Best of our wild blogs: 8 Jul 09


12 Jul (Sun): FREE Drop-off and Collection of IT equipment
at the Really Really Free Market on facebook

Massive Ex Northstar VII on Sentosa's natural shore
from wild shores of singapore

Massive reclamation near Labrador continues until Jan 2010
from wild shores of singapore

Pasir Ris - Anemone day
from Singapore Nature and wild shores of singapore

Crabby Day @ Tanah Merah
from colourful clouds

Wood Sandpiper bathing, preening and feeding
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Carpenter Bees
from Manta Blog

Fascinating Fraser's Hill
from Butterflies of Singapore


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Idyllic getaways at home

Lee Siew Hua, Straits Times 8 Jul 09 on AsiaOne

It is so very crowded in microscopic Singapore.

I often feel like escaping for a few hours. A swift, seamless and spontaneous getaway within our borders, since I can't be hopping on a plane every time I feel like it.

That kind of instant escape seemed simpler in the past.

My colleagues and I decided it'd be fun to create a teppanyaki feast on the beach one Friday night, not long after we joined the company.

The serious chef in our circle rustled up skewers of delicacies for the three of us. I think he also fixed a couple of salads and elegant appetisers.

We popped into Liang Court after work to buy a disposable Japanese grill. It looked like a small aluminium-foil tray packed with chemical coals.

Then we took a cab to Changi Point - and it was not that secluded after all. A few guitars were strumming, people were splashing in canoes.

But it still felt like an excursion, for it was a quick change of scenery and a quirky step away from routine.

All we needed was a little patch of beach to set up our grill. Then we would swop stories all night.

As you can imagine, food relished by the sea on a cool tropical night is extra luscious. And more so when the chef is a friend who infectiously revels in cooking. Plus, there was no washing up later.

I'm a nocturnal person and was all ready to stay up to talk. But I fell asleep long before midnight, soothed by the waves.

Yes, we planned to sleep on the open beach. Not the safest of ideas, I guess.

Sure enough, we woke up around 3am. A shadowy figure was looking intently at our belongings. He disappeared when we sat up.

Groggy, we tucked our belongings under our heads, and slept on, now more fitfully. The next morning, I think our colleague had breakfast and coffee ready as the sun rose.

On a dense island, getting away may mean choosing the quiet night hours like we did. It then becomes a journey into a different time zone, without the need for a passport.

The sporty cycle and run ultra-marathons by night.

Night golfing is also possible. Others fish at night.

Walking on the lit-up urban trail of the Southern Ridges is also a serene evening treat.

By day, there are also surprising pockets of peace.

The other week, I was at a seminar at a no-frills resort nestled next to the sea at Labrador Park.

The resort is nothing to shout about. But it's set far from the main road. And it was good to know there are still parts of Singapore waiting to be discovered.

That time, I also got re-acquainted with Labrador Park, a lush little gem.

Much of the Pasir Panjang zone is nostalgic for me. My parents grew up in this sleepy corner, and I spent my infancy here. In later years, my sisters and I would sit on the swings for hours in a park, with my dad patiently pushing our swings.

Also, I bought my first apartment in South Buona Vista Road, at the end of this winding road where my once-youthful father raced his motorbike.

Though the places here have changed radically, and I now live on the East Coast, returning to the area counts as a sweet escape.

Here, too, in the past couple of years, I've enjoyed resort-like Keppel Island, pretty HortPark and the varied terrain of the Southern Ridges.

I don't think Singaporeans are outdoorsy, so that leaves most of our parks quiet enough, with the notable exception of East Coast Park.

I find Bishan Park and Pasir Ris Park serene, for instance, even though they nudge massive housing estates.

Such parks are ideal for a bit of solitude, if you can take the humidity. And these places will abound, with all our national focus on greenery and park connectors.

Okay, for a truer getaway, we can head as far out as possible. That will be our offshore islands.

In university, I once joined a friend's family for a night on an island. I forget which island, but I remember catching crabs on the shore.

It was easy to grab and toss them into the campfire for the freshest, sweetest barbecue ever.

A few years later, my friends and I rode mountain bikes on kampung-like Pulau Ubin. We found a disused quarry filled with brightly coloured catfish. It was such a hot day, and the water was icy.

It was too tempting not to pop into the rustic pool, though I wouldn't do it now.

And so we create many escapes from our crowded lives, and it's easier than we imagine.


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Singapore is 10th most expensive city for expats

Mercer survey also lists S'pore as fifth most expensive in Asia-Pacific
Teh Shi Ning, Business Times 8 Jul 09;

SINGAPORE has become the 10th most expensive city in the world for expatriates, up three places from last year, says HR consultancy Mercer.

Singapore is also the fifth most expensive expat location in the Asia-Pacific, according to Mercer's 2009 cost of living survey.

Tokyo overtook Moscow as the most expensive city for expats, as the Japanese yen strengthened considerably against the US dollar.

The strong yen also lifted Osaka into second place, from 11th last year. Moscow slipped to third place but remained the most expensive European city.

The significant reshuffle of rankings is largely due to currency fluctuations and less to price movements.

For instance, the stronger US dollar makes it dearer for European-based companies to send expatriates to US cities.

It also explains why London dropped out of top 10 for the first time since 2001 - falling from third last year to 16th this year, while New York City rose to eighth, from 22nd last year.

Mercer senior researcher Nathalie Constantin-Metral said: 'Many currencies, including the euro and British pound, have weakened considerably against a strong US dollar, causing a number of European cities to plummet in the rankings.'

Middle Eastern cities rose in the rankings, mainly due to the United Arab Emirates dirham being fixed to the US dollar.

And the Chinese yuan's relatively strong performance lifted China's cities up the ranks. Beijing rose 11 spots to ninth place.

Ms Constantin-Metral said: 'The cost of expatriate programmes is heavily influenced by currency fluctuations and inflation rates.

'Now that cost containment and reduction is at the top of most company agendas, keeping track of the change in factors that dictate expatriate cost of living and housing allowances is essential.'

Mercer's survey is conducted annually to help multinational companies gauge expatriate pay packages.

The March 2009 survey covered 143 cities and more than 200 items, including housing, transport, food, clothing, household goods and entertainment, in each city.

All cities are compared against New York, which is used as the benchmark. Currency movements are measured against the US dollar.

Singapore 10th most pricey city for expats: Survey
Melissa Tan, Straits Times 8 Jul 09;

SINGAPORE has jumped three spots to become the 10th most expensive city in the world for expatriates, according to Mercer's latest cost of living survey.

Tokyo stole the top spot from Moscow because the yen has strengthened over the survey period - March last year to this March - while London dropped to 16th from third place due to the weakening of the pound, Mercer said.

Johannesburg is at the bottom of the list of 143 cities, and is roughly one-third as costly as Tokyo. It replaced Asuncion in Paraguay, the least expensive city last year.

Mercer, the human resource consulting arm of Marsh & McLennan - an American professional services and insurance brokerage firm - noted on its website that the British pound has lost more than 26 per cent against the US dollar over the survey period.

The 'significant reshuffle of cities' can be explained more by 'important currency fluctuations and less so by price movements', it added.

However, Singapore's rise is probably not due to changes in exchange rate, because during the survey period, the Singapore dollar did not strengthen against the US dollar.

The survey data actually suggested that the country became a little cheaper, but rival cities had become even less expensive.

Each city was given a numerical score, based on how much certain goods or services cost.

The prices of more than 200 items such as food, housing, transport and entertainment were recorded.

Mercer used New York City, where it is based, as a benchmark. The company assigned it a score of 100, and calculated the scores of the other 142 cities relative to that.

Tokyo and Johannesburg scored 143.7 and 49.6 points respectively, while Singapore reached 98, down from last year's score of 111.3, reflecting that the country has become relatively less expensive.


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When disasters can help development

Euston Quah & Suman Kumari Sharma, Straits Times 8 Jul 09;

DISASTER events cause losses in infrastructure, physical injuries and fatalities. Last year alone, natural disasters caused 235,816 fatalities, affected 2.1 billion people and resulted in economic damages worth US$181 billion (S$264 billion).

When disaster costs are expressed in terms of gross domestic product (GDP) of a country, the ratios are seen to be higher in developing countries than in developed countries.

Historically, Asian countries have suffered a greater loss in human lives and property damage due to a higher population density, rapid urbanisation, inadequate infrastructure growth and a higher rate of natural hazard incidents.

Prior to the 1970s, disasters were considered as outcomes of exogenous, unpredictable events. Disaster research primarily remained the domain of physical scientists and engineers. This dominant approach of disaster analysis primarily focused on physical systems, structures and material damage without any consideration to social, economic, demographic and political forces associated with the vulnerabilities of countries and societies.

An alternative approach, initiated during the mid-1970s, highlights the need to incorporate the underlying socio-economic and political aspects in disaster analysis. This approach maintains that issues related to hazards and disasters cannot be understood unless their linkages with societies and the affected communities are taken into account.

Since a hazard can become a disaster only through its impact on vulnerable population, an effective development strategy must, therefore, incorporate vulnerability reduction measures to preclude a hazard from turning into a disaster.

The foundation of this alternative approach is based on a clearer understanding of the relationship between disaster and development, together with a country's resilience in coping with a disaster.

While it is evident that disasters have a short-term negative impact on development, the question remains: Do they always hamper development efforts? This question does not have a simple answer as the relationship between disaster and development shows a two-way causality.

Disasters cause temporary setbacks to a country's development via direct effect - loss to physical assets and human capital such as buildings, bridges, dams and infrastructure, loss of lives and injuries to humans and animals - and indirect effect when it slows economic activity such as in the agriculture and financial sectors.

Both effects can cause production in the affected area to decline, disrupting macro-economic variables of an economy, such as GDP, investment, trade, public expenditure, inflation and unemployment.

Disasters can negatively influence a number of cross-cutting themes, such as environment, governance, human psychology, gender and institutions. Furthermore, major disasters can have differential impacts on marginalised groups, particularly women and minorities.

Development failure on its own may aggravate disaster risk. At times, development failure may increase individuals' and/or community's vulnerabilities to hazard events. Examples include environmental degradation, over-exploitation of resources, institutional failure in governing development activities and corruption. Furthermore, a failure to address issues related to climate change may result in even higher losses as a consequence of extreme weather events.

Responses to a disaster can increase hazard risk and induce future disasters. In the immediate aftermath of a disaster, humanitarian assistance can, at times, undermine local institutions, governance and technical capabilities which are needed for longer-term resilience. Donor financing, at times, may not be adequately aligned with longer-term needs. The responses of governments in the aftermath of a disaster can divert resources away from other development activities.

Approached properly, however, disasters can offer opportunities for longer- term development. Case studies on post-disaster responses show that an efficient and participatory governance structure can provide opportunities for physical, social, political and environmental development in the affected area not only through reconstruction but also through adoption of longer-term perspective plans.

Disasters raise short-term awareness among policymakers where areas were neglected in past policies. But the real opportunity for improvement comes when long-term policies are formulated and carried out. For example, a disaster could spur donors and organisations to provide savings and credit facilities, insurance services, reserve creation and risk transfers.

Disasters can also provide opportunities for improving and strengthening cooperation and good neighbourliness among countries affected by the same event. Disaster responses across countries can lead to better relationships as countries realise that one nation's actions alone may not be adequate to cope with the disaster.

For instance, the haze and forest fire episodes in South-east Asia in 1997 and 2006 provided the affected countries opportunities to voice their concerns, mobilise resources and seek longer-term solutions that benefit all.

The relationship between development and disasters is, therefore, not straightforward. Major disasters typically cause short-run disruptions to a country's development but their longer-term impacts are influenced by many interlinked factors.

However, in order for disasters to have a positive impact on development, disaster issues should be managed and governed properly through an efficient and participatory institutional structure.

Such a structure can mitigate future impacts and increase societal resilience to disasters, making future disasters manageable, predictable and non-disruptable to any country's course of development. Indeed, disasters can only strengthen the resolve to correct weaknesses in an economy and in doing so, advances a country's path to further sustainable development and higher economic growth.

Euston Quah is Professor of Environmental Economics and Suman Kumari Sharma is a lecturer in economics at the Nanyang Technological University.


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US$2.5m donation to help keep Straits of Malacca safe

Vincent Wee, Business Times 8 Jul 09;

(SINGAPORE) Safety, security and the environment in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore will be boosted through the Nippon Foundation's US$2.5 million contribution yesterday to the Aids to Navigation Fund to help maintain navigational equipment in the world's busiest strait this year.

'I do not think I can emphasise enough the huge importance of the Straits of Malacca and Singapore for the littoral states and the waterway's many users,' Malaysia's Transport Minister Ong Tee Keat said when receiving the contribution at a ceremony in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.

'We know that for centuries the Straits have been used for international trade, and played an important role in the geopolitical development of the littoral states and their rise as trading nations,' he said. 'This role has grown even more significant in these modern times to meet the increasing demands of consumers around the world.'

The Straits are a vital sea lane between the East and the West, carrying about 40 per cent of global sea trade and more than half of the world's total oil trade. As a result, they are one of the world's busiest waterways, with annual traffic of 94,000 vessels.

The Aids to Navigation Fund was set up to receive voluntary financial contributions from user states and other stakeholders to maintain navigational aids in the Straits. The fund is administered on a rotational basis between the three littoral states for a period of three years each. Malaysia is the fund's first host, and as such, chairs the Aids to Navigation Fund Committee.

The Aids to Navigation Fund was formally launched during the first Aids to Navigation Fund Committee Meeting in Penang last year and started operating with an initial contribution of US$1.35 million from the Nippon Foundation. This contribution was used to assess all 51 aids to navigation in the Straits and was in addition to an earlier pledge by Nippon Foundation to contribute one-third of the sum required to maintain the aids for five years. Running costs are expected to be US$7.4 million this year.

The fund comes under the auspices of the Cooperative Mechanism, which groups the littoral states of Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore and user states of the Straits through an arrangement to promote cooperation and share the burden of ensuring the waterway remains safe, secure and open.

The fund, now in its second year of operation, is attracting growing support. But Mr Ong said yesterday there needs to be greater emphasis on getting more stakeholders to contribute.

Besides Nippon Foundation, the United Arab Emirates, the Malacca Strait Council of Japan and the Middle East Navigation Aids Service have contributed.

In addition, India contributed to the fund specifically to set up a tidal, current and wind measurement system in the Straits, while Greece made a contribution of US$1 million through the International Maritime Organization.

Japan foundation puts $9million in Malacca Strait safety
MSN News 7 Jul 09;

A Japanese foundation said Tuesday it would contribute nine million dollars towards ensuring safety on the Malacca Strait, through which thousands of Japanese vessels pass annually.

The Nippon Foundation, a Tokyo-based group which has been shouldering part of the cost of maintaining navigational aides on the narrow waterway and the Straits of Singapore, said the money would be paid out over five years.

"There is a potential for an accident to happen. If it involves crude oil tankers, there will be a major oil spill. This could disrupt international trade," foundation chairman Yohei Sasakawa told AFP.

"We must take preventive measures before a disaster takes place," he said at a signing ceremony to grant the money to a multinational fund.

Sasakawa urged ship owners to contribute to the navigation safety fund, to combat threats faced by ships plying the vital artery for world trade.

"Our contribution accounts for one-third of the total cost to maintain the safety equipments. Ship owners must contribute to keep the strait safe. It is a dangerous strait as it is full of oil tankers," he said.

The fund, set up last year, is managed by the three littoral states -- Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore, which take three-year rotating terms. Malaysia is the current chair.

The United Arab Emirates, India and Greece have also contributed to the fund.

A total of 7.4 million dollars will be spent this year on maintaining navigational aides including lighthouses, beacons, and buoys to guide ships through the congested waterway and prevent collisions.

A Japanese transport official at the ceremony said that at least 94,000 ships sail the narrow strait annually, and that 20 percent are Japanese vessels -- mostly large crude oil carriers.

The Malacca Strait, one of the busiest waterways in the world, is vital to Japan's national interests as more than 80 percent of its oil passes through it.


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Another case of malaria reported

Eighth case, a foreign worker, on Jurong Island brings total infections since May to 22
Salma Khalik, Straits Times 8 Jul 09;

MALARIA is still spreading, despite intense efforts to get rid of mosquitoes and their breeding sites.

Jurong Island has seen its eighth case, bringing the total number of infections in Singapore since early May to 22.

The latest victim is another foreigner, a 24-year-old who works on a construction site along Jurong Island Highway. He lives on the mainland in Soon Lee Road, where there are no known malaria cases.

He fell ill on June 20, 10 days after the previous victim on the island, another foreign construction worker, did.

Both have since recovered and have been discharged from hospital.

The Ministry of Health said it informed the National Environment Agency (NEA) of this latest case on June 25, two days after it was notified by the patient's doctor.

The current outbreak has also hit 14 people in another cluster in the north - in the Mandai/Sungei Kadut area.

All but two are foreign workers.

Malaria parasites are carried by female Anopheles mosquitoes, which need to feed on blood to reproduce.

When a mosquito bites an infected person, it picks up the parasite from his blood, and passes it to the person it next feeds on. Anopheles mosquitoes are most active at dawn and dusk.

The recent infection surfaced despite the ongoing intensive fogging and search-and-destroy efforts on Jurong Island and in the Mandai/Sungei Kadut areas to prevent the disease from gaining a foothold.

This outbreak of local cases is possibly the country's largest since it was declared malaria-free in 1982. Five people fell ill in the last outbreak in 2007, and 13 contracted the disease the year before.

Singapore also gets between 100 and 300 imported cases a year. Malaria is a 'notifiable disease', which makes it mandatory for doctors to report cases they see to the Health Ministry within 24 hours to minimise spread.

Once malaria becomes endemic like dengue, it will be difficult to eradicate, since it is impossible to rid the nation of all mosquitoes.

The only way to fight it then would be to quarantine the infected, so they do not get bitten again by Anopheles mosquitoes and pass the parasite along. This should break the chain of infection.

People who come down with the illness suffer fever, headache, chills and vomiting spells about 10 to 15 days after being bitten.

The parasites have been known to lie dormant in the body for up to a year. Left untreated, they can cause red blood cells to burst, leading to seizures and sometimes death.

But malaria is eminently curable.

An outbreak is considered over if no new cases surface for 30 days. The Mandai/Sungei Kadut cluster, for example, will get the all-clear if no more cases surface by the end of this week.

The last victim there was sick on June 11.

Another malaria case in Sungei Kadut-Mandai Estate area
Pearl Forss, Channel NewsAsia 26 Jul 09;

SINGAPORE: One more person has contracted malaria in the Sungei Kadut-Mandai Estate area, bringing the total number of cases in this cluster to 16.

The latest person is a 21-year-old foreign construction worker who previously lived in Mandai Estate.

He has no travel history and no history of malaria prior to entry to Singapore. His illness started on June 30.

The last time anyone else contracted malaria in this cluster was on July 1. So far, 14 foreigners and two locals are affected in this cluster.

The National Environment Agency (NEA) and stakeholders, such as dormitory operators, are continuing with vector control operations in the Sungei Sungei Kadut-Mandai Estate area.

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

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

No new breedings have been found since June 27, and NEA says the vector control operations will continue. No other new cluster has been reported.

There are no new cases at Jurong Island and the total number of cases in this cluster remains at seven. The cases are all male foreigners aged 25 to 46, and the onset dates of the cases in this cluster ranged from May 3 to June 10.

- CNA/yt


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Shouldn't we pay less for consuming water?

Straits Times Forum 8 Jul 09;

LAST Thursday's report, 'Forget bottled water, tap water as good as it gets' by Professor Tommy Koh and Ms Leong Ching missed an opportunity to discuss the fair price for water consumption.

While I agree that Singaporeans wasted $98.3 million on bottled water (the cost of plastic bottles and the bottling process) in 2007, and that the quality of bottled water may not be as good as that of tap water, I am not convinced that the true cost of one cubic m of water is $1.17.

In fact, the total price consumers pay is $1.93 after factoring in fees and taxes such as the 30 per cent water conservation fee, 28.03 cent waterborne fee and the 7 per cent goods and services tax.

So, we are paying 76 cents - or 65 per cent - more than the listed tariff. A household consuming 35 cubic m a month pays $67.55 for water.

My question is whether Singaporeans are now paying too much for water with the advent of four national taps - local catchment water, imported water, Newater and desalinated water.

Singapore's average daily consumption of 156 litres compares favourably with other First World nations; in fact, it is an excellent achievement given our hot and humid climate. We compare well with Australia (155 litres) and Britain (157 litres), and are far better than Norway (198 litres), Canada (510 litres) and the United States (1,415 litres). Singaporeans have done well to conserve water. Obviously, we should try and further reduce usage to match the Dutch at 140 litres.

Looking at the production cost of potable water, Canada scores the lowest at 40 US cents (58 Singapore cents), while Germany tops the scale at US$1.80 per cubic m. Between 40 US cents and 70 US cents are countries such as the US, Canada, Spain, Australia, Sweden, Ireland, Finland and Italy.

With Singapore's advanced technology to reclaim water by the process of reverse osmosis, the cost has been brought down to about 50 cents per cubic m. A price breaker compared with the reverse osmosis process of the West at about 62 US cents per cubic m.

Now that we are at the forefront of potable water technology and self-sufficient in water supply, national water agency PUB should consider removing the 30 per cent water conservation fee and waterborne fee of 28 cents.

After decades of faithfully serving the national water conservation cause, Singaporeans deserve to start enjoying the benefits of their conscientiousness.

Paul Chan

Just open and drink
Straits Times Forum 8 Jul 09;

'Bottled water is here to stay because it is convenient and user-friendly.'

MR MIKE CHAN: 'I refer to Professor Tommy Koh and Ms Leong Ching's article last Thursday ('Forget bottled water, tap water as good as it gets'). Yes, we should drink tap water at home or in the office, but in a restaurant or other eateries? I will never drink water in a glass brought by a waiter. Who knows where he obtained it from? Better be safe than sorry. Bottled water is here to stay because it is convenient and user-friendly. It is cheap and cleanly sealed. Most modern offices have clean drinking water. However, the water is supplied by a vendor and is not from the office taps. Restaurants and offices should be encouraged to use the tap water from their premises. One way to advance conservation is to use tap water and not commercially supplied water. It is a habit among Singaporeans to drink tap water only after it has been boiled or filtered and not directly. They will, however, drink bottled water readily and directly, without reservations.''

PUB REPLIES: Need for water conservation tax
Straits Times Forum 11 Jul 09;

PUB, the national water agency, refers to Mr Paul Chan's letter on Wednesday, 'Shouldn't we pay less for consuming water?'. Mr Chan commented on the relevance of the water conservation tax and waterborne fee.

Singapore's water supply from local sources has been diversified and made more robust with the introduction of Newater and desalinated water, as well as the development of additional local catchments including Marina, Punggol and Serangoon reservoirs. PUB is confident of ensuring Singapore's self-sufficiency in water supply if need be.

Local catchment water collected through rainfall is limited and subjected to the vagaries of weather and climate change. We will need to rely more on both Newater and desalinated water in future. Desalinated water, in particular, is much more expensive than water supplied from local catchment as desalination is energy-intensive. Water conservation is still necessary to reduce our reliance on costly desalination.

Water pricing is an important and effective mechanism to get consumers to conserve water. The Government prices water not only to recover the full costs of producing and distributing it, but also to reflect the scarcity of this precious resource and the higher cost of additional water supplies. Thus, the Government levies a water conservation tax as part of the water charges. The waterborne fee and the sanitary appliance fee are to cover the cost of providing a modern sanitation system.

Singaporeans have been supportive of water conservation, and this enables us to bring down our per capita domestic water consumption from 165 litres per day in 2003 to the current 156 litres. An average household of four consumes 19 cubic m per month, and its monthly water bill, inclusive of sanitation fees, is about $42. We aim to further reduce the level of per capita domestic water consumption to 147 litres per day by 2020.

PUB thanks Mr Chan for his comments.
Chan Yoon Kum
Assistant Chief Executive
PUB

Water conservation tax hard to swallow
Straits Times Forum 15 Jul 09;

I REFER to last Saturday's letter ('Need for water conservation tax') by Mr Chan Yoon Kum, assistant chief executive of national water agency PUB, in response to my letter ('Shouldn't we pay less for consuming water?') on July 8.

Mr Chan did not address the crux of my question, which was this: After many decades of conscientiously and successfully pursuing water conservation measures, is it necessary to continue using a hefty pricing mechanism to penalise consumers for some incremental reduction?

What is the ideal limit of water consumption in our hot and humid climate without compromising basic hygiene that would convince the PUB to remove the water conservation tax and waterborne fees?

According to a study in 2003, 'The water issue between Singapore and Malaysia: No solution in sight?', by Dr Lee Poh Onn, a Fellow of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore produced 1.3 million cubic m of water per day. The PUB revealed that by last year, the daily capacity had increased to more than 1.4 million cubic m, of which domestic households consumed half and the rest was sold for commercial revenues.

The report quoted that our raw water processing cost was 25.3 cents per cubic m. Dr Lee summarised the production cost of imported water at 26 cents, Newater at 39 cents and desalination water at 78 cents (exchange rate of S$1 to RM$2.08 in 2003).

By 2011, the PUB will be producing 1.33 million cubic m of water (0.68 million cubic m from catchments, 0.4 million cubic m from desalination and 0.25 million cubic m of Newater).

Based on the 2003 study, the average cost would be 41.5 cents per cubic m. With a 20 per cent increase, the cost is about 50 cents per cubic m.

There is hardly any justification for responsible consumers to pay $2.21 per cubic m of water quoting Mr Chan's example. The water tariff in Johor Baru is 36 cents (90 Malaysian sen), while that in Hong Kong is HK$4.15 (80 Singapore cents) per cubic m.

Is it logical or reasonable for Singaporeans to pay over four times the recovery cost of drinking water - a basic human need?

While it is laudable that Singapore proudly and unselfishly helps solve the water dilemma by sharing its drinking water technology with the world, the country's citizens should also share the benefits of Singapore's water success.

It took us a long time to get to where we are now; where we are self-sufficient with less imported water if needed on a sustainable basis.

Tax revenues and sanitary fees should cover the maintenance cost of the sanitation system. Hence, the water conservation tax and waterborne fees have lost their intended purposes. They can only become an extra burden on citizens.

Paul Chan

Water tax at odds with pro-family policies
Straits Times Forum 15 Jul 09;

MANY consumers will agree with national water agency PUB's acknowledgement ('Need for water conservation tax', July11) of Mr Paul Chan's view ('Shouldn't we pay less for consuming water?', July 8) that Singaporeans have been conscientious and supportive of water conservation measures.

Few will disagree with the agency's caution about the scarcity of water and need to conserve it as a precious resource.

But the issue raised by Mr Chan, which the PUB did not address, was whether the water conservation tax is out of date. Just as estate duty has been abolished, the water conservation tax should be scrapped for the following reasons:

The tax is at a very high rate of 30 per cent. In addition, the goods and services tax (GST) at 7 per cent is imposed over and above the water conservation tax. Indirectly, the Government collects additional GST as a result of the water conservation tax.

The water conservation tax is also at odds with two key public policies: encouraging families to have more children and encouraging adult children to support their elderly parents.

The water conservation tax seems to penalise those who have more children and who support their aged parents as more people in a household results in more water consumption.

When the GST was introduced, it was marketed as a fairer tax because the more you consume, the more tax you pay. So, do we still need a water conservation tax? It is time that the tax is reviewed.

Manmohan Singh


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Australian town set to ban bottled water

Yahoo News 8 Jul 09;

SYDNEY (AFP) – An Australian town is set to ban bottled water over concerns about its environmental impact, in what is believed to be a world first.

Bundanoon, a picturesque rural town with a population of just 2,000, was expected to vote heavily in favour of the move with a show of hands at a public meeting later.

"At the moment we've got a lot of community support behind it. We're confident the town is going to back it," said activist John Dee.

"We believe Bundanoon is the world's first town that has got its retailers to ban bottled water. We haven't found it anywhere else."

Local opinion was incensed when beverage company Norlex Holdings announced plans to tap an underground reservoir in the town, truck the water up to Sydney and then send it back in bottled form.

"The company has been looking to extract water locally, bottle it in Sydney and bring it back here to sell it again," said Dee.

"It made people look at the environmental impact of bottled water and the community has been quite vocal about it."

Dee, whose Do Something group was instrumental in a plastic bags ban in Coles Bay, Tasmania, said he hoped the ban would make people think twice about buying bottled water.

"It's possible it will extend to other places. The main idea is to get people thinking about their usage of bottled water -- we're spending about half a billion dollars on it here in Australia," he said.

Retailers in the New South Wales town, south of Sydney, have already agreed to stop stocking bottled water.

Activists say bottling water causes unnecessary use of plastics and fuel for transport. A New South Wales study found that in 2006, the industry was responsible for releasing 60,000 tonnes of gases blamed for global warming.


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Reef in the Pacific bounces back from injury

James Cook University, ScienceAlert 8 Jul 09;

Hope some of the world’s corals may be able to escape destruction under climate change has emerged from a study by an international team of scientists working in French Polynesia in the Pacific.

The researchers found that corals off Moorea, in the central Pacific, have rebounded on five occasions despite sustaining heavy damage from four bleaching events and one cyclone in the past 18 years.

In particular they were able to recover even after the reef had been swamped by weeds, says team member Dr Lucie Penin of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University.

“We conclude from this that coral reefs may not completely disappear as a result of climate change – as some people fear they might,” she says. (In the earth’s past history corals have become either nearly or totally extinct on five separate occasions, and some researchers warn that conditions under global warming may prove similar to those previous events.)

However Dr Penin notes that the corals studied lie on the outer reef slope of an island that is not heavily populated, and that the main human impact on them is fishing. “The lack of human pressure on the reef makes it more resilient,” she says. “This research suggests that, if left alone, coral reefs have the possibility to recover and re-grow.”

However the addition of further human disturbances such as silt, nutrients and chemicals from the land or physical destruction of corals compounds the impact of natural events such as bleaching and storms, making it all the more important to keep these in check.

Researcher Loïc Thibaut adds: “One of the salient feature of this reef is that the fish community, and in particular herbivorous fishes have remained at high levels of abundances throughout the study. This might well explain why the coral community recovered so quickly despite the catastrophic events it had to face.”

Dr Penin said the Tiahura Outer Reef Sector of Moorea had been closely studied for four decades by scientists, and the corals responses to natural disturbances was now well understood.

The five major disturbances had reduced coral cover at the time from over 50 per cent of the area to as little as 22 per cent while, in the early nineties sea weeds known as turf algae had taken over more than half of the area in the wake of cyclone and bleaching. However key coral species were able to re-colonise the reef in subsequent years.

“Our results support the idea that a rapid recovery from a weed-dominated reef to a coral dominated one is possible – but it will depend on what other pressures the corals are facing,” Dr Penin says. “It also shows that a fast recovery, in just a decade, is possible under the right conditions.”

However since the study was completed the Tiahura reef has come under a new threat – Crown of Thorns starfish have mounted a severe attack on the corals, slashing coral cover to as little as two per cent in some areas.

“We are keeping a very close eye on this outbreak. Right now the reef is in a very bad condition, but there are signs of recovery and we are hoping it will come back from this as it has from the damage caused by bleaching and cyclones,” she says.

The paper 'Recurrent disturbances, recovery trajectories, and resilience of coral assemblages on a South Central Pacific reef' by Adjeroud M and colleagues, appeared in the online journal Coral Reefs in early June.


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Fishy tale: one man's fight to save tuna

Sydney Morning Herald 7 Jul 09;

Hagen Stehr was at home in Adelaide, on March 12 when his company's chief scientist called with news that their bet of about $60 million on the breeding of southern bluefin tuna in captivity - a feat never accomplished before - might finally pay off.

"Big fella, you better come back," scientist Morten Deichmann said to the 6-foot-1-inch Stehr. Stehr, chairman of Port Lincoln-based Clean Seas Tuna, rushed more than 500 kilometers to his company's fish hatchery outside Arno Bay in southern Australia.

With tears in his eyes, he pushed his Toyota Land Cruiser to its top speed of 180 kilometers an hour as he raced to see the fertilized eggs for himself.

As the owner of a fishing fleet during the past four decades, Stehr had helped empty the seas of the bluefin tuna used in sushi restaurants from New York to Tokyo. Now, at age 67, he believed he was on the verge of saving the tuna - and the industry that made him rich - from the threat of extinction.

"Everyone thought I was a bloody lunatic," says the suntanned Stehr, in jeans and a checked shirt. "Nobody in the world had ever done this. We've created a sustainable fishing industry for years ahead."

The majestic bluefin, a metallic-blue-and-silver fish, is prized by sushi lovers in Japan, the US and Europe for the rich taste and creamy texture of its meat. In their zeal to feed those palates, fishermen have almost wiped out the two species of bluefin - northern and southern - while also threatening the yellowfin and bigeye tuna.

Nothing left to fish

The eastern Atlantic bluefin, a northern variety found in the Mediterranean Sea, will probably vanish within 10 years, says a study by marine scientist Brian MacKenzie at the National Institute of Aquatic Resources in Charlottenlund, Denmark.

"In a few years, there'll be nothing left for us to fish," says Atsushi Sasaki, a Japanese fisherman who's caught bluefin for 20 years. "The collapse of bluefin is just around the corner."

The Japanese - the biggest consumers of bluefin - devour 80 percent of the world's catch. The fish has been served at restaurants such as Nobu, a chain of at least 18 high-end Japanese eateries. The menu at Nobu London, however, warns that bluefin is a threatened species and asks patrons to order an alternative dish.

Failed quotas

This is more than another fish story. The saga of the bluefin, a creature that can swim 45,000 miles in 17 months to spawn and feed, shows the difficulties in managing resources across borders - a sign of the challenges ahead as countries confront the more intractable problems of environmental degradation and global warming. At the same time, Stehr's indoor-breeding breakthrough points to the role technology may play in addressing these broader resource issues.

Since the early 1980s, countries working through the United Nations have tried - and failed - to set catch quotas tough enough to protect bluefin and other tuna from overfishing.

"Where you have politicians arguing for a share of a quota, that quota will inevitably be inflated," says Callum Roberts, a marine conservation biologist at the University of York in England. "That kind of decision making guarantees the collapse of a population."

Stehr and his scientists now must find a way to grow fertilized hatchery eggs into adult tuna. One challenge: The bluefin, a predator, eats its young.

$US20,000 tuna

"If Hagen Stehr can solve the issues surrounding breeding predacious fish, he'll have a sustainable product that will last forever," says Barbara Block, a professor of marine science at Stanford University in California. "The future lies somewhere in what they're doing."

Clean Seas, which has raised about $US58 million since its initial public offering in December 2005, plans to build more indoor tanks to protect and grow young fingerlings before they're put into the ocean. Stehr aims to produce at least 250,000 bluefin by 2015 - a number that would almost equal the total bluefin catch of Australia's fishermen in a single year.

As prices soar for bluefin, which sell for as much as $US20,000 a fish at Tsukiji, the world's largest fish market in Tokyo, Stehr stands to add to his fortune.

He's worth about $US135 million, according to the 2009 annual Australian rich list by BRW magazine, owned by Fairfax Media, publisher of this website. "It's about more than making money," Stehr says. "I would like to leave a legacy to the world with bluefin."

Sky diver

Stehr, who's invested millions of his own money in the breeding of southern bluefin, has always been a risk taker. The former owner of a sky-diving school, he once jumped out of an airplane attached to a parachute packed into a shoe box that he held tucked under his arm.

"It's more gung-ho-like," says Stehr, who has a dragon figure tattooed on his forearm. "You make an exit out of the airplane door; you throw the shoe box in the air and pray to God that the chute comes out."

Since the 1970s, Stehr has helped build a tuna industry that was worth about $US7.2 billion globally in 2006. The fishermen have thrived on the high seas, particularly in the Mediterranean, where they have exceeded quotas established by regulators.

Greenpeace protest

The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, the UN body that controls the Mediterranean region, set the limit for eastern Atlantic bluefin between 32,000 metric tons and 29,500 metric tons from 1999 to 2007.

During that period, even as ICCAT's own scientists pushed unsuccessfully for lower quotas, fishermen blew past the limits. They netted twice as much bluefin tuna as permitted, or up to 60,000 tons a year, according to ICCAT data.

In November 2008, ICCAT, composed of agricultural officials from 46 nations, including France, Spain, Italy and Japan, held a meeting in Morocco to set stricter quotas. As the meeting began, activists from the environmental group Greenpeace International dumped 5 tons of bluefin tuna heads in front of France's Agriculture Ministry building in Paris under a banner reading "Bluefin Tuna Massacre." The pile of gray-blue heads, each about the size of a basketball, spilled off the sidewalk into the street.

Greenpeace activists and several scientists were calling for ICCAT to temporarily ban bluefin fishing.

"If the situation doesn't improve, ICCAT will take the blame for managing the collapse of one of the most important and profitable fisheries of our time," says Sebastian Losada, oceans campaigner for Greenpeace in Spain.

Merchant marine

Regulators did lower annual quotas to 18,500 tons of bluefin by 2010 and for the first time required that an ICCAT observer be onboard the larger vessels that use purse seines - crane-operated nets that can capture as much as 100 tons of fish in a day.

"If people play by the rules, we'll still have a fishing season next year," says Nathalie Charbonneau, a spokeswoman for the European Commission, whose ICCAT members account for 66 per cent of the bluefin quota.

Stehr began fishing for tuna in 1961 after he arrived in Australia with little money and no work. A native of Germany, he left home at the age of 12 to become a cadet with the merchant marines and later served as a seaman on cargo ships, bouncing from job to job. When his freighter docked at Port Lincoln, Stehr got off the vessel and never returned.

Crazy days

After a decade of catching tuna for other operators, he used money he earned diving for abalone to start his own fishing outfit. By the 1980s, the entrepreneur owned several companies that he brought together under the Stehr Group. Today, it boasts a fleet of 21 vessels that range from 30 feet to 100 feet long.

Stehr compares the heyday of bluefin fishing in the Great Australian Bight off the country's southern coast to the Battle of Britain during World War II, when waves of German Luftwaffe bombers attacked England. Rival fishing companies flew as many as 12 planes at a time from Port Lincoln to spot schools of fish.

"Those days were crazy," says Stehr. "It was catch as much as you can, kill as many fish in the shortest possible period of time, make a lot of money, then have the rest of the year off. We raped the industry quite badly."

While Stehr was on his way to catching tens of thousands of tons of southern bluefin in his fishing career, Australia, Japan and New Zealand moved to slow the destruction. The governments began lowering their quotas for the fish in 1984, dropping them to a total of about 14,000 tons per year a decade later.

Fish farming

The Australian government stood out for cracking down on quota violators, and in 2006 it accused Japan of exceeding its bluefin limit by a total of about 178,000 tons from 1985 to 2005. Japan acknowledged that some overfishing took place.

"You can't even catch three too many or you end up a criminal," Stehr says. "We all had our backs against the wall. Most of us were virtually bankrupt."

To keep his business afloat in the early 1990s, Stehr helped start ocean-based fish farming - now a booming industry that has exacerbated the reduction of bluefin. Before quotas, fishermen chased the largest tuna because those earned the most profit at market. As restrictions cut into Stehr's catch, he kept more of the younger tuna, which weighed less, and transferred them to cages at sea.

"We towed large cages in from 300, 400 miles out in the Great Australian Bight all the way to Port Lincoln," Stehr says.

After feeding tuna in 20 cages for up to 8 months - enlarging them to weights that surpass his annual 400-ton catch limit - Stehr sells them to Japan, Europe and the US.

Mediterranean boom

About 70 such farms dot the coasts of Spain, Italy, Croatia and Turkey - turning the Mediterranean region into a tuna pantry for Japan. The farms have a total capacity of 57,582 tons, or about three times the total ICCAT quota for the area this year.

They hold fish caught in the spring, which is the prime fishing season in the Mediterranean, until the winter, when demand peaks in Japan.

"In the beginning, ranching was a sustainable business that made sense; it really controlled the trade flux in bluefin," says Roberto Mielgo Bregazzi, a Spaniard who developed the first farms in the Mediterranean. "Then the business matured and resulted in a mushrooming of tuna ranches. In 15 years, we have almost wiped out the entire stock, and I'm very pessimistic we can save it."

He quit the industry in 2003 and started ATRT Tuna-Ranching Intelligence Unit to expose abuses in the trade.

As wild tuna became scarcer, Stehr started Clean Seas in 2000 with the idea of breeding the fish. The hatchery is set on 700 hectares (1,730 acres) surrounded by sheep ranches and grain farms just outside Arno Bay. The concrete breeding tank - about 25 meters in diameter and 7 meters deep - is housed in a plain, white shed that's monitored with security cameras.

"We are quite strict who we let into our hatchery," Stehr says.

To get the bluefin to breed, scientists at Clean Seas designed the tank to simulate conditions in the ocean. Using overhead lights to suggest the sun and moon, saltwater piped in from the ocean, artificial currents and temperature controls, the scientists have tried to re-create the experience of a spawning journey for the fish.

Helicopter airlift

Stehr hired a former Vietnam War helicopter pilot to airlift 400-pound (180-kilogram) adult tuna one by one from the sea to the tank. The fish were pacified, suspended beneath the helicopter, flown over the top of the shed, which has a removable roof, and lowered into the tank. Scientists were concerned that the effects of stress on the tuna from what Stehr called a "military-style operation" might prevent them from spawning.

"It's like playing cricket with hand grenades," Stehr says. "If something goes wrong, it costs you mega dollars."

Miles Wise, one of about 20 scientists who live at the hatchery for months at a time, watches over the feeding and health of the tuna via a flat-screen monitor. Once a week, he dons a wet suit and enters the tank to get a closer look at the tuna, a fish that will die if it stops swimming.

"They are a difficult species to work with, so it's been very trying over the last couple of years," Wise says.

The fish entered the tank in 2006, and for three years the females didn't produce eggs although the males were making sperm. Stehr's scientists changed almost every variable, including water temperature and the age of the males.

Hormone injections

Hormone injections, given to females using spearguns, were a key in finally getting the tuna to spawn, says Abigail Elizur, a professor at the University of Sunshine Coast in Queensland, who works with Clean Seas. In March, the females began to lay eggs, setting off a mating ritual that lasted for more than one month. On some days, the tuna generated as many as 2 million fertilized eggs.

"Every time you crack a new species, it's always very exciting," says Deichmann, the chief scientist who also helped Stehr breed kingfish, a type of amberjack popular for making sushi in Japan. "To everybody that is working in marine hatchery, tuna is the crown. It is probably the most significant thing I have done."

In 2002, Kinki University's fisheries laboratory in southern Japan first bred northern bluefin in the ocean under the stewardship of marine scientist Yoshifumi Sawada. The problem with ocean breeding is that the tuna don't consistently produce fertilised eggs, and only 2 per cent of them survive to become juveniles due to cannibalism and dietary issues. Sawada says his project is a long way from achieving large-scale commercial production.

Preventing cannibalism

The university sold 5000 fingerlings last year to commercial farms, equal to only 2.5 per cent of the 200,000 young tuna caught by Japanese fishing companies for farming annually.

"It's not enough," Sawada says.

Stehr may have more success in mass-producing tuna. At Clean Seas, the use of hormones may spur females to spawn more consistently, says Elizur. And scientists can prevent cannibalism by removing the eggs, which float to the surface of the water, from the tanks.

"We have over 50 million fertilised eggs and larvae," Stehr says. "We have so many we can hold the equivalent of 28 years of quotas for wild southern bluefin in the palm of one hand."

Stehr still must overcome other obstacles to growing tuna into adults. The fish used to feed captive tuna - primarily mackerel and sardines - are also in short supply in many parts of the world. In attempting to save tuna, breeders have to find a way to avoid wiping out the feeder fish. Clean Seas is developing wheat-based pellets to feed its tuna.

General Patton

"Within five years, they'll be breeding thousands of young tuna," says Stanford's Block, who's served as an unpaid adviser to Clean Seas. "We still have to solve the feed issue, and that's the huge worry out there."

In looking for inspiration during the tough years when he couldn't get his tuna to spawn, Stehr would open a history book about his hero, George Patton, the four-star US general who helped repel the German offensive at the Battle of the Bulge during World War II.

"When I feel kind of low, I read General Patton," says Stehr, who has the warrior's picture on his office wall.

If Stehr's breeding experiment bears fruit, it will change his place in history - from one of the fishermen who endangered the bluefin to the entrepreneur who helped save it.


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New Long-Tailed Monkey Discovered in Amazon

livescience.com 7 Jul 09;

A new monkey subspecies with quite a long tail has been discovered in a remote region of the Amazon in Brazil.

The monkey is mostly gray and dark brown in color, with a distinctly mottled "saddle." It weighs somewhat less than a pound (213 grams) and is 9 inches (240 millimeters) tall with a foot-long (320 millimeter) tail.

The little primate is related to saddleback tamarins, which include several species of monkeys known for their distinctively marked backs. The newly described distinct subspecies, announced today, was first seen by scientists on a 2007 expedition into the state of Amazonas in northwestern Brazil.

Researchers have dubbed the monkey Mura's saddleback tamarin (saguinus fuscicollis mura) named after the Mura Indians, the ethnic group of Amerindians of the Purus and Madeira river basins where the monkey occurs. Historically this tribe was spread through the largest territory of any of the Amazonian Indigenous peoples, extending from the Peruvian frontier today (Rio Yavari) east to the Rio Trombetas.

The monkey's discovery was published in the June online edition of the International Journal of Primatology. Authors of the study include Fabio Röhe of the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Jose de Sousa e Silva Jr. of Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Ricardo Sampaio of the Instituto Nacional de Parquisas de Amaozônia, and Anthony B. Rylands of Conservation International.

The monkey is threatened by several planned development projects in the region, particularly a major highway cutting through the Amazon that is currently being paved, Röhe said. Conservationists fear the highway could fuel wider deforestation in the Amazon over the next two decades. Other threats to the region include a proposed gas pipeline and two hydroelectric dams currently in the beginning stages of construction.

"This newly described monkey shows that even today there are still major wildlife discoveries to be made," said Röhe, the study's lead author. "This discovery should serve as a wake-up call that there is still so much to learn from the world's wild places, yet humans continue to threaten these areas with destruction."

The Wildlife Conservation Society helped establish the Mamirauá, Amanã, and Piagaçu-Purus Sustainable Development Reserves in Brazil, which represent some of the largest protected blocks of rainforest on the planet.

WCS researchers have discovered several new monkey species in recent years: the Arunachal macaque, discovered in India in late 2004; and the Madidi monkey and Kipunji discovered in Bolivia and Tanzania respectively in 2005. In 2008, Jean Boubli, who now works for WCS, discovered a new species of uakari monkey in the Amazon.

The GEOMA project at the Ministry of Science and Technology of Brazil helped to support the project that led to the discovery of the monkey.

The Good News: A New Monkey Is Discovered; The Bad News: It Is Already at Risk
Construction projects could soon harm the Amazonian habitats of a tiny tamarin
Lynne Peeples, Scientific American 8 Jul 09;

A new monkey is swinging through the Amazon rainforests—at least it's new to scientists. Unfortunately, the future of this mini monkey, weighing in at just 7.5 ounces (213 grams) and nine inches (23 centimeters) tall, is already threatened by human development.

The discovery of Mura's saddleback tamarin was announced today by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) in New York City and published online in the International Journal of Primatology.

"We keep finding new species of plants, insects and butterflies. But it is more and more difficult to find newer species of mammals," says Avecita Chicchón, director of WCS's Latin American and Caribbean Program, unable to suppress her excitement about the new rabbit-size primate. "It is our relative, albeit a little more distant than the gorilla. Looking into its eyes is like looking in the mirror."

The new subspecies of saddleback tamarin is gray and brown in color, with a mottled back and long tail. It is named for the Mura Indians who populate the remote Purus and Madeira river basins where the monkey lives. At this point, scientists have no way of knowing just how many roam the region.

This portion of Brazil is also home to several development projects, including a section of major highway currently being paved through parts of the Amazon's approximately 2.7 million square miles (seven million square kilometers) of tropical rainforest. Construction has also begun on two hydroelectric dams, with a proposed gas pipeline likely close behind.

"These are a significant threat to wildlife that are not even documented," Chicchón says. She advocates the need for more thorough calculations of costs and benefits—for the environment, the people and the wildlife—before these kinds of projects are carried out.

Although the monkey's discovery likely won't stave off the development, Chicchón believes that it will "help us highlight the need to keep doing explorations and to document the diversity of life in the Amazon—the last wilderness on Earth."


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Aquatic Asian mousedeer and ancient whales

Matt Walker, BBC News 7 Jul 09;

If you startled a deer, you might not expect it to jump into the nearest pond and submerge itself for minutes.

But that is exactly what two species of mouse-deer in Asia do when confronted by predators, scientists have found. One other African mouse-deer species is known to do the same thing, but the new discovery suggests all ruminants may once have had an affinity with water.

It also lends support to the idea that whales evolved from water-loving creatures that looked like small deer.

There are around 10 species of mouse-deer, which are also called 'chevrotains'.

All belong to the ancient ruminant family Tragulidae, which split some 50 million years ago from other ruminants, the group that went on to evolve into cattle, goats, sheep, deer and antelope.



Each are small, deer-like creatures that unusually don't have antlers or horns. Instead they have large upper canine teeth, which in the males project down either side of the lower jaw.

The largest species, which stands no more than 80cm tall, lives in Africa and is thought to be the most primitive of all mouse-deer. Known as the water-chevrotain, this animal likes to live in swampy habitats. When alarmed, it dashes for the nearest river where it submerges and swims underwater to safety.

All of the other species of mouse-deer, which live in southeast Asia and India and Sri Lanka were thought to be dry-land animals.

Diving deer

That was until researchers witnessed some remarkable behaviour during two separate incidents.

The first occurred in June 2008 during a biodiversity survey in northern Central Kalimantan Province in Borneo, Indonesia.

During the survey, observers saw a mouse-deer swimming in a forest stream. When the animal noticed the observers it submerged. Over the next hour, they saw it come to the surface four or five times, and maybe more unseen. But it often remained submerged for more than five minutes at a time.

Eventually the observers caught the animal, which they identified as a pregnant female, then released it unharmed.

Among the survey team was the wife of Erik Meijaard, a senior ecologist working with the Nature Conservancy in Balikpapan, Indonesia.

Meijaard knew of anecdotal reports by local people who described deer hiding in creeks and rivers when chased by their dogs. When he saw photos of the deer he identified it as a greater mouse-deer ( Tragulus napu ).

The same year, Meijaard also heard reports of a mouse-deer in Sri Lanka that had also been seen swimming underwater.

Three observers saw a mountain mouse-deer ( Moschiola spp) run into a pond and start to swim, hotly pursued by a brown mongoose. The mouse-deer submerged itself, and eventually the mongoose retreated. The deer left the water only to be chased straight back into it by the mongoose.

"It came running again and dived into the water and swam underwater. I photographed this clearly and it became clear to me at this stage that swimming was an established part of its escape repertoire," says Gehan de Silva Wijeyeratne, who saw the incident.

"Seeing it swim underwater was a shock. Many mammals can swim in water. But other than those which are adapted for an aquatic existence, swimming is clumsy. The mouse-deer seemed comfortable, it seemed adapted," he says.

Origins of whales

Meijaard, Wijeyeratne and Umilaela, who saw the submerged Bornean mouse-deer, describe both incidents in the journal Mammalian Biology .

"This is the first time that this behaviour has been described for Asian mouse-deer species," says Meijaard. "I was very excited when I heard the mouse-deer stories because it resolved one of those mysteries that local people had told me about but that had remained hidden to science."

"The behaviour is interesting because it is unexpected. Deer are supposed to walk on land and graze not swim underwater. But more interestingly for the zoologist are the evolutionary implications," he says.

The behaviour bolsters one leading theory regarding the origin of whales.

In 2007, scientists led by Hans Thewissen of the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine in Ohio published details of a remarkable fossil called Indohyus .

This fossil was of a ruminant animal that looked like a small deer, but also had morphological features that showed it could be an ancestor of early whales.

Although speculative, that suggests that all early ruminants may also have led a partially aquatic lifestyle.

The discovery that two Asian species of mouse-deer are comfortable underwater shows that at least three species of modern tragulid share an aquatic escape behaviour.

Because these species diverged at least 35 million years ago, their ancestor also likely behaved in the same way, again bolstering the the idea that a deer-like ruminant may have evolved to produce the modern cetacean group of whales and dolphins.

Hippos, the closest modern relative of whales, also dive for water when threatened, a behaviour that may have been lost over time by other modern species such as sheep and antelope.


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Producers may abandon pricier 'green' palm oil

Business Times 8 Jul 09;

(KUALA LUMPUR) The slow uptake of pricier 'green' palm oil in European supermarkets may see Asian producers focus on cheaper variants that have been sustainably sourced in the first place, a Malaysian palm industry official said yesterday.

The extra cost lies in hiring auditors to ensure that palm oil is produced without felling rainforests and building new storage tanks and processors to keep the supply chain 'clean', but this has not worked with consumers, Malaysian Palm Oil Council chief executive Yusof Basiron said.

Price-conscious shoppers are now finding it difficult to think green in the global economic downturn, food manufacturers and supermarket chains have said, and the economics does not help.

Palm oil undergoing an ethical certification process trades at a US$50 premium to wholesale prices, currently at US$600 a tonne, halving its discount to rival soyoil, industry watchers say.

Malaysia and Indonesia, the top palm oil suppliers, ship 34 million tonnes of the vegetable oil globally, with the European Union taking up roughly 15 per cent for food and fuel requirements, industry data showed.

In recent years, European lawmakers and green groups moved to cut the region's targets on traditional biofuel use and called for an ethical certification system in the food sector because of fears that rapid estate expansion to keep up with booming global demand encouraged deforestation.

The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), created in 2004, had seen only 15,000 tonnes of certified green palm oil sold since the first shipment last November, just 2.5 per cent of total certified output so far, a top RSPO official said in May.

'The market signal is very clear. We can supply at a premium but if buyers are clearly not interested, the palm oil suppliers will have to change tack. This is still a business, after all,' Mr Yusof said.

He said demand for palm oil produced without the certification process was still strong, thanks to the Middle Eastern countries as well as top consumers China and India, whose populations are expanding\. \-- Reuters


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IUCN report urges forestry industry to tackle conflict with local people

IUCN 8 Jul 09;

Conflict between companies that profit from forests and local people who depend on them could be tackled by industry-led approaches but too few companies use them, says a report published today (8 July) by The Forests Dialogue (TFD), an international group of forest experts from business, environmental, academic and human rights groups.

The report, written for TFD by the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), urges companies to take the lead in resolving existing conflicts and preventing new ones from arising.

Conflict in the forest sector is common and can range from wars of words to serious acts of violence. It most often follows disputes over rights to land and resources but can also arise over conservation priorities, pollution, and access to benefits from the sector. Conflict is a lose-lose situation. For local communities it means diminished livelihoods and worse, and for the private sector it increases costs and risks.

"Most companies in the forest sector have no formal systems to address conflict, despite there being clear ethical and business cases for doing so,” says Emma Wilson, a senior researcher at IIED and author of the report. “Forest certification schemes often require companies to have systems for local stakeholders to raise grievances, but very few companies are certified and those that are tend to have systems that are ad hoc or in their early pilot stages.”

The report shows that while company-led approaches for avoiding and managing conflict in the forest sector do exist, they are rarely used to their full potential. It calls for a range of mechanisms and flexible, locally tailored approaches to address conflicts.

"This report draws on established best practice to show how companies can take the lead in resolving conflicts and pursuing fair and equitable outcomes,” says TFD co-leader Stewart Maginnis, of International Union for the Conservation of Nature. “It shows that even where national legislation to protect poor people’s rights is woefully inadequate, private sector relations with local communities do not have to be held hostage to the lowest common denominator but can live up fully to the aspirations of good corporate social responsibility.”

The report calls for more industry-wide sharing of experience and knowledge, and the development of broadly applicable means of resolving conflicts.

"Sustainable companies invest for the long term, so they have a broader perspective than the average company on who their major stakeholders are and a deeper interest in understanding and accommodating local expectations and concerns,” says TFD co-leader James Griffiths, who heads the sustainable forestry programme at the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD). “This report – which features several WBCSD member companies - can help share best practice within the sector, while clarifying the respective roles of companies and other stakeholders, like government, in address existing conflicts or avoiding future ones.”

The report acknowledges that companies will not be able to do this alone. It urges companies to build effective, equitable and lasting relationships with groups that are directly affected by forestry operations – including indigenous peoples, forest owners and user groups, unions, other businesses, civil society organisations, community leaders and government – in order to address environmental and social concerns. To be effective, companies also need supportive local policies and laws. The report highlights the potential for good practice in company-led approaches to influence the local policy environment through demonstration.

“Enduring conflicts between forest peoples and forestry companies have been one of the main barriers to good relations between corporations and communities,” says Marcus Colchester, Director of the Forest Peoples Programme, a human rights group.

“As this report stresses, conflicts may be rooted in the lack of recognition of customary rights in national laws and policies but such conflicts can be resolved by companies going the extra mile. Better though if governments provide a fairer basis in the first place.”

The report notes that some conflicts can only partially be addressed by voluntary corporate approaches, especially if they are deeply rooted in historical land use and land reform processes. Such conflicts may be addressed most effectively through reform of policy and the practices of governments and bureaucracies.

TFD members are drawn from organisations such as the International Tropical Timber Organization, World Bank, International Institute for Environment and Development, World Business Council for Sustainable Development, International Union for the Conservation of Nature, Forest Peoples Programme and International Alliance of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forests.

Members of TFD participate as individuals, not organisational delegates.

To request an embargoed copy of the report, email: mike.shanahan@iied.org


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WWF says key UK marine species under threat

Reuters 8 Jul 09;

LONDON (Reuters) - Much of Britain's marine biodiversity is under threat from human activity, according to a report on Wednesday which highlights the plight of harbour porpoises and Atlantic salmon.

Legislation currently passing through parliament does not go far enough to protect marine species, says the WWF-UK conservation organisation.

It says the danger comes from activities like oil and gas exploitation, fishing and emerging threats such as climate change.

Its latest research shows:

-- Despite being the most heavily protected species in the UK, populations of the harbour porpoise are still declining in areas around tshe UK due to incidental capture or by-catch

-- The pink sea fan, one of the most exotic of our sea bed species, continues to be damaged by fishing gear and is being put at greater risk of natural disease.

-- Seagrass beds which provide rich habitats for an array of marine life, including seahorses, and are an important source of food for wading birds, are still being damaged by activities such as anchoring and trawling, and depleted populations show no sign of recovery.

-- Atlantic salmon continue to decline and the UK-wide population is considered unstable. The numbers of salmon returning to British rivers from our seas are still a fraction of populations 30 years ago.

"Now is the crucial time to put things right, with a long awaited UK Marine and Coastal Access Bill close to being finalised," WWF-UK said.

However, it added, it has concerns that the legislation making its way through parliament will not go far enough to secure the health of some of our flagship species.

The organisation's marine officer, Dr Lyndsey Dodds, said in a statement: "WWF's Marine Health Check has shown no improvement in the status of iconic species such as the harbour porpoise since the year 2000.

"It is clear that the mish-mash of current laws governing the use of our seas is having a catastrophic effect on marine wildlife.

"We need to ensure that new legislation will reverse this trend and reduce the many pressures being placed on our most vulnerable species."

The WWF wants to Bill to be strengthened and says economic interests could still take precedence over conservation needs.

(Reporting by Olivia Smart; Editing by Steve Addison)


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Arctic warming sees more polar bear populations threatened

WWF 7 Jul 09;

The world’s top experts have just confirmed that Arctic warming is continuing its ravages of polar bear populations. The Polar Bear Specialist Group of the International Union of the Conservation of Nature has added to its list of declining polar bear populations.

“There is a disturbing downward trend apparent in world polar bear populations,” says Geoff York, polar bear coordinator for WWF International’s Arctic Programme. “In 2005, there were five declining populations – now there are eight. The experts have clearly identified climate change as the major culprit, but they are also optimistic that these trends can be reversed, given timely and effective action on greenhouse gas emissions.”

The main effect of warming on the bears is that their hunting is restricted by a lack of sea ice. The bears use the ice as a platform from which they can hunt seals, their favourite prey. Research has shown a definite link between the time the bears have to stay on land, and a decline in health, and in the numbers of cubs that survive.

At a meeting in Norway earlier this year, representatives of the countries that are home to polar bears agreed to refer the climate change problem to the UN-sponsored climate negotiations. WWF continues to push those countries to live up to the treaty they signed in 1973, obliging them to protect polar bear habitat.


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Benin declares state of emergency over floods

Reuters 7 Jul 09;

COTONOU (Reuters) - Benin has declared a state of emergency and called for international humanitarian aid after floods hit the south of the West African country.

The government estimates that some 2,000 families have already been displaced by flooding caused by heavy rains and it appealed late Monday for immediate help to prevent the imminent spread of epidemics.

The West African region has experienced heavy seasonal flooding in the past few years and about 200,000 people were displaced when their houses were destroyed by similar floods in Benin last year.

"There is urgent need of food, potable water, essential drugs, blankets and treated bed nets," Interior Minister Armand Zinzindohoue said after visiting neighborhoods in the main city of Cotonou that were hit by the floods.

Government officials have warned that the situation may worsen in coming days as the rainy season continues.

Experts say countries on the coast of the Gulf of Guinea including Benin, Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria and Togo are becoming more prone to floods.

Forecasts by the African Center of Meteorological Application for Development for July to September 2009, suggest a high probability of rainfall higher than normal in these countries.

In June, at least 19 people were killed by mudslides and flooding following heavy rains in Abidjan, the economic capital of Ivory Coast.

Global aid agency Oxfam warned this week that poor communities across Africa, Asia and Latin America were being hit hard by effects of global warming, with rainfall becoming shorter and more erratic in many places.

(Reporting by Samuel Elijah; Editing by George Fominyen)


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El Nino weather pattern increasing says Australia

Michael Perry, Reuters 8 Jul 09;

SYDNEY (Reuters) - The development of an El Nino weather pattern is increasing and at this stage may be a medium-strength event, but it could take months for it to be officially declared, Australia's weather bureau said.

"We are warming reasonably rapidly. The models tend to suggest something reasonably warm," said Andrew Watkins from Australia's Bureau of Meteorology, which issued its latest El Nino report on Wednesday.

"It doesn't look weak, but then again it doesn't look like it will be at the levels of the 1997/1998 event either," he said.

The last severe El Nino in 1998 killed over 2,000 people and caused billions of dollars worth of damage to crops, infrastructure and mines in Australia and Asia. It struck in the middle of the Asian financial crisis which roiled financial markets.

India, one of the world's biggest producers and consumers of everything from sugar to soybeans, is already experiencing weaker annual monsoon rains. Its faltering sugar crop is a prime reason why sugar prices are at their highest levels in three years.

An El Nino is also a major risk to wheat production in Australia, palm oil output in Indonesia and Malaysia, and rubber in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Output of palm oil and rubber has already fallen this year due to adverse weather.

"Conditions have reached a point that, should they persist at such levels through the remainder of the southern winter and into spring, 2009 will be considered an El Nino year," said the bureau's report titled "Strong indicators of El Nino persist."

The bureau said there was "very little chance of the current development stalling or reversing."

The 2009 El Nino is developing as the world struggles to emerge from the worst economic conditions since the Great Depression of 1929.

INDIA NEEDS RAIN

El Nino, meaning "little boy" in Spanish, is driven by an abnormal warming of the eastern Pacific Ocean and creates havoc in weather patterns across the Asia-Pacific region.

It is associated with drought conditions in parts of Australia and Asia and wetter-than-normal weather in parts of South America.

"Most of the indicators show an El Nino is developing in the Pacific. I would not say it is accelerating, but it's definitely increased," Watkins told Reuters.

"The warm sea surface temperatures and the warm ocean temperatures, looking at them instantaneously, if you arrived from the Moon you'd probably say that looks like an El Nino," he said.

"I guess we are going fairly close to saying it is an El Nino, but you have to be a little cautious because an El Nino is a longer timeframe thing."

The Southern Oscillation Index (SOI), a key factor in an El Nino and calculated from monthly and seasonal fluctuations in air pressure between Tahiti and Darwin, eased in June to negative 2 from a negative 5 in May.

Malaysian crude palm oil futures dropped as much as 1.7 percent to touch a new 3-month low on Tuesday after news of the indicator easing, with the market viewing signs of a weaker El Nino as positive for the prospects of higher production.

Indonesia, one of the biggest producers of palm oil, is already facing drought.

Australia's weather bureau said the easing in the SOI was only temporary due to a high pressure system near Tahiti or what meteorologists call "weather noise."

"We are fairly confident, given ocean conditions, the SOI will unfortunately start to fall fairly soon. In fact, the latest daily value has started dropping again," said Watkins.

"There is still a clear warming trend nothing has really eased back in the main indicators."

Australia's weather bureau said India's monsoon, the lifeblood of the country's huge farming sector, will likely remain weak according to the Madden-Julian Oscillation index, which gauges the eastward progress of tropical rain.

India's monsoon rains have now covered all of the country, but the country's Meteorological Department said last week that as of July 1, rains were 29 percent below normal.

India's farm economy may be hit by a bad drought if the monsoon remains weak, with the window for plantings closing by mid-July, says a U.S. Agricultural Department attache report.

RUBBER, WHEAT

A brewing El Nino may further dent shrinking rubber supplies in Southeast Asia and keep prices high at a time when demand is struggling to recover from the global financial crisis.

A developing El Nino is also a major risk to wheat production in Australia, but is unlikely to have a material impact on global wheat prices, said Rabobank, a specialist in agribusiness, earlier in the week.

Strong northern hemisphere production would help to make up for any shortfall from Australia in the event of El Nino reducing the harvest in the world's fourth-largest exporter, it said.

Australia's wheat crop is forecast at between 21 and 23 million tonnes this year and industry analysts were confident there would still be a decent crop given strong rainfall in some growing regions in recent weeks.

"If the wet weather continues over the next couple of months, we will be in a better condition to weather a moderate El Nino system," said Richard Koch, managing director of farm advisory firm Profarmer.

It's not long since the country's farmers were battling the worst drought in more than 100 years, resulting in an annual harvest just 10.6 million tonnes in 2006/07.

For more information: www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/

(Additional reporting by Fayen Wong in Perth)

(Editing by James Thornhill)


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NASA satellite shows 'dramatically thinned' Arctic ice

Yahoo News 7 Jul 09;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Arctic sea ice thinned dramatically between the winters of 2004 and 2008, with thick older ice shrinking by the equivalent of Alaska's land area, a study using data from a NASA satellite showed Tuesday.

Using information from NASA's Ice, Cloud and Land Satellite (ICESat), scientists from the US space agency and the University of Washington in Seattle estimated both the thickness and volume of the Arctic Ocean's ice cover.

ICESat allows scientists to measure changes in the thickness and volume of Arctic ice, whereas previously scientists relied only on measurements of area to determine how much of the Arctic Ocean is covered in ice.

Scientists found that Arctic sea ice thinned some seven inches (17.8 centimeters) a year, or 2.2 feet (67 centimeters) over four winters, according to the study by NASA and the University of Washington, published in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans.

They also found that thicker, older ice, which has survived one or more summers, shrank by 42 percent.

"Between 2004 and 2008, multi-year ice cover shrank 595,000 square miles (1.5 million square kilometers) -- nearly the size of Alaska's land area," a report of the study's findings said.

The Arctic ice cap grows each winter, when the northerly region grows intensely cold as the sun sets for several months.

Then, in the summer, wind and ocean currents cause some of the ice to flow out of the Arctic, while warmer temperatures make much of it melt in place.

Thicker, older ice is less vulnerable than thinner ice to melting in the summer months.

But in recent years, the amount of ice replaced in the winter has not been sufficient to offset summer ice losses, the ICESat study showed.

That makes for more open water in summer, which absorbs more heat, warming the ocean and further melting the ice, the report of the scientists' findings said.

The research team attributed the changes in the overall thickness and volume of Arctic Ocean sea ice to recent warming and anomalies in patterns of sea ice circulation.

"The near-zero replenishment of the multi-year ice cover, combined with unusual exports of ice out of the Arctic after the summers of 2005 and 2007, have both played significant roles in the loss of Arctic sea ice volume," said Ron Kwok of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California who led the study.

Data from the study will help scientists to better understand how fast the volume of Arctic ice is decreasing and how soon the region might be "nearly ice-free in the summer," said Kwok.

A study published in April by the Colorado-based National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) also showed that the Arctic ice cap is thinner than ever and the maximum extent of Arctic ice was at an all-time low.

The same month, US researchers warned that the Arctic could be almost ice-free within 30 years, not 90 as scientists had previously estimated.

Arctic ice thinned dramatically since 2004: NASA
Deborah Zabarenko, Reuters 7 Jul 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Arctic sea ice has thinned dramatically since 2004, with the older, thicker ice giving way to a younger, thinner kind that melts in the northern summer, NASA scientists reported on Tuesday.

Researchers have known for years that ice covering in the Arctic Sea has been shrinking in area, but new satellite data that measure the thickness of ice show that the volume of sea ice is declining as well.

That is important because thicker ice is more resilient and can last from summer to summer. Without ice cover, the Arctic Sea's dark waters absorb the sun's heat more readily instead of reflecting it as the light-colored ice does, accelerating the heating effect.

Using NASA's ICESat spacecraft, scientists figured that overall Arctic sea ice thinned about 7 inches a year since 2004, for a total of 2.2 feet over four winters. Their findings were reported in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans.

The total area covered by thicker, older ice that has survived at least one summer shrank by 42 percent.

Beyond that, the new satellite data showed that the proportion of tough old ice is decreasing at the same time as the amount of young fragile ice is increasing, information that was hard to discern from earlier data.

LOSING THE OLD ICE

In 2003, 62 percent of the Arctic's total ice volume was stored in multi-year ice and 38 percent in first-year seasonal ice. By last year, 68 percent was first-year ice and 32 percent the tougher multi-year ice.

The research team blamed these changes on recent warming and anomalies in sea ice circulation.

"We're losing a lot more of the old ice, and that's significant," said Ron Kwok of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. "Basically we knew how much the area (of ice) was shrinking, but we didn't know how thick it was."

To find the volume of ice, NASA's ICESat spacecraft measured how high the ice rose above sea level in the Arctic, Kwok said in a telephone interview.

"If we know how much is floating on top, we can use that to compute the rest of the ice thickness," Kwok said in a telephone interview. About nine-tenths of the ice is beneath the water, he said.

The ICESat measurements cover virtually the entire Arctic, and they tally with ice volume measurements made by submarines, which cover only a few passes across the area.

Arctic sea ice melted to its second-lowest level last year, rising slightly from its all-time low in 2007, according to the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Arctic ice is a factor in global climate and weather patterns, because the difference between the cool air at the poles and the warm air around the Equator drives air and water currents, including the jet stream.

More information and images are available online here

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)


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Turkey pushes ahead with controversial dam projects

Nicolas Cheviron Yahoo News 7 Jul 09;

CORUH VALLEY, Turkey (AFP) – Determined to reduce dependence on foreign energy, Turkey vowed Tuesday to push on with an ambitious dam construction program despite the loss of financing for a key project and loud objections from environmentalists.

German, Swiss and Austrian creditors announced earlier in the day they were withdrawing from the Ilisu dam project on the Tigris river in southeast Turkey because Ankara had failed to meet conditions of the 1.2 billion-euro (1.7 billion-dollar) credit.

Turkey hit back by saying that the decision was "political" and underlined that it was determined to realize the Ilisu project, which opponents say will flood a millenia-old historic site and displace some 50,000.

Last week, Environment Minister Veysel Eroglu said Ankara would build the dam and its 1,200-megawatt powerplant with its own money if the loan were not released.

Observers say it is unlikely for Turkey to give up on plans for low-cost energy at a time when official projections estimate an annual 6.0 to 8.0 percent increase in the country's energy consumption.

Turkey is already a big importer of natural gas and oil, part of which it uses to produce electricity.

There are currently 172 hydroelectric dams in operation in Turkey with an overall capacity of 13,000 megawatts, which amounts to 17 percent of the country's electricity production, according to figures from the state-run hydraulic works directorate (DSI).

A total of 148 are under construction and there are plans to build another 1,400, which would enable Turkey to triple its hydroelectric production.

"At the moment Turkey uses only 30 percent of its hydraulic resources, but there are planned projects to increase it to 50 percent," said Sezayi Sucu, an enthusiastic engineer heading a major dam project in northeastern corner of Turkey.

"This figure is still rather low compared to the United States or Europe where the exploitation rate reaches 95 percent and 85 percent respectively," he added.

But some of the planned hydroelectric dams not only come under fire from environmentalists but are also criticised by neighbouring Syria and Iraq who say Turkish dams on the Euphrates and Tigris rivers reduce the flow into their territories.

Sucu works on one such controversial project in the Coruh River in the Black Sea province of Artvin, bordering Georgia, that involves the construction of 15 major dams -- two of which have already been completed -- and several dozen smaller ones.

Once completed, the project will provide one tenth of Turkish electricty production.

But one of the planned dams, the Yusufeli dam, has for several years has been at the centre of a legal war between the state and environmentalists trying to block its construction.

Opponents say the dam will not be profitable, will destroy endemic flora and fauna species and displace some 16,000 people in a region that has already been drained by years of migration.

"This project does not stand up on its feet: Just look at the reservoir of the nearby Borcka dam and you will see how much silt has accumulated there. In a few years, everything will turn into mud," said Bedrettin Kalin, a lawyer from a local environmental platform called the Fraternity of the Valleys.

Korol Diker from the environmental group Greenpeace blamed Ankara for ignoring the potential environmental impact of planned dams when it gives the go-ahead to the projects.

"The problem is that the environmental impact study system does not work properly in Turkey," Diker said, adding that Ankara often chooses to build big dams that are more environmentally destructive than smaller ones.

Local authorities reject the accusations and say the dam project will go ahead with national funding.

"The Yusufeli dam will be constructed with national fundings: either with local businessmen in a build-operate-transfer system or directly with state funding," insisted Cengiz Aydogdun, governor of Artvin.


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