Best of our wild blogs: 26 Aug 09


Reclamation at Jurong Island may affect natural sites
from wild shores of singapore

Large Niltava eating snake
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Dedicated To Those Who Hate Lizards ;-)
from Life's Indulgences

The Day Kermit Leapt Out At Me
from Life's Indulgences

The stare by the Duck!
from Biodiversity Singapore

1 Sep (Tue): Assoc. Prof. Hugh Tan on "Cultivating the Native Plants of Singapore" from wild shores of singapore

Possible Environmental Crises Facing Singapore and Appropriate Responses: The Case of the Poh Ern Shih Buddhist Temple from Low Carbon Singapore

Developing Renewable Energy and Carbon Abatement Projects in Southeast Asia from Green Business Times


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Triumph of the commons: Helping the world to share

Mark van Vugt, New Scientist 25 Aug 09;

DO YOU ever get the impression that civilisation has degenerated into an unedifying free-for-all? Like pigs gobbling at their troughs, we all seem to be out to get as much as possible of whatever is on offer. Everyone is at it, from loggers felling the Amazonian rainforest and fishers fighting over the last few cod to SUV drivers running the oil wells dry and politicians on their gravy trains. Science even has a name for the phenomenon - one that seems eerily prescient following the recent revelation about MPs' expense claims in the UK. It is called the Tragedy of the Commons.

Four decades ago, ecologist Garrett Hardin published a ground-breaking paper on this phenomenon, arguing that when personal and communal interests are at odds, overexploitation of resources is inevitable. His tragedy of the commons referred to the destruction of communal pasture when individual herders act rationally in their own best interests, each putting as many cows as possible onto the land. The same fate, he noted, is likely to befall any shared limited resource, from the atmosphere and oceans to national parks and rivers. Over the years, and with the rise of environmentalism, Hardin's ideas have become hugely influential.

Does this mean we are doomed to plunder the world's resources and trash our planet? Even Hardin wasn't entirely pessimistic. He noted that groups can create institutions to manage their communal resources, although these usually fail because of "free-riders" - individuals who try to reap the benefits of cooperation without paying any of the costs. The solution he came up with was "mutual coercion, mutually agreed upon by the majority of the people affected" (Science, vol 162, p 1243). In other words, people must give up their freedom to save the commons. I disagree.

Today we understand human nature and motivation far better than we did in Hardin's day. In particular, we know that individuals do not always act selfishly but also have some regard for the interests of others and the natural environment. Games such as the prisoner's dilemma and the public goods game demonstrate that under certain conditions people do behave altruistically (New Scientist, 12 March 2005, p 33). Besides, countless success stories attest to the fact that communities can overcome the tragedy of the commons without a great deal of coercion.

Putting all this together, I have identified four key conditions for the successful management of shared environmental resources: information, identity, institutions and incentives. (Current Directions in Psychological Science, vol 18, p 169). I believe we can and should use this 4i framework as the basis for a plan of action to combat local and global environmental catastrophe.

Information, identity, institutions and incentives correspond to what most psychologists believe are the four core motives that influence our decision-making in social dilemmas, respectively understanding, belonging, trusting and self-enhancing. Let's consider them in turn, starting with "institutions" because it is the one that comes closest to Hardin's prescription for overcoming the tragedy of the commons.

In our technologically and culturally complex modern world, many limited resources are managed by institutions, from private companies distributing water, to governments limiting air pollution through quotas. Hardin believed that such institutions cannot avert the tragedy of the commons without coercion because of the problem of free-riders. In fact, it is worse than that: researchers have since shown that introducing a system of policing simply creates a second-order free-rider problem - raising the issue of who guards the guards. Nevertheless, there are institutions that successfully promote environmental sustainability, so how do they do it?

The key is trust - and the cornerstone for building trust is fairness. In the 1991 California water shortage, the local water authorities tried to implement drastic water-saving measures but only with partial success. Residents were most likely to comply with authorities if they felt their concerns were taken seriously and they got accurate, unbiased information about the severity of the drought (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol 69, p 482). Likewise, in my research I discovered that following the privatisation of the British railway network in 1994, railway passengers who did not trust the private companies to run the system efficiently and fairly were more likely to switch from trains to cars (Social Psychology Quarterly, vol 63, p 355).

Next up is information. People want to make sense of their natural environment - and their impact on it - but we seldom have enough information to evaluate questions such as: Should I recycle? Is it really worth turning those lights off? Would it be better to buy a new eco-friendly car or hang onto my old one for a while longer? And it turns out that the more uncertain we are the more likely we are to bias our decisions in our own narrow self-interest. In a lab study where a group of people were asked to manage a communal resource, they were far more successful when the resource was fixed in size than when its size fluctuated (European Journal of Social Psychology, vol 20, p 475). The researchers concluded that the environmental uncertainty caused by a fluctuating resource led individuals to underestimate the damage of their actions and exploit the resource to the point of collapse.

Equipped with better information, we face less environmental uncertainty and can therefore make more sustainable choices. But how can we improve the quality of environmental information available? First we must recognise that many aspects of environmental decision-making are intrinsically uncertain. That is especially true at the global level, where there is often a bewildering array of complex interacting factors. This is why local information, relevant to specific individuals in their particular circumstances, is far more effective at persuading people to change their behaviour. We are much more likely, for example, to act on information about local flood risks than on general data about the dangers of global climate change.

The best information systems are simple but accurate. The ABC rating system used throughout Europe for labelling household electrical appliances is a good example because it allows customers to compare at a glance complex information about energy use and emissions between different products. Research designed to evaluate this system also highlights the obvious but important point that information is most likely to promote sustainable behaviour when given to people who are already committed to the environment but lack the technical know-how to make a green choice.
Just connect

Targeted environmental education programmes are a good idea and they work particularly well in situations where people share a common social identity, because we are more likely to exchange environmentally relevant information when we identify more with our community. This effect is borne out in a classic example of triumph over tragedy of the commons among the lobster fishers of Maine. Over many decades they have developed a self-policing system to maintain the limited resource upon which their livelihood depends. Research shows that the system is most sustainable in small communities with dense social networks because fishers exchanged catch information more freely than in those with fewer connections (Ethology and Sociobiology, vol 12, p 221).

Social identity, a feeling of belonging to a social group, influences our behaviour in other ways too. My colleagues and I found that the more connected people felt to their community, the more willing they were to act in the group's interests by conserving water during a shortage (Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, vol 27, p 1440). Since we all identify most strongly with our primary groups - family, friends and neighbours - environmental messages that appeal to these relationships, such as "think of your children's future", can be highly effective.

People who identify with a group are also more concerned about upholding a green reputation. In another study we found that when people harvested from a common resource - a shared pot of money - and their decisions were made public they behaved more responsibly (Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, vol 32, p 1402).

Showing people how their behaviour compares with that of others produces a similar effect. When a US energy company started issuing its customers with smiley and frowney faces to indicate whether their bills were more or less than the neighbourhood average, energy consumption went down dramatically (Psychological Science, vol 18, p 429). Various environmental pressure groups use the power of social norms to "name and shame" polluting companies into changing their policies, and with success (Quarterly Review of Biology, vol 78, p 275).

One way to connect a group of strangers is through inducing competition with other groups. David De Cremer from Erasmus University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and I showed that students cooperated more with each other when they believed they were being compared with groups from other universities (European Journal of Social Psychology, vol 29, p 871). Creating competition between communities does not always promote environmental welfare, however. When a resource is the shared responsibility of several communities - such as the North Sea fish stocks - it is at even greater risk of depletion. That is why it is important to think of ways to blur group boundaries, for instance, by generating a superordinate social identity, such as, "we are all Europeans".

The fourth great motivator is incentives - appeals to people's desire to enhance themselves through seeking pleasure and avoiding pain. Government subsidies encourage people to adopt green technologies. Fines persuade individuals and companies to comply with environmental regulations. However, some incentive schemes are more effective than others. My own research on domestic water use indicates that economic incentives make little difference when people are already prepared to do their bit for the environment (Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, vol 27, p 1440). Sanctions can even be counterproductive if they are considered unfair and distort people's understanding of an environmental problem as essentially an economic one. For example, if people feel that they pay through the nose to run a car, they may be more likely to believe that they should be able to drive as much as they like.

The most effective strategies to protect our shared environment are likely to combine several of the 4is. For example, when my colleagues and I conducted a survey of 120 households in the UK during the drought of 1997 we found that those with a water meter made the most efforts to conserve water. Because they were paying only for the water they used, not a flat rate, they had a financial incentive to save. The meter also allowed them to see more clearly where the most water was being wasted, so giving them a greater understanding of the situation (Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, vol 25, p 731).

All this shows that with a good understanding of human nature, a destructive global free-for-all is not inevitable. Of course we don't yet have all the answers, but while social psychologists like myself continue to probe human behaviour and motivation, we already know enough to make a difference. I would like ingenious conservationists, policy-makers, marketers and others to start using the 4i framework to influence the way people behave. We only have one planet and as the human population grows its limited resources are increasingly stretched. To avoid a commons tragedy we need to act decisively and we need to act now.


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Coastal dredging operation in Cambodia halted: company

Vong Sokheng Phnom Penh Post 25 Aug 09;

PREAH Sihanouk province customs officials prevented the export of several thousand tonnes of sand to Singapore in a recent raid, officials from the company transporting the material said Monday, adding, however, that it had obtained permission from the government to operate.

Pen Pinith, a supervisor at the Cambodia-based company Dany Trading, said company ships entered waters off of Preah Sihanouk province on August 14 after obtaining permission to carry the sand to Singapore.

He said the ships were raided on Friday, noting that employees aboard the ships had failed to produce official approval documents.

Prime Minister Hun Sen in May announced a ban on sand-dredging for export. In subsequent announcements, he said that dredging could be permitted in areas where damage to the environment could be minimised.

Pen Simon, director of the Customs and Excise Department at the Ministry of Economy, could not be reached for comment Monday.

Sao Sokha, commander of the national Military Police, said he had not yet received a report from officers involved in the raid.

Hundreds of thousands of tonnes of sand from the Kingdom's rivers and coastal areas have been dredged and shipped to Singapore for use in land-reclamation projects.

Indonesia and the Philippines are among the countries that have banned the practice of dredging because of its destructive impact on riverbeds and shorelines.


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More Solomon Island dolphins may head overseas

The Solomon Star 25 Aug 09;

IN the face of international condemnation and scientific advice, the government of the Solomon Islands is poised to allow another export of wild-caught dolphins.

Earth Island Institute claims that up to 18 Indo-pacific bottlenose dolphins of 30 being held in pens on Gavutu are destined to be shipped to Panama in the Caribbean in the near future.

Christopher Porter, Robert Satu and Francis Chow. Wildlife International Network is reportedly the buyer/broker in the deal.

In April of this year, a working group of CITES, the body that regulates the international trade in endangered species instigated an in-depth review of trade in Solomon Islands dolphins because of its concerns about the status of dolphin populations in Solomon Island waters.

This review is still underway. In making the decision the group, acknowledging the lack of data on dolphin numbers, recommended that the maximum number that may be able to sustain being taken from Solomon Island waters in any one year is only ten animals.

“By allowing three times that number to be held in the Gavutu pens and 18 to be exported, the government is ignoring international law and is acting contrary to its own statements and advice,” said Susan Millward, Executive Director at the Washington DC-based Animal Welfare Institute.

In April 2008 at a CITES meeting, Dr. Baddley Anita, representing the government of Solomon Islands stated that “the Solomon Islands would stop exports if new scientific data showed them to be unsustainable.”

No reliable population studies of Solomon Islands dolphins have been undertaken and such studies will take several years to complete.

The Cetacean Specialist Group of the World Conservation Union, comprising some of the world’s leading dolphin experts, stated in a 2008 report co-authored by representatives of the Solomon Islands government, which are Joe Horokou and John Leqata that “the local population would have to consist of at least 5,000 dolphins to sustain removals of 100 dolphins per year for export.”

In the same report they determined that dolphin “abundance in the area of recent live-captures may be well below 5,000.”

Mark Berman, Associate Director of Earth Island Institute’s International Marine Mammal Project stated that “By allowing the continued capture and export of dolphins the Solomon Islands government is hurting the country’s economy and reputation as potential investors and tourists shy away.”

The last export of Solomon Islands dolphins to the Philippines was deemed illegal by the Philippine Scientific Authority and a ban on future imports of Solomon Islands dolphins was advised.

The multi-million dollar tuna business is another industry to suffer.

Minister of Fisheries Nollen Leni has been trying to marketing himself to Earth Island Institute approved dolphin-safe tuna companies overseas but will be met with stiff opposition because of the dolphin trade situation, Earth Island said yesterday.

“The Solomon Islands government must stop pandering to the few individuals who are getting rich from the dolphin exports and respect international law.”


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NEA's review finds water at Pasir Ris beach not safe for swimming

Channel NewsAsia 25 Aug 09;

SINGAPORE: The National Environment Agency (NEA) has completed its annual water quality review of Singapore's six recreational beaches.

The water quality at all the beaches attained a "good" rating except Pasir Ris beach, which is still deemed unsafe for swimming, the same as last year.

The water at Pasir Ris beach may look clean but it is actually teeming with a bacteria found in human faeces.

Significant amounts of the enterococcus bacteria were present in eight per cent of 1,364 water samples collected in the water quality review. They had enterococcus counts of more than 200 per 100 ml.

Based on the World Health Organisation's water guidelines for recreational use, only beaches with not more than 5 per cent of the collected water samples having enterococcus counts of greater than 200 per 100 ml and graded "good" or "very good" are suitable for activities such as swimming, water-skiing and wakeboarding.

Although there has been no deterioration in the water quality at Pasir Ris beach, it is still graded as "fair" since the 8 per cent exceeded WHO's guidelines of not more than 5 per cent of collected water samples having enterococcus counts greater than 200 per 100 ml.

So NEA is continuing to advise the public not to swim, wakeboard or waterski in the water at Pasir Ris beach. However, people still go into the water, despite nine advisory signages put up at the beach.

Said one teen: "I think the sign is not obvious. I feel that its location is wrong. They should have a bigger sign so the public can be alerted to it."

And water sport activities will still continue as per normal on weekends.

Serene Giam, assistant manger, Training & Operation, People's Association Water-Venture, said: "We'll remind participants during their breaks or even after their activities to rinse themselves with clean water over here at the outlet."

NEA said the water quality is affected by several factors, including minor leaks from older sewers and discharges from small-scale sewage treatment plants and low water currents in parts of Pasir Ris beach are not effective in diluting and dispersing discharges.

By 2012, these plants will be phased out under an ongoing plan by PUB and the sewer network will be extended. PUB aims to mend 23 kilometres of aging sewers in the area by 2011. - CNA/vm/al

Waters off Pasir Ris beach still filthy
Levels of bacteria found in human faeces exceed WHO guidelines
Amresh Gunasingham, Straits Times 26 Aug 09;

A YEAR after signs went up at Pasir Ris beach warning swimmers against taking a dip in the waters there, little has changed.

Levels of bacteria found in human faeces present in the sea there still exceed World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines, a year-long National Environment Agency (NEA) study has found.

It said that although water quality has improved marginally, swimming and activities such as waterskiing are still discouraged along the 3.3km stretch of beach from the People's Association's Pasir Ris Holiday Complex to the Civil Service Aloha resort.

The NEA said yesterday that an ageing sewage network was partly to blame for the poor water quality: Faeces is leaking into the waters off Pasir Ris beach from a 23km network of pipes in the Tampines, Changi and Pasir Ris areas.

The discharge from 39 sewage treatment plants in areas such as Tampines and Changi is also to blame, it added.

Waste dumped from moored vessels and animals secreting waste into the waters there add to the problem.

Pasir Ris beach is the only one with poor water quality in Singapore, said the study, which examined six recreational beaches.

The other beaches - Sentosa and Seletar islands, Sembawang Park, Changi and East Coast - are suitable for swimming and other water sports, it added.

The NEA caused a stir last year when it said the adoption of more stringent water-quality standards based on new WHO guidelines meant that swimming was no longer safe off Pasir Ris beach.

Since then, more officers have been sent to examine drains and rivers in the area that lead to the sea for possible discharges, a spokesman for the agency said.

Enforcement action has also been stepped up, she added.

When contacted yesterday about the problem, the PUB, Singapore's national water agency, said plans were in place to phase out the 39 treatment plants, which have contributed to the problem off Pasir Ris, by 2012.

PUB director of water reclamation Tan Thai Pin said two contracts worth $30 million to do this have already been awarded.

Work to repair the leaking sewers is also expected to be completed in two years' time, he added.

'Over their lifespan, sewers will naturally deteriorate through ageing and corrosion, which may result in minor leaks.'

The conditions at Pasir Ris may be compounding the problem, said Assistant Professor Hu Jiang Yong of the National University of Singapore's (NUS) civil engineering department.

She said the water temperature, sunlight intensity and other factors there may be more conducive to the bacteria's survival.

There are no known cases of people falling sick after swimming off Pasir Ris.

But Associate Professor Ng How Yong of the Division of Environmental Science and Engineering at NUS advised against swimming there.

He said potential problems could arise if swimmers swallow the water or wade in when they have open wounds.

Sales engineer Patrick Tam, 32, who was at the beach yesterday, said that although the water looked clean enough to swim in, the areas surrounding the beach had put him off taking a dip.

'It is not the water itself, but the shipyards and kelongs located so near the water here that put me off.

'Compared to the East Coast beach, the area does not look clean.'

Still not good enough for a dip

PUB extension plans in Pasir Ris mean that water quality will improve
Lin Yan Qin, Today Online 26 Aug 09;

MINOR leaks from older sewers and moored vessels, as well as discharge from small-scale Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs) - these are affecting water quality at Pasir Ris beach.

And for the second year running in an annual water quality review, Pasir Ris beach (picture) has received a "fair" grading, which means beachgoers will continue to be advised against swimming, wakeboarding and water-skiing there, the National Environment Agency said.

The agency revealed yesterday the factors behind the water quality at Pasir Ris for the first time after its review last year. Significant improvements should come within two or three years.

The beach was given the grade last year after NEA's guidelines for assessing water quality for recreational use included tests for enterococcus, a type of bacteria found in faeces. Beaches that have more than 5 per cent of the collected samples with enterococcus counts above a certain limit and which are graded "fair", "poor" or "very poor" are unsuitable for activities involving long periods of whole-body immersion or where water is likely to be swallowed.

The other five beaches reviewed - at Sentosa, Seletar Island, Sembawang Park, Changi and East Coast Park - remain safe. But at Pasir Ris, 8 per cent of the samples collected over three years - down from 10 per cent last year - had enterococcus counts greater than 200 per 100ml. The bacteria can cause stomach pain, breathing problems and eye or ear infections.

So far, the Health Ministry has not observed health problems associated with poor water quality at beaches, according to NEA. In its study to establish the causes of the higher bacterial content, NEA found that the low water current in the inner curve of Pasir Ris beach do not effectively dilute and disperse the sewage discharge.

Change will come with PUB's ongoing plan to extend the sewer network, which will phase out the 39 STPs and rehabilitate 23 kilometres of ageing sewers in the area by 2012 and 2011 respectively.

According to the PUB, there are now about 190 STPs - built to service remote areas across Singapore, located mainly in the Lim Chu Kang, Sungei Tengah and Pasir Ris farmland areas. These will also be phased out in tandem with developments or when it is necessary to safeguard water quality, said Mr Tan Thai Pin, PUB director for Water Reclamation (Network).

Meanwhile, NEA will continue to review water quality at beaches annually. It will work with other agencies to minimise the bacterial pollution from other sources by enforcing against indiscriminate discharge of sewage from moored vessels and against dog owners who do not clean up after their pets.

Ms Pamela Hee, 28, who visits Pasir Ris beach once a month, felt it was a pity the sea would remain off-limits for swimming, since there are no swimming pools in that area.

Few people flout the nine signs put up by NEA advising against swimming. "There are people who splash the water around a bit, but that's rare," said Ms Hee, an executive. "We go mainly to enjoy the scenery, and many people fly kites or cycle."

Clean-up of waters off Pasir Ris beach soon
Pipework to be repaired, discharge dispersed from sewage treatment plants
Judith Tan, Straits Times 28 Aug 09;

PIPEWORKS serving north-east Singapore will be repaired and ageing treatment plants shut down at the end of this year.

The works, undertaken by the national water agency PUB, are expected to improve the quality of the waters off Pasir Ris beach, which was last year labelled Singapore's dirtiest.

News reports this week still crowned it with the dubious title one year on.

The 3.3km stretch, where swimming has been declared unsafe, wends from the People's Association Pasir Ris Holiday Complex to the Civil Service Aloha resort.

Works aside, studies on the feasibility of changing the profile of Pasir Ris beach are under way. Doing this promises to improve the flow of water and disperse the bacteria from the leaky sewers and discharge from sewage treatment plants.

The sea water there contains levels of enterococcus bacteria - found in human faeces - higher than those allowed in World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines.

The guidelines state that not more than 5 per cent of collected water samples should have bacteria counts of more than 200 per 100ml if a beach is to be suitable for activities such as swimming, water-skiing and wakeboarding.

Pasir Ris beach clocked in at 8 per cent.

A National Environment Agency (NEA) study last year found that its waters were being fouled by various sources, including minor leakage from old sewers and discharge from small-scale sewage treatment plants serving remote areas of Pasir Ris.

PUB director of the water reclamation network Tan Thai Pin said that, apart from phasing out the 39 smaller sewage treatment plants in the Halus/Tampines, Changi and Selarang areas by 2012, ageing sewers in Pasir Ris are being repaired.

By 2011, work on 23km of sewers will be completed. Ten per cent of them are more than 30 years old.

The NEA study also drew attention to the low water currents in the concave part of the beach being ineffective in diluting and dispersing the discharges.

Associate Professor Wong Poh Poh of the National University of Singapore's department of geography called for a proper assessment of the magnitude of the problem before any work is done.

Dr Ahmad Magad, a Member of Parliament for Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC, told The Straits Times he had not received complaints from residents about not being able to swim or wakeboard in the area, but expressed confidence in NEA's 'holistic and comprehensive solution' to the problem.

Environmentalists Howard Shaw and Eugene Heng agree.

Mr Heng, who chairs the environmental group Waterways Watch Society, said Singaporeans should not add to the problem by littering there.

Meanwhile, some members of the public are either unaware of the contaminated waters or are throwing caution to the wind.

Mrs June Pereira, 39, said she saw many swimmers in the area last Saturday.

Dr Derrick Aw, a dermatologist with the National University Hospital, warned that swimming in contaminated waters may cause a flare-up of eczema in people with sensitive skin.

He said: 'In people with open wounds, there is also a risk of infection by flesh-eating bacteria.'

Old sewers to be repaired over next five years
Aim is to prevent leakage and contamination of fresh-water sources
Amresh Gunasingham, Straits Times 28 Aug 09;

THE pipes are old, underground and potentially dangerous.

That is why more than 1,000km of old sewers, some dating back to the colonial era, will be repaired over the next five years.

The aim is to protect sources of fresh water from being tainted.

PUB, the national water agency, has a $423 million programme started in 1996 to upgrade the 3,400km national sewer network.

It is estimated that at least 10 per cent of the sewage network is at least three decades old.

Some of the pipes in some areas - around the Singapore and Kallang rivers, as well as Rochor and Stamford canals - are close to 50 years old.

To date, more than a third of the network has been repaired, said PUB director of water reclamation Tan Thai Pin.

Most of the new upgrading work will take place in areas such as Punggol, Serangoon and Jurong.

According to PUB surveys, surface cracks, displaced joints and corrosion can occur in older sewers.

Waste pipes sited up to 6m underground are vulnerable to soil movement and damage from tree roots, said Mr Toh Hong Huat from Sam Lain Equipment Services, a local sewerage pipe contractor employed by PUB.

The concern is that sewage may leak from the pipes, through cracks and defective joints, into the water catchment areas in the suburbs and city area.

Sewage not only contaminates the water in reservoirs, but also contains chemicals that make the water harder and more costly to treat.

Another concern is that sewers near the coastline can fill with seawater at high tide, and groundwater because of considerable damage.

'Repair is undertaken for two reasons - to prevent leaking and to prevent water from getting in,' said Mr Tan.

But rather than digging up roads to install new pipes, technological advances have allowed for the use of manholes, usually up to 1m in width, to repair ageing sewers.

Mr Tan said spiralling costs and structural limitations meant that the authorities had to opt for repairs rather than laying new pipes.

'Most sewers are found under roads that have high traffic volume. In the past, we could close the roads and replace these pipes, but that is not feasible now,' he noted.

Digging could also add as much as 50 per cent to costs, as well as cause inconvenience to businesses and the public.

Highly urbanised areas such as Chinatown, where many of the older pipes are found, also have narrower roads and building structures that make digging unfeasible.

As part of the upgrading programme, $10 million will be invested over the next two years to rectify leaks along a 23km stretch of decade-old sewer pipes in the Pasir Ris area.

This was cited in a study, released earlier this week, as being partly to blame for the waters off the Pasir Ris coast being unsafe for swimming.





More on Pasir Ris beach water quality still fail on the wild shores of singapore blog.


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Singapore agri-business company HLH harvests corn crop in Cambodia

Jamie Lee, Business Times 26 Aug 09;

SINGAPORE-listed HLH Group's corn plantation project in Cambodia has borne fruit.

The agri-business and property development group said yesterday that it has successfully harvested its first crop of corn at its freehold 450-hectare plantation in Amlang Commune, Thpong District, Kampong Speu.

The maiden harvest stood at about six tonnes per hectare of corn. HLH has already built its corn drying, processing and storage facilities at the plantation, giving it the largest corn processing plant in Cambodia.

One of Singapore's first agri-business companies to invest in Cambodia, HLH said it is expecting its second harvest by the end of the year. 'Typically, corn plantations in the region can produce an average of two harvests a year,' said HLH, known in Singapore for its agri-tainment farm called D'Kranji Farm Resort.

Each corn harvest is expected to yield about six to eight tonnes per hectare. HLH's plantation is expected to produce 5,000 to 7,000 tonnes a year.

The group, which has invested more than US$12 million in Cambodia and has acquired more than 10,000 hectares of agricultural land in the country, expects to invest close to US$40 million for its entire corn plantation there.

HLH said it will fund its agricultural investments in Cambodia through internal funds and borrowings from financial institutions.

The corn produced will be sold to feed mills in Cambodia and used mainly for animal feed, such as for poultry, cattle and hog feed industries. Over the past three years, the price of corn is said to have risen by a compounded rate of more than 30 per cent to the current US$205-220 per tonne.

HLH's 450-hectare plantation is part of the 1,791 hectares of freehold land that it agreed to buy in June last year.

In March this year, the group also agreed with Cambodia's Ministry of Environment to develop 9,985 hectares concession lands at Oral District in Kampong Speu for its corn plantation business.

Land clearing and corn planting on these concession lands have begun, with the company expecting to reap its first harvest by the end of this year.


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Indonesian man arrested for smuggling live birds into Singapore

Hoe Yeen Nie, Channel NewsAsia 25 Aug 09;

SINGAPORE: A 58-year-old Indonesian man has been caught for trying to smuggle Mata Puteh birds into Singapore in a box of otah.

The seemingly ordinary box of otah, or barbequed fish cakes, aroused the suspicions of officers at the Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal when they heard chirping noises from the box. The officers removed the otah to discover three trays containing 50 live birds.

The incident happened around 1pm on Monday.

Officers said the case has been referred to the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) for further investigations.

Mata Puteh birds have distinctive white rings around their eyes, and yellow feathers at their throat. They are also known as Oriental White Eyes.

The importation of live birds without an AVA permit is a violation of the Animals and Birds Act, which carries a maximum penalty of S$10,000. Offenders can also be jailed up to one year.

Chirps from otak otak give smuggler away
Straits Times 27 Aug 09;

AN INDONESIAN man, who declared he was only carrying otak otak (fish cakes) to give to a friend here, was found to be hiding 50 birds among them.

Ho Han Hong, 58, was jailed for three weeks for bringing in the Oriental White Eyes without a permit from the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore.

A district court heard yesterday that Ho had arrived on a ferry from Indonesia and disembarked at the Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal on Monday afternoon.

An Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) officer heard the birds chirping when he lifted a plastic bag containing the otak otak that was inside the cardboard box Ho was carrying.

He found the 50 birds packed in three green trays.

Ho confessed he had brought the birds, also known as Mata Puteh, from Tanjong Pinang to be delivered to a bird-shop owner in Bedok.

He was to receive $500 for the delivery of the birds, which are prized for their singing ability.

Import of any birds from Indonesia is prohibited because of the bird flu outbreak there.

The maximum penalty for the offence is a $10,000 fine and a year in jail.

KHUSHWANT SINGH

- CNA/yt


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Getting Rich in Malaysia Cronyism Capital Means Dayak Lose

Yoolim Lee, Bloomberg 25 Aug 09;

After a stomach-churning takeoff from a 550-meter runway at Long Banga airstrip on the Malaysian side of the island of Borneo, the 19-seat plane soars over a green tropical wilderness. This is one of the world’s last remaining virgin rain forests.

About 30 minutes into the flight to the bustling oil town of Miri, the lush landscape changes, and neatly terraced fields of oil palms take the place of jungle. Twenty years ago, this was forestland. Now, those forests are lost forever.

The shift from rain forest to oil palm cultivation in Malaysia’s Sarawak state highlights the struggle taking place between forces favoring economic development, led by Sarawak state’s chief minister, Abdul Taib Mahmud, and those who want to conserve the rain forest and the ways of life it supports.

During Taib’s 28-year rule, his government has handed out concessions for logging and supported the federal government’s megaprojects, including the largest hydropower site in the country and, most recently, oil palm plantations. The projects are rolling back the frontiers of Borneo’s rain forest, home to nomadic people and rare wildlife such as orangutans and proboscis monkeys.

At least four prominent Sarawak companies that have received contracts or concessions have ties to Taib or his family.

Transforming Malaysia

The government of Malaysia plans to transform the country into a developed nation by 2020 through a series of projects covering everything from electric power generation to education. The country’s gross domestic product, which has been growing at an average 6.7 percent annual pace since 1970, shrank 6.2 percent in the first quarter.

In Sarawak, Taib’s government is following its own development plans that call for doubling the state’s GDP to 150 billion ringgit ($42 billion) by 2020. Sarawak Energy Bhd., which is 65 percent owned by the state government, said in July 2007 it plans to build six power plants, including hydropower and coal-fired generators.

The state government also wants to expand the acreage in Sarawak devoted to oil palms to 1 million hectares (2.5 million acres) by 2010, from 744,000 at the end of 2008, according to Sarawak’s Ministry of Land Development. Companies that formerly chopped down hardwood trees and exported the timber are now moving into palm plantations.

Lawsuits Filed

Meanwhile, many of the ethnic groups who have traditionally lived from the land in Sarawak -- known as Dayaks -- have filed lawsuits that aim to block some projects and seek better compensation.

Sarawak’s ambitions could be hindered by a lack of good governance, which would shut out overseas investors, says Steve Waygood, head of sustainable and responsible investment research at Aviva Investors in London, which manages more than $3 billion in sustainable assets.

“Even just the perception of corruption can lead to restricted inflows of capital from the global investment community into emerging markets such as Sarawak,” says Waygood, who wrote about reputational risk in a 2006 book, “Capital Market Campaigning” (Risk Books).

“The largest and most responsible financial institutions are very careful to avoid funding unsustainable developments,” he says.

Unilever, which buys 1.5 million tons of palm oil a year -- 4 percent of the world’s supply -- for use in products such as Dove soap and Flora margarine, announced in May that it would buy only from sustainable sources.

No Direct Purchases

“Unilever does not source any palm oil directly from Sarawak,” says Jan Kees Vis, Unilever’s director of sustainable agriculture. “We buy from plantation companies and traders located elsewhere.”

He says Unilever has committed by 2015 to buy all of its palm oil from sources certified by the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, a group representing palm oil producers, consumers and nongovernmental organizations that seeks to establish standards for sustainably produced palm oil. The Malaysian Palm Oil Association, a government-supported group of Malaysian plantation companies, is a member of the RSPO.

About 35 percent of the world’s cooking oil comes from palm -- more than any other plant, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. And 90 percent of the world’s palm oil comes from Malaysia and Indonesia.

Skittles and Soap

The oil is an ingredient used in everything from Skittles candy to Palmolive soap to some kinds of biodiesel fuel. Palm oil futures have climbed 45 percent this year as of Aug. 24 on concern that dry weather caused by El Nino may reduce output. Crude oil prices rose to a 10-month high of $74.24 a barrel, spurring demand for biodiesel.

Malaysia lost 6.6 percent of its forest cover from 1990 to 2005, or 1.49 million hectares, the most-recent data available from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization show. That’s an area equivalent to the state of Connecticut.

Neighboring Indonesia lost forestland at the fastest annual rate among the world’s 44 forest nations from 2000 to 2005, Amsterdam-based Greenpeace says.

“Palm oil is the new green gold after timber,” says Mark Bujang, executive director of the Borneo Resources Institute in Miri, a city of about 230,000 people in Sarawak. “It has become the most destructive force after three decades of unsustainable logging.”

While Malaysia’s palm oil exports have more than doubled to a record 46 billion ringgit in 2008 from 2006, according to the country’s central bank, the gain has come at a price.

Displaced People

Development projects and palm plantations have displaced thousands of people, some of whom have lived for centuries by fishing, hunting and farming in the jungle. Almost 200 lawsuits are pending in the Sarawak courts relating to claims by Dayak people on lands being used for oil palms and logging, according to Baru Bian, a land rights lawyer representing many of the claimants.

A handful of activists have been found dead under mysterious circumstances or disappeared, including Swiss environmental activist Bruno Manser, who vanished in the jungle in 2000.

Cutting down rain forests to cultivate palms in Sarawak has consequences far beyond Malaysia, says Janet Larsen, director of research at the Washington-based Earth Policy Institute.

The forests that are being destroyed help modulate the climate because they remove vast stores of carbon from the atmosphere. Chopping down the trees ends up releasing greenhouse gases.

‘Lungs of the Planet’

“These last remaining forests are the lungs of the planet,” Larsen says. “It affects us all.”

Chief Minister Taib, 73, has multiple roles in Sarawak. He’s also the state’s finance minister and its planning and resources management minister -- a role that gives him the power to dispense land, forestry and palm oil concessions as well as the power to approve infrastructure projects.

Until last year, Taib held the additional role of chairman of the Sarawak Timber Industry Development Corp., which fosters wood-based industries in the state.

Anwar Ibrahim, the former Malaysian finance minister who’s the head of the country’s opposition alliance, sees parallels between Taib’s rule and those of other long-standing leaders in Southeast Asia, such as former Indonesian President Suharto and former Philippine leader Ferdinand Marcos.

“It’s an authoritarian style of governance to protect their turf and their families,” says Anwar, who was fired as deputy prime minister by then Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad in 1998 and jailed on charges of having homosexual sex and abusing power. The sodomy conviction was overturned in 2004.

‘Driven by Greed’

Sim Kwang Yang, an opposition member of parliament for Sarawak’s capital city of Kuching from 1982 to 1995, agrees with Anwar’s assessment. “It is crony capitalism driven by greed without any regard for the people,” he says.

Taib’s adult children and his late wife, Lejla, together owned more than 29.3 percent of Cahya Mata Sarawak Bhd., the state’s largest industrial group, with 40 companies involved in construction, property development, road maintenance, trading and financial services, according to the company’s 2008 annual report.

Local residents jokingly say that the company’s initials, CMS, stand for “Chief Minister and Sons.”

In total, CMS has won about 1.3 billion ringgit worth of projects from the state and the federal government since the beginning of 2005, according to the firm’s stock exchange filings.

Taib declined to comment for this article. In an interview he gave to Malaysia’s state news agency, Bernama, on Jan. 13, 2001, Taib said CMS’s ties to him had nothing to do with its winning government jobs.

‘Not Involved’ in Contracts

“I am not involved in the award of contracts,” he said. “No politician in Sarawak is involved in the award of contracts.”

He told Bernama he doesn’t ask for special treatment of his sons. “I never ask anybody to do any favors,” he said.

Mahmud Abu Bekir Taib, the elder of Taib’s two sons, is CMS’s deputy chairman and owns 8.92 percent of the firm, according to the annual report. Sulaiman Abdul Rahman Taib, the younger son and CMS’s chairman until 2008, holds an 8.94 percent stake.

Taib’s two daughters and his son-in-law are also listed in the annual report as “substantial shareholders.”

Taib’s History

Taib, a Muslim who belongs to the Melanau group -- one of about 27 different ethnic groups in Sarawak -- entered politics at the age of 27 after graduating from the University of Adelaide in Australia with a law degree in 1960.

He held various ministerial positions in Sarawak and Malaysia before taking over in 1981 as the chief minister from his uncle, Abdul Rahman Yaakub. Rahman, now 81, ruled Sarawak for 11 years.

Taib, who has silver hair, appears almost daily on the front pages of Sarawak newspapers, sometimes sporting a goatee and a pair of rimless glasses, at the opening of new development projects or local events.

He lives in Sarawak’s capital city of Kuching, an urban area of about 600,000 people on the Sarawak River. Its picturesque waterfront is dotted with colonial buildings, the legacy of British adventurer James Brooke, who founded the Kingdom of Sarawak in 1841 and became known as the White Rajah. Brooke’s heirs ruled the kingdom until 1946, when Charles Vyner Brooke ceded his rights to the U.K. Sarawak joined the Federation of Malaysia on Sept. 16, 1963, along with other former British colonies.

Cousin’s Role

At Taib’s mansion, which overlooks the river, he receives guests in a living room decorated with gilt-edged European-style sofa sets, according to photos in the July to December 2006 newsletter of Naim Cendera Holdings Bhd., which changed its name to Naim Holdings Bhd. in March.

Naim is a property developer and contractor whose chairman is Taib’s cousin, Abdul Hamed Sepawi. He is also chairman of state power company Sarawak Energy and timber company Ta Ann Holdings Bhd., and is on the board of Sarawak Timber Industry Development Corp. and Sarawak Plantation Bhd.

Naim and CMS jointly built Kuching’s iconic waterfront building, the umbrella-roofed, nine-story Sarawak State Legislative Assembly complex. Naim has won more than 3.3 billion ringgit worth of contracts from the state and the federation since 2005, its stock exchange filings show.

Companies Respond

Ricky Kho, a spokesman for Naim, said the company declined to comment for this article. Naim’s deputy managing director, Sharifuddin Wahab, said in an interview with Bloomberg News in July 2007 that the chairman’s family ties weren’t why the company won government contracts.

“We have been able to execute our projects on time, we stick to the budget and the quality of what we hand over to the government is up to their expectations, if not more,” he said.

“Our teams have always acted professionally” when working with the government, whether on large or small projects, CMS’s group managing director, Richard Curtis, said in an e-mail. “CMS is governed by the strict listing regulations of the Malaysian stock exchange,” he said, adding that the chairman and the group managing director are both independent.

“The large projects carry with them an equally large risk, including a huge reputational risk, particularly for crucial projects by the government,” he said. “It is the government’s prerogative and discretion to award projects using a variety of approaches that includes open and closed tenders as well as directly negotiated processes, to the contractors and developers they feel will deliver the project as promised.”

Malaysia’s reputation as a place to conduct business has deteriorated in recent years, according to Transparency International, the Berlin-based advocacy group that publishes an annual Corruption Perceptions Index.

‘Monument of Corruption’

Transparency ranked the country 47th out of 180 in 2008, down from 43rd in 2007. Transparency also has singled out the Bakun Hydroelectric Dam, under construction on the Balui River in Sarawak, as a “monument of corruption.”

The index lacks fairness, says Ahmad Said Hamdan, chief commissioner of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, because it doesn’t take into consideration the size of the population of the countries in the ranking, for example.

“I’ve seen a lot of improvement in civil service in the past 10 years,” he says.

Dead Fish

Early this year, hundreds of dead fish started floating on the muddy river near the Bakun dam site. The fish were killed by siltation, which was triggered by uncontrolled logging upstream, Sarawak’s assistant minister of environment and public health, Abang Abdul Rauf Abang Zen, says. He says the Bakun dam has very strict environmental assessments and isn’t to blame for the siltation.

In January, Tenaga Nasional Bhd., Malaysia’s state- controlled power utility, and Sarawak Energy said they won approval from the national government to take over the operation of the hydropower project through a leasing agreement. Sarawak Energy also won preliminary approval to export about 1,600 megawatts of electricity from the 2,400-megawatt Bakun project, once it begins operating, to Peninsular Malaysia. The remaining power will go to Sarawak.

Taib announced a plan called New Concept in 1994. The aim was to bring together local people, with their customary rights to the land, and private shareholders, who would provide capital and expertise to create plantations. The plan called for companies to hold a 60 percent stake in the joint ventures, the state to own 10 percent and the remaining 30 percent to go to local communities in return for a 60-year lease on their land.

‘Emotional’ Disputes

That time period equals about two complete cycles of oil palm development. An oil palm typically matures in 3 years, reaches peak production from 5 to 7 years and continues to produce for about 25 years, says Nirgunan Tiruchelvam, a commodities analyst at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Singapore.

The policy has led to some disagreements. In his interview with Bernama in 2001, Taib said land acquisitions by the state have led to “emotional” disputes because some people seek too much compensation.

“We are not allowed to pay more than market value,” he told Bernama. He said people need to prove that they have traditionally lived in an area -- for example, by providing an aerial photograph -- in order for the state to grant them title to the land.

“If there are disputes, they go to the court,” Taib told Bernama.

Some local people say they received no compensation at all for their land. In Kampung Lebor, a village about a two-hour drive from Kuching, 160 families, members of the Iban group that was formerly headhunters, live in longhouses and survive by fishing and some farming. The Iban are Sarawak’s largest single group of Dayaks, who make up about half of the state’s 2.3 million population.

Land Overlap

In mid-1996, the state handed out parcels of land that overlapped with the community’s customary hunting and fishing areas to the Land Custody and Development Authority and Nirwana Muhibbah Bhd., a palm oil company in Kuching.

In mid-1997, the authority and the company cleared the land with bulldozers and planted oil palm seedlings, according to a copy of Kampung Lebor’s writ of summons filed to the High Court in Kuching.

Government ‘Cruel’

“The government is cruel,” says Jengga Jeli, 54, a father of five in Lebor. “Fruit trees have been cut down. It’s become harder to hunt and fish. Now we are forced to get meat and vegetables from the bazaar, and we are very poor.” Jengga’s village filed a lawsuit in 1998 against Nirwana, LCDA and the state government in a bid to get compensation.

The case was finally heard in 2006 and is now awaiting judgment, according to Baru Bian, who is representing the Iban in Kampung Lebor. Reginal Kevin Akeu, a lawyer at Abdul Rahim Sarkawi Razak Tready Fadillah & Co. Advocates, which is representing Nirwana and LCDA, declined to comment.

The cases show that the development projects, including plantations and dams, haven’t helped poverty among the local people, many of whom live without adequate electricity or schools, says Richard Leete, who served as the resident representative of the United Nations Development Program for Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei from 2003 to 2008.

Poverty Remains

“This is the paradox of Sarawak -- the great wealth it has, the natural resources in such abundance, and yet such an impoverishment and the real hardship these communities are suffering,” says Leete, who chronicled Malaysia’s progress since its independence from Britain in his book “Malaysia: From Kampung to Twin Towers” (Oxford Fajar, 2007). “There has no doubt been a lot of money politics,” he says.

In the rugged hills about 150 kilometers (93 miles) south of Kuching, some 160 Bidayuh families, known as the Land Dayaks, are clinging to their traditional habitat, while a dam is under construction nearby. They live by farming and fishing.

With only a primary school in the village, children have to go to boarding schools outside the jungle to get further education, crossing seven handmade bamboo bridges and trekking two hours over the hills when they return home.

The state has offered the Bidayuhs 7,500 ringgit per hectare, 80 ringgit per rubber tree and 60 ringgit per durian fruit tree in compensation for their native land, says Simo ak Sekam, 48, a resident of Kampung Rejoi, one of four villages in the area. In Rejoi, about half of 39 families have refused.

Bamboo Bridges

“We don’t want to move because we are happy here,” Simo says. “We feel very sad because our land will be covered with water. The young generations won’t know this land. They won’t see the bamboo bridges.”

The builder of the local reservoir is Naim Holdings -- the company headed by Chief Minister Taib’s cousin. The government awarded Naim the 310.7 million-ringgit contract without putting it out for bids. Naim’s statement announcing the deal in July 2007 said it won the job on a “negotiated basis.”

One of the most threatened groups is the Penan, nomadic people who live deep in the jungle on the upper reaches of the Baram River. On a steamy equatorial morning in late October 2007, Long Kerong village leader Kelesau Naan and his wife, Uding Lidem, walked two hours to their rice-storing hut. Kelesau, who was in his late 70s and who had protested logging activity in their area, told Uding he’d go check on an animal trap he had set nearby. He never came back.

Skull and Bones Found

Two months later, his skull and several pieces of his bones, along with his necklace made of red, yellow and white beads, surfaced on the banks of the Segita River. Inspector Sumarno Lamundi at the regional police station says the investigation is ongoing.

It was just the latest tragedy among activists working for the Penan since the early 1990s, when rampant logging took place. At least two other Penan were found dead, including Abung Ipui, a pastor and an advocate for land rights for his village. His body was found in October 1994 with his stomach cut open.

Manser, the Swiss activist for the rights of the Penan, vanished without a trace from the Borneo rain forests in May 2000 and was officially declared missing in March 2005.

Kelesau’s death has made the Penan willing to stand up for their survival.

“We are scared of something terrible happening to us if we don’t resist,” says grim-faced Bilong Oyoi, 48, headman of Long Sait, a Penan settlement close to Long Kerong.

Penans’ Resistance

Bilong, who wears a traditional rattan hat decorated with hornbill feathers, says his group is setting up blockades to resist logging activities. They are also working with NGOs to get attention for their plight and filing lawsuits.

With the help of the Basel, Switzerland-based Bruno Manser Fund, an NGO set up by the late activist, Bilong and 76 other Penan sent a letter -- which some signed using only thumb prints -- to Gilles Pelisson, the chief executive officer of French hotel chain Accor SA.

The letter urged Accor to think twice about partnering with logging company Interhill Logging Sdn. to build a 388-room Novotel Interhill in Kuching. The Penan community says Interhill’s operations in Sarawak have a devastating effect on them. Accor responded by sending a fact-finding mission to Sarawak to investigate Interhill’s logging activities.

“If the worst-case scenario occurs and if no action plan is implemented, we will not continue with our partnership,” Helene Roques, Accor’s director for sustainable development in Paris, said in June. In mid-August, she said she expects “good results” by the end of September.

Rio Tinto Venture

No foreign investor has made a larger bet on Taib’s development plans than Rio Tinto Alcan, a unit of London-based mining company Rio Tinto Plc. A joint venture between Rio Tinto and CMS for a $2 billion aluminum smelter has been negotiating power purchase agreements with Sarawak Energy for more than 12 months, according to Julia Wilkins, a Rio Tinto Alcan spokeswoman in Brisbane, Australia.

CMS meets Rio Tinto’s requirements as a joint-venture partner, she says. “CMS is a main-board-listed company with its own board of directors,” she says. “It has a free float of shares in excess of the minimum market requirement. The chairman and the group managing director are both independent.”

Malaysia grants special economic advantages to the country’s Malay majority and the local people of Sabah and Sarawak states on Borneo, collectively referred to as Bumiputra -- literally, sons of the soil.

Still, the country is leaving behind many of its ethnic minorities, says Colin Nicholas, a Malaysian activist of Eurasian descent who has written a book about the mainland’s oldest community, “The Orang Asli and the Contest for Resources” (IWGIA, 2000).

‘Completely Powerless’

One person trying to help the Dayaks is See Chee How, 45, a land rights lawyer who became an activist after meeting Sim, the former opposition member of parliament in Kuching.

In 1994, See witnessed an attack on Penan demonstrators who’d erected a roadblock to prevent logging trucks from driving through their land. A 6-year-old boy died after security forces used tear gas on the demonstrators, he says.

“They were completely powerless,” recalls the soft-spoken, crew-cut See, sporting a white T-shirt and a pair of jeans, in his office above a bustling market in Kuching. “They were depending on logging trucks to move around because their passageways had been destroyed by logging trails.” See now works with Baru Bian, 51, one of the first land rights lawyers representing the Dayaks in Sarawak.

Lawsuits and Votes

Nicholas says Sarawak’s people have to fight for their rights not only through lawsuits but by voting.

“The biggest problem we have with indigenous people’s rights is that we have the federal government and state government run and dictated by people who have no respect or interest for indigenous people,” he says. “We need a change of government.”

The prime minister’s office declined to comment.

Opposition leader Anwar says change is possible. His alliance won control of an unprecedented five states in Peninsular Malaysia in a March 2008 election. Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak’s ruling coalition has lost at least four regional polls held this year.

“I think this is a turning point,” Anwar says.

Still, Taib’s coalition won 30 of Sarawak’s 31 seats in March 2008 parliamentary elections. That helped the ruling National Front coalition led by then Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi retain a 58-seat majority, ahead of Anwar’s People’s Alliance. Sarawak is due to hold the next election by 2011.

Taib defended his government’s program to turn forestlands into oil palm plantations as a way of improving living standards for the Dayaks at a seminar on native land development in Miri on April 18, 2000.

“Land without development is a poverty trap,” he said, according to his Web site. Many Dayak people, who have seen their land transformed as a result of Taib’s policies and companies linked to him, say they are still waiting to see their share of wealth.


Read more!

Indonesia tells neighbors not to internationalize haze issue

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 25 Aug 09;

The government has asked neighboring countries not to bring unsettled haze problems to international forums as happened in 2006 when smog from forest fires in Sumatra spread to Singapore and Malaysia.

Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar said Tuesday the haze problems should be resolved among ASEAN member countries.

“We have done our best to tackle the forest fires. If there are still problems, we ask for their understanding since it is not easy [to stop the blaze],” Rachmat told reporters.

He said he had extended the request during the meeting of ministerial steering committee of five neighboring countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Brunei Darussalam last week.

An official from Singapore complained about the haze problems from Indonesia in a session at the United Nations in 2006.

The 2006 forest fires due to El Nino weather anomaly caused 145,000 hotspots in Indonesia, the second worst since 1997.

The thick haze also affected million of people in Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei and Thailand, forcing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to apologize to neighboring countries over the export of haze.

Fears have been rife that the 2006 incident could be repeated this year due to the expected
return of El Nino.

Rachmat said water bombing and helicopters had been involved in the fight against forest fires.

“It’s difficult to stop the fires as many of them take place in peat land areas.”

Agreement to Keep Gripes About Haze in Family
Fidelis E. Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 26 Aug 09;

The five Southeast Asian countries unhappily sharing the problem of heavy haze from forest and peatland fires have agreed to keep their comments on the problem among themselves and not raise them at wider international forums, the Indonesian environment minister said.

Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar said his counterparts from Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Brunei had agreed to this at his suggestion at a meeting in Singapore last week.

Rachmat said he had expressed a need for restraint in comments about handling forest and peatland fires because a wider audience could lead to a loss of international credibility.

“Indonesia had a very bad experience with the issue in 2006 when Singapore accused us at the United Nations of not doing anything about the fires, which of course had the consequence of us losing credibility in international eyes,” he said.

“That is why I was really firm on the issue last week.”

The meeting was the eighth held by the five members of the Subregional Ministerial Steering Committee on Transboundary Haze Pollution. The committee serves as a forum for discussing shared problems associated with the annual forest and peatland fires which occur in all of the five countries except Singapore.

The worst of the fires occur in the Indonesian and Malaysian parts of Borneo and on Sumatra.

Rachmat said last week’s meeting had been positive, with the five nations repeating their commitment to staying focused on extinguishing the fires and preventing new outbreaks.

“The other countries now understand that we [in Indonesia] have tried our best, but these fires are not easy to put out because they happen in peatland areas which have unique characteristics and are highly flammable,” he said.

The committee’s members agreed the fires were becoming a regional problem not identified with any particular countries.

Rachmat said Indonesia was using the committee as a forum to seek consensus, not financial assistance from other countries.

Rachmat denied media reports last week that he had been re l uctant to accept help from other countries.

“If other countries want to help Indonesia with the fires, then I don’t think we’re the ones who should be issuing statements. We should leave it to the other countries to comment,” he said.

He said the help Indonesia might receive was expected to be in the form equipment such as helicopters or airplanes capable of dropping water bombs, instead of money.

“Basically, our main problem with the peatland fires is that we don’t have any effective means to extinguish them,” he said.

“So I asked for their understanding that it’s not easy for us. We have tried our best but have not successfully managed to contain all the fires.”

Indonesia wants to keep haze issue a domestic matter
Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 26 Aug 09;

The Indonesian government on Tuesday warned neighboring countries to settle the issue of haze through regional negotiation rather than by raising it at international forums.

In 2006, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was forced to sign a regional apology after neighboring countries protested internationally about the export of Indonesian haze.

State Minister for the Environment Rachmat Witoelar said the haze problems should be resolved in internal ASEAN member country meetings.

"We have done our best to tackle forest fires. If problems still exist, we ask for understanding as it is not easy to control the haze," Rachmat told reporters Tuesday.

He said the warning had been addressed during the meeting of a ministerial steering committee made up of five countries - Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Brunei Darussalam last week.

An official from Singapore complained about the haze problems exported from Indonesia in a session at the United Nations in 2006.

There were 145,000 fires hotspots in 2006 when El Nino hit the country and conditions were as bad as the 1997 forest fires.

At the time, thick haze blanketed Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei and parts of Thailand, forcing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to apologize to neighboring countries.

There are fears that a similar incident could occur this year due to the expected return of El Nino.

Rachmat said that following the complaints in 2006, several foreign countries had canceled their financial aid directed at helping protect Indonesian forests.

Rachmat said the government had taken efforts to stop forests fires as well as preventing them by deploying all necessary equipment, including helicopters and water-bombings. Forestry Minister M.S Kaban said earlier the government would only take firm action to control forest haze if it disturbed flights and sparked protests in Malaysia and Singapore.

Environmental activists have criticized the government for its slow action in tackling forest fires across the country. "The forest fires also occur because the government has failed to take preventive actions through policies and law enforcement," said Berry Furgon from the Indonesian Forum for Environment.


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'Extinction threat' to flying fox: Malaysian government urged to ban hunting

Judith Burns, BBC News 25 Aug 09;

Scientists are urging the government of Malaysia to ban the hunting of the world's largest fruit bat.

Researchers say the large flying fox will be wiped out on the Malaysian peninsula if the current unsustainable level of hunting continues.

Writing in the Journal of Applied Ecology they say around 22,000 of the animals are legally hunted each year and more killed illegally.

They say the species could be extinct there by as early as 2015.

Flying foxes can have a wingspan of up to 1.5m and are crucial for the rainforest ecosystems in this part of Asia.

Lead author, Dr Jonathan Epstein of Wildlife Trust, told BBC News: "They eat fruit and nectar and in doing so they drop seeds around and pollinate trees. So they are critical to the propagation of rainforest plants."

The most optimistic estimates put the population of flying foxes in peninsular Malaysia at 500,000.

Shooting at dusk

The animals are hunted for food, medicine and sport. Shooting takes place at dusk as the bats set out to forage overnight.

The researchers say their population models suggest that if current hunting rates continue it will take between six and 81 years for the species to be hunted to extinction.

The research team carried out abundance surveys and collected government data on hunting licences.

The scientists used a computer model to predict the fate of the species according to varying rates of kill and a range of current population estimates.

This was the first time satellite telemetry has been used to track bats in Asia. The method is often used to track birds but is more rarely used to study mammals.

The researchers trapped individual bats and fastened collars round their necks before releasing them.

Each collar sent a satellite signal which allowed the scientists to track the animal by computer.

The team found that individual animals travelled up to 60km a night in search of food.

Protected in Thailand

Flying foxes, or Pteropus vampyrus, are protected in neighbouring Thailand but hunting is allowed in Malaysia and parts of Indonesia.

Dr Epstein said: "We think this shows there is a need for co-ordinated protection management along the countries where these bats live. It's clear now that they are not just Malaysian bats but they share time between Sumatra, Thailand and Malaysia."

The Malaysian government wildlife departments were partners in the study and are looking at reviewing the hunting laws in the light of the results.

Dr Epstein and his colleagues have recommended at least a temporary ban on hunting to allow the population to recover and to give time for a more comprehensive assessment of the threats to their survival in peninsular Malaysia.


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Rare tiger killed, body stolen from Indonesian zoo

Associated Press 24 Aug 09;

JAKARTA, Indonesia — A group of thieves killed an endangered tiger in an Indonesian zoo and stole most of its body, zoo officials said Sunday, a theft police suspect was motivated by the animal's valuable fur and bones.

The remains of the female Sumatran tiger were found by staff Saturday at the Taman Rimba Zoo in Jambi province on Sumatra island, said zoo director Adrianis, who like many Indonesians uses only one name.

"It was sadistic," Adrianis said of the attack. "The killers left only its intestines in the cage."

Posma Lubis, lead detective for the Jambi police department, said they were searching for the perpetrators.

It was unclear how the thieves broke into the zoo or how many were involved.

British-based international wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC said in a 2008 report that it found tiger bones, claws, skins and whiskers being sold openly in eight cities on Indonesia's Sumatra island in 2006, despite tough laws banning such trade.

The group estimated that 23 tigers had been killed to supply the parts found for sale in souvenir, Chinese medicine and jewelry stores.

Sumatran tigers are on the brink of extinction because of rapid deforestation, poaching and clashes with humans. Their numbers have dwindled to about 250 from about 1,000 in the 1970s, according to the Washington D.C.-based World Wildlife Fund.

Authorities Say Poachers Who Killed Tiger at Jambi Zoo Were Professionals
Fidelis E. Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 23 Aug 09

The killing of a rare Sumatran tiger at Jambi’s Taman Rimbo Zoo over the weekend will be thoroughly investigated, authorities said on Sunday.

Sheila, who had been the only Sumatran tiger remaining at the zoo, was killed and skinned on zoo grounds after being drugged by poachers early on Saturday, leaving virtually nothing behind except the innards and a few ribs of the animal, which is critically endangered in the wild.

“There is no doubt that the killers were professionals because they did their job very cleanly, taking off the skin in the enclosure rather than dragging the 100-kilogram animal out, which could have attracted attention,” said Didy Wurdjanto, the head of the Jambi Natural Resources Conservation Center.

Didy said the killers were also well aware of the tiger’s worth on the black market, with body parts such as the animal’s bones in high demand for use in traditional local and Chinese remedies as a pain killer or aphrodisiac. Even the blood was thought to have been collected in plastic bags to be sold.

“They were skillful because if there was one scratch on the skin, it wouldn’t be worth much,” he said, adding that the skin could fetch between Rp 35 million ($3,500) and Rp 45 million on the black market.

Authorities suspect the killers entered the zoo by climbing through a gutter running past its lightly guarded main gate and went to the tiger enclosure located just 10 to 15 meters from the main road.

They are then though to have climbed onto the roof of the enclosure, from where they threw in some poisoned bait.

Didy said the police had yet to determine the kind of poison used to kill the animal.

He said the incident was an insult to Jambi residents because Sheila, who was donated by Jakarta’s Ragunan Zoo in 1992, was the centerpiece of the zoo’s conservation education efforts.

“I just can’t bear the thought that this could be a new trend in the illegal wildlife trade, [that poachers] are now going after tame tigers in zoos rather than in forests,” Didy said. “The demand for tigers is increasing and the price is getting higher because there are so few left.”

Adrianis, the head of Taman Rimbo Zoo, said that despite the lack of security, zoo officials never considered the tiger to be in any danger.

“Apart from her keepers, there were obviously not many people wanting to go near the tiger, and even the police hesitated about going near the cage,” she said.

Adrianis refused to speculate on whether zoo staff could have been involved in the crime. “We just hope that the police can catch these people because tigers are a national asset.”

Tiger killed in Jambi zoo
The Jakarta Post 22 Aug 09;

Police are questioning a veterinarian and five workers of the Taman Rimbo zoo in the Jambi capital of Jambi after its Sumatran tiger was killed early on Saturday.

Detectives suspected the thieves poisoned the female tiger, Sheila, and slaughtered her in the wee hours when the zoo was almost unguarded. Worse, the zoo is poorly illuminated in the evening.

The police found remnants of meat bait that contained anesthetics and intestinal parts of the protected animal in her cage.

Head of the provincial natural resources conservation agency Didy Wurjanto said the cage had been left unlocked to allow zoo workers to feed the tiger, which had settled in the zoo for 20 years since its birth at Ragunan zoo in Jakarta.

“The thieves took the tiger’s skin and some body parts that they could sell,” Didy told kompas.com.

Jambi police detective Adj. Comr. Posma Lubis said the five people were questioned as witnesses. He said the police had not yet found evidence of involvement of insiders in the case.

“But a tiger will not attack people close to it,” he said.

The Sumatran tiger faces extinction due to uncontrolled hunting.

Tiger Death Sees Calls for Action on Zoos
Fidelis E. Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 25 Aug 09;

Environmentalist urged the government on Tuesday to tackle wildlife crime after a female Sumatran tiger was slaughtered in a zoo in Jambi last weekend.

Sheila, the only Sumatran tiger remaining at the Taman Rimbo Zoo, was killed and skinned on zoo grounds after being drugged by poachers early on Saturday, leaving virtually nothing behind except the innards and a few ribs of the animal, which is critically endangered in the wild.

Authorities suspect the killers entered the zoo by climbing through a gutter running past its lightly guarded main gate to the tiger enclosure located just 10 meters from the main road.

They are then thought to have climbed onto the roof of the enclosure, from where they threw in a poisoned bait.

“The skinned and stolen tiger from the Jambi zoo is just another incident in a long list of the wildlife crimes in zoos. We are strongly against such crimes, especially when they happen in zoos,” said Radius Nursidi, a campaign officer for ProFauna, a wildlife protection organization.

Nursidi said the government needed to have a moratorium on issuing permits for any new Indonesian zoo or safari park, and instead focus on assisting and monitoring the present facilities.

“It seems that there are no ‘safe places’ for the endangered Sumatran tigers. In the wild, tigers are still being hunted for illegal wildlife trade and now tigers in zoos are threatened by well-organized criminals,” he said, adding that the latest incident in Jambi showed a lack of security by the zoo’s authorities.

Data from ProFauna Indonesia shows that two other tigers have died suspiciously in zoos over the past four months. One of them, a male tiger also belonging to the Taman Rimbo Zoo, died last February but its remains were never verified by the public. The second tiger, a female, died in a Surabaya zoo in July.

Profauna recently managed to help law enforcement officers to expose four people involved in the wildlife trade. They are alleged to have close connections with employees from various zoos in Jakarta and Surabaya.

Tiger killing and theft plotted in jail
Jon Afrizal, The Jakarta Post 2 Sep 09;

Jambi Police are still searching for two men accused of masterminding the killing and theft of a Sumatran tiger from its cage at the Taman Rimba Jambi Zoo on Aug. 22, following the arrest of a suspect.

Syamsuddin alias Udin Bolu, who was arrested last week, said Iwan and Mukmin were the brains behind the crime.

“We planned the theft and killing when we were serving our jail sentences. The plan was discussed between May and June this year,” said Udin, who has been in prison six times for various criminal cases.

Udin said he accepted Iwan’s request for assistance due to their childhood friendship and to pay back Iwan’s donation aid. For his role, Udin was promised to receive Rp 18 million, Rp 8 million of which was transferred in advance.

Udin said Iwan was only taking orders from a businessman living in the South Sumatra capital of Palembang.

The thieves stole the skin and flesh of a 25-year-old tiger called Sheila, the remaining tiger at the zoo, after feeding it with poisoned bait.


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Thai rare fish threatened by aquariums, says diver

The Nation 26 Aug 09;

Thaphol Somsakul, a civilian dive instructor with the Navy, said he was monitoring a reported trend among fishermen acting on their own initiative, or who were hired by aquariums to catch rare species.

Thaphol said he became suspicious after spotting rare species with distinctive marks at various trawler piers, and then seeing them later in aquariums.

"I interviewed fishermen who all said those rare species were trapped in their nets by chance," he said. Thaphol said the rare fish were becoming harder to find in their regular habitats, citing his own experience and reports from fellow divers.

"The decrease in number of these species coincides with the increase in the number of new aquariums opening, as well as in the number of rare species on display," he said.

He said the Navy was aware of the trend and often found fishing trawlers catching rare species, but had no authority to act, either in finding proof or raising awareness among fishermen.

Unlike protected or endangered species, the rare species are not protected by law. The rare species cited by Thaphol are a giant stingray and a fish called ronin.

A oneyear joint project by the Navy, PTTEP, and the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry will soon inspect 20 sites in the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea to locate coral reef sites and gather information to make a seabed map. The information will be ultilised in a coming project to conserve natural coral reefs.


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Dwindling food supplies, water crisis threaten Javan rhino

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 24 Aug 09;

Indonesia’s endangered rhinos are increasingly threatened by declining food resources coupled with a projected water scarcity due to climate change that would dry out the rhinos’ wallows in jungles, a study reveals.

The study, conducted by the Indonesian Rhino Foundation (YABI), said the greatest threat for the rhinos in Ujung Kulon National Park in Banten was the sharp decline in food resources thanks to the invasion of a palm species called Langkap (Arenga Obtusifolia).

“More recent trends in climate change suggest a variation in seasonal rainfall. The water scarcity may restrict the rhinos’ movement,” Widodo Ramono, a senior scientist at the YABI, said.

He said the expected shortage of rainfall would become a serious problem for the preservation of the rhinos’ wallows for bathing.

The study, carried out in July, was jointly supported by the International Rhino Foundation, the ASEAN Rhino Foundation, the WWF and the Ministry of Forestry.

The study was aimed at assessing the geology, soil type and proximity to water in order to find suitable areas for the planned relocation of the Javanese rhino.

The proposed areas are adjacent to Gunung Honje, Gunung Halimun, Masigit Kareumbi and Leuweung Sancang, all of them close to the Ujung Kulon area on the western tip of Java Island.

“The spatial analysis suggests there is good possibility of an area on the Ujung Kulon peninsula and on Gunung Hone suitable for the Javan rhino,” the study said.

The Javanese rhinos’ habitat would be expanded from 38,000 hectares in Ujung Kulon to 42,000 hectares, up to the Mount Honje area.

The study showed that other proposed relocation areas were surrounded by intensive land use pressures which would threaten the rhinos.

Once the most widespread of Asian rhinoceroses, the Javan rhinos ranged from the islands of Indonesia, throughout Southeast Asia and into India and China.

However, due to habitat loss and poaching for their horns, Javan rhinos are now the rarest of the world’s five rhino species and considered critically endangered.

The shy rhinos can now be found only in two locations in the world – one in Ujung Kulon, which is home to an estimated 50 Javan rhinos, and another in the Cat Tien National Park in Vietnam Park in Vietnam, whose rhino population is probably no more than 10.

The WWF has installed 34 video cameras in the Ujung Kulon jungle in an effort to track the lives of the Javan rhinos. In June, the WWF’s camera captured images of the rhinos, showing a mother and a calf and a large male wallowing in various mud holes. The WWF has identified about 37 individuals in Ujung Kulon through camera tracking.

Widodo said Javan rhinos preferred to live in lowland forest in areas less than 100 meters above sea level.

“However, the expected sea level rises because of climate change could overwhelm its prime habitat which would threaten the rhinos,” he said.

The study, however, admitted that in Gunung Honje, mounting threats, arising from increasing human activity due to high population pressures, included potential rhino poaching and anthrax.

The Banten provincial administration and the legislative council have voiced their support for plans to expand the habitat of the Javan rhinos at Ujung Kulon.


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'Stress' is shrinking polar bears

Victoria Gill, BBC News 25 Aug 09;

Polar bears have shrunk over the last century, according to research.

Scientists compared bear skulls from the early 20th Century with those from the latter half of the century.

Their study, in the Journal of Zoology, describes changes in size and shape that could be linked an increase in pollution and the reduction in sea ice.

Physical "stress" caused by pollutants in the bears' bodies, and the increased effort needed to find food, could limit the animals' growth, the team said.

The researchers used the skulls as indicators of body size. The skulls from the later period were between two and 9% smaller.

"Because the ice is melting, the bears have to use much more energy to hunt their prey," explained Cino Pertoldi, professor of biology from Aarhus University and the Polish Academy of Science, and lead scientist in this study.

"Imagine you have two twins - one is well fed during its growth and one is starving. (The starving) one will be much smaller, because it will not have enough energy to allocate to growth."

The team, which included colleagues from Aarhus University's Department of Arctic Environment, also found shape differences between the skulls from the different periods.

This development was slightly more mysterious, said Dr Pertoldi.

He explained that it was not possible to determine the cause, but that the changes could be linked to the environment - more specifically to pollutants that have built up in the Arctic, and in the polar bears' bodies.

The aim of the study was to compare two groups of animals that lived during periods when sea ice extent and pollution levels were very different.

The pollutants that the scientists focused on were compounds containing carbon and halogens - fluorine, chlorine, bromine or iodine.

Some of these compounds have already been phased out, but many still have important uses in industry. These include solvents, pesticides, refrigerants, adhesives and coatings.

Genetic brink

The changes, the team says, could also be related to a reduction in the genetic diversity of the species.

Hunting over the last century, said Dr Pertoldi, could have depleted the gene pool, leaving polar bears to suffer the effects of inbreeding.

"We also know from previous studies that some chlorinated chemical pollutants have affected the fertility of the females," he continued.

Rune Dietz from Aarhus University was another member of the research team.

He explained that he and his colleagues had already determined a link between man-made "persistent organic pollutants" and reduced bone mineral density in polar bears - which could leave the animals vulnerable to injury and to the bone disease osteoporosis.

Skull collection

The collection of almost 300 polar bear skulls was provided by the Zoological Museum of Copenhagen in Denmark.

Christian Sonne, a veterinary scientist from Aarhus University who worked with the team, said that this provided a unique and "fantastic sample", providing a window into the bears' development over a whole century.

During that time, he said, concentrations of many man-made pollutants in the Arctic have significantly increased.

He said: "Polar bears are one of the most polluted mammals on the globe."


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Death rate spikes among migrating whooping cranes

Maria Sudekum Fisher, Associated Press Yahoo News 26 Aug 09;

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A federal official says the world's only naturally migrating whooping cranes died at about twice their normal rate last year and will likely see an overall drop in numbers this year.

Tom Stehn, who oversees whooping crane conservation efforts for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, says 21 percent of a flock of whooping cranes that migrates between northern Canada and the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge in Texas each year died off last year. Typically about 10 percent of the flock dies off.

Stehn says including new births, this year's flock is expected to drop by about 20 birds from last year's 270 when counted in the fall.

The whooping crane numbered just 15 in 1941 but now numbers 539 and is considered a success story by conservationists.

___

U.S. Fish & Wildlife whooping crane report:

http://www.birdrockport.com/tom(underscore)stehn(underscore)whooping(underscore)crane(underscore)report.htm


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Disregard for the environment damages Indonesia's economy

Jonathan Wootliff, The Jakarta Post 25 Aug 09;

Although Indonesia covers only 1.3 percent of the planet's land surface, this island nation is home to about 17 percent of Earth's plant and animal species, some of which are found nowhere else in the world, according to The Nature Conservancy.

It's no wonder that most of world's leading conservation organizations have operations in a country that plays such an important role as part of the global ecosystem.

The Nature Conservancy, which is one of the largest environmental NGOs in the world, works alongside many famous international names in ecological protection in Indonesia, including Birdlife International, Conservation International, Greenpeace and Worldwide Fund for Nature. And there are hundreds of homegrown organizations dedicated to the nurturing of this nation's nature.

As the world's largest archipelago of 17,000 islands, Indonesia spans two bio-geographic regions, known as the Indomalayan and Australasian. Its rich array of biodiversity can be found across its breathtakingly varied landscape from pristine rainforests to rich coastal and marine areas.

The biological statistics are staggering.

More than 3,300 known species of amphibians, birds, mammals and reptiles and nearly 30,000 types of vascular plants are endemic to the islands, estimated at 40 percent of all biodiversity found in the region.

There are 1,539 bird species and 50 percent of all the world's fish species can be found in its marine and freshwater systems. And with over 500 varieties, Indonesia has more species of mammal than any other nation

But as regularly reported in this column and elsewhere, Indonesia's stunning natural environment and rich resources are facing sustained challenges from both natural phenomena and human activity. It is located in the highly seismic Pacific Ring of Fire, which accounts for 90 percent of the world's earthquakes. It is also the site of significant human activity as massive development is unleashed.

The growing pressure of population demands together with inadequate environmental management is a challenge for Indonesia that hurts both the poor and the economy at large.

Economic losses attributable to limited access to safe water and sanitation are conservatively estimated at an annual 2 percent of the country's gross domestic product. The annual costs of air pollution to the Indonesian economy have been calculated at around Rp 4 trillion each year.

As is so often the case in the developing world, these costs are typically disproportionately borne by the poor because they are far more exposed to pollution and much less likely to be able to afford mitigation measures.

Indonesia has long been a land of paradoxes. While it is home to so much of the world's flora and fauna, it is also the place with the largest number of critically endangered species.

IUCN, the World Conservation Union, has listed 147 mammals as close to extinction together with 114 birds, 91 fishes and 26 invertebrates. The organization explains that major conservation efforts are vital if these species are not to become extinct in the near future.

Trade in wild animals is a serious threat to many species in Indonesia. More than 95 percent of animals sold in markets are taken directly from the wild and not from captive breeding stocks, with more than 20 percent dying in transportation. And yet many endangered and protected species are traded freely, with the rarest sickeningly commanding the highest prices.

A roll call of animals threatened with annihilation collated by the Indonesian animal protection charity, ProFauna, makes for depressing reading.

Some 115,000 parrots are trapped each year in the wild in Papua and Maluku, including the highly endangered palm cockatoo, black-headed lory and yellow-crested cockatoo.

More than 25,000 turtles are slaughtered each year in Bali for satay and their shells sold as cheap ornaments to tourists.

Each year, 1,000 Kalimantan orangutans are smuggled to Java and overseas. To capture the orangutan babies, hunters will kill the mothers, meaning at least one orangutan dies for each baby taken.

At least 2,500 Javanese ebony lutung are hunted each year for illegal trade and for meat.

In excess of 3,000 gibbons are annually culled for domestic wildlife trade or to be smuggled overseas.

Forty percent of trapped wild animals die as a result of cruelty and pain inflicted during their capture and transportation due to cramped cages and inadequate food and water. Sixty percent of animals illegally traded in the local wildlife markets are endangered, all of which are officially protected by law.

It is common in Indonesians to keep wild animals in cages, often without realizing that this can be cruel to the animal and damaging to the species. Singing bird competitions are commonplace in some regions of the country, particularly Java, stimulating hunting and trade in some of the country's most endangered creatures.

This column is relentlessly documenting the complexity and diversity of problems facing Indonesia's wildlife and the environment.

We must be thankful for the plethora of NGOs dedicated to the protection of Indonesia's biodiversity. The people of this country need to be made more aware of the value of nature, and the government must be constantly reminded of its duty to ensure that our unique environment is adequately protected.

Jonathan Wootliff is an independent sustainable development consultant specializing in the building of productive relationships between companies and NGOs. He can be contacted at jonathan@wootliff.com


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