.

“We have found clear evidence that coral recruitment – the regrowth of young corals – drops sharply in the wake of a major bleaching event or a hurricane,” says lead author Dr Jennie Mallela of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and Australian National University.

Using the island of Tobago in the Caribbean as their laboratory she and colleague Professor James Crabbe of the University of Bedfordshire, UK, backtracked to 1980 to see what had happened to the corals in the wake of nine hurricanes, tropical storms and bleaching events.

“In every case there was a sharp drop in coral recruitment following the event – often by as much as two thirds to three quarters. Not only were fewer new coral colonies formed, but also far fewer of the major reef building coral species recruited successfully.”

“This finding mirrors our modelling studies on the fringing reefs of Jamaica, and on the Meso-American Barrier reef off the coast of Belize”, says Prof. Crabbe.

Tobago lies outside the main Caribbean hurricane belt and therefore is more typical of the circumstances of most coral reefs around the world. Nevertheless its corals are disrupted by a major storm or bleaching every three or four years – and the frequency of this may be growing.

“Climate researchers are seeing increasing evidence for a direct relationship between global warming and rising hurricane intensity as well as frequency,” Jennie explains. “Global warming produces significant increases in the frequency of high sea surface temperatures (SSTs), and hurricane winds are strengthened by warm surface waters.”

The high temperatures cause bleaching, while the storms inflict physical destruction on the corals as well as eroding the rocky platforms they need to grow on, or burying them in sand.

“Maintaining coral reef populations in the face of large-scale degradation depends critically on recruitment – the ability of the corals to breed successfully and settle on the reef to form new colonies. Our research suggests this process is severely disrupted after one of these major events.”

If the disruption is sufficiently large it may threaten the actual survival of some of the larger and more spectacular reef building and brain corals, she says. “In the aftermath of a big storm or bleaching event, some of these important species appear not to have recruited at all.

“Healthy reefs usually have high numbers of coral recruits and juvenile corals, whereas degraded systems typically have far fewer young colonies.”

The concern is that if major storms and bleaching become more frequent as the climate warms, the ability of individual reefs to renew themselves may break down completely, Jennie says.

“While our work was carried out in the Caribbean, it has general implications for coral reefs globally, and deepens our concern as to what may happen to them as global warming advances and the world’s climate becomes more tempestuous.”

The research paper is Mallela, J., Crabbe, M.J.C., Hurricanes and coral bleaching linked to changes in coral recruitment in Tobago, and is published in the latest issue of Marine Environmental Research (2009).


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Disappearing dolphins clamour for attention at whale summit

WWF 23 Jun 09;

Madeira, Portugal: Small whales are disappearing from the world’s oceans and waterways as they fall victim to fishing gear, pollution, and habitat loss – compounded by a lack of conservation measures such as those developed for great whales, according to a new WWF report.

Small Cetaceans: The Forgotten Whales, released today (PDF on WWF website), states that inadequate conservation measures are pushing small cetaceans – such as dolphins, porpoises and small whales – toward extinction as their survival is overshadowed by efforts to save their larger cousins.

“Although great whale species of the world are by no means secure and still require conservation attention, the situation is just as critical for these smaller, seemingly forgotten species,” said Dr. Susan Lieberman, Director of the Species Programme for WWF-International.

While great whales are now protected (to an extent) by the international commercial whaling moratorium, in effect since 1986, small cetacean hunts continue around the globe, largely unmanaged and unchecked by the international community.

For example, the hunt of 16,000 Dall’s porpoises every year in Japan is considered unsustainable. Yet several of the pro-whaling nations taking part in the International Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting this week object to discussing small cetacean conservation.

“It is time for the IWC and its members to take full responsibility for the conservation future of all whales great and small. The IWC – and the world - must not ignore the small whales of our planet until it is too late,” said Dr. Lieberman.

A significant disadvantage smaller whale species face compared to great whales is a crippling lack of data on their numbers and habits. Forty of the 69 small cetacean species, or 58 percent, are classified by IUCN as ‘data deficient’, meaning that there is not enough information available to even determine whether they are threatened or not.

“It must never be assumed that “Data Deficient” means that the species is out of danger— rather, it means that the world’s top scientists just don’t know,” the report says.

Only four out of 15 Species, or 27 percent, of great whales are listed as data deficient, even though many of the reasons why smaller whale species are difficult to study also apply to the great whales.

According to the IUCN Red List, population trends – whether the species is increasing or decreasing in number – are unknown for 60 of the 69 small cetacean species. The nine remaining species are in decline.

Great whales also have more protection in international conservation efforts. Almost all great whale species, for example, have the strongest level of protection offered by CITES – a conservation convention which regulates international trade in protected wildlife species – compared to just 17 percent of dolphin and porpoises species. In addition, the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) protects 87 percent of great whale species, but less than half of smaller whale species.

Small cetaceans fulfill a critical role in their environment, stabilising and ensuring a healthy and productive ecosystem. They also are part of the highly profitable whale and dolphin watching industry worldwide, which generates over US $1.5 billion each year.

“If small cetaceans are not central to negotiations on current whaling, it is possible that conservation successes achieved for great whales could simply result in a shift of problems from great whales to small cetaceans,” the report states.

IWC 61 runs June 22 to 26 in Madeira, Portugal.

Dolphins deserve the same protection as whales – WWF
The Telegraph 23 Jun 09;

Dolphins and smaller whales are in danger of dying out because they have not been given the same protection as great whales, according to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).


By Louise Gray, Environment Correspondent
Published: 7:00AM BST 24 Jun 200

The WWF said a number of smaller whales and dolphins are considered in danger of becoming extinct.

However, the international community has no measures in place to protect the species across the world, the charity claimed.

At at meeting of the International Whaling Commission in Madeira this week, the WWF will call for new measures to protect the animals not only from hunting but pollution, fishing gear and habitat loss.

Almost all great whale species are protected under international treaties but just 17 per cent of dolphin and porpoises.

Heather Sohl, of the WWF, said dolphins, porpoises and small whales receive much less political attention than their larger cousins.

"Although great whale species of the world are by no means secure and still require conservation attention, the situation is just as critical for these smaller, seemingly forgotten species," she said.

Although there has been a worldwide ban on commercial whaling since 1986, the pro-whaling nations claim that they should be allowed to hunt whales for scientific or cultural purposes.

However, charities and ant-whaling nations including the UK insist the whales must be protected. They point out that whale watching is now more profitable than whale hunting and it is possible to carry out scientific surveys without killing whales.


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'Bycatch' Whaling A Growing Threat To Coastal Whales

ScienceDaily 23 Jun 09;

Scientists are warning that a new form of unregulated whaling has emerged along the coastlines of Japan and South Korea, where the commercial sale of whales killed as fisheries "bycatch" is threatening coastal stocks of minke whales and other protected species.

Scott Baker, associate director of the Marine Mammal Institute at Oregon State University, says DNA analysis of whale-meat products sold in Japanese markets suggests that the number of whales actually killed through this "bycatch whaling" may be equal to that killed through Japan's scientific whaling program – about 150 annually from each source.

Baker, a cetacean expert, and Vimoksalehi Lukoscheck of the University of California-Irvine presented their findings at the recent scientific meeting of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) in Portugal. Their study found that nearly 46 percent of the minke whale products they examined in Japanese markets originated from a coastal population, which has distinct genetic characteristics, and is protected by international agreements.

Their conclusion: As many as 150 whales came from the coastal population through commercial bycatch whaling, and another 150 were taken from an open ocean population through Japan's scientific whaling. In some past years, Japan only reported about 19 minke whales killed through bycatch, though that number has increased recently as new regulations governing commercial bycatch have been adopted, Baker said.

Japan is now seeking IWC agreement to initiate a small coastal whaling program, a proposal which Baker says should be scrutinized carefully because of the uncertainty of the actual catch and the need to determine appropriate population counts to sustain the distinct stocks.

Whales are occasionally killed in entanglements with fishing nets and the deaths of large whales are reported by most member nations of the IWC. Japan and South Korea are the only countries that allow the commercial sale of products killed as "incidental bycatch." The sheer number of whales represented by whale-meat products on the market suggests that both countries have an inordinate amount of bycatch, Baker said.

"The sale of bycatch alone supports a lucrative trade in whale meat at markets in some Korean coastal cities, where the wholesale price of an adult minke whale can reach as high as $100,000," Baker said. "Given these financial incentives, you have to wonder how many of these whales are, in fact, killed intentionally."

In Japan, whale-meat products enter into the commercial supply chain that supports the nationwide distribution of whale and dolphin products for human consumption, including products from scientific whaling. However, Baker and his colleagues have developed genetic methods for identifying the species of whale-meat products and determining how many individual whales may actually have been killed.

Baker said bycatch whaling also serves as a cover for illegal hunting, but the level at which it occurs is unknown. In January 2008, Korean police launched an investigation into organized illegal whaling in the port town of Ulsan, he said, reportedly seizing 50 tons of minke whale meat.

Other protected species of large whales detected in market surveys include humpbacks whales, fin whales, Bryde's whales and critically endangered western gray whales. The entanglement and death of western or Asian gray whales is of particular concern given the extremely small size of this endangered populations, which is estimated at only 100 individuals.

It will be published in a forthcoming issue of the journal Animal Conservation.
Adapted from materials provided by Oregon State University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.


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Whales worth more alive than dead, says new report

Yahoo News 23 Jun 09;

FUNCHAL, Portugal (AFP) – Whales are worth more alive than dead, an Australian minister said Tuesday, as campaigners publicised the billion-dollar whale-watching industry on the sidelines of the IWC conference.

Environment Minister Peter Garrett welcomed a report by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), which said that in 2008 whale-watching generated 2.1 billion dollars (1.5 billion euros) of tourism revenue worldwide.

Garrett was speaking on the second day of the International Whaling Commission (IWC), where pro- and anti-whaling countries are thrashing out the issue of whether to permit increased hunting of the marine mammals.

"The bottom line is clear," said Garrett, who before his political career was a rock musician with Midnight Oil. "Whales are worth much more alive than dead.

"Responsible whale-watching is the most sustainable, environmentally-friendly and economically beneficial use of whales in the 21st century," he told reporters at Funchal, on the Portuguese island of Madeira.

IFAW's whale programme director Patrick Ramage told reporters: "While governments debate what to do about whales, their citizens are pointing the way."

In 2008, more than 13 million people had taken whale-watching tours in 119 countries, he added.

"More than 3,000 whale-watching operations around the world now employ an estimated 13,200 people," said Ramage.

The 2.1 billion dollars produced in 2008 was more than double the estimated one billion dollars generated by the industry in 1998, said an executive summary of the report.

The IWAF report defined whale-watching as covering all cetaceans -- whales, dolphins and porpoises.

Garrett attended the launch of the launch to show his support.

Australia is one of the IWC member nations fiercely opposed to the hunting of whales.

They, like other anti-hunting nations, argue that hunting whales is not profitable, to the point that some whaling countries have to subsidise the industry.

Anti-whaling nations are fighting to preserve the 1986 moratorium on whale-hunting, although Norway and Iceland are already defying it.

Japan, which says whaling is part of its culture, kills more than 1,000 whales a year through a loophole in the 1986 treaty that allows their killing for scientific research.

Whale-watching 'worth billions'
Richard Black, BBC News 23 Jun 09;

Whale watching generates far more money than whale hunting, according to a report released at the International Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting here.

Worldwide, the industry now generates about $2.1bn per year, it says.

The group commissioning the report, the International Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw), says whaling countries would gain from a switch to whale watching.

However, Iceland's delegate here said the two industries were compatible and could grow together.

Iceland recently announced a major expansion of its fin whale hunt and plans to take 150 of the animals this year, along with up to 100 minke whales.

"As governments sit here [at the IWC] debating what to do about whaling, their people are showing the way," said Patrick Ramage, director of Ifaw's whale programme.

"Whale watching is clearly more environmentally sustainable and economically beneficial than hunting, and whales are worth far more alive than dead," he told BBC News.

The report follows on the heels of an analysis commissioned by another organisation opposed to whaling, WWF, which suggested that the Japanese and Norwegian hunts were a net cost to their governments.

Double digit

The Ifaw-commissioned report, compiled by the Australian organisation Economists at Large, found that income from whale watching had doubled over the last decade, with the fastest growth seen in Asia.

In 2008, it concluded, 13 million people went to sea to watch cetaceans in 119 countries.

As an anti-whaling organisation, Ifaw has repeatedly campaigned to persuade Iceland to end its hunts - a practice which, Ifaw contends, is hurting its whale-watching industry.

The potential for conflict between the two industries was starkly demonstrated in 2006, when tourists on a Norwegian boat saw a minke whale harpooned.

But Iceland's commissioner to the IWC, Tomas Heidar, said that in his country the two industries had co-existed successfully for a number of years.

"Allegations that whaling affects whale watching have proven not to be true," he said.

"On the contrary, whale watching has been growing steadily in the last few years after our resumption of commercial whaling [in 2006]."

Economists at Large gathered the data for its report through surveying whale-watching companies, tourist boards, researchers and NGOs.


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Denmark asks to resume humpback whale hunt

Yahoo News 23 Jun 09;

FUNCHAL, Portugal (AFP) – Denmark on Tuesday officially requested permission to resume hunting humpback whales off Greenland, in a move that has angered environmentalists.

Ole Samsing, Danish commissioner at the annual International Whaling Commission (IWC) conference being held on the Portuguese island of Madeira, made the call and demanded a "quick solution".

"We want to put forward a proposal for a quota of 10 humpback whales per year for the 2010-2012 period" in Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory, Samsing said.

"We want a quick solution for this proposal," he added.

Samsing said the hunting of humpbacks would be carried out under so-called "aboriginal" or subsistence hunting to support local communities.

To compensate for resuming the humpback hunt, Samsing proposed reducing the quota of minke whales from 200 to 178.

Commercial hunting of humpbacks has been banned since a moratorium in 1966.

Greenland continued to legally capture the large marine mammals until 1987, when the ban was extended to "aboriginal" or subsistence hunting.

The Danish plans drew criticism from environmental campaigners, who say Greenland does not need a quota increase.

"Overall since 1991, Greenland has taken only 77 percent of its whole available quota," the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS) said in a statement urging the IWC to refuse the request.

"The IWC scientific committee has already made it clear that the humpback population can withstand 10 being captured a year," Portuguese commissioner Jorge Palmeirim, head of the sub-commission for subsistence whaling, told AFP earlier Tuesday.

"But the question is one of need, and it is not clear that they need to increase their quota," Palmeirim added.

Whaling peace talks 'to continue'
Richard Black, BBC News 23 Jun 09;

Peace talks on whales and whaling are to continue for a further year.

Delegates to the International Whaling Commission (IWC) annual meeting here agreed it was worth extending reform talks that began a year ago.

Pro- and anti-whaling countries emphasised that fundamental differences remain between the two blocs.

Earlier, animal welfare groups released a new report arguing that whaling countries would gain economically by switching to whale-watching.

They calculate that whale-watching
around the world, dwarfing income from whaling, which is measured in tens of millions of dollars.

Potential benefits

In recent years this has become one of a battery of arguments the anti-whaling camp has assembled against the industry.

But with attempts to end hunting in Iceland, Japan and Norway showing little sign of success, anti-whaling countries led by the US embarked last year on talks with Japan and its pro-hunting allies aimed at finding a compromise that everyone could live with.

or the anti-whaling side, potential gains include a possible reduction in the total number of whales being killed each year, greater oversight of hunting, and reform of the IWC's scientific whaling clause under which any country can set its own catch quotas irrespective of the 1982 global moratorium on commercial hunting.

Whaling nations, particularly Japan, see political benefits in making a deal that would reduce the barrage of criticism they receive from whaling's opponents.

Japan also wants to secure quasi-commercial quotas for four coastal communities with a history of whaling.

Divided rules

The talks were supposed to conclude a package deal at this week's meeting, but it became clear last month that this was not going to happen.

Most member nations wanted to continue for another year, but some delegates said before this meeting began that the process could collapse - which, in some people's eyes, would have meant the end of the IWC.

Of the six countries involved in small group talks aimed at developing the compromise "package", Australia has been the most hawkish.

Environment minister Peter Garrett laid out his government's condition for the talks - that they must bring an end to scientific "special permit" whaling as it is currently practiced.

"I do not believe it will be possible to reach any package predicated solely on reductions in the size of certain special permit programmes," he said.

"While Australia certainly wishes to see fewer whales killed under special permit programmes, reductions in catch cannot solve the fundamental problem."

Japan has agreed to refrain from including humpback and fin whales in its annual Antarctic hunt and reduce the number of minke whales targeted from 935 to 600.

However, it is adamant that at this stage it will not concede on the principle, enshrined in the 1946 whaling convention, that each country can set its own quotas for special permit catches.

Japan's whaling commissioner Akira Nakamae responded that his country had made the running so far.

"In the last year during the small working group meetings, Japan declared to make the major concessions including a reduction in the sample size of scientific whaling," he said.

"Even though we disagree with the principle, we could also agree to including a South Atlantic whale sanctuary (a key demand of Latin American countries) as part of the package.

"But we cannot accept that some contracting parties... continue to demand the phase-out of scientific whaling."

The gulf between Australia and Japan may prove hard to bridge over the coming year.

Although on the surface Australia has the backing of its traditional allies - New Zealand, the EU and the US - in private, some members of this bloc are concerned that successive Canberra governments have made whaling into such an emotive public issue that Australia now has no room for diplomatic manoeuvre.


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Militants kill animals in Congo national park: park director,NGO

Yahoo News 23 Jun 09;

KINSHASA (AFP) – Dozens of animals have been killed by armed groups at Africa's oldest national park in the Democratic Republic of Congo since the start of the year, park officials and environmental groups said Tuesday.

Chimpanzees, elephants, antelopes, birds and hippos have been slaughtered after Virunga National Park became the scene of intense fighting.

The park, on the frontier with Uganda, was made a world heritage site by the UN's cultural body UNESCO, and is home to endangered species such as the mountain gorilla.

"Four chimpanzees were killed last week in the central zone and 11 elephants since the start of the year," park director Emmanuel de Merode told AFP.

He added "a large number of game animals", including antelopes, had also been slaughtered.

Bantu Lukamba, from local environmental NGO Innovation, said: "At least 31 animals, including 11 migratory birds and three hippos were killed over 21 days."

They died between May 25 and June 16, he said.

Armed groups have overrun the park since violence flared up last year.

It became the theatre of intense fighting, mainly between government forces or their proxies and rebels of the National Congress for the Defence of the People.

"It is impossible to get control the situation in the park, given the huge number of armed men who exploit its resources," Merode said.

The park is also home to Lake Edward, which in 1980 was the world's most important hippopotamus sanctuary with 27,000 of the animals.

There are now less than 300, according to Merode.

Created in 1925, Virunga National Park is the oldest in Africa.


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Orangutans May Be Closest Human Relatives, Not Chimps

James Owen, National Geographic News 23 Jun 09;

Orangutans, not chimpanzees, are the closest living relatives to humans, a controversial new study contends.

The authors base their conclusion on a close physical resemblance between orangutans and humans, which they say has been overshadowed by genetic evidence linking us to chimps.

What's more, the study authors argue, the genetic evidence itself is flawed.

John Grehan, of the Buffalo Museum of Science in New York State, and Jeffrey Schwartz, of the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania, say that the DNA evidence cited by many scientists only looks at a small percentage of the human and chimp genomes.

What's more, the genetic similarities likely include many ancient DNA traits that are shared across a much broader group of animals.

By contrast, humans share at least 28 unique physical characteristics with orangutans but only 2 with chimps and 7 with gorillas, the authors say.

The finding, which has the potential to spark a radical rethink of human origins, is being met with caution.

"There are many paleontologists and molecular biologists who are heaping scorn on this paper," noted Peter Andrews of the Natural History Museum in London.

Even though he still backs the human-chimp relationship, Andrews had recommended that the study be published, and it now appears in the June issue of the Journal of Biogeography.

"It is controversial," he said, "but I think it is a subject that needed to be aired."

Orangutan Look-alike?

With the sequencing of the chimpanzee genome in 2005, scientists found direct proof that humans and chimps are 96 percent the same genetically.

But looking at physical traits rather than genetic ones, orangutans are a better match, Grehan and Schwartz say.

Tell-tale features shared by both orangutans and humans include thickly enameled molar teeth with flat surfaces, greater asymmetries between the left and right side of the brain, an increased cartilage-to-bone ratio in the forearm, and similarly shaped shoulder blades.

"A hole in the roof of the mouth that was supposedly unique to humans is also present in orangs," Schwartz said.

"Humans and orangs have the widest-separated mammary glands, and they grow the longest hair," he added. "Humans and orangs actually have a hairline, in contrast to virtually all primates, where the hair comes down to the top of the eyes."

The team also highlighted orangutan-type traits in the teeth and jaw remains of ancient fossil apes from Africa and Europe.

Based on their analysis, the authors suggest "that humans and orangutans share a common ancestor that excludes [living] African apes."

But orangutans are native to Southeast Asia, which creates a problem: How did humans evolve in Africa if we are so closely related to the geographically distant orangutan? (Explore a human migration time line.)

The mainstream view is that humans evolved from the same group as African great apes: chimps, bonobos, and gorillas.

Instead, the authors speculate that a widely distributed orangutan-like ancestor of humans lived in Africa, Europe, and Asia some 13 million years ago.

Subsequent changes in climate and environment likely caused many populations to become extinct, leaving Asian and African species to evolve in isolation.

"Wacky Idea"

"There are actually very few [physical] features linking chimps and humans," noted the Natural History Museum's Andrews. "The case for that is based almost entirely on molecular evidence."

And those molecular studies are flawed, Schwartz and Grehan say, because of the high likelihood that the data includes broadly shared DNA traits.

"When you're doing a really rigorous analysis of relationships, you don't just stop at the potential demonstration of similarity," Schwartz said. "You have to distinguish between features that are widely shared [among many species] and those that are more uniquely shared."

In addition, Schwartz notes, the most cited studies are largely based on the so-called coding region of the genome, which makes up just 2 to 3 percent of an animal's DNA.

Scientists are referring to this tiny part of the genome when they say humans and chimps are so similar, he said.

But other studies that focus on non-coding regions also consistently support a human-chimp link, counters Carel van Schaik of the Anthropological Institute and Museum at the University of Zurich, Switzerland.

"A study that reaches a very different conclusion [from the genetic evidence] must explain why these molecular studies are wrong," van Schaik, who also serves as a consultant to the conservation group Borneo Orangutan Survival UK, said in an email.

"Of course, orangutans are very human-like in many respects, but so are chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas … ."

Anthropologist Nick Newton-Fisher, of the University of Kent in the U.K., described the human evolutionary path implied by the new study as a "wacky idea."

"Given the weight of evidence from the genetics," he said, he would be reluctant to accept the new findings.


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EU seeks to catch up with Asia on fish farming, despite critics

Yahoo News 23 Jun 09;

LUXEMBOURG (AFP) – EU fisheries ministers on Tuesday backed a plan to develop aquaculture in Europe's waters, despite opposition from ecologists who argue that fish farming creates more problems than it solves.

"Development of aquaculture in Europe has stagnated in the last decade in contrast to the high growth rate of the sector worldwide over the same period," particularly in Asia, the ministers said in a joint statement from Luxembourg.

Fish-farming is a good response to the kind of over-exploitation hitting stocks of fish and crustaceans, or even threatening species, they added.

The ministers called on the European Commission to come up with concrete proposals by the end of the year, building on the broad outlines agreed Tuesday.

The Commission should "fully use existing funding mechanisms and possibly consider additional support to aquaculture."

However some professionals and ecologists contest the stated benefits of fish-farming.

They say that it can take five or six kilograms (11-13 pounds) of wild fish to produce a single kilogram of farmed fish and that acquaculture can cause serious damage to the environment, notably in developing countries.

"Rapid development and expansion of intensive aquaculture for species such as salmon and shrimp has, for example, resulted in widespread degradation of the environment and the displacement of coastal fishing and farming communities," according to Greenpeace.

Currently fish-farming is mainly used for Norwegian salmon, South-East Asian and South American prawns and various types of cheaper fish such as catfish.

In Europe, the main areas of aquaculture are off France with its oysters and mussels; and Britain and Greece with salmon, carp and various crustaceans and shellfish.


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Greens urge boycott of Kenya flowers

Yahoo News 23 Jun 09;

NAIVASHA, Kenya (AFP) – Green campaigners in Kenya, one of the world's top flower exporters, called Tuesday for a boycott of flowers from some 30 farms contributing to the degradation of Lake Naivasha.

The executive director of the Indigenous bio-diversity environmental conservation association (IBECA), James Kahora, said his group would travel to Europe to promote the "Save Lake Naivasha" campaign.

"We are ready to travel even to the Holland market and various supermarkets in the United Kingdom to have our case heard as these flower farms are killing Lake Naivasha," he told reporters.

Lake Naivasha, some 100 kilometres (60 miles) northwest of Nairobi, is a stunning freshwater lake considered one of the top 10 bird-watching spots in the world and one of the continent's jewels of bio-diversity.

Environmentalists and biologists say that water extraction by the dozens of flower farms around the lake has contributed to a sharp decline in water levels that will eventually destroy the local ecosystem.

Maasai herders have further complained that flower farms have also closed natural corridors, making it impossible for them to water their livestock.

"The farmers found the Maasais here and we shall not stand back and watch as the only natural resource we know is killed by profit-oriented investors," Andrew Ole Korinko, a local Maasai leader, said.

IBECA and various demonstrators on Monday prevented a local farm from extracting water from the lake through a deep canal.

Local MP John Mututho gave the 30 farms targeted by the campaign two weeks to fill the canals they have dug around the lake.

Many of the sprawling flower farms around Lake Naivasha and across the country are foreign-owned and send tonnes of roses and other flowers daily to European capitals and other markets such as Japan.

The horticultural sector is one of Kenya's top exporters but wildlife tourism is also a key source of revenue for the east African country.


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Red Locust disaster in Eastern Africa prevented 24-06-2009 Biopesticides being used on a large scale

FAO 24 Jun 09;

24 June 2009, Rome - An international Red Locust emergency campaign in Eastern and Southern Africa has succeeded in containing a massive locust outbreak in Tanzania, FAO said today. It is the first time that biopesticides are being used on a large scale in Africa against locusts.

The rapid intervention has markedly reduced Red Locust infestations thereby preventing a full-blown invasion that could have affected the food crops of around 15 million people in the region, the agency said.

FAO organized and coordinated the campaign together with the International Locust Control Organization for Central and Southern Africa (IRLCO-CSA). Aerial survey and control operations will continue during the next weeks in Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia, until the locust threat is fully under control.

"Without the rapid intervention, involving affected countries and the international community the Central and Southern Africa region could have faced a major Red Locust disaster, putting agriculture and food production of millions of poor farmers at risk," said FAO Assistant Director-General Modibo Traoré.

"The concerted and coordinated effort of all partners involved in this campaign is a model for combating other transboundary pests that are threatening the region."

Surveys carried out in Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zimbabwe by IRLCO-CSA and Ministries of Agriculture revealed serious Red Locust infestations, particularly in Tanzania.

Tanzania at risk

Affected countries launched an emergency appeal to FAO for assistance since they do not have sufficient resources and the necessary equipment to respond instantly to large-scale locust infestations in areas that are difficult to access. Tanzania is one of the first countries at risk as it harbours four out of the eight recognized Red Locust outbreak areas in Central and Southern Africa.

"Locust control campaigns are logistically very complex and require timely and well-targeted interventions using the most appropriate tactics to reduce locust infestations and avoid unwanted effects on the environment," said Christian Pantenius, a senior FAO locust expert.

"This year's Red Locust campaign brought all the important players together in time to prevent a potentially very dangerous situation. The UN's Central Emergency Response Fund contributed nearly $2 million, under its first ever regional project, which allowed aerial survey and control operations to be launched quickly and effectively. FAO provided around one million dollars from its own emergency funds," he added.

If not controlled, large swarms of Red Locusts will fly over vast areas of farmland, travelling over a distance of 20-30 kilometres per day and feeding on cereals, sugar cane, citrus and fruit trees, cotton, legumes and vegetables cultivated by often poor farmers. A Red Locust adult consumes roughly its own weight, about two grams, in fresh food in 24 hours. A very small part of an average swarm (or about one tonne of locusts) eats the same amount of food in one day as around 2 500 people.

Biopesticide

Locust control interventions in Tanzania focused mainly on three areas: the Iku-Katavi National Park, the Lake Rukwa plains and the Malagarasi River Basin. In order to protect large wild animals, including elephants, hippos, and giraffes, in the wetlands of the Iku-Katavi National Park FAO used the bio-pesticide Green Muscle® to treat around 10 000 hectares infested with adult locusts.

Green Muscle® is composed of the spores of the fungus Metarhizium anisopliae and a mixture of mineral oils. The biopesticide is not toxic to humans and kills only locusts and grasshoppers; it has no other environmental side-effects.

In addition, the World Food Programme organized the airlift of conventional pesticides from Mali to Tanzania, to treat around 4 500 hectares in the Rukwa and Malagrassi region. The chemicals were left-over pesticides from previous locust campaigns.

"Establishing a community-based early warning system involving wildlife rangers and the farm communities in the vicinity of the outbreak areas to better observe locust developments and organize timely interventions will be the challenge of the future," Pantenius said.


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