Marina Barrage Reservoir safe for recreational activity

Straits Times Forum 27 Jun 09;

PUB, the national water agency, would like to thank Mr Goh Shi Hai for his letter on Tuesday, 'Is Marina Barrage the reason for unhealthy water conditions?'

PUB is aware of occurrences of dead fish occasionally found in localised areas of Kallang Basin in the past two weeks. The dead fish were mainly of one species called Tilapia. Our investigations showed that it was not caused by any pollution. Other species of fish were observed to be swimming normally in the basin.

Marina Reservoir is currently undergoing a desalting process which will turn it into a freshwater reservoir. As the process will take some time, PUB is monitoring its water quality closely. So far, the results show the water is safe for recreational activities.

To improve the water quality in Marina Reservoir, PUB has also put in place strategies and measures to manage the water that flows into the Marina catchment.

Members of the public are welcome to provide feedback to PUB's 24-hour call centre on 1800-284-6600.

Tan Nguan Sen
Director, Catchment and Waterways
PUB, the national water agency


Read more!

When looking for water know-how, go Dutch

Victoria Vaughan, Straits Times 27 Jun 09;

WHAT have windmills, tulips and clogs got to do with Merlions, orchids and chilli crab? The answer - water.

Singapore is tapping the Netherlands' century-old water expertise, making Dutch companies a key part of water infrastructure and technologies here.

At this week's Singapore International Water Week (SIWW), the second annual event of what is hoped to become South-east Asia's definitive water conference, Dutch companies were out in force.

Dutch utility company PWN chose SIWW to globally launch its technology company at the event, and is hoping to work with PUB on ceramic membranes - a type of water filter.

Pointing to Holland's efforts to keep water from flooding its land, PWN director of research and development Peer Kamp said: 'The Netherlands is known for fighting water... I won't say Singapore is fighting water, but when it comes to land reclamation and sea level rise, there are some similarities.'

About 30 per cent of the Netherlands is reclaimed from the sea and lakes. In Singapore, one-fifth has been reclaimed.

Optiqua Technologies is a Singapore-based company which launched its water quality sensor at SIWW and it also announced it would move its new research lab to the WaterHub in Toh Guan Road, Jurong. Its core technology comes from parent company Optisense, based in the Netherlands.

Chief executive Melchior van Wijlen said Singapore caught its eye with the strong government policy to invest in and support new innovative technologies, and the goal to make Singapore an international water hub.

Prince Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands - the star guest at water week - explained why both nations are ideal partners: 'We are both very small countries, and therefore always looking abroad to find other opportunities.'

The Netherlands, a low-lying delta in north-western Europe, has always lived with water, said the prince, who chairs the United Nations Secretary-General's Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation. 'Therefore our institutions and academia are at a very high level on water management, so we can collaborate with Singapore on this issue.'


Read more!

Sembcorp inks deals to treat industrial waste water

Liaw Wy-Cin, Straits Times 27 Jun 09;

OVER the past week, home-grown utilities conglomerate Sembcorp has been busy inking partnerships in industrial waste-water treatment.

The industry is seen as big business.

As populations expand and demand for household and industrial water skyrockets, treating waste water, worth an estimated US$152 billion (S$222 billion) in 2007, is projected to increase to US$235 billion in 2016.

Many companies see potential in developing technologies to treat industrial waste water, because it contains more chemicals and is more difficult to treat than household waste water.

Sembcorp will mainly test such technologies developed by other companies or research institutions.

One of its latest partnerships is with the Nanyang Technological University's Nanyang Environment and Water

Research Institute.

Over the next three years, Sembcorp will test the institute's technology to remove substances in industrial waste water that are difficult to break down, such as petrochemicals.

Another tie-up is with local water technology companies United Envirotech and Memstar.

This project aims to test a new system that treats industrial waste water and reclaims water in a way that requires less heat, making the process cheaper and greener.

Sembcorp also opened its second plant to treat waste water using a membrane bioreactor on Jurong Island.

This type of technology combines the use of a membrane to filter out waste particles from the water, together with a bioreactor where air is bubbled through and tiny organisms are added to eat up waste matter in water.


Read more!

Opportunities in Russia for Singapore's green firms

Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 27 Jun 09;

SINGAPORE'S growing expertise in green technology makes it a choice partner for Russia as it develops its own sustainable energy sector, Russian representatives said here yesterday.

Mr Sergey Obrezanov, director and chief executive of the Russian Business Incubator (RBI), told an energy conference that the country is looking to adopt technologies and solutions from Singapore to help modernise its own economy.

Some promising areas of collaboration include solar energy and waste management. For example, the Russian nanotechnology project funding body Rusnano will invest up to US$1billion (S$1.46billion) in solar-related industries.

The RBI's deputy chief executive, Mr Viacheslav Kichatov, said: 'With Singapore's push into solar energy, there will be opportunities to collaborate in R&D and to use Singapore-developed applications.'

Russia is also in talks with a large Singapore waste-to-energy equipment manufacturer for a possible joint venture.

'Russia has an old infrastructure for waste management and this needs to be modernised,' added Mr Kichatov to the 70-strong audience.

Mr Teng Theng Dar, chief executive officer of the Singapore Business Federation (SBF), which jointly organised the conference, noted that many Russian firms in the energy field possess advanced technologies. Many local firms would benefit by tapping into these companies to gain exposure to bigger markets, he said.

Russia was Singapore's 30th-largest trading partner last year, with a total trade value of $3.8billion - a spike of almost 100per cent from 2007's level of $1.9billion. Top import products from Russia include refined petroleum products, crude petroleum and aluminium.

Russia's economy is 'coming of age' and presents huge opportunities to local firms willing to 'go out and hunt for them', said Mr Teng.

'Russia's interest in this sector also coincides with Singapore's own plan to develop its capabilities in clean energy and move towards alternative energy industries,' he added.

Some other opportunities for both countries will include partnerships in fuel cell technology and hydrogen-based sustainable energy technologies.

The RBI and the SBF signed a Memorandum of Understanding in January to encourage trade, economic, technology and investment flows between both countries.


Read more!

How to avert water crisis: 'Make People Pay'

Governments need to upgrade infrastructure, so those who have free supply will need to pay, say experts
Amresh Gunasingham, Straits Times 27 Jun 09;

WATER has long been considered a free commodity. But this has to change if the world is to avert the impending water crisis and make clean water available to an ever-expanding population.

The first hurdle: people will have to get used to the idea of paying for water, said experts at the Singapore International Water Week (SIWW), which ended yesterday.

The event, attended by 10,000 people, including 300 ministers, mayors, government officials and industry leaders, saw speakers highlighting water supply issues and solutions.

Rapid industrialisation, population growth in urban cities and the effects of climate change are likely to cause a drastic decline in the quality and supply of drinking water, said Mr Fehied Fahad Al Shareef, governor of the Saline Water Conversion Corporation, a utilities company based in Saudi Arabia.

According to the United Nations and World Health Organisation, water consumption has doubled worldwide since 1950, with 1.1 billion people now with no access to clean drinking water.

By 2025, the agencies expect that half of the world's population will lack access to drinking water.

To improve such standards in the long term, both governments and private sector firms will have to pump money into new infrastructure, added Mr James Adams, World Bank's vice-president for East Asia and Pacific region.

Many governments are investing in public infrastructure to stimulate an economic rebound, he noted.

According to World Bank data, more than US$15 million (S$22 million) will be invested this year by developing countries in new infrastructure, including the water sector.

But these investments will mean that citizens in many developing countries, who now have free access to water, will have to pay for it.

New infrastructure aside, leakages in present water distribution systems was another concern, said Oxford University's Professor Michael Rouse, an expert on water governance and regulation issues.

Professor Tommy Koh, chairman of the Institute of Policy Studies, noted that in most parts of Asia, the water problem could be due to poor governance and management practices rather than absolute shortages.

In some cities such as New Delhi and Manila, for example, up to half of the water supply is lost in ageing distribution networks, as well as through other factors such as corruption and theft.

It is a problem that Mr Thomas Searle, president of global consulting firm CH2M Hill, refers to as the 'silent tsunami'.

'In terms of the level of water losses that take place each day around the world, it is a tsunami - yet you never see any public discussion about it,' he said.

Another concern is water wastage in some industries.

Up to 70 per cent of water being used today is pumped into the agricultural sector, said Professor Benedito Braga, director of the Brazilian National Water Agency.

About 70,000 litres of water is used to produce 1kg of beef, for example; in rice production, as much as 2,000 litres of water is used per hectare of rice produced.

More efficient technology and better water management practices in the sector could help reduce the amount of water wasted, he said.

Addressing the issue of sustainability in future cities will call for redrawing the traditional boundaries between industries, noted Lord Ronald Oxburgh, president of the British Carbon Capture and Storage Association.

'As populations grow, which at the moment is at a rate of 1,000 people per minute, this is going to create needs for water, food and energy.'

'We cannot talk about water without looking at energy, food and waste supplies.'


Read more!

Delayed monsoon worries India

70% of population depend on agriculture for livelihood
P. Jayaram, Straits Times 27 Jun 09;

NEW DELHI: Villagers are holding frog weddings, women are yoking themselves to ploughs and tilling the fields, and priests are chanting prayers while sitting in cooking pots, as the Indian government worries over truant monsoon rains.

Since it hit the southern coastal state of Kerala a week in advance last month, the south- west monsoon has weakened, prompting people across the country to resort to traditional methods of invoking the rain gods.

And elsewhere, the acute heatwave has claimed at least 100 lives.

In the eastern state of Orissa, at least 58 people have died due to sunstroke since April, disaster management official Durgesh Nandini Sahoo told AFP.

Local newspapers have reported at least 12 deaths in the impoverished northern state of Bihar, and 17 deaths in neighbouring Jharkhand state. And there are other deaths due to the heatwaves in Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh.

The government announced on Wednesday that the monsoon, the mainstay of the country's trillion-dollar economy, will be below normal for the first time in four years.

'Rainfall is likely to be below normal,' Earth Sciences Minister Prithviraj Chavan told a news conference, adding that it would be 93 per cent of the long-term average.

Meteorologists say there is a 45 per cent shortfall in the rain so far, but signs are that it would pick up in the coming days.

The vagaries of the monsoon, which normally comes upon Kerala around June 1 and then rapidly advances northwards and drenches the whole subcontinent, are big news in India.

This is understandable because 70 per cent of the country's one billion-plus population depend on agriculture for their livelihood, and more than 60 per cent of farming is rain-fed.

While parched fields and dry rivers and irrigation ponds present a gloomy picture, the weatherman said there was no cause for panic yet.

'For many years, June rainfall has been bad, but the monsoon turned out normal,' said Mr A. Mazumdar, deputy director-general of the Meteorological Department.

He said that in 1926, for instance, the country experienced its worst June rainfall, deficient by 48 per cent, but the overall monsoon rainfall that year was still above normal, at 107 per cent.

Monsoon rains are key to the cultivation of kharif - or summer - crops like rice, soya bean, sugar cane and cotton, which account for nearly 60 per cent of the country's farm output. A good kharif season augurs well for the economy.

Mr Rajesh Agarwal, chairman and managing director of Insecticides India, a leading manufacturer and distributor of plant protection chemicals and household pesticides, said that while there was a delay in the onset of the monsoon, it was still not very late.

'But definitely people look at rain because once the rain starts, the farmers would be in a better position to look at their crop prospects,' he added.

The impending El Nino phenomenon in the Pacific Ocean is also increasing the risk of disruption in the progress of monsoons, experts have said.

El Nino is a periodic climate phenomenon where the Pacific Ocean heats up beyond normal and depletes the monsoon showers in South and South-east Asia.

'The trend over the last five months shows that El Nino could develop this year,' said Mr B.P. Yadav, a spokesman for the Meteorological Department.


Read more!

Best of our wild blogs: 27 Jun 09

Cyrene - Blue dragons in the grass
from Singapore Nature and Fishy day at Cyrene Reef from wild shores of singapore with
Nem Check and The Big Picture

Beting Bemban Besar and Cyrene reef
as seen by Richard from Singapore Nature

Update on Resorts World Sentosa construction
from wild shores of singapore

Citizen scientists document another hornbill nesting
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Ahimsa’s elephant dung-dwelling frogs
from The Biodiversity crew @ NUS


Read more!

Sumatra Leads The Way With Spatial Plan For Ecosystem

Fidelis E. Satriastanti Jakrata Globe 26 Jun 09;

All 10 of Sumatra’s provincial governors on Friday signed a memorandum of understanding in Jakarta to establish mutual cooperation to set up a spatial planning program geared to protect the island’s ecosystem.

“It [the signing] will become the benchmark for the island to set up its first spatial planning scheme and will also speed up the implementation of the national spatial plan,” Minister of Public Works Djoko Kirmanto said at the ceremony.

Djoko said the national planning program had already earmarked protected areas and areas prone to disaster for having national value.

“It is the obligation of the local governments to be faithful to the national planning scheme and to also consider the rights of locals,” said Djoko, who also heads the National Spatial Planning Coordination Agency.

He said the agency had determined eight national strategic areas for Sumatra Island.

“They are Leuser National Park, Toba Lake, Berbak National Park, Mahato protected forest, Kerinci Seblat National Park, Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, Bukit Duabelas National Park and Bukit Batabuh National Park,” he said.

“The efforts to save Sumatran ecosystems will be closely connected to preserving river areas that are in a critical condition, of which there are 14 in Sumatra,” he said.

State Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar, who also attended the signing ceremony, said spatial planning programs were vital and required good communications with local residents in order to succeed.

“We are trying to design an incentive and disincentive mechanism from the Environmental Law, which is currently being revised,” he told the governors.

“However, we warn you that the law will be very strict and there won’t be any room for violation.”

Meanwhile, Djoko said there were no specific guarantees that spatial planning would be implemented by the central government.

“We don’t call it a guarantee, but we will continue to guard the process so that local governments remain faithful to the agreement they have reached,” he said. “On top of that, local planning must automatically follow the guidelines of the national planning program.”

Environmental expert Emil Salim, a member of the Presidential Advisory Council, said there should be a shift from exploitative development to enrichment development.

“We desperately need to implement a different kind of development where biological resources have more value,” he said.


Read more!

Stop Clearing Work At Mangrove Area In Sungai Pulai, NGOs Urge

Bernama 26 Jun 09;

JOHOR BAHARU, June 26 (Bernama) -- Nine environmental NGOs (non-governmental organisations) strongly urge the authorities to stop the clearing work at the 913-hectare environmentally-sensitive mangrove area in Sungai Pulai to make way for a petrochemical project.

They called on the authorities to reconsider the project and ensure that all environmental concerns are considered by carrying out a detailed Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) study with public and stakeholder participation.

"From the environment perspective, there is rich biodiversity in Sungai Pulai including dugong, seahorses and fish which are dependent on the health of the mangrove forest," said the NGOs in a statement, here, Friday.

Among the nine NGOs which object to the clearing work at the mangrove area are the Centre for Environment, Technology and Development Malaysia (CETDEM), Malaysian Nature Society (MNS), World Wide Fund for Nature Malaysia (WWF-Malaysia) and Enviromental Protection Society Malaysia (EPSM).

The statement said the NGOs supported the views of the local fishermen, the Peninsular Inshore Fishermen Action Network (Jaring) and the Save Our Seahorses (SOS) which had opposed the project.

It said media reports in August 2007 indicated that Johor Menteri Besar Datuk Abdul Ghani Othman had called for a detailed EIA for the petrochemical project in Sungai Pulai.

"However, to date no detailed EIA has been forthcoming although work on the ground seems to have started," it said, adding that the area of mangrove started to be cleared earlier this month by MMC Berhad.

The mangrove forest according to the NGOs, is designated as an environmentally-sensitive area Rank 1 under the National Physical Plan and Comprehensive Development Plan (CDP) of Iskandar Malaysia.

The Iskandar Malaysia CDP specifies that the area being cleared should remain a protected forest reserve and not be developed.

"Given these existing provisions, the biological richness, uniqueness and sensitivity of Sungai Pulai are being seriously threatened," said the NGOs which called for the site to be adequately protected.


Read more!

World Bank steps up efforts to create economical cities

Channel NewsAsia 26 Jun 09;

SINGAPORE: The World Bank is stepping up efforts to create cities that are economical and environmentally-friendly. It's launched its Eco2 City programme, providing a platform to help developing countries achieve sustainability.

By 2030, cities in developing countries are expected to triple their built-up areas.

The World Bank said this presents massive opportunity to plan, design, and create more ecological and economical cities.

According to The World Bank, if the cities in developing countries urbanise and consume resources the way developed countries have in the past, it will take up a footprint of four planet earths to sustain this growth.

And to give cities a push in the right direction, the bank has come up with its Eco2 Cities programme.

Arish Dastur, co-team leader, Eco2 Cities, The World Bank, said: "The Eco2 city programme is a broad platform of analytical and operational support that we'll be providing to our client cities through the countries that we work with.

What this basically entails is the use of an analytical and operational framework which we have developed in the case of these countries, adapting to the particular conditions of each city. And then using a whole range of practical but very powerful methods and tools to devise to devise what we call a Eco2 pathway.”

On average about 75 per cent of global economic production takes place in cities and in developing countries, and The World Bank said this share is now rapidly increasing.

And it's not just about being environmentally friendly.

The World Bank said cities also need to think of the economic long term benefits and cost savings.

Hiroaki Suzuki, co-team leader, Eco2 Cities, The World Bank, said: “I think one example of a global best city is the city of Yokohama, the second largest city of Japan. This city has succeeded in reducing the volume waste by 40 per cent in just seven years. They did not need to construct two incineration plants which would cost them US$1.1 billion.

“In addition, because they are recycling the waste and need not buy oil, they can save US$6 million annually. This is really an economic benefit of the eco2 approach. While they are tackling the key environmental issue, they can still save a lot of money.”

The World Bank said it has already had preliminary discussions with the cities in China, Switzerland (Stockholm), Singapore. And in the Philippines, it will also be speaking to delegations from Vietnam and Indonesia. - CNA/vm

Sustainable Urbanization – Economically and Ecologically - Is Focus of New Program
World Bank 26 Jun 09;

June 26, 2009—It took the world hundreds of years to build today’s urban space of 400,000 square kilometers of cities.

It will take only about another 30 years to build that same amount of urban space in cities of developing countries, according to projections for urbanization in developing countries.

This rapid urbanization may be the “single greatest development challenge and opportunity in our century,” says a report outlining a new World Bank program called Eco² Cities: Ecological Cities as Economic Cities, launched today in Singapore.

The report notes that while urbanization has enabled economic growth, it has also contributed to environmental and socio-economic challenges, including climate change, pollution, congestion, and the rapid growth of slums.

The Eco² Cities Program is, in effect, a call to alter the way cities develop—to avoid the kind of growth that fosters heavy and inefficient use of energy and resources, while helping cities become climate-friendly economic centers. And to do so quickly.

“We have a once in a lifetime opportunity to plan, develop, build and manage cities that are simultaneously more ecologically and economically sustainable,” says Katherine Sierra, World Bank Vice President of Sustainable Development.

“The Eco² Cities Program is complementary to the ongoing efforts the World Bank and its development partners are making in sustainable development and climate change.”

Eco² Cities Offers Urban Development Framework

Jim Adams, vice president for the World Bank’s East Asia and Pacific region, adds that the pace of urbanization in Asia alone points to the urgency for an integrated economic and ecological approach to city development.

“Eco² is being launched at a critical historic juncture – urbanization in developing countries is a defining feature of the 21st century,” he said. “There is only a short space of time in which to make an impact on how this development takes place.”

The Eco² Cities Program has just completed its first phase—a comprehensive three-part book presenting the overall analytical and operational framework of the program.

The program’s next step is to apply this framework in several cities, and eventually be mainstreamed through national-level urban development strategies.

Representatives from Vietnam, the Philippines, and Indonesia will hear about the program first-hand this week at a presentation in Singapore.

Eco² Cities team leader Hiroaki Suzuki and co-team leader Arish Dastur say the program recognizes that successful cities create economic opportunities for their citizens in an inclusive, sustainable, and resource-efficient way, while also protecting and nurturing the local ecology and global public goods, such as the environment, for future generations.

Urban Sustainability Will Pay Compounding Dividends

Cities like Curitiba, Brazil, Stockholm, Sweden, and Yokohama, Japan, have demonstrated that they can greatly enhance their resource efficiency while decreasing harmful pollution and unnecessary waste.

“By doing so, they have improved the quality of life of their citizens, enhanced their economic competitiveness and resilience, strengthened their fiscal capacity, and created an enduring ‘culture’ of sustainability,” says Suzuki.

“What is encouraging is that most of the imaginative and practical solutions used by these cities are affordable and they generate economic returns, including direct and indirect benefits for the poor.”

Adds Dastur: “Sustainable urban planning is in fact an investment in the future of a city’s economy and welfare. An organized approach that consolidates and transfers these lessons to rapidly urbanizing countries can lock in systemic benefits for current and future generations.”

Cities Develop Their Own Eco² Pathway

The Eco² framework is designed to be adapted to local conditions. Each city taking part in the program should use it to develop its own “Eco² pathway” taking into account its own unique set of challenges and constraints, says Suzuki.

The World Bank plans to provide technical assistance through diagnostics studies that look at how efficiently the city is using resources and identify where improvements could be made.

The diagnostics would also look at the city’s infrastructure systems, urban form, policies and regulations for opportunities to realize greater synergies through integration and coordination of these elements, says Dastur.

The Bank’s technical assistance will also promote the use of life cycle costing—a method that looks at total costs, including resource depletion and environmental impact.

“A fundamental ingredient in the process is the political will to truly make a change – a genuine desire by city leadership and stakeholders to invest in the future of the city and the well-being of the citizens,” says Suzuki. “If we start with that, the knowledge exists, the methods exist, and growing support is now in place.”

Ideal City of the Future Offers ‘Concise Lifestyle’

The Eco² program is an integral part of the World Bank’s new urban strategy, scheduled for formal approval in September. The strategy looks at how to help cities harness their economic growth to improve the quality of life of their citizens.

Abha Joshi-Ghani, sector manager for the World Bank’s global urban unit , says that cities, “if managed and planned in a sustainable way, have the potential to offer a high quality of life with the least amount of resource consumption. They are also more enjoyable places to live.”

“It’s the consumption-oriented lifestyle of residents—not cities themselves—that leads to pollution. Compact, well-managed cities reduce the need for car ownership and long commutes, and are potentially much more efficient in delivering services such as water, sanitation and shelter to large numbers of people,” she says.

“The ideal city of the future is economically and ecologically sustainable,” she adds. “It’s a city which is optimizing its growth potential, creating jobs and attracting people, but at the same time offering a good quality of life, good living standards, services such as water, sanitation, sewerage. It’s also a city which is less consumption-oriented, well managed, financially sound, and which is green and ecologically friendly.”

“Really, it’s a city which offers a very compact, concise lifestyle.”

With 90 percent of urban growth in the next three decades expected to take place in developing countries, Suzuki and Dastur argue what’s needed is a “paradigm shift.”

“We’re building, for all intents and purposes, a whole new world at 10 times the speed, in countries with serious capacity constraints. At the same time, we now know what it takes for cities to be more ecologically sustainable, economically dynamic and socially viable. It would be a tremendous loss if we do not act on this opportunity. The stakes are very high.”

Singapore a model of sustainable growth
Business Times 27 Jun 09;

SINGAPORE has been named by the World Bank as one of four cities with best practices in the area of sustainable development. The bank yesterday launched a new urban development programme that aims to help cities in developing countries move towards greater sustainability.

Called Eco2 Cities - Ecological Cities as Economic Cities - the programme recognises that successful cities create economic value and opportunities for their citizens in an inclusive, sustainable and resource efficient way.

'Eco2 is being launched at a critical juncture - urbanisation in developing countries is a defining feature of the 21st century,' said Jim Adams, vice-president for the World Bank's East Asia and Pacific region - which has a fair share of the developing countries expected to treble their built-up urban areas by 2030.

Singapore was lauded for its efforts in integrated land use and transport planning, and effective measures to relieve road congestion and water resource management.

The cities of Curitiba, Stockholm and Yokohoma were similarly praised for environmentally conscious practices, and the World Bank aims to model features of the programme after the systems of these places.

Eco2 Cities co-team leader Arish Dastur said the World Bank should realise that 'infrastructure finance alone is not the answer, and should take a cue from countries like Stockholm and Singapore in this new initiative'.


Read more!

Malaysian firm recycles used cartridges, bottles to make benches

Melissa Goh, Channel NewsAsia 27 Jun 09;

KUALA LUMPUR: With the widespread use of computers and other machines, office trash has emerged as a growing environmental problem.

One Malaysian company has tapped on the durable nature of plastic to turn used toner cartridges and bottles into something much more environmentally friendly.

Benches that are made entirely from recycled toner cartridges and bottles are a common sight at many monorail stations, parks and schools in downtown Kuala Lumpur.

The company behind the initiative said it costs nearly US$300 to produce one bench, but the money is well spent.

Lim Eng Weng, managing director, Ricoh Malaysia, said: "We actually pay a dollar per cartridge to our technical team to collect (these used cartridges) from customers.

"We've been able to do up to 60 per cent – the other 40 per cent still get thrown away. With more awareness on recycling, some people actually do it out of their own initiative and find it a joy to recycle plastic."

Ricoh sells over 1,000 copiers a year in Malaysia. On average, at least 3,000 toner cartridges are thrown away each month. As only half of these cartridges get recycled, the company hopes to raise this number to 85 per cent.

The company's green message has gone down well with Malaysians.

One said: "I always think that recycling is a good idea because you don't waste too much."

"It's a good idea to make our world greener than before," another added.

- CNA/so


Read more!

China's Mount Wutai, Italy's Dolomites join World Heritage List

Yahoo News 26 Jun 09;

MADRID (AFP) – The sacred Buddhist mountain of Wutai in China and Italy's Dolomite Mountains were among five new sites named Friday to UNESCO's World Heritage List.

The tidal flats and wetlands of the Wadden Sea in Germany and the Netherlands, Cape Verde's 15th century town of Cidade Velha and Burkina Faso's Loropeni ruins also became World Heritage Sites, UNESCO announced.

It also inscribed the Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park in the Philippines as an "extension" to the Tubbataha Reef Marine Park, which joined the World Heritage List in 1993.

The announcements were made on the fifth day of a meeting of UNESCO's World Heritage Committee in Seville, Spain.

The committee, which is meeting until June 30, is deciding which of 27 sites deserve to be added to the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation's heritage list of 881 sites that have "outstanding universal value."

UNESCO said Mount Wutai, a "sacred Buddhist mountain" in northern China that includes 53 monasteries, was named as a "cultural landscape."

It features "the Ming Dynasty Shuxiang Temple with a huge complex of 500 statues representing Buddhist stories woven into three dimensional pictures of mountains and water.

"Overall, the buildings on the site present a catalogue of the way Buddhist architecture developed and influenced palace building in China over more than one millennium."

The Dolomites in northern Italy comprise "a diversity of spectacular landscapes of international significance for geomorphology marked by steeples, pinnacles and rock walls," UNESCO said in a statement.

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which makes recommendations to the UNESCO committee, said the mountains were chosen for "their outstanding natural beauty and the geological significance of their limestone formations."

UNESCO said the Wadden Sea "is one of the last remaining natural, large-scale, intertidal ecosystems where natural processes continue to function largely undisturbed.

"It is home to numerous plant and animal species, including marine mammals such as the harbour seal, grey seal and harbour porpoise."

German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel welcomed the decision as "a great day for the protection of nature in Germany", and said the government now had an "obligation to make protection of the site a priority."

A Dutch environmental organisation, Bund, described it as "a great responsibility" for both countries, which must support "tourism that is sustainable and respectful of nature."

UNESCO said Cidade Velha "bears testimony to the history of Europe's colonial presence in Africa and to the history of slavery.

"The town of Ribeira Grande, renamed Cidade Velha in the late 18th century, was the first European colonial outpost in the tropics. Located in the south of the island of Santiago, the town features some of the original street layout, impressive remains including two churches, a royal fortress and Pillory Square with its ornate 16th century marble pillar."

UNESCO said the extension of the Tubbataha Reef Marine Park represents a "threefold increase in the size of the original property."

Josephine Langley, the IUCN's World Heritage Monitoring Officer, added that the park, "composed of two atolls and one reef, is home to a number of threatened and endangered species, such as the iconic Napoleon wrasse."

UNESCO announced Thursday it had removed Dresden's Elbe Valley from its World Heritage List because the eastern German city had gone ahead with the building of a road bridge "in the heart of the cultural landscape."

It is only the second site ever to have been removed from the list, after Oman's Arabian Oryx Sanctuary was dropped in 2007.

UNESCO names new world heritage sites
Daniel Woolls, Google news 26 Jun 09;

MADRID (AP) — Italy's Dolomite mountains and the Wadden Sea along the coasts of Germany and the Netherlands were among several sites added Friday to UNESCO's world heritage list.

The U.N. agency's World Heritage Committee announced the additions, most of them nature-related, at a meeting in Seville, Spain. Heritage sites, which are deemed as having outstanding universal value, can also be cultural, such as old quarters of cities or monuments.

The Wadden Sea coastline is a wetlands area rich in wildlife. UNESCO described it as one of the world's last, large-scale intertidal ecosystems where natural processes continue to function undisturbed.

"The number of fish, shellfish and birds the system supports is simply staggering," said Pedro Rosabal of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which advises UNESCO on heritage nature sites.

UNESCO also praised the Dolomites in Italy's northern Alps as "one of the most beautiful mountain landscapes anywhere."

The agency added northern China's Mount Wutai, a sacred Buddhist site known for its five flat peaks and a landscape with 53 monasteries.

Cape Verde's city of Cidade Velha, the first European colonial outpost in the tropics, was also listed Friday. UNESCO said the city bears testimony to the history of slavery.

The agency extended an existing heritage site in the Philippines called Tubbataha Reef Marine Park by adding adjacent countryside, increasing its size threefold.

On Thursday, UNESCO dropped Germany's Elbe River valley at Dresden from the heritage list because of a bridge under construction across the river, saying this spoils the landscape.

UNESCO was expected to name more sites at the Seville meeting, which continues through June 30. Sites currently on the list range from the Angkor Wat temple complex in Cambodia to the Versailles palace in France.

Prior to Friday, the list featured 878 properties deemed as being so precious as to belong to humanity in general, not just the country where they are located.

Governments that nominate sites must present a plan for their upkeep. The heritage committee regularly then inspects listed sites, although it provides no funding except in case of emergencies like natural disasters.

Two new natural wonders on World Heritage List
IUCN 26 Jun 09;

The Wadden Sea, on the coast of Germany and the Netherlands, and the Dolomites mountains in Northern Italy have been inscribed on the World Heritage List, following IUCN’s recommendations.

The Tubbataha Reefs National Park, an existing World Heritage Site in the Philippines, has been significantly extended.

After over a year of rigorous evaluations of the this year'sa nominations, IUCN, which is the independent advisory body on nature to UNESCO, presented the findings of its expert missions to the World Heritage Committee, currently meeting in Seville, Spain. With the new additions, the number of natural and mixed sites is now 201.

The Wadden Sea is the largest unbroken system of inter-tidal sand and mud flats in the world. It is one of the most important areas for migratory birds, with up to 6.1 million birds present at any one time more than 400,000 breeding pairs and an average of 10-12 million birds which pass through every year.

“Coastal wetlands are not always the richest sites in terms of the fauna found there, but that is not the case for the Wadden Sea,” says Pedro Rosabal, of IUCN’s Protected Areas Programme. “The number of fish, shellfish and birds the system supports is simply staggering. Biodiversity on a worldwide scale is reliant on this special ecosystem.”

The Dolomites in Italy have been inscribed on the World Heritage List due to their outstanding natural beauty and the geological significance of their limestone formations. Some of the rock cliff rise more than 1500 meters and are among the highest vertical limestone walls in the world. The fossil record of the Dolomites provides an insight into the recovery of marine life after near extinction more than 200 million years ago.

“This highly distinctive mountain range is exceptionally beautiful,” says Tim Badman, IUCN’s Special Advisor on World Heritage. “Spectacular pinnacles, spires and towers of limestone rise abruptly from gentle foothills. They are widely recognized as one of the most attractive mountain landscapes in the world.”

The Tubbataha Reef Marine Park in the Philippines, which was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1993, has been significantly extended following IUCN’s recommendation. The National Park is home to pristine reefs with a high diversity of marine life, including whales, dolphins, sharks and turtles. The extended World Heritage site is three times bigger than the original, increasing from 33,000 to 97,000 hectares. Its reefs harbour more than 350 species of coral and almost 500 species of fish.

“Tubbataha Reef Marine Park, composed of two atolls and one reef, is home to a number of threatened and endangered species, such as the iconic Napoleon wrasse” says Josephine Langley, IUCN’s World Heritage Monitoring Officer. “It’s in a unique position in the middle of the Sulu Sea and is the perfect site to study the response of a natural reef system to the impacts of climate change.”

For more information or to set up interviews, please contact:

* Borjana Pervan, IUCN Media Relations Officer, m +41 79 ..., e borjana.pervan@iucn.org
* Sarah Horsley, IUCN Media Relations Officer, m +41 79 ..., e sarah.horsley@iucn.org

For high resolution images, please visit:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/iucnweb/sets/72157619639272706/

Photos, audio/video material and fact sheets are available at www.iucn.org/worldheritage


Read more!

Ozone hole has unforeseen effect on ocean carbon sink

Kate Ravilious, New Scientist 26 Jun 09;

The Southern Ocean has lost its appetite for carbon dioxide, and now it appears that the ozone hole could be to blame.

In theory, oceans should absorb more CO2 as levels of the gas in the atmosphere rise. Measurements show that this is happening in most ocean regions, but strangely not in the Southern Ocean, where carbon absorption has flattened off. Climate models fail to reproduce this puzzling pattern.

The Southern Ocean is a major carbon sink, guzzling around 15 per cent of CO2 emissions. However, between 1987 and 2004, carbon uptake in the region was reduced by nearly 2.5 billion tonnes – equivalent to the amount of carbon that all the world's oceans absorb in one year.
Premature effect

To figure out what is going on, Andrew Lenton, from the University of Pierre and Marie Curie in Paris, France, and his colleagues created a coupled ocean and atmosphere climate model, to investigate carbon absorption in oceans. Crucially, they included changes in the concentration of stratospheric ozone since 1975.

By running their model with and without the ozone depletion since 1975, Lenton and his colleagues were able to show that the ozone hole is responsible for the Southern Ocean's carbon saturation.

The effect could be down to the way decreasing stratospheric ozone and rising greenhouse gases are altering the radiation balance of the Earth's atmosphere. This has been predicted to alter and strengthen the westerly winds that blow over the Southern Ocean.

"We expected this transition to a windier regime, but it has occurred much earlier than we thought, seemingly because of the ozone hole," says Lenton.
'Unexpected effect'

Stronger surface winds enhance circulation of ocean waters, encouraging carbon-rich waters to rise from the deep, limiting the capability of surface water to absorb carbon from the atmosphere. Furthermore, the higher carbon levels in surface waters make them more acidic – bad news for many forms of ocean life, such as coral and squid.

"This result illustrates how complex the chain of cause and effect can be in the Earth system. No one would ever have predicted from first principles that increasing CFCs would have the effect of decreasing uptake of ocean carbon dioxide," says Andrew Watson, from the University of East Anglia, UK.

Journal reference: Geophysical Research Letters (DOI: 10.1029/2009GL038227)


Read more!

Fate of whales depends on Obama: conservationists

Shrikesh Laxmidas, Reuters 26 Jun 09;

FUNCHAL, Portugal (Reuters) - Conservationists are looking to the United States to help re-establish the authority of the International Whaling Commission after IWC delegates this week failed to reach a deal to regulate global whaling.

A moratorium on commercial whaling was agreed at the IWC in 1986. But Japan continues to skirt the ban, citing research purposes, while Iceland and Norway simply ignore it and harpoon whales for commercial use, leaving the IWC looking irrelevant and in danger of collapsing.

Instead of coming up with a deal this week to marry the views of anti-whaling nations such as Australia and whaling countries Japan, Norway and Iceland, IWC delegates agreed only to extend the deadline for a compromise for a year.

Opponents of whaling argue that many species face extinction, and that the explosive harpoons in general use can cause horrific suffering.

The Obama administration has so far taken a back seat at the IWC but has been highly active on other aspects of environmental protection, raising hopes among conservation groups that it may yet convince Japan, in particular, to make concessions.

"We hope the U.S. can now show leadership at the IWC and are convinced that, if they act in a proactive manner, they can help the commission and Japan to get out of the deadlock," said Remi Parmentier of the U.S.-based Pew Whales Conservation Project.

"We have a lot of hard work to do in the next year," said Monica Medina, one of the new U.S. delegates to the IWC. "And our administration will roll up their sleeves and we will work hard."

The IWC allows Japan to hunt 900 whales a year for research purposes, but anti-whaling nations say it uses the quota commercially, and that whale meat ends up on the dinner table.

Japan says stocks of species like the small minke are big enough to allow limited hunts. It says the IWC has betrayed its roots by emphasizing conservation above all else instead of enabling the development of a sustainable whaling industry, and that this may soon rob it of its reason for existing.

But the Japanese government is under severe pressure in opinion polls, and may find it easier to consider compromises after a national election later this year.

"It is imperative that a short-term agreement is in place by next year. Without that, the future of the IWC is seriously in doubt," said Joji Morishita, a senior official in the Japanese delegation.

(Editing by Axel Bugge and Kevin Liffey)


Read more!

Gordon Brown puts $100bn price tag on climate adaptation

Prime minister attempts to move stalling political talks on global warming away from targets and towards the cost of mitigation

David Adam, guardian.co.uk 26 Jun 09;

Gordon Brown today attempted to seize the political initiative on climate change by calling for rich countries to hand over $100bn (£60bn) each year to help the developing world cope with the effects of global warming.

In a speech at London zoo, the prime minister said the cash offer was intended to break the political stalemate over a new global deal on greenhouse gas emissions. He said the "security of our planet and our humanity" rested on such a treaty being agreed at key UN negotiations in Copenhagen in December.

"Over recent years the world has woken to the reality of climate change. But the fact is that we have not yet joined together to act against it. Copenhagen must be the moment we do so," Brown said. "As always, this will involve a calculus of national and collective interests, with each yielding something for the common good."

Aides said the speech was intended to provide fresh momentum to the stalling political talks on global warming. In exchange for greater action on climate as part of a new deal, the developing world wants money to help it cut carbon emissions and adapt to a warmer world. Earlier this month, EU leaders postponed a decision on such funds until October.

Brown said: "If we are to achieve an agreement in Copenhagen, I believe we must move the debate from a stand-off over hypothetical figures to active negotiation on real mitigation actions and real contributions."

Under the plan, funding would begin in 2013 and rise to $100bn a year by 2020. The money would be raised from private and public sources, such as levies on international carbon trading schemes. Developing countries would be able to apply for funds for specific projects. "I would urge the leading developing countries to bring forward ambitious and concrete propositions ... that could be financed by these sources," Brown said.

Brown is expected to discuss the plan with world leaders including Barack Obama. Because the UK will negotiate at Copenhagen as part of the EU-bloc, the suggestion will have to be agreed in Brussels before it could be put forward as a formal offer as part of the Copenhagen negotiations.

The annual $100bn falls well short of what China and other developing nations have demanded in climate funding. The G77 group of nations has suggested that rich countries could hand over 1% of their GDP, a figure that British government sources consider unfeasible. "That's a totally unrealistic number. It doesn't even bring us to the negotiating table," one said.

Green campaigners welcomed the speech but were unhappy with the reliance on carbon markets to generate the necessary funds.

Greenpeace said: "Brown is right when he says the scale of the money on the table for the developing world will make or break Copenhagen. By becoming the first major leader to put a figure on how much money is needed he has shown signs of leadership on climate change that have so far been sorely lacking."

Rich must pay $100 bilion yearly on climate, says UK's Brown
Gerard Wynn, Reuters 26 Jun 09;

LONDON (Reuters) - Developed countries must fund a $100 billion a year fight against climate change in the developing world by 2020, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Friday.

Green campaigners supported the first such offer from a world leader and praised its timing two weeks before a climate summit of the 17 biggest developed and developing economies. India said the offer fell short but was something to build on.

U.N.-led talks meant to lead to a new treaty to fight climate change when representatives of 190 countries meet in Copenhagen in December have struggled on disagreement over how far rich countries should fund action in developing countries.

"I propose we take a working figure of around $100 billion per annum by 2020," Brown said in his speech at London Zoo, with a backdrop of emus and wallabies in an arid landscape, hinting at droughts scientists say await Europe without climate action.

"If we are to achieve an agreement in Copenhagen, I believe we must move the debate from a stand-off over hypothetical figures," he told foreign diplomats and public figures.

Green groups showed rare, collective enthusiasm after four years of halting global progress to agree a successor to the Kyoto Protocol after 2012.

"Politically it's very important but there's still a question on the ambition," said Keith Allott of WWF UK.

FALLING SHORT

The $100 billion figure fell far short of what many developing countries have called for. For example India has suggested that developed countries should provide 1 percent of national wealth, or GDP, and was unimpressed by Friday's offer.

"It's just a drop, but at least somebody has said something at last," said Pradipto Ghosh of New Delhi-based The Energy and Resources of Institute (TERI), and a member of the climate panel of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The 1 percent GDP number was an "obviously fantasy figure," a senior British government official told reporters Friday.

Brown also said a climate fund must not simply divert rich countries' existing commitments to aid overseas development.

Up to a tenth of such existing promises could be used, he proposed, where steps met both development and climate goals, for example boosting drought resistance and food yields.

Campaigners especially supported his suggestion that the $100 billion fund could be partly raised from international aviation and shipping, for example from taxing or including these sectors in emissions trading markets.

Ships and planes are exempt from carbon cuts under Kyoto. Brown also backed a Norwegian proposal to levy a charge on national emissions rights for rich countries under a new pact.

Britain wants a Copenhagen deal to commit to limit global warming to no more than 2 degrees Celsius by, for example, setting a goal for global greenhouse gas emissions to stop rising by 2020.

(Additional reporting by Krittivas Mukherjee in New Delhi; Editing by Louise Ireland)


Read more!

Trade chiefs stress on climate change deal

Yahoo News 26 Jun 09;

GENEVA (AFP) – A global climate change deal in Copenhagen is crucial to ensure that world trade becomes a catalyst for the greening of the economy rather than an obstacle, trade and environmental chiefs said Friday.

"Business as usual will not prevail," said UN Environment Programme Executive Director Achim Steiner at the launch of a joint report on climate change with the World Trade Organisation.

"The transition to a green economy is the backdrop against which trade must evolve," he told WTO member states at a meeting in Geneva.

Steiner and WTO Director General Pascal Lamy underlined the potentially defining impact on the shape of the world economy of ongoing but separate negotiations on opening up trade and tackling global warming.

"With a challenge of this magnitude, multilateral cooperation is crucial and a successful conclusion to the ongoing climate change negotiations is the first step to achieving sustainable development for future generations," they said in a statement.

Attempts to forge a new deal on global warming in Copenhagen in December are foundering.

Meanwhile, the Doha round of talks at the WTO has virtually ground to a halt in its long-running bid to expand free trade, mainly to help developing nations.

The report underlined that although free trade could increase carbon emissions by stimulating economic activity, it could also help to reduce global warming by increasing the circulation of technologies to mitigate or adapt to climate change.

But the report on Trade and Climate Change also pointed to potential legal hurdles in WTO rules that could hamper incentives like carbon taxes, emissions trading or subsidies aimed at cutting emissions - all potential ingredients of a Copenhagen deal.

In the absence of a coherent international approach, those measures could be regarded as trade distorting and ruled as illegal depending on the way an individual country applies them.

"In my view the sequence is Copenhagen first," said Lamy. "That's where the bulk of the problem lies."

Countries Representing Four Fifths of the Global Economy Back Green Growth
UNEP 26 Jun 09;

UNEP Head Applauds Green Investment Declaration Signalling Fresh and Fundamental Trend Towards Sustainable 21st Century

Geneva 26 June, 2009 - Achim Steiner, the head of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), today welcomed the 'Green Growth' Declaration by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) saying it underlined the way environment was rapidly being brought into the centre of economic discourse and policy-making.

Ministers from 40 countries said: "Well targeted policy instruments can be used to encourage green investment in order to simultaneously contribute to economic recovery in the short-term and help to build the environmentally-friendly infrastructure required in the long term—the crisis should not be used as an excuse to postpone crucial decisions for the future of the planet".

The Ministers, representing the 30 OECD member countries along with five who are candidates for membership plus Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and South Africa, called on the OECD to work with a wide-range of partners including international organizations to develop a Green Growth Strategy "to achieve economic recovery and environmentally and socially sustainable economic growth".

They also underlined their determination to realize an "ambitious, effective, efficient, comprehensive and fair international post-2012 climate agreement" at the UN climate convention meeting in Copenhagen, December as a key building block.

In a wide-ranging Declaration, the ministers also called for greater cooperation over low carbon, clean-tech including renewable energies and green information and communications technologies to assist in realizing a sustainable 21st century.

Mr Steiner, who addressed the ministerial meeting on Thursday, said UNEP stood ready to work with the OECD in shaping and delivering the Green Growth Strategy over the next 12 months underlining the way it dovetails with UNEP's Global Green New Deal/Green Economy initiative.

"It is encouraging to see so many countries, representing 80 per cent of the global economy, putting their collective political will behind the transformational opportunities of embracing Green Growth within a Green Economy," said the UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director.

"Their statement also underlines their determination to unleash the market and empower the private sector via effective policy mixes, such as fiscal instruments, incentives and creative regulations in order to realize low carbon, resource efficient, development" said Mr Steiner.

"We are talking about a paradigm shift in policy," said Korean Prime Minister Han Seung-Soo, who chaired the meeting. "Technological development and actions to protect the environment and combat climate change can also be harnessed in favour of economic growth."

OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said: "Looking beyond the crisis, OECD countries and countries that we hope will shortly swell our numbers have made a solemn pledge to promote environmentally friendly green growth policies in favour of sustainable economic growth based on low carbon energy use," he told a closing news conference.

"We have recognized the importance of well-targeted policy instruments encouraging green investment to contribute to both short-term economic recovery and long-term green infrastructure. This is a significant signal and staging post on the road to what we hope will be an ambitious agreement on climate change in Copenhagen at the end of the year," said Mr Gurría

The OECD Ministerial Declaration Green Growth came as more than 20 UN agencies meeting in New York issued a statement mirroring the one unveiled in Paris

"Investing stimulus funds in such sectors as energy efficient technologies, renewable energy, public transport, sustainable agriculture, environmentally friendly tourism, and the sustainable management of natural resources including ecosystems and biodiversity, reflects the conviction that a green economy can create dynamic new industries, quality jobs, and income growth while mitigating and adapting to climate change and arresting biodiversity decline," said the UN agencies and multilateral environmental agreements.

These, it said, "can potentially contribute to economic recovery, decent job creation, and reduced threats of food, water, energy, ecosystem and climate crises, which have disproportionate impacts on the poor."

Notes to Editors:

The OECD Declaration on Green Growth
http://www.olis.oecd.org/olis/2009doc.nsf/LinkTo/NT00004886/$FILE/JT03267277.PDF

The Green Economy Interagency Statement of the UN System
http://www.unep.org/pdf/pressreleases/Green_Economy_Joint_Statement.pdf

UNEP's Global Green New Deal/Green Economy initiative
http://www.unep.org/greeneconomy/


Read more!