Best of our wild blogs: 30 Aug 09


Open for booking from 1 Sep: Chek Jawa intertidal walk dates for Oct-Dec 09 from wild shores of singapore

Fallen Star - by no fault of its own
from Running with the Wind

Everyone has Secrets, and this is mine: Sedimentary Rock Landforms at Sentosa from You run, we GEOG

Night of shiny armour
from The annotated budak

How Woodpeckers Walk Vertically Up Trees
from Life's Indulgences

Birds in the Neighbourhood
from Running with the Wind

Flora and Fauna@Toa Payoh Sensory Park (Part 1)
from Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature

Long yet fulfilling day at Ubin
from wonderful creation

Pulau Ubin - With the Naked Hermit Crabs
from Singapore Nature and wild shores of singapore

Barred and Little Cuckoo Doves roosting together
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Sunrise doesn't last all morning, a cloudburst doesn't last all day from You run, we GEOG


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Organic food study opens can of worms

Claims that such produce has no nutritional edge are one-sided and inconclusive, say organic farmers
Jamie Ee Wen Wei, Straits Times 30 Aug 09;

Organic farmers and supporters in Singapore are finding it difficult to stomach a recent British study claiming that organic food has no nutritional edge over conventional produce.

Calling the study one-sided and inconclusive, they claim it has not affected their business, although they fear worldwide news reports of the findings could also turn some potential converts away.

'I'm disappointed with it,' said Mr Max Liao, business development manager of Quan Fa Organic Farm.

'I don't think the report gave a strong argument against organic food. Throughout the years, there have been so many studies that showed that people experienced better health after eating organic food.'

The study was conducted by researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and commissioned by the British government's Food Standards Agency (FSA).

It was a result of a systematic review of 162 papers published in scientific literature over the past 50 years. Since the findings were published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition a month ago, the study has drawn flak from the organic food movement for not being comprehensive enough.

Organic food, devoid of additives and produced without chemicals such as fertilisers and pesticides, has become an increasingly popular choice among the health-conscious in recent years.

The world organic market was said to be worth an estimated US$48 billion (S$69 billion) in 2007.

Mr Tai Seng Yee, executive director of Zenxin Agri-Organic Food, which runs four organic farms in Malaysia and a wholesale store in Pasir Panjang, also dismissed the study.

'It is not representative of all the studies that have been done on organic food,' he said.

He pointed out that just two years ago, a major European Union-funded study - the biggest of its kind then - had found that organic produce contained as much as 40 per cent more antioxidants. Antioxidants are said to cut the risk of cancer and heart disease.

Mr Tai said his company's products were sent for laboratory tests three years ago and were found to contain over 15 per cent more antioxidants.

Some organic farmers also questioned if the products sampled in the literature review were grown under controlled quality. In the report, the researchers said that nearly two-thirds of the included studies 'failed to provide a clear description of the organic regimen under which the crops or livestock products (the study exposures) were produced'.

Mr Chai Kien Chin, owner of Fire Flies Health Farm in Lim Chu Kang, said: 'It is very difficult to compare crops grown in different environments as they may turn out very differently. So what is their standard?'

Others pointed out that the study did not look into the impact of pesticides and chemical fertilisers on normal food.

Ms Jay Chong, from Camu Camu Organic and Nature House in Hougang, said many customers choose organic food to minimise their exposure to pesticides.

'They believe it's harmful to them in the long run,' she said.

But the Health Promotion Board and dieticians interviewed sided with the study.

A spokesman for the board said it has been keeping abreast of scientific investigations on organic foods, and the latest study concurs with its position that 'overall, organic foods are not nutritionally more superior than conventionally produced foods'.

Echoing her views, Madam Koay Saw Lan, head of dietetics and nutrition services of Singapore General Hospital, also pointed out that there are strict government standards to ensure that all conventional foods are wholesome, safe and nutritious.

Dieticians advised consumers to focus on having a well-balanced diet instead.

Senior dietician Pauline Chan, managing director of The Nutrition Place, said: 'To buy or not to buy organic foods is a personal choice and really depends on the taste preference and the food budget one has.'

Sales of organic products here continue to surge despite the recession, as prices have fallen by more than 20 per cent in the past two years. The rise of organic farms in the region has been cited as one key factor.

At NTUC FairPrice, sales of its house-brand organic products Pasar Organic have increased by more than 30 per cent since it was launched in July last year, said Mr Tng Ah Yiam, the supermarket's director of integrated purchasing.

In the end, industry players say they would rather let their food do the talking. Mr Tai from Zenxin said: 'They taste good and many customers have testified that organic food has improved their quality of life.'


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New S$8m Xtreme SkatePark at East Coast Park officially opens

S. Ramesh, Channel NewsAsia 29 Aug 09;

SINGAPORE: The new S$8 million extreme sports facility at the East Coast Park has officially opened for daredevils to hone their skills on wheels.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong launched the Xtreme SkatePark and the inaugural extreme championship on Saturday.

80 participants from seven countries in the region are taking part in the two-day competition from August 29 to 30.

The skatepark located at the East Coast Park's energy zone is Singapore's first and only international standard competition facility.

And it is the result of an idea put up by young people during a consultation exercise in 2004.

Community Development, Youth and Sports Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said: "This also represents a transformation of our attitudes as Singaporeans. We used to be very risk-averse. If anything goes wrong, we look for someone to blame.

"This is part of a transformation of attitudes that in life you choose the level of risks you are happy with. Pursue your dreams and go all out and do your best. This also shows the coming of age for sports in Singapore."

The government said it would provide the necessary infrastructure to help Singaporeans realise their interests and talent.

Over the next few months, the National Youth Council will be hosting a series of programmes at the Xtreme SkatePark and they include extreme sports clinics for those who want to hone their skills on extreme skating. - CNA/vm

Athletes flip over Xtreme Skate Park
Jeremy Au Yong, Straits Times 30 Aug 09;

It is the first skate park in Singapore to meet international competition standards - and local and foreign athletes were yesterday already tagging it as among the best in the world.

Japanese professional inline skater Takeshi Yasutoko, a cult figure among Singapore's extreme sports enthusiasts, had nothing but praise for the $8 million Xtreme Skate Park in East Coast Park.

The 23-year-old and a host of other extreme sports stars were in town for the park's opening.

'This park has a very nice balance. It has a lot of ramp parts with different difficulties. A beginner can skate here. I am a pro-skater, and I can skate here,' he told The Sunday Times.

Australian Tim Wood, one of the world's best BMX riders, was similarly enthused, adding that such a park is crucial if Singapore's athletes want to be competitive overseas.

'It's fundamental: If you haven't got the facility to practise on, there's no way you can develop those skills,' he said.

It was a sentiment echoed by local athletes, who were thrilled to finally have a proper place to practise.

Local BMX rider Ng Chee Keong, 26, recalled the time when he had to build his own ramp out of dirt to practise. He has been riding for 10 years.

Even when a proper skate park was built in Orchard Road, it was not enough to help local athletes prepare for international competitions.

'There, the highest ramp is only 1.8m. Here, we have one that is 3.6m high,' he said.

But more than just having a new place to skate, local extreme sportsmen were pleasantly surprised that three ministers were present for the launch. They took it as recognition that the sport was finally stepping out of the shadows of its more mainstream cousins.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong officially opened the park. He was accompanied by National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan and Community Development, Youth and Sports Minister Vivian Balakrishnan.

Dr Balakrishnan acknowledged that extreme sports was starting to appear on the radar in Singapore. 'In the last five years, in fact more, we have certainly given extreme sports a place on our national sporting agenda,' he said.

And he added that the rise of extreme sports - where athletes often engage in risky stunts - was part of a larger change in society.

'It is part of a greater transformation of our attitude - our attitudes to risk, how we deal with risk, and how we take responsibility for those risks. It is part of a larger transformation of society.'

A survey conducted by the Singapore Sports Council in 2005 showed that some 30,000 Singaporeans participate in various forms of extreme sports. More than half, or 18,000, are inline skaters and skateboarders.

$8m skate park opens in East Coast
It's world class, says X-Gamer
Zaihan Mohamed Yusof, The New Paper 31 Aug 09;

THE 'ooohs' and 'aaahs' echoed loudly at a brand new skate-park in East Coast Park yesterday.

The 1,000-strong crowd, with their necks craned skywards, were treated to a dizzying show of aerial acrobatics by professional extreme games athletes at the inaugural Singapore Extreme Championship 2009.

The competitors came from various disciplines like Skateboarding, Aggressive in-line Skating and BMX Freestyling.

Earlier, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong 'planted' a skateboard into a 'launch' mechanism to officially open the $8 million Xtreme Skatepark @ East Coast, near Bedok jetty.

PM Lee wasn't the only person 'planting' yesterday.

At the Combo Bowl - one of the three sections at the skate park - famous X-Games in-line skater Takeshi Yasutoko performed hand plants as well.

The trick involved him staying temporarily inverted with only one hand supporting his body at the lip of the ramp.

Known as the Japanese Bullet, Takeshi executed more stunts, launching himself as high as 2m into the air in a series of back flips and somersaults.

Said Takeshi, 23, who is in Singapore for the first time: 'This is a cool skate park because the concrete surface is smooth.'

S'poreans lucky

X-Games BMX rider Tim Wood said Singaporeans were fortunate.

Said the 34-year-old Australian: 'Singaporeans are lucky to have the facilities to learn how to be better skaters and riders. When I was growing up, I had to build my own ramp. And I had no one mentoring me.'

Wood's largest ramp, which he had built in his backyard, cost more than $60,000.

He added: 'What you have here is world-class.'

The skate park, built on 1.4ha of land, is about the size of 21/2 football fields.

It has three courses with unique features like bank walls, ledges and ramps of differing heights.

The skate park, a joint project by National Parks Board, the National Youth Council and the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports (MCYS), only became a reality because of what young Singaporeans said they wanted in 2004.

Dream big

Said Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports Dr Vivian Balakrishnan: 'I hope it would inspire young people. In Singapore, you can dream big dreams.'

The skatepark also represented a 'transformation of attitudes'.

He added: 'We used to be very risk-averse. If anything goes wrong, we will look for someone to blame... In life, you choose the level of risk you are happy with and pursue your dreams.'

Taking risks to the extreme were 80 participants from the region.

The competitors perfected their stunts during yesterday morning's practice session.

It was a combination of gravity-defying tricks blended with some spectacular spills.

One of them told The New Paper on Sunday that he liked what he saw at the skate park.

Said Mr Mohd Zamri, team manager of the 11-man Malaysian contingent: 'The park is perfect with its combination of a street course and challenging ramps/bowls.

'In Malaysia, a skate park is usually designed as a street course, not a combination of different courses.'

Closer to the sidelines, the future of extreme games athletes may have already got the bug.

Boys like Samuel, 7, were spotted getting 'air-time' on their skate-scooters and skateboards.

After managing to get the wheels of his skate-scooter 2cm off the ground, Samuel, an American, said: 'I don't know what you call this trick. I just made it up a few minutes ago.'

The finals will be held today.

Entry is free.

Extreme take-off
Extreme sports enthusiasts thrilled with $8m East Coast skate park that meets world competition standards
Tan Yi Hui, Sunday Times 6 Sep 09;

It is a weekday evening but the newly opened Xtreme SkatePark in East Coast Park is busy.

Two teenage skateboarders attempt stunts and receive the occasional whoop and applause from other users of the park, which include inline skaters and BMX riders.

Only a few days after its official launch last week, the $8-million facility, a joint development by the National Parks Board and the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports, is already being put to good use by enthusiasts.

Extreme sports, which encompasses aggressive inline skating, BMX freestyle riding and skateboarding, first took root here in the late 1980s, with enthusiasts carving their skills on the streets or in small, neighbourhood skate parks.

With the 1.4ha Xtreme SkatePark, they now have a facility that meets international competition standards. The park features a street course packed with obstacles and a 3.6m Vertical Bowl, a challenging pit for advanced athletes.

More importantly, say insiders, the park is a sign that the Government recognises the growing popularity of extreme sports and that it has gone from being a niche activity to a mainstream obsession.

A survey conducted by the Singapore Sports Council in 2005 showed that about 30,000 Singaporeans participate in extreme sports, with 18,000 of them being inline skaters and skateboarders.

This is an almost sixfold leap compared to the number in the late 1980s, says Action Sports Association president Eddie Goh.

Adrenaline booster

Mr Zeeshaun Sheikh, owner of online shop Boards And Stuff Skateshop, says he has seen a 20 per cent jump in sales of skate products compared with last year. And over at the Singapore Inline Skating Training Centre off Farrer Road, chief executive officer Law Kum Seng says business has grown in recent years. They declined to give figures.

The burgeoning interest in extreme sports also bodes well for the competitive scene. The authorities have said they welcome organisers of international competitions to stage their events here, including the annual Kia X Games Asia, which has been held in Phuket and Kuala Lumpur.

When contacted, ESPN Star Sports, a major promoter of extreme sports, says it would 'definitely look at any opportunity to bring the X Games Asia to Singapore'.

Competitive BMX rider Ng Chee Keong, who has taken part in events held in places such as Thailand and Canada, says: 'I've been waiting for this park for a very long time. We should finally be able to catch up with athletes from other countries in one to two years.' The self-employed 27-year-old used to drive up to Kuala Lumpur on weekends to train.

Competitive athletes aside, the leap of extreme sports into mainstream popularity also m


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Singapore: Garden goals

Andrew Sia, The Star 30 Aug 09;

CONCRETE + greenery = green oasis? If there is one city in the region that has softened and swathed its urban concrete jungle with lush landscaping, it is Singapore.

I notice its verdant tree-lined roads, admire how the bridges are carefully covered with creepers, and rejoice that the open-air car park is cool and shady.

The “Garden City” was first proclaimed so back in the 1980s. Now, Singapore wants to go even further and become a “City in the Garden”, where greenery permeates the whole urban fabric.

According to its National Parks Board (Nparks), it will be possible, in a few years, to walk, cycle or roller-blade around the whole of the island republic along verdant, landscaped paths without having to worry about motorised traffic. And there will be gardens in the sky, garden roofs and terraces, and greened walls.

In most parts of the world, population growth is the oft-quoted reason (or excuse) for deforestation. Singapore has a land area of only 700 square kilometres. But between 1986 and 2007, its green cover grew from 35.7% to 46.5% (measured by satellite imaging), as its population leapt rom 2.7 million to 4.6 million.

Economic reasons

The whole push to make Singapore green began in the 1960s. The aim was to create a pleasant living environment, and attract foreign investors, who would be able to see for themselves how well the landscape (and the nation) was taken care of.

“We had to make this a First World oasis ... Without having to tell anything to the (foreign investor) CEO, I knew he would understand that ... this is a country where the administration works,” Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew recalled in a dialogue during the 150th anniversary of the Singapore Botanical Gardens last May.

“You just can’t plant a tree and walk away. The tree will die ... If you plant under a flyover, you’ve got to get forest shrubs that grow in shaded areas. It’s complex (maintenance) that all people who run big organisations will understand,” he said.

In other words, landscaping was to be Singapore’s hidden “green trump card”.

Lee also admitted that planting and maintaining trees was “the easy part”. The tough part was “to get people to change from Third World to First World behaviour”, leading to endless campaigns for people “not to pee in elevators” and, he joked, “not to steal the plants”.

Finally, Singapore has reached the stage where people feel a sense of ownership for their own environment.

“It took some time to get them to understand (that) if you keep your environment nice and clean, your property values go up,” Lee noted.

Urban biodiversity

Today, residents and visitors can explore different natural habitats. They can trek the coastal hill forests of Labrador Nature reserve in the south of Singapore, watch migratory birds from Siberia stop over at the mangroves of Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve in the north, or mountain bike around the dipterocarp hill forests of the Central Catchment Nature Reserve.

While the 46.5% “green cover” includes trees in urban settings, the country has also committed 10% of its land area to full-scale parks and nature reserves.

“The government has adopted the policy to legally protect representatives of key indigenous ecosystems,” explains Ng Lang, the CEO of Nparks in a policy paper.

Despite being a highly urbanised city, Singapore has relatively rich biodiversity, including some 360 species of birds, among them hornbills. In fact, efforts are being made to encourage the breeding of rarer birds, by growing plants they can feed on.

Even those who cannot bear to tear themselves away from the shopping complexes will be enticed to visit the Singapore Botanic Gardens, declared the “best urban jungle in Asia” by Time Magazine last year. It’s just five minutes from Orchard Road! I was impressed that the nation’s history is not just about personalities and buildings; the grand old tembusu is hailed as a “heritage tree”, and is featured on its five-dollar note.

Green web

On the garden goals, Ng says the guideline is to provide 0.8 hectare of park per 1,000 people, via a nationwide network of parks, including small neighbourhood ones. And these will all be linked – even if they are on hills separated by busy roads!

An example is the Southern Ridges, where three major parks are linked by two eye-catching pedestrian bridges – called Henderson Waves and Alexandra Arch – to create a nine-kilometre chain of leafy pedestrian paths through the hills.

The chain begins from the forests of Mount Faber Park (where the cable cars to Sentosa Island swing out), and winds through Telok Blangah Hill Park (which has seaside views), Hort(iculture) Park (a gardening and educational centre) and Kent Ridge Park (near the National University of Singapore) before ending at the beaches of West Coast Park.

On a guided walk through the Southern Ridges by Soh Hui Hiang, one of the managers for Telok Blangah Hill Park, I note just how much attention has been paid to detail.

Soh personally walks through the park every two or three days to check on the trees. Showing me a certain “rojak tree” (Dillenia suffruticosa), she explains:

“They tend to grow too strongly, so we cut them down and replace them with fruit trees like nutmeg and mangosteen. We don’t want certain trees to dominate this park while the fruit trees will be good to attract birds here.”

Even the walkways have been carefully planned using light-weight grid metal so that sunlight can pass through to the plants below.

By linking all the patches of greenery through its Park Connector Network (PCN), Singapore obviously hopes to create a synergy greater than the sum of its parts.

The biggest green web thus far is the 42km Eastern Coastal PCN, which enables people to jog, cycle or even roller-blade along specially landscaped lanes from the beaches of East Coast Park to inland parks at Bedok town and on to more beaches at Changi Beach Park and Pasir Ris. This PCN was even used for the first Asian night-time marathon last year.

“By 2013, we aim to develop a 300km island-wide network of green corridors that will link major parks and nature areas in Singapore,” declares the Nparks 2008 Annual Report.

Ng adds that “the park connectors will enhance the sense of green space throughout the city.”

In the rush to develop the country in the 1970s and 80s, many rivers were canalised with grey concrete walls. Now the trend is being reversed under the Active, Beautiful and Clean (ABC) Waters Programme.

Some of the harsh concrete walls of the canals will be broken down, and landscaped to integrate with nearby park connectors to create land and water-based recreational space. The technical terms used are almost poetic: “softscaping our waterways” to integrate “blue and green spaces”.

Sky gardens

After the terrestrial and aquatic landscaping, comes skyscaping!

“There is an increasing adoption of skyrise greenery in new iconic buildings such as the National Library Building, and the upcoming Eco-Precinct by the Housing Development Board (HDB),” Ng says.

Singapore is targeting some 50 hectares of skyrise greenery by 2030 and its Urban Redevelopment Autho-rity (URA) launched its LUSH Pro-gramme (Landscaping for Urban Spa-ces and High-Rises) in April. This of-fers financial and planning incentives to developers to provide greenery at the upper levels of highrise buildings.

For instance, precious extra floor space (above the permitted Master Plan intensity) in the downtown and Orchard Road areas can be allowed if developers build roof top gardens, which can then be used as outdoor refreshment areas.

Cheong Koon Hean, CEO of of URA, underlines, “We want to ensure that our city dwellers are never far away from greenery, even with high density living.”

Thus far, more than 100 developments have been approved with communal “sky terraces”, where residents of high-rises can socialise literallyamidst “gardens in the sky”. In addition, skyscaping also helps cool down the urban “heat island” effect

And after green roofs and balconies, even the very vertical walls of buildings may be planted over! At Hort Park, I see various types of walls filled with plants.

“These are experimental,” explains marketing manager Yvonne Cheng. “We are trying to see which plants, planting mediums and watering systems work best.”

Serious business

Singapore is so serious about its greenery that it has planned three “world-class gardens” on prime land at the Marina Bay waterfront (near the upcoming Integrated Resorts).

The first phase, a 52-hectare Gardens at Marina South, is scheduled to open in 2011. It includes the Cooled Conservatories (an “energy efficient” showcase of plants from tropical mountains and the Mediterranean), SuperTrees (“spectacular” 16-storey vertical gardens with flowering climbers and ferns) as part of“plant-based edutainment”.

Yet, as Lee points out, perhaps the most important part is for the people themselves to buy into the idea of a green environment. At East Coast Park one Saturday evening, I see how every car park is full as Singaporeans are out in force, walking, eating, cycling or building sand castles along this long and lovely beach park.

To enhance the people’s personal stake in their environment, the Community in Bloom programme was launched in 2005 to build a strong “community gardening” culture of beautifying one’s surroundings and foster social bonding says Ng Cheow Kheng, assistant director of the Streetscape Project at Nparks.

There are now 320 community gardening groups in Singapore.

The over 21,000 people employed in the landscape industry are given government training provided to turn “gardeners” into “green collar professionals” – such as Certified Arborists (“tree care professionals”), Certified Practising Horticulturists, and even Certified Playground Safety Inspectors (qualifications for the last are accredited to Australian and American institutes.

During a media trip to Korea last year, I was briefed by officials on their ambitious plans to turn Seoul into a “city with soul”. Buzzwords like “eco-intelligent-city” and “landscape architecture” were all over the place.

Just as Minister Mentor Leeenvisioned 40 years ago, Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon says, “We must create a city environment where people want to come to invest and live with their businesses and their families. Attractiveness is the key to national competitiveness.”

The strategy in Korea was that as Shanghai, Seoul, Hong Kong, Singapore and Tokyo are all competing to become Asian power hubs, luscious gardens may become the “green trump card” that draws “quality” people (and yes, investments) in.

It’s fascinating how hard-nosed, business-minded cities have turned to greenie gardening in such a big way.

I just want to cycle through the parks and along the beaches of eastern Singapore. Soon.


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Johor Urged To Ensure Project Not Causing Pollution

Bernama 29 Aug 09;

JOHOR BAHARU, Aug 29 (Bernama) -- The state government was Saturday urged to order the developer of the RM2.7 billion Lido Boulevard to activate its environment management plan to ensure the project was not causing water pollution in the Tebrau Strait.

Pulai Member of Parliament Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed said there were concerns among the people on the change in the qualify of water along the strait.

"We are worried over this development and fishermen and fish rearers are beginning to voice out their concerns over the quality of the water which has been their source of daily income," he said.

He added that pollution would also affect the area's tourism attractions.

Early this month, several fish rearers in Teluk Jawa and Perigi Acheh in Pasir Gudang lost thousands of ringgit when the fish they reared in cages perished, believed to be due to a change in water quality.

The Lido Boulevard, launched on Nov 22, 2007, is a joint venture project between Central Malaysian Properties Sdn Bhd and the State Secretary Incorporated.

It involves land reclamation which will start next month after being approved by over 30 departments and agencies as well as the Malaysia-Singapore Joint Committee on the Environment.

-- BERNAMA

CMP Denies Involvement In Land Reclamation
Bernama 2 Sep 09;

JOHOR BAHARU, Sept 2 (Bernama) -- The developer of the Lido Boulevard project worth RM2.7 billion has denied that it was involved in the Tebrau Straits' land reclamation project that was said to have been destructive to the environment.

Central Malaysian Properties (CMP), in a statement today, said the land reclamation project was under the control of Iskandar Malaysia and a contractor appointed by the agency.

"Those involved should not make false, baseless and misleading statements that could tarnish CMP's image as we have nothing to do with the project as claimed by a news report," said CMP.

It said as a responsible corporate citizen, CMP was also worried over the impact of the development towards the environment and the Tebrau Straits.

"The Detail Environment Impact Assessment Studies on the development project was approved in May last year while the Environment Management Plan was approved in March before CMP started work on the Lido Boulevard," added CMP.

-- BERNAMA


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Indonesia: Fires rage on amid poor law enforcement

Jakarta Post 29 Aug 09;

Since 1997, Indonesia has been plagued by forest and land fires mostly taking place in Sumatra and Kalimantan. Thick haze from the fires has drawn significant criticism and protests against Indonesia from neighboring countries. However, the government is still unable to stop the forest fires from occurring every year during the dry season. The Jakarta Post's Adianto Simamora, Rizal Harahap, Jon Afrizal and Khairul Saleh from Jakarta, Riau, Jambi and South Sumatra respectively looked into this annual problem.

With no breakthroughs in law enforcement, land and forest fires have continued to rage across Kalimantan, Sumatra and Sulawesi islands as well as several parts of Java, as the repeated drive against slash and burn methods used to clear land have failed amid the current dry season.

The central government claims it had provided training on preventive measures for local people in fire-prone areas, months before the expected dry season.

"But, all the lessons were then forgotten when the dry season came. People returned to low-cost methods, clearing land with fire," State Ministry for the Environment forest and land destruction deputy assistant Heddy Mukna told The Jakarta Post this week.

"Land and forest fires continue to pose a massive problem because the poor law enforcement has no deterrent effect *on those starting them*."

The law on the environment only authorizes civilian investigators to seek explanations and evidence from individuals or companies. Any findings must be submitted to police, the only state agency authorized to arrest or detain suspects guilty of such offenses as starting bush fires.

Those found guilty of damaging the environment can face up to 10 years in prison and Rp 500 million (US$50,000) in fines.

"We want a special approach when dealing with environmental violators including in land and forest fires cases, otherwise slash and burn will remain a problem," Heddy said.

The ministry is currently investigating 14 companies in Riau and 11 firms in Central Java, in cases involving land and forest fires.

The investigating team detected hotspots in lands owned by 77 companies operating in Riau during the first seven months of the year.

The environment ministry has pledged to submit its findings on forest fires to police for legal action against any perpetrators showing a disdain for the environmental law.

The ministry has also unveiled a plan to fence off any burned land for use as evidence.

However, a source at the ministry admitted that the office was facing difficulties to enforce the law on forest burners because of budget limitations.

State Minister for the Environment Rachmat Witoelar has appealed to the governors and regents in fire-prone areas to stop all open burning activities and revoke bylaws allowing local farmers to carry out open burning.

The ministry also pledged to hand over financial aid to local farmers who could avoid open burning in their land.

Land and forest fires have ravaged thousands of hectares in Jambi, Riau, South Sumatra, North Sumatra and all Kalimantan provinces. The ministry detected about 7.064 hotspots during August alone.

The Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) Indonesia branch found that the hotspots in Riau province had continued to increase from 973 in January to 2,395 in July, the most of any province in Indonesia.

It reported about 52 percent of these hotspots were located on land belonging to local people, 31 percent were in managed forest areas (HTI) and the remaining 17 percent in plantation areas.

Riau and Kalimantan have been the most severely affected areas during the recent forest fires, which have caused repeated closures of airports and sent thousands of students home because of smoke and haze.

The national taskforce for handling disasters has planned to deploy helicopters to stop land the forest fires in Central Kalimantan.

"We will bring the police with us to arrest perpetrators we find in burned-out areas. This is part of our work to enforce the law," senior environmental official Soetrisno said.

Soetrisno said his office would also deploy helicopters to extinguish forest fires including those in Riau.

"But we will only provide help at the request of local administrations," he said.

Forestry Minister M.S. Kaban earlier said the government would only take firm action to control forests if haze disturbed flights and sparked protests in Malaysia and Singapore.

Analysts say the expected return of the El Ni*o phenomenon will cause massive forest fires, as it did in 2006, when fires ravaged more than 145,000 hectares of forests around Indonesia.

The Forestry Ministry has proposing around Rp 24 billion in the 2010 draft state budget in anticipation of imminent dry storms from El Ni*o.

Head of the forest fire unit at WWF Indonesia, Hariri Dedi, agreed that poor law enforcement and public awareness remained the main causes of repeated forest fires.

"However, the government's campaigns to stop the fires are still ineffective since no incentives have been provided to those avoiding using fires to clear land," he said.

"The government often only comes to the field after fires have ravaged the land and forests."

Efforts still `sporadic, lack commitment and clear concept'
The Jakarta Post 29 Aug 09;

Recurrent forest and peatlands fires in Riau have been blamed on weak law enforcement. Estate companies and residents who set fire to forest areas to clear land often escape justice, so there are no deterrents.

Riau chapter Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) executive director Hariansyah Usman said nature was also a major factor in Riau's forest and peatlands fires.

"But it is impossible for peat to burn by itself without someone igniting fire to clear land on a large scale. Most of the fires take place in areas spanning more than 2 hectares, which discounts arguments that fires are dominantly carried out by local residents."

Hariansyah blames weak law enforcement and unresolved cases for the recurring forest fires, which started early this year.

He said the Riau Police's determination to stamp out illegal logging and forest-burning during police chief's Sutjiptadi's tenure in 2007 has not been continued by his successors.

"A different police chief would have different policies. As long as the law is not enforced, the chances of a haze-free Riau is slim."

Hariansyah said tracing the party responsible for the forest fires would be easy because most of the land in Riau was privately-owned.

"Each year police always conduct target investigations into a number of companies, but so far none have been reprimanded despite hot spots found in their concession areas. Environmental crime will prevail without stern consequences to serve as a deterrent."

Head of the Forest Fire Mitigation division at the Riau Forestry Office Nurjaya said almost 80 percent of fires in Riau since early this year took place in areas with clear ownership status.

Nurjaya said the forestry office had questioned 43 companies holding industrial forest licenses, forest concession areas and oil palm plantations because they were indicated to have burned forested areas to clear land or left their areas burning. A number of companies have responded and explained the fires in their concession areas.

"Investigation is the police's responsibility. We once assisted police by arresting people who had set fire, but after handing them over to police, they were released," he said.

A joint team from the forestry office recently caught three residents who were starting a fire and admitted to have received Rp 50,000 per day from the land owner. They were handed over to the nearest police in Dumai, along with evidence.

"Police immediately named them suspects, but two days later they were released. They should have been used to trace their financiers," Nurjaya said.

Walhi's South Sumatra director Anwar Sadat said the government's efforts to combat forest fires were still sporadic and lacked commitment and a clear concept.

"No plantation company in South Sumatra is entitled to the zero burning status."

Walhi has also indicated the unfair stance of the authorities, evident from the various reports on violations committed by estate companies that have never been processed, while residents are subject to immediate arrests for burning areas within restricted zones.

"The authorities have never followed up with our reports, while residents are prone to arrests because they are being paid by companies," Anwar said.


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Thousand Islanders struggle to conserve marine species

Desy Nurhayati, The Jakarta Post 29 Aug 09;

Local authorities and fishermen in the Thousand Islands regency have been working hand-in-hand over the last couple of years to harmonize conservation efforts with business interests.

Their efforts have borne significant change, particularly in the way the fishermen make a living while sustaining marine biodiversity.

Before the islands were officially declared one of seven national marine parks in the country in 1995, they faced serious threats to more than 134 species of coral reefs and other endangered marine life, including the hawksbill turtle, the green turtle and the giant abalone.

Thousand Islands National Marine Park head Joko Prihatno says the threats came from destruc-
tive fishing methods using explosives, and the large-scale plunder of living coral.

“Business interests often run counter to efforts to save the environment, and so that’s why we’re trying to find common ground,” Joko says during a visit to Pramuka island, part of the marine park area.

“We aim to improve the fishermen’s welfare and at the same time save the marine resources from destruction.”

He adds the environmental damage is also wreaked by outsiders, particularly companies in the marine life trade.

“We need to create an integrated and self-reliant conservation system that can serve as a benchmark for all stakeholders here,” Joko says.

Managed by the Forestry Ministry, the 107,500-hectare marine park is home to various typed of coral, including Acropora and Porites, and the Turbinaria algae.

The area also boasts mangrove forests that have been replanted intensively since 2003.

In 2004, the ministry divided the area into four zones to improve conservation efforts.

The core zone of 4,500 hectares hosts the nesting grounds for hawksbill turtles. It also serves as a protection zone for the turtles, coral reefs and mangroves.

The second zone, the 26,200-hectare protection zone, is used for research and education and for limited tourism. Migratory species are also bred in this zone.

The tourism zone of 59,600 hectares is used for marine recreation, while the inhabited zone of 17,121 hectares is designed to accommodate the activities of the fishermen and the entire community on the islands.

Through the conservation efforts, the marine park management is targeting coverage of living coral of 40 percent by 2010.

In cooperation with the NGO Indonesian Coral Reef Foundation (Terangi), the park management has conducted a study on coral reefs in the area every two years since 2003.

The studies show the coverage at the core zone reached 30.39 percent in 2003 and 31.98 percent in 2005, before increasing to 33.44 in 2007.

In the tourism zone, the coverage was 30.67 percent in 2003 and 40.03 percent in 2005. In 2007, however, it decreased to 31.5 percent.

In the inhabited zone, the coverage was 40.63 percent in 2003, down to 31.98 percent in 2005, then up to 33.44 percent in 2007.

The park management is scheduled to hold the 2009 coral coverage study in October, along with Terangi, the fisheries agency, the tourism agency and university researchers, to monitor the coral coverage level and the condition of biodiversity in the marine park.

“By preserving the coral, we also preserve other marine species that make the coral reefs their homes,” Joko says.

“If the coral coverage decreases, the species will lose their homes.”

He adds the park is currently mapping the mangrove and coral ecosystems in and around 15 islets, including Pramuka, Panggang, Karya, Kelapa, Harapan, Kelapa Dua, Kotok, Pantara, Puteri and Sepa.

“The map will be a reference for all stakeholders interested in taking part in our conservation programs,” he says.

Besides increasing coral coverage, the conservation efforts are also expected to raise each fisherman’s monthly income to more than Rp 3 million per month and to create more jobs.

Coral transplantation is one of the main conservation programs carried out by the fishermen. In this program, they work in groups and cooperate with exporters.

There are 26 groups consisting of 120 fishermen, which are supported by 26 companies. However, only 13 of the groups are still active in transplanting and exporting coral reefs, while the rest only fulfill their responsibility to transplant but not to export.

Some non-active companies are focusing on selling dead coral because it’s more profitable, Joko says. A piece of dead coral sells for about Rp 25,000, while live coral is usually sold in bulk, making it less expensive.

Selling transplanted coral helps reduce the looting of coral from the seabed and increase fishermen’s income.

The park management also has a certification method in place to harmonize business interests with conservation programs. This applies to the trade of exotic fish, in which the fishermen also cooperate with exporters.

The certificate is issued by the international Marine Aquarium Council (MAC).

“We submit reports to the MAC every six months,” Joko says.

“Certification is crucial in winning the trust of the international market and raising the fishermen’s welfare, as well as in restoring the level and quality of our exotic marine fish.”

The park management also works together with the Jakarta Husbandry, Fishery and Marine Agency in the certification program.

In addition to trading in exotic fish, the fishermen also breed the fish and receive certification from the MAC to ensure the breeding program meets international standards of environmental safety and management.

“We’re looking to complete the certification by the end of this year,” Joko says.

“We’re currently undergoing an audit by the MAC.”

Despite the intensive efforts to restore the marine ecosystem, the park management still faces serious threats, including destructive fishing using explosives, theft of live coral, and sedimentation caused by waste carried over by the tide from North Jakarta.

Joko points out the conservation efforts have yet to encompass the whole Thousand Islands area.

“The programs have only focused on the marine park, which itself only accounts for 15 percent of the Thousand Islands area,” he says.

“That’s why we also need to expand the coverage.”

Another looming threat comes from the islands’ rapidly booming population, which could trigger land reclamation to establish new residential areas.

Population growth in the islands hovers at 3.5 percent a year, with the population density now 400 people per hectare in Panggang and 350 people per hectare in Harapan and Kelapa.

The Thousand Islands regency administration’s plan to reclaim Pramuka, expanding it from the current 9 hectares to 60 hectares, will also threaten the marine ecosystem, Joko warns.

“We fear the reclamation will destroy the coral reefs, especially if the administration allows the building of resorts,” he says.

“We’re hoping for greater public advocacy to steer the administration’s plans and our ongoing conservation programs in the same direction.”

To prevent coral reef destruction from tourism, the park management has designated open and closed diving spots. Certain diving spots, where the condition of the coral has degraded, are temporarily closed for natural restoration.

Coral farming, turtle watching become tourist attractions
Desy Nurhayati, The Jakarta Post 29 Aug 09;

Transplanting coral reefs and watching endangered species of sea turtles and sea snails lay eggs, are two activities tourists visiting Pramuka island can partake in.

Currently, there are 10 hawksbill sea turtle hatcheries in the island, each usually containing between 120 and 200 eggs.

Head of the Thousand Islands National Marine Park, Joko Prihatno, said the hatcheries were set up in 1998 to protect the species.

"We aim to protect the eggs and baby turtles from predators. They are very vulnerable," he said.

Turtles hatched in the nesting grounds are released in the sea after six months or a year.

"Actually it's better to release the turtles soon after they are hatched, but we keep them here for months for educational and tourism purposes, and also to protect them from predators," Joko said.

In the hatchery, the turtles are placed in tubs. "These ones are three -month old," said Salim, an employee at the hatchery.

Only 60 percent of the hatched turtles are returned to their natural habitat, while 30 percent of them stay in the hatchery for tourism and educational purposes, and the remaining 10 percent are sent to the Sepa Island Resort located near Pramuka island.

Tourists interested in transplanting corals can spend an afternoon with fisherman Mahmudin, who transplants and collects corals for a living. Mahmudin and his fellow fisherman will provide the corals and transplanting equipment.

"First, we prepare a mixture of 10 portions of cement and 1 portion of salt, a fragment of dead coral and a living coral," said Mahmudin.

"Then, we cut a little piece of the living coral, and attach it to a dead coral with the cement mixture," he said.

Not far from the turtle hatchery, around 50 sea snails or abalones are bred, and then kept in several small aquariums.

"We set the water temperature in the aquarium three or four degrees higher than room temperature to create the ideal breeding conditions for abalones," said Elim, an employee at the sea snail breeding site.

"Usually we put one male abalone and three females *abalone* in one aquarium."

He said most of the abalone in the breeding site were between six months and two years old.

"We feed them red, green and brown algae."

Some of the abalones are kept at the breeding site, while others are released in the sea after a certain period of time.

Fishermen discover coral farming pays off
Jakarta Post 29 Aug 09;

Fishermen who can barely eke out a living on catching fish in Pramuka island can now earn additional income from transplanting coral reefs.

Not only is coral farming profitable for fishermen, it also helps conserve coral reefs and restore marine life.

Fishermen, who often used to damage coral reefs by selling them to make a living, can now transplant corals, a process initiated by the Thousand Islands National Marine Park in 2006.

First they create rock piles to encourage the re-establishment of corals, then attach a slice of living coral to a dead one with a mixture of cement and salt.

They work in groups, cooperating with coral exporting companies, to sell the corals they transplant as ornaments.

Joint ventures between fishermen and private companies must be approved by the park management to stop companies taking advantage of fishermen, said the park management head, Joko Prihatno.

"We have to make sure the joint ventures benefit both parties, not only companies," he said.

Mahmudin is one of the first fishermen who learned how to transplant corals. The 46-year-old man said he was encouraged to rehabilitate degrading corals several years ago.

"The condition of corals here was not very good at that time, there were not many fish," said the head of Pondok Karang, a group of seven fishermen.

"Growing corals by transplanting it is three to four times faster than letting corals grow naturally," said the man, who is currently transplanting 24 coral species.

His success has motivated other fishermen in the island to follow suit.

Each fisherman can now sell up to 1,000 pieces of ornamental coral per month, costing between Rp 5,000 to Rp 10,000 each. Most of the coral is exported to the US.

Eighty percent of the transplanted coral is sold, while the remaining 20 percent stays in the marine park as part of the conservation program.

To restore reefs, fishermen are obliged to transplant as much as 10 percent of the amount sold.

Before they start transplanting coral, the fishermen must run their production quota to the park management for approval.

Three months after they transplant the corals, they have to submit a report on their harvesting activities.

The park management checks the report before allowing fishermen to harvest their corals. The fishermen then sell the corals to their partner firms.

"We have a checklist the fishermen need to complete. If they fail to meet the requirements, we can revoke their certificates," Joko said.

- JP/Desy Nurhayat


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The last of their kind: the nomads of Borneo

Sarah Stewart AFP Google News 30 Aug 09;

LONG NEN, Malaysia — In the language of the nomadic Penan there is no word for forest, it is simply their universe, and its destruction is snuffing out the ancient lifestyle of this tribe who are among the world's last hunter-gatherers.

Wielding spears and dressed in loincloths, one small band who emerged from the Borneo jungles to tell their tale said that encroachment by timber and plantation firms has made their already hard life impossible.

They said they are ready to stop roaming and settle in villages, giving weight to fears that the 300-400 Penan thought to still be nomadic may all be heading this way, or even that their way of life is already extinct.

"Our problem is that there is just not enough to eat, there are no wild boar to catch any more," said Sagong, the headman of the group.

"The companies logged all the teak already, and now they are going to clear the land for palm oil plantations," said the young chief, who brought 15 of his people to a blockade against the timber and plantation companies.

"If that happens, we lose everything, we cannot survive this," he said.

"Yes it is sad to leave this life of roaming. But what can we do? We have to strive for the best for ourselves. It is our fate to face this challenge."

A lean and muscular man aged in his 30s, Sagong said their last hope was to join the anti-logging campaign which has escalated recently in Sarawak state, on Malaysia's half of Borneo, an island shared with Indonesia.

"I came here to man the blockade and safeguard the land," he said at one of the barriers built of logs and bamboo, among seven constructed in the region in recent months to force the timber trucks to a halt.

The Penan of Sarawak, who are estimated to number around 10,000, had mostly abandoned their nomadic ways and settled in villages by the 1970s under the influence of Christian missionaries.

Even the settled Penan still retain a deep connection to the jungle, foraging for rattan, medicinal plants, fruits, and sago palm -- a starchy staple. Wild game are hunted with finely crafted blowpipes and poison darts.

The Penan have been opposing logging for decades, but the spectre of bulldozers coming in to clear-fell what is left of the jungles has proved too much to bear.

Jayl Langub, an anthropologist from the Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, said the nomadic Penan are being thrust into the modern world through contact with loggers, satellite TV, and the boarding schools where some send their children.

"It would be better if they made their own decision and settled at their own pace, but these changes are coming very rapidly and I think it just overwhelms them," he said.

"However much they want to remain nomadic, the changes to the landscape mean it probably would not be possible for them to continue anyway... unless they live next to a national park, or unless areas are converted into reserves."

Ian Mackenzie, a linguist who has studied the Penan since 1991, said he believes that few of the fabled group of 300-400 are truly nomadic as most have taken up some farming and established base camps with sturdier timber huts.

"There are various reasons for it but I would say the primary reason is that it's economically untenable to live as hunter-gatherers when their jungle has been logged three times," he said.

"The end of this ancient lifestyle is a very tragic cultural loss," he said. "That's how humans were supposed to live, how we all lived a long time ago, and this is the last flicker of it gone."

Mackenzie, one of a handful of foreigners to speak Penan fluently, said that any groups who wanted to settle should have as many generations as they needed to make the momentous transition.

"To force them to make it brutally in a few years, it's almost beyond the capacity of human beings to make that leap. It's as if you or I were dropped down in the middle of the primary jungle and forced to survive."

On a sliver of hilltop not far from the blockade, Sagong's tribe from the district of Ba Marong has constructed three sturdy open-sided huts, raised from the ground and built of saplings and bamboo lashed together with vines.

In a tropical downpour that drenched the canopy and turned the ground to mud, they sat serenely with their children -- including a five-month-old baby -- who, despite these most basic conditions were clean, dry and healthy.

As she played with a baby monkey that the family kept as a pet, Sagong's daughter Nili smiled and shook her head when she was asked whether she liked this life in the rainforest.

"I would like to go to school," she said shyly.

These days few Penan still sport the traditional bowl-shaped haircut, woven bamboo hats, brightly beaded necklaces and stretched earlobes that sometimes dangle near the shoulders.

In his baseball cap paired with a purple loincloth, and bare chest marked with tattoos including Christian images, snakes and a skull and crossbones, Sagong laughed when asked about his appearance.

"I'm a new generation, I don't dress like that," he said as he stood next to his father-in-law, who wore a monkey tooth around his neck, bunches of woven bangles, and played a bamboo nose flute.

"For us the jungle was our bank, we survived without money. Our life depended on the sago palm and wild animals and for generations we have lived like this," said the older man, Ngau Anyi.

Sagong said his own band of 27 people wanted help to establish a proper house with access to schools and medical care, while still having the chance to hunt and gather in the forest.

"Our wish is to have our own village, to do farming," he said. "We see other settlements and that's what we want. We have to spend a lot of time building huts and moving around. It's a hard life."

The plight of the Penan was made famous in the 1980s by environmental activist Bruno Manser, who waged a crusade to protect their way of life and fend off the loggers. He vanished in 2000 -- many suspect foul play.

Manser lived with a group of nomadic Penan from 1984 to 1990 and learnt to speak Penan as well as how to survive in the jungle, while gathering a huge amount of botanical and cultural information.

"We have been accused of being against development, of wanting to keep the Penan in a museum," said Lukas Straumann, director of the Bruno Manser Fund, which continues to campaign for the people of the rainforests.

"Maybe there was a little bit of truth to that. But what we hear from the Penan is that they want development, to participate in modern life, but it has to be development at their own pace."


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Oil slick off Australia more serious than thought, endangers whales, turtles

Narelle Towie, Perth Now 29 Aug 09;

THE danger to migrating whales and turtles posed by a massive oil spill off the Kimberley coast has been exposed by a satellite tracking and aerial surveys.

Oil and gas has been leaking from a faulty cement well on the West Atlas rig, about 250km off the far north Kimberley coast, since last Friday.

Despite assurances from the Federal Government and the rig's operator, PTTEP, that the slick is drifting away from the coast, a whale and her calf have been spotted alongside oil on the shore side of the rig.

Greens senator Rachel Siewert has flown over the rig and says she saw the whales near a breakaway slick. Strong ocean currents and wind are thought to have moved the slick towards land.

``There is a lot of oil that has spread substantially,'' Ms Siewert said.

``The Government have said that there is no risk to the coast, but that is nonsense. If it keeps flowing for the next seven to eight weeks, it is inevitable that oil will come ashore.''
It is expected to take seven-weeks to stem the flow of hydrocarbons forming a film of oil stretching over 180km from east to west of the rig.

The Government-run Australian Maritime Safety Authority, which is managing the clean-up, has labelled it one of the worst spills to affect the WA coast.

Ms Siewert said legal action against PTTEP could not be ruled out.

Biologists say an endangered flatback turtle fitted with a tracking devise as part of a Barrow Island research project is on a collision course with the toxic slick.

Since late November, the 20-year-old female turtle has travelled 914km along the west coast.

The Wilderness Society says the Kimberley coastline is a ``marine superhighway'' used by 19 species of whales and dolphins, sea snakes, birds and fish.

WWF marine biologist Ghislaine Llewellyn says the tracking devise on the turtle illustrates the impact a disaster of this scale can have on a range of marine life.

Ms Siewert has accused the Government and PTTEP of misleading the public on the size and extent of the spill.

PTTEP says it will take at least seven weeks to stop the flow of oil because it needs to tow in another rig from Singapore.

Conservation groups have called on PTTEP to use a rig offered by Woodside Petroleum, which is only five days away.

PTTEP refused and a spokesman would not comment on the company's refusal.

Public 'misled over oil spill size'
Michael Hopkin and Marian Wilkinson, The Age 29 Aug 09;

THE company behind the West Atlas oil spill has admitted it has no idea how much oil has leaked into the Timor Sea, or how much will be lost before the leak can be plugged.

The admission came yesterday amid accusations the public had been misled over the true size of the spill, and that the slick now spans 180 kilometres.

Oil firm PTTEP Australasia said it had been unable to estimate the volume of oil spilled from its Montara platform since the leak began eight days ago.

"We are not in a position to calculate that at the moment," spokesman Mike Groves said yesterday. "We could make a visual guess but that would be inaccurate. The truth of the matter is we just don't know."

Mr Groves said there was no way to predict how much oil would leak before a second well could be drilled to intercept the flow - a plan set to take six weeks to implement.

"Our priority is to stem the flow of the leak as opposed to try and calculate how much is out there at the moment," he said.

Greens senator Rachel Siewert, who flew over the site yesterday, said the community had been "seriously misled" over the spill's true size.

"The spill is far bigger than we have been told, and closer to the coast than expected," Senator Siewert said. "There is a film of oil around the rig, from horizon to horizon. From east to west it stretches 180 kilometres at a minimum."

She said the current plan to bring a relief drilling rig from Singapore would take too long.

The rig, which set sail on Thursday, is not expected to arrive on site for another 16 days, and will take a further four weeks to cap the stricken oil well.

Environmentalists have warned that allowing the leak to continue for weeks would endanger the Kimberley's coastal mangroves, and the important reef ecosystem on Ashmore Island, 300 kilometres west of the spill's source.

Australian Marine Conservation Society director Darren Kindleysides said by the time the spill was capped, it could be "right up there as one of Australia's biggest in terms of the amount of oil".

Mr Kindleysides said chemical dispersants were the correct strategy for dealing with the oil, forcing it to form droplets that sink into the water column rather than remaining on the surface.

He also called for plans to be put in place for a comprehensive assessment of the spill's effects on fish and seabed species.

Federal Energy Minister Martin Ferguson, who is responsible for the safety of offshore oil rigs, said he wanted the leaking well repaired as quickly as possible, but was concerned at the risks to safety involved.

Departmental officials have been in talks with companies that have offered the use of closer drills and equipment, but there are questions over whether the equipment would be compatible.

Oil Spill Off Australia More Serious Than Thought (Update3)
Ben Sharples, Bloomberg 29 Aug 09;

Aug. 29 (Bloomberg) -- An oil leak from a well in the Timor Sea that threatens to harm migratory whales and breeding turtles has spread to about 80 nautical miles (92 miles) of the Australian coast, the Resources and Energy minister said.

Spraying of dispersant will continue today to accelerate the breakdown of the oil slick, Minister Martin Ferguson said in a statement after visiting the site. Australian Greens party Senator Rachel Siewert said in an earlier statement that the oil was 20 kilometers from the Kimberley coastline of Western Australia, and appeared to be more serious than had been previously indicated.

PTTEP, Thailand’s only publicly traded oil exploration company, said Aug. 23 it may take 50 days to plug the leak from the well about 250 kilometers (155 miles) off the coast.

The Bangkok-based company is unable to comment on speculative aspects of this issue, Ian Williams, a Perth-based spokesman said in a statement. A rig that will drill a well to plug the leak is expected to arrive at the site on Sept. 8, Williams said.

A Boeing 747 carrying equipment to disperse gas and prevent a fire at the field will leave Singapore Sunday night and arrive in Darwin the following day, Williams said. The gear will be fitted to two vessels and probably leave Darwin for the spill site 36 hours after arrival, he added.

Oil, gas and condensate started seeping into the Timor Sea Aug. 21 from a leak 3,500 meters (11,500 feet) below the ocean floor during drilling by the West Atlas rig.

Perth-based Woodside Petroleum Ltd. said Aug. 25 it is able to provide rigs, boats, workers and an “expert team” to assist in the response to the incident.

Australia denies 'downplaying' oil spill
Amy Coopes Google News 29 Aug 09;

SYDNEY — Australia denied claims Saturday it had downplayed the scale of a massive oil spill at a drilling rig off its northwest coast, and said the slick was dispersing naturally.

Resources Minister Martin Ferguson said the Greens party was exaggerating the size of the leak at the West Atlas drilling platform, about 250 kilometres off the Australian mainland.

"The area of the spill is rectangular in nature," said Ferguson.

"It is to the north-east of the rig and 15 nautical miles (28 kilometres) to the north and 60 nautical miles to the east.

"Contrary to what the Greens are suggesting, the closest it is to the Australian coastline is in excess of 80 miles (129 kilometres)," he added.

Ferguson's comments came after Greens Senator Rachel Siewert flew over the spill in a chartered plane Friday and said it was "far bigger than we have been told and closer to the coast than expected."

"From east to west it stretches 180 kilometres (112 miles) at a minimum. Urgent action is needed to stop the flow," she added.

Tonnes of dispersant chemicals have been dumped on the slick, and Ferguson said most of it was breaking up naturally.

"This spill will continue to spread in a north-easterly direction and I must say, as of today the weather conditions are assisting," Ferguson said.

"They are a bit more choppy and that will assist in the natural break-up of the oil and gas."

The leak began early last Friday at the West Atlas rig, forcing the evacuation of 69 workers.

Its Bangkok-based operator PTTEP Australasia was unable to cap the leak, and authorities have warned it could take up to seven weeks to contain, with a second rig sent from Singapore for the repair operation.

Based on average flow rates in the region and data from the company, Siewert said almost half a million litres (132,000 US gallons) of oil was daily spilling into the ocean.

She urged PTTEP and Norway's Seadrill, which owns the West Atlas platform, to accept the offer of a relief rig from Australian company Woodside Petroleum, which could be on the site within five days.

But PTTEP said there was no indication Woodside's equipment would reach West Atlas any faster than the Singapore rig, which it estimated would arrive in "seven or eight days".

"The other thing is there's different types of rigs and the option that has been selected by the company is the safest, most effective and most likely for success," said PTTEP spokesman Ian Williams.

He would not comment on Siewert's claims about the size and extent of the spill.

PTTEP on Monday estimated the slick was eight nautical miles long and 30 metres wide, and said it had "not shown signs of expanding".

It plans to drill a relief well with the secondary rig to intersect the leaking well head and stop the flow of oil and gas.

Government denies oil slick claims
ABC News 29 Aug 09;

Federal Resources Minister Martin Ferguson says claims that an oil spill off northern Australia is now only 20 kilometres from the Kimberley Australian coast are not true.

Oil has been flowing from the West Atlas rig in the Timor Sea for the past week and the Greens Senator Rachel Siewert says the slick is close to reaching Australian shores.

Martin Ferguson inspected the spill area today and says the Greens are sensationalising what has happened.

"The area of the spill is rectangular in nature," he said.

"It is to the north-east of the rig and 15 nautical miles to the north and 60 nautical miles to the east.

"Contrary to what the Greens are suggesting, the closest it is to the Australian coastline is in excess of 80 miles [148 km]."

Mr Ferguson says most of the pollution spilling into the ocean from a rig off northern Australia is dispersing naturally.

"This spill will continue to spread in a north-easterly direction and I must say, as of today the weather conditions are assisting," he said.

"They are a bit more choppy and that will assist in the natural break-up of the oil and gas."

Oil spill expert Ray Lipscombe backs Mr Ferguson's statement.

"I've just been speaking to the aerial surveillance officer who's on the aircraft overflying the area as we speak, and he hasn't indicated it has moved away from that position," he said.

A replacement rig is coming from Singapore and will be in the area in 11 days, but the Greens say the company should bring in another rig from a rival company that could be there in five.

But Mr Ferguson says that will not happen.

"In the end, we are best advised that for the safety purposes and the most successful potential rig is the West Triton and the rig we are bringing in from overseas is our best option to actually seal the leaking well head."


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New Orleans's green dilemma

Four years after Hurricane Katrina, residents are struggling to balance the costs and benefits of how they rebuild the city
Anna Hartnell, guardian.co.uk 29 Aug 09;

As of today, four years have now passed since Hurricane Katrina made landfall and devastated New Orleans, and the task of rebuilding is slowly gathering pace.

Although we will never know whether climate change was a factor behind the severe weather that battered the city in 2005, it is clear that rising sea levels and warming waters will increase the frequency of Katrina-type storms in the future. So it's not surprising that the reconstruction is being driven by strong environmental considerations. But after numerous delays, and with many of the poor and predominantly African American population still homeless, one gets the troubling sense that those who lost most to the storm may now be becoming pawns in a green agenda.

Global Green, an organization that teamed up with Brad Pitt, is piloting a "green community" in the Holy Cross area of the Lower Ninth Ward, home to some of the city's poorest inhabitants. They say that if 50,000 homes destroyed by Katrina were rebuilt to their standards, over half a million tonnes of CO2 would be eliminated from the atmosphere – the equivalent, they claim, of taking 100,000 cars off the road. New Orleans residents would save $38m to $56m every year. It's hard not to agree with this agenda in principle. A city built below sea level would be stupid not to be persuaded by the idea of carbon-neutral living, which its green homes will showcase to the rest of the US and the wider world.

But the problem with these technologically sophisticated green homes is that in the short term they are very expensive: organisations like Global Green and its offshoot, Make It Right, have been able to subsidise those homes built with private money. But massive subsidies would be needed if the entire city were to be rebuilt on this model. And of even greater concern for residents, these homes also take time: Global Green were on the ground in New Orleans in September 2005, and their first model green home – now open to visitors – wasn't completed until April 2008.

And time is not on the side of those who wish to reclaim their homes in New Orleans. This was made abundantly clear shortly after Katrina when Mayor Ray Nagin's Bring New Orleans Back Commission proposed converting large swaths of the city's flood-prone areas – including the Lower Ninth – into green spaces. The response of the city's scattered residents – evacuated to far-flung places all over the US – was to return to pitch tents on the sites of their former homes, and to make themselves human barriers to the bulldozers poised to tear down their neighbourhoods.

The scenes of widespread homelessness that continued for years after Katrina have been largely "solved" not by rebuilding but by people migrating from the streets to the floors of family and friends. Many displaced residents have yet to return to the city. Rebuilding in the Lower Ninth is taking place in the midst of a sea of vacant lots, many of which have yet to be cleared of storm debris.

The fact remains that the city has not yet recovered from its acute shortage of affordable housing, and the situation has been made worse - after Katrina - by the demolition of most of the city's public housing projects. Many of these projects were sitting on prime real estate long eyed up by the tourist industry, and were condemned partly on the grounds that they weren't green enough. This is typical of the way the green agenda, because it has been so widely accepted, has also been hijacked to promote much less worthy interests.

The environmental justice movement's efforts to rebuild sustainable green communities for low-income residents are without doubt to be admired. They have engaged closely with the communities in which they work, ensuring that the new homes do go to former residents in moves designed to mitigate the inevitable gentrification that has shaped much of the city's reconstruction. They have stepped into the gaping breach left by inept governments at the city, state and federal levels, all of which allowed talk of a much reduced and in all likelihood much 'whiter' New Orleans to go on for far too long.

But there needs to be a real conversation about who is responsible for sustainable rebuilding or else the call to build back green can become another excuse for not building back at all.

Global Green's vision – which includes not just green homes but green schools, playgrounds and community centres – surely has to be the future. But it also presents a real dilemma. For it is a vision that sits uneasily in the context of impoverished communities who have been made to pay many times over for the consequences of the exploitation of the earth's natural resources, and which may well pay again for the privilege of becoming a national example of sustainable living. In this sense New Orleans can be seen as a microcosm of the global story about climate change, in which developing nations continue to carry the burden of western affluence.


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LNG boom to make Australia 'Middle East of gas'

Neil Sands AFP Google News 30 Aug 09;

MELBOURNE — Australia is poised to become "the Middle East of gas" as Asia's rapidly growing economies queue up to buy its vast reserves in liquid form, according to analysts.

The government last week approved the massive Gorgon liquefied natural gas (LNG) project off Western Australia, which Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said would cost 50 billion dollars (41 billion US) to build and would generate 6,000 jobs.

The joint venture by Chevron, Shell and ExxonMobil is already underpinned by supply contracts with China and India worth more than 60 billion US dollars, and more customers are likely to sign up before it begins operating in 2014.

Gorgon is just one of a clutch of LNG projects planned in the next decade that analysts say will pump tens of billions of dollars into the economy and see Australia challenge Qatar as the world's major gas exporter.

Hailing Gorgon's 41 billion US supply contract with PetroChina this month -- the largest trade deal in Australian history -- the government said LNG was an important part of the country's future prosperity.

"This unprecedented export deal confirms Australia?s importance as a global energy superpower supplying vital clean energy resources and technologies to China and our other Asia-Pacific trading partners," Resources Minister Martin Ferguson said.

Asian demand for coal and iron ore have helped Australia's economy avoid recession during the global downturn but State One Stockbroking analyst Peter Kopetz said LNG was the next boom commodity.

The gas is liquefied for shipping abroad, where it is turned back into gas and distributed via pipeline.

"The numbers are phenomenal. When you look at them it's mind-boggling," he said. "It's going to be LNG boom times."

Australia exported 15.2 million tonnes of LNG worth 5.2 billion dollars in 2006, a figure the government estimates will quadruple to 60 million tonnes by 2015 if all currently planned projects proceed.

"Potentially, there could be many more projects coming on board," Kopetz said, pointing out that new discoveries were being made all the time.

He said Australia had the potential to become "the Middle East of gas" in coming decades as the world's oil supplies dwindled.

"Have a look at the Middle East, how they've benefited over the past 50-60 years from the oil boom," he said.

Western Australia is the centre of the LNG boom with three huge gas fields off its northwest coast: the Carnarvon, Browse and Bonaparte basins.

But Kopetz also points out that Queensland state on the east coast has significant reserves of coal seam gas (CSG), naturally occurring methane trapped by water deep underground that can be converted to LNG.

Shell plans a CSG plant in Queensland expected to produce up to 16 million tonnes of LNG a year, with other energy giants such as Britain's BG Group, ConocoPhillips, and Malaysia's Petronas also developing projects in the area.

Despite the proliferation of LNG schemes, EL&C Baillieu head of research Ivor Ries said there was sufficient demand from Asia.

He said existing LNG fields in Malaysia and Indonesia were coming to the end of their operational life, creating a market for Australian gas.

Asian buyers were also keen to source gas from Australia rather than outside the region because it offered a secure supply, Ries said.

"If you're in Asia, you don't have to route your ships through a war zone, which is the Middle East, and the distance is shorter," he said.

However, not everyone is happy about Australia's rush to exploit its LNG reserves, with green groups raising concerns that environmental factors are being neglected.

Environment Minister Peter Garrett has conceded Gorgon is "greenhouse-gas intensive" and could raise national emissions by up to one percent if ambitious plans to pump carbon dioxide emissions into the seabed fail.

But while Garrett included 28 conditions in his Gorgon approval designed to protect the environment, Ries said the government was determined to develop LNG resources.

He said the industry had the potential to overtake coal as the country's most valuable export, generating jobs, boosting the economy and filling government coffers with tens of billions of dollars in tax revenue.

"The tax figures are quite exciting for government. If all these projects go ahead, Canberra and the states of Queensland and Western Australia would be awash with cash," he said.


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