Best of our wild blogs: 15 Sep 09


“Freshwater Aquaculture - Prospects and Challenges for meeting the global demand" Tue 15 Sep 2009: 6.30pm, NIE LT3 from The Biodiversity crew @ NUS

The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology Supplement No. 21
A Classification Of Living And Fossil Genera Of Decapod Crustaceans now available for download from Raffles Museum News and wild shores of singapore

Mud Skipping Escapades
from Fish, Respect And Protect

Mangroving Replanting
from Project Orion

On A Hot Sunny Saturday
from Life's Indulgences

Striated Heron chicks wandering out of nest
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Caseolaris check up with Brandon
from wild shores of singapore

APO Singapore – 3rd ICCS and counting!
from News from the International Coastal Cleanup Singapore

Energy Challenge Fair 2009
from Low Carbon Singapore

Saving the last megafauna of Malaysia, an interview with Reuben Clements from Mongabay.com news


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Haze prompts Jambi airport closure

The Jakarta Post 15 Sep 09;

Sultan Thaha Saifudin Airport in Jambi was closed for four hours Tuesday due to thick haze that reduced visibility -- the latest in a series of airport closures across Sumatra this year.

Airport information officer Olan Simanjuntak said visibility on Tuesday morning had fallen to less than 800 meters, far below the normal level of 1,800 meters.

"We’ve had to close the airport until 10:30 a.m. because of the thick haze; all flight activities, departures and arrivals, will be delayed for the time being," Olan said as quoted by Antara.

He added a Lion Air flight to Jakarta, scheduled for takeoff at 7:10 a.m., had to be delayed for four hours. Likewise, the 7:45 a.m. arrival of a Garuda flight from Jakarta was also delayed.

Arrivals of Batavia Air and Sriwijaya Air flights from the capital were also delayed. The two airlines are awaiting confirmation from Jambi about the haze condition, Olan said.


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Economic Growth in Singapore: Just a numbers game? Quality counts too

Basant K. Kapur, Straits Times 15 Sep 09;

RECENT observations by economists suggest a need to reconsider some aspects of Singapore's economic growth experience.

In an article in this newspaper last Saturday on the inflow of foreign workers, National University of Singapore professor Hui Weng Tat was quoted saying: 'Growth at any cost is not something we want.'

In a chapter in a forthcoming publication of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Professors Lee Soo Ann and Linda Lim observe: 'The fact that government officials are rewarded economically, through salaries and bonuses...for delivering GDP growth, may also lead to 'growth fetishism'... and thus to preference for the easiest route to growth, which is through the addition of inputs of foreign capital, labour and skills.'

These comments raise a number of related issues. Differing somewhat from professors Lee and Lim, I am of the view that, in general, inflows of foreign capital and skills provide valuable growth momentum. However, large inflows of lower-skilled foreign workers are a different matter.

Such inflows create a vicious circle. The availability of low-skilled workers reduces the incentive for employers to upgrade their operations through mechanisation, automation and the like. The resulting low productivity levels imply that they can offer only low wages, which in turn acts as a disincentive to Singaporeans to take up such jobs, and which in turn leads employers to continue demanding for foreign workers.

Of course, the foreign worker 'tap' should not be abruptly curtailed. But a gradual and sustained tightening of the inflow is likely to be highly beneficial over time. There would also appear, as professors Lee and Lim suggest, to be a need to reconsider the GDP bonus scheme for civil servants, which factors in only the real total GDP growth rate each year.

Economic growth should, one, be significantly based on productivity improvement or at least not interfere with such improvement; and two, be inclusive, benefiting all sections of society, especially the less privileged.

I am therefore of the view that consideration should be given to replacing sole reliance on GDP growth in the bonus scheme with a composite criterion, comprising:

# GDP growth

# A fairly broad-based measure of productivity growth, such as the growth of per capita indigenous GDP (GDP accruing to Singaporeans divided by the total number of Singaporeans); and

# A welfare measure, such as the growth rate of the average household disposable income of the lowest 20 per cent of Singaporean households.

No set of criteria for the bonus scheme can be perfect. Just as the current scheme leaves out other desiderata of economic policy - such as low unemployment and inflation rates - so does the proposed composite criterion.

However, a composite criterion along the lines I have proposed will have the effect of, at least symbolically, reinforcing the desirability of productivity growth and inclusiveness as public policy goals.

Two other issues: First, I have referred in the third measure above to 'disposable income', which would be inclusive of fiscal transfers. Is there a danger that an 'easy' route to achieving higher disposable income among the poor might be sought - through overly generous transfers, rather than through training and skills upgrading, thus breeding an entitlement mentality?

Clearly, the application of any criterion will have to be tempered by good judgment. Though, in this case, a little 'erring' on the side of generosity may not be a bad thing for the least-privileged among us, especially if it helps to produce a more comfortable home environment for children in these households.

Second, what weights should be attached to the three criteria in the composite scheme? Since we are considering simply a bonus scheme and the signal we wish it to send to public servants, the exact choice of weights is not critical.

Tentatively, may I suggest equal weights to all three criteria, based on the following considerations: the intrinsic worth of each criterion; and since GDP growth is also facilitated by productivity growth, on the part of both higher- and less-skilled Singaporeans, the three criteria can, to a certain degree, be mutually supporting.

The writer is professor of economics and director of the Singapore Centre for Applied and Policy Economics, Department of Economics, National University of Singapore.


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NUS to become living laboratory for improving urban environment

Dylan Loh, Channel NewsAsia 14 Sep 09;

SINGAPORE: The National University of Singapore (NUS) plans to use its Kent Ridge campus as a living laboratory for research to find solutions for the problems posed by climate change and rapid urbanisation.

By using the campus as a test-bed, NUS will conduct studies on how work from different fields of research can be integrated to produce practical solutions to transform urban environments and raise the quality of life in Singapore and other Asian countries.

Explaining the need for this initiative, NUS President Professor Tan Chorh Chuan said: "Cities will require a range of solutions to become "smarter", more ecologically sound and resource efficient. These solutions should be applicable at different scales in the built environment - from products to buildings and whole cities."

The NUS School of Design and Environment (SDE) is developing urban architecture for the tropical environment that is climatically responsive and energy-efficient, as well as creative urban spaces that feature intensive greenery.

The school is also a test-bed for the applications of solar panels in reducing energy costs and is looking into the use of plants to insulate buildings from heat.

In addition, the school has conducted a study of the micro-climate of Kent Ridge Campus for NUS planners to better understand the environmental impacts of future developments.

NUS will team up with government agencies and research institutions like Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) and Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART) to promote Singapore as a model for urban development that is environmentally sustainable.

According to the United Nations, two billion more people will be living in the world's cities by 2030. And this will put a huge strain on the quality and efficiency of urban infrastructure, especially related to energy, water and transportation.

- CNA/sc


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Cleaner water from new drainage

The Business Times 15 Sep 09;

JTC's eco-friendly drainage system reduces the amount of pollutants in the water, improving the quality in reservoirs downstream

SUSTAINABLE development has become a growing imperative and across the world, governments and corporations are investing more than ever in new technologies to reduce pollution and energy consumption.

Some agencies are leaving no stone unturned in their search for the next green application. In fact, they are making use of stones - gravel and sand to be exact - in drainage systems to produce cleaner water.

Gravel filtration system

Industrial landlord JTC Corporation will be testing out a gravel filtration system at one of its upcoming estates, the Business Aviation Complex in Seletar Aerospace Park. The project is the result of a study which started late last year, looking at how rainwater can be filtered through layers of gravel, rough sand and granite debris before it runs into the public drains.

Concrete drains in most industrial estates today channel unfiltered storm water directly into waterways and reservoirs. With the new gravel filtration system in place, large volumes of storm water can be cleansed before entering public drains. This helps reduce the amount of pollutants in the water, improving the quality in reservoirs downstream.

'This is our effort to support the overall sustainable development of Singapore, and do our part to make sure the water run-off from our industrial estates is made cleaner, and help reduce pollutants or load to the waterways and reservoir systems,' said JTC director of engineering planning Koh Chwee.

The new drainage system can also look better than traditional concrete drains. As the Seletar Aerospace Park is nestled in greenery and the old-world charm of Seletar, the drainage system will be designed to blend in with the environment. The gravel surfaces can be covered with soil and planted with trees, adding colour to the estate.

Furthermore, it can make good business sense to explore storm water pollution control measures - investors and industrialists have become increasingly conscious of environment and corporate social responsibility issues.

The Business Aviation Complex will sit on a 7,000-square-metre compound which channels rainwater through the gravel filtration system. JTC has appointed a consultant to design the system and expects to complete it in 2011. The agency is the overall planner for the Seletar Aerospace Park - an aviation hub for maintenance, repair and overhaul, design and training services.

JTC will monitor the new drainage system for its cost and effectiveness in improving water quality. If it proves to be successful, JTC may introduce it to other industrial estates in Singapore.

The concept behind gravel filtration systems is not new and countries such as Germany, Australia and New Zealand have such features in place. JTC studied various systems and the challenge for it was to design one that would suit Singapore's geography and apply it in an industrial area.

For instance, JTC had to come up with a gravel filtration system that would accommodate heavy rains in Singapore. During the research phase, the agency found that heavy rainfall could exceed the drainage system's load, and it had to make modifications to prevent overflows.

In public housing estates, the national water agency PUB has introduced another type of drainage system known as bio-retention swales. Drains along Sengkang West Way for instance, have troughs of shrubbery which filter rainwater through soil layers.

Storm water management

Besides Seletar Aerospace Park, JTC is also looking to introduce a storm water management system at the new CleanTech Park at Jalan Bahar, a centre for the development and production of clean technology products.

JTC has started drawing up the master plan for the area and considered implementing a wide range of eco-friendly practices. The CleanTech Park will have a 'central green core' which captures surface run-off, and then uses retention, detention and cleansing techniques to make the water suitable for non-potable use.

JTC displayed its environmentally-sustainable drainage systems at the Singapore International Water Week this year. Local and international visitors from both the academia and corporate world were supportive of its initiatives, it said.

The new drainage systems are part of JTC's initiatives in bringing innovative and sustainable real estate solutions to its industrial parks. The agency is no stranger to the sustainable development movement, being the key manager of supply and demand for scarce industrial land in Singapore. It has been spearheading Singapore's industrial growth since 1968.


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Failure to counter new anti-palm oil tactics will be costly to Malaysia

Comment by Errol Oh, The Star 15 Sep 09;

IT may be time to sound the alarm. Fuelled by a cocktail of environmental issues, the anti-palm oil lobby in the West is gaining traction, and failure to counter this well can be costly.

The lobby’s message is simple – the palm oil industry harms the planet – but once it seeps into people’s minds, undoing the damage will take years.

The latest indication that the momentum is working against the industry is the Sept 9 ruling by Britain’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) on an advertorial taken out by the Malaysian Palm Oil Council (MPOC) several months ago.

Carried in the April 25-May 1 edition of The Economist, the advertorial (Palm Oil: The Green Answer) talks about the economic importance and environmental sustainability of Malaysian palm oil. It was meant to defend the industry, but the ultimate effect is quite different.

The Friends of the Earth, which describes itself as the “most influential environmental campaigning organisation” in Britain, submitted a 20-page complaint that picked apart the advertorial and pointed out sections that it alleged are in breach of the British Code of Advertising, Sales Promotion and Direct Marketing.

The NGO also provided background information, including photographs, to support its contention that Malaysian palm oil is not sustainably produced.

The ASA conducted an assessment (which included correspondence with the MPOC) and upheld the complaint, saying some claims made by MPOC in the advertorial were “likely to mislead”.

The result is that the ad cannot appear again in its current form. Perhaps the greater damage to the Malaysian palm oil industry is that those who have been attacking it can go around claiming vindication. And this is, in fact, what they are doing.

In an immediate response to the ASA adjudication, Friends of the Earth biofuels campaigner Kenneth Richter said: “The ASA is right to ban this misleading palm oil ad.”

British newspaper The Independent, which has advocated a consumer boycott against food products containing palm oil, began its report on the ASA decision with this: “The palm oil industry misled the public by claiming production of the vegetable fat was sustainable and socially useful, according to an official investigation.”

Naturally, the MPOC is deeply unhappy with the latest development. It may not be a body blow, but it hurt all the same.

Said chief executive officer Tan Sri Dr Yusof Basiron in a Sept 9 statement: “By censoring our message, this relatively small group of people is blocking the entire British public’s access to a diverse range of views and information about palm oil.

“Consumers have a right to have information about the various products and services available to them and a right to determine for themselves which they want. Consequently, we are deeply concerned that the ASA is acting as an interested party in the public debate on palm oil rather than as a neutral and objective arbiter.”

This is not the first time that the ASA has ruled against an MPOC advertisement. In January last year, the authority upheld a complaint from the Friends of the Earth against the council’s television ad.

However, the ASA should not be a target of the palm oil industry’s ire; the authority hands out similar decisions to many companies and organisations all the time. For that matter, anger and petulance are not useful in this context. Self-contemplation, honesty and intelligence are definitely essential.

There has to be a reality check. Are we taking this threat to the industry as seriously as we ought to?

The worry over the fate of the Earth is powerful leverage, and the passion for the cause is contagious. The anti-palm oil lobby has long gone beyond being merely pesky. It may well turn into a mini movement that will sway the decisions of palm oil buyers.

The industry’s response has to be a balance of sophistication and forthrightness. It is a mistake to have a “been there, done that” attitude. New challenges demand new approaches and solutions. If we run out of ideas, it will not be long before we run out of luck.

# Deputy business editor Errol Oh believes that right is might, but he recognises that might alone does not win wars.


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Smart Farming To Help Penans Overcome Starvation

Bernama 14 Sep 09;

KUCHING, Sept 14 (Bernama) -- A private researcher might just have the solution for Penans facing starvation in Sarawak's remote settlements.

Having formulated an outreach smart farming system for rural communities, all Dr Elli Luhat needs is government collaboration and funding for his projects.

He said he would put forward his proposal -- based on a model that was specially adapted to the needs of the Penans -- to the agriculture and agro-based industry ministry to assist the government solve the problem.

"We know very well the Penans are closely associated with nature, and due to their special lifestyle, it is important to find an agricultural activity that they could effectively be involved in," added Dr Luhat.

He was speaking to reporters after attending the signing of a Memorandum of Cooperation on the implementation of smart farming projects in Sarawak, between DLT Institute and Yayasan Ikhlas Malaysia here Monday.

Dr Luhat, who invented the technology to integrate the environmental and social factors to achieve optimal output from ventures, especially in remote ares like Ulu Baram, Ulu Murum and Bario, said a few Penan graduates had called suggested their community participate in such projects.

Unlike ongoing activities, including oil palm and rice culitivation which the Penans found difficult to adapt, he was confident they could be trained to collect gaharu or agarwood, which are used commercially for the manufacture of perfume, make-up and pharmaceutical products.

In July, it was reported that famine had hit Penans at five major settlements in Belaga due to poor rice harvests, forcing them to cry out to the government for help.

Dr Luhat said the gaharu was one of the valuable products identified as having good potential for implementation under the smart farming programme to help poor farmers in the state's interior.

So far, he has embarked on a collaboration with Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (Unimas) on research and development (R&D) for the jatropha as a cash crop whose potential as biodiesel is being developed under the system.

Through his technology, he said, there was vast potential in the aquaculture industry, including the domestic rearing of the wild empurau fish, which he described as a "swimming goldmine" as it could fetch as high as RM450 per kilogramme.

Meanwhile, DLT Institute managing director Esther Mujan Wang said the company planned to conduct more in-situ trainings and workshops, especially for poor farmers in the rural areas, to impart skills on smart farming, as part of its outreach programme with Yayasan Ikhlas' assistance.

-- BERNAMA

Smarter way for Penans to settle down
Desmond Davidson, The New Straits Times 15 Sep 09;

KUCHING: A private researcher specialising in forestry said he could help the state government redefine its blueprint on getting the Penans to switch from being hunters and gatherers to farmers and planters.

Dr Elli Luhat, who had over the years conducted extensive research on the state's most backward ethnic group, which gave up its nomadic life only 20 years ago, said the current policy of teaching the Penans to plant and farm was flawed.

Despite the success of getting 97 per cent of them to give up their nomadic lifestyle, the Penans still hold strong to their tradition of eking out a living by going into the forest to hunt and gather edible plants for food.

They do not plant or rear livestock.

"Don't force the Penans to do things that they find alien. They won't adapt.

"We know they find it difficult to adopt our methods of farming," Dr Luhat said after witnessing the signing of a memorandum of cooperation between two non-governmental organisations, Yayasan Ikhlas and DLT Institute, on the development of "smart farming" in Sarawak.

The institute is adopting his concept in the smart farming programme.

He pointed to the failure in getting the Penans to plant rice and tapioca as examples of the flaw in the state's policy.

"What they farm should be more suited to their environment.

"It should be more about meeting their needs and what they like to do."

Dr Luhat said he could assist the state government in formulating a smart farming system for the Penans.

His system seeks to harmonise the social, economic and environmental factors to achieve optimal benefits for the farmers.

He said as such, better results could be achieved if the Penans were taught to do things that they were familiar with, like planting the agar wood (gaharu), which they often gathered for their own consumption.


Planting the scented wood, he added, could also uplift the economic standing of the Penan as they could also sell the excess.

He said the wood could fetch as much as US$150,000 (RM523,500) per kg and the income derived could help them get out of the poverty trap.

Other economic activities "that are their thing" to undertake, Dr Luhat believed, were the rearing of ikan empurau and ikan kelah and wild boar.

The ikan empurau, often described as the "swimming gold", fetches RM450 per kg in the market.


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Malaysia is committed to sustainable forest management

The Star 15 Sep 09;

THE Forestry Department appreciates the concerns highlighted in “Get to the root cause of why more trees are felled,” (The Star, Sept 2).

Malaysia is committed to manage its natural forest in a sustainable manner; to ensure continuous timber production, maintain multiple functions of the forests, conserve biodiversity and control environmental impact.

The sustainable forest management concept is in line with the “conservation” and “sustainable use” definitions by the World Conservation Strategy and Convention of Biological Diversity. In 2008, natural forest cover in Peninsular Malaysia was 5.85 million ha or 44.39% of the total land area (13.18 million ha).

Of the 5.85 million ha, 4.81 million ha had been designated as permanent reserved forest (PRF) to be managed sustainably for the benefit of the present and future generations.

Of this, approximately 2.81 million ha (21.3% of the total land area) are classified as production forest. The remaining two million ha (15.2% of the total land area) is classified as protection forest.

The role of the protection forest is to ensure favourable climatic and physical conditions of the country, the safeguarding of water resources, soil fertility, environmental quality, conservation of biological diversity and the minimisation of damage by floods and erosion to rivers and agricultural land.

Besides the protection forest within the PRF, other protected areas, which had been gazetted as national parks, wildlife and bird sanctuaries in Peninsular Malaysia amounted to 0.89 million ha (6.8% of the total land area).

A total of 0.12 million ha (0.9% of the total land area) of the wildlife and bird sanctuary areas are located within the PRF.

Currently, the production forests are managed under Selective Management System, which advocates the selection of a cutting regime based on diameter limits and species composition of the standing trees.

Furthermore, the harvesting operation in PRFs is being carried out with the guidelines of Malaysian Criteria and Indicators, a standard used for assessing forest management practices and MS ISO 9001:2000 certification procedures.

To further mitigate the adverse effects of forest harvesting, the Forestry Department supervises closely the implementation of the environmental conservation measures including demarcation of buffer zones for rivers and water bodies, selection of cutting regime, constructions of forests road, preparation of the forest management plan and restriction from cutting for areas with elevation above 1,000m and area of slopes greater than 40°.

In addition, conservation measures for environmental protection and biological conservation have been taken into consideration during harvesting through retention of mother trees and fruit trees, retention trees for protection, buffer zone along rivers and streams, timber tagging and directional felling, construction of forest roads, skid trails and log landings according to prescribed standards approved by the department.

Sustainable forest management is the principle of the forest management practices and the department will continue to enhance and improve its management practices in the light of new research findings, innovative technologies, better skills and knowledge.

Thus, it will demand conscientious effort, a lot of hard work and a strong commitment, determination and collaboration from the Government, private sector and non-governmental organisations.

DR AMERJIT SINGH,
For Secretary-General,
Natural Resources and Environment Ministry.


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Indonesian zoos linked to illegal sales of protected animals

Wahyoe Boediwardhana, The Jakarta Post 14 Sep 09;

The government has been urged to audit and check the inventories of at least 10 zoo managements in Java and Sumatra, over fears they may have been involved in illegal trades of protected animals.

The demand was expressed on Sunday in Malang, East Java, following the capture by Jakarta Police of a suspect named Wardi, a noted taxidermist who had reportedly worked in cooperation with almost all zoo managements in Indonesia.

"We obtained copies of transfer documents for protected animal ownership, from the zoos to the suspect," ProFauna Indonesia chairman Rosek Nursahid said.

According to police reports on the trade, animal conservation institutions including Indonesian Safari Park, Pematang Siantar Zoo and Bandung Zoo were involved, Rosek said.

Surabaya Zoo, he said, was also included in the list, but his organization had yet to obtain a copy of the official documents regarding its alleged involvement.

"The only evidence we have is a 2000 film showing an employee at Surabaya Zoo involved in the sale of stuffed skins of a Sumatran tiger *Panthera tigris sumatrae* and a leopard *Panthera pardus*," Rosek said. Among the traded protected animals were Sumatran tigers, orangutans, Malayan tapirs (Tapirus indicus), sun bears (Helarctos malayanus), leopard cats (Prionailurus bengalensis), birds of paradise (Paradisaea) and Sulawesi bear cuscus (Ailurops ursinus).

Trading protected animals, Rosek said, is a violation of Law No. 5/1990 on the conservation of natural resources and ecosystems.

Separately, in her press statement, the coordinator of the anti-trading forum for protected animals, Irma Hermawati, said that the forum had long found indications of such involvement.

"Serious and tight surveillance of zoo managements is thus urgent to prevent state losses from the trading of protected animals," Irma said.

A similar criticism was expressed by international animal welfare organization the Born Free Foundation. In an email made available to the press, the foundation's program manager Andrina Murrell said the news had surprised her organization very much and urged that such practices be stopped immediately.

Another ProFauna activist, Nursidi, suggested the government place a moratorium on the establishment of new zoos in Indonesia.

"It should not issue any more new licenses for the establishment of zoos, so it can focus more on existing ones," Nursidi said.


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Pertamina Admits 5,000-Barrel Oil Spill In Indonesia’s Kutai National Park

Kafil Yamin The Jakarta Globe 15 Sep 09;

Indonesia's state oil and gas producer PT Pertamina is negotiating to compensate farmers in East Kalimantan whose land was tainted by a previously undisclosed oil spill at a well in Kutai National Park, where the company has a concession.

The company said the spill, estimated by an official as the equivalent of 5,000 barrels of crude oil, occurred last month when a storage tank overflowed, but Pertamina did not announce the incident until contacted by the Jakarta Globe on Monday.

The company began negotiating with local farmers living inside the park, apparently illegally, on the same day.

An environmental investigator in East Kalimantan told the Globe that local residents claim the oil spill originated from inside the underground well.

He said oil that flowed out damaged tracts of virgin forest in the park. Some of the oil also flowed into the Sangata River.

The investigator, who asked not to be named, estimates that thousands of animals, including rare types of fish and reptiles, would be affected by the oil spill.

Mochammad Harun, a public relations manager for Pertamina, acknowledged the environmental accident when contacted by the Globe, though he described it as a “minor leak.”

“The oil spilled over from a tank and flowed into several parts of the forest and farms,” he said.

“But we will restore all of the damaged parts of the forest. It will take around two or three months for the land to totally recover. As for the affected farms, we will offer compensation for every lost tree. We won’t compensate for land because it belongs to the park.”

After the spill occurred on Aug. 12, staff members from the Pertamina site fought to contain the oil, but they were unsuccessful.

People in the village of Sangkima in Sangata subdistrict, where the spill occurred, said that Pertamina told them they would be compensated on the condition that they didn’t speak about the oil spill to outsiders. Syaid Ramadhan, village chief of Sangkima, said they were in talks with Pertamina over payment for their losses.

“But compensation will be about the plantations, not the land, because the land belongs to Kutai National Park,” he said.

Muchlisin, a Pertamina employee in Sangata, claimed that the oil spill damaged farm areas belonging to “only 10 families.”

Kutai is a haven for endangered animals such as the orangutan and rare species including the maroon leaf monkey, clouded leopard, black flying squirrel and flat-headed cat.


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Slow-motion disaster: oil spill in Australia

Nicolas Perpitch, The Australian 15 Aug 09;

THERE was plenty of backslapping in Perth yesterday over the final approval for the $43 billion Gorgon gas project, but another story involving Australia's oil and gas industry continues to paint a different picture. The West Atlas drill rig has been belching up to 400 barrels of light sweet crude oil a day into the Timor Sea off Australia since a leak developed in a well deep below the ocean floor.

Along with unknown quantities of methane gas and condensate, as much as 1215tonnes of oil may have seeped into the sea since the blowout almost four weeks ago.

PTTEP Australasia, the Thai-owned company that operates the wellhead platform 250km northwest of the Truscott air base in Western Australia's Kimberley region, has put in place a complex and highly technical operation to plug the leak.

But the operation, if successful, will take another 3 1/2 weeks. By then, more than 2400 tonnes of oil could have spilled out.

It's not a crisis on the scale of the Exxon Valdez disaster, when 40,000 tonnes of crude oil devastated Prince William Sound in Alaska after the tanker struck Bligh Reef in March 1989, but it already ranks as Australia's third worst oil spill. In 1991, 17,280 tonnes of light crude oil spilled out of the Greek tanker Kirki when it lost its bow off the coast of Western Australia. Serious coastal pollution was avoided only because severe weather conditions and the Leeuwin current helped disperse much of the oil.

And 14,800 tonnes of oil seeped into the sea off WA after a large crack developed in the hull of the Princess Anne Marie in 1975.

Prevailing winds and tides have so far kept the oil away from the pristine Kimberley coast, but environmentalists are worried about the effect of the oil and the chemical dispersants used to break up the spill on marine life and migrating birds.

Commercial fishermen are furious PTTEP has offered to pay only for the clean-up and not any potential future damage to the fishery and their livelihood. They are threatening to take the company to court.

PTTEP, which operates oil and gas projects in 13 countries and has a market capitalisation of $US13.4bn ($15.65bn), was given approval by the Howard government to drill at the Montara oilfield in 2003.

It was part of the company's Montara Development Project, which takes in the Montara, Skua and Swift/Swallow oilfields, and has oil reserves of about 37million barrels. The project had been due to start production by the end of the year, but a federal sign-off on its oil spill contingency plan was not secured until June.

Early on August 21, as the West Atlas entered the final stages of pre-production, a crack developed in the temporary system sealing one of its five wellheads.

With vast amounts of oil and gas spewing out and no idea exactly what had happened, those on board the rig knew they had to get off quickly.

In an emergency evacuation, all 69 workers on the jack-up rig were airlifted to Dili and more than 60 workers on a nearby pipe-laying barge were also evacuated, as divers who surfaced found themselves surrounded by the oily substance. The damaged well is sunk to a depth of 2.6km, then curves into the oil and gas reservoir for a total length of 3.6km. A concrete and rubber plug was meant to hold the oil and gas until it was ready to be pumped.

PTTEP Australasia director and chief financial officer Jose Martins admits he is unsure what had happened.

"There's a pipe that's gone down 3.5km," Martins says.

"That pipe is sitting in a reservoir and, because it's a development well, it's not in production, because of that it's plugged. So it has quite a sophisticated system of plugs and about 20 odd metres of concrete, or cement, pumped into the well bore.

"And that is designed to keep it from flowing. And on top of that is always a whole lot of seawater in the pipe as well. That's what stops it from flowing. However, there must be some fracture in the system somewhere which we can't detect, which is causing the leakage."

An emergency response team for PTTEP ruled out the quickest option for fixing the leak, which would have been to land a crew on the West Atlas and block the flow at the top of the pipe.

But they decided that was far too dangerous because the gas could ignite. They decided instead to bring in another rig to drill a relief well down to the damaged pipeline and fill it with heavy mud.

But that would take a whopping 50 days to implement, while oil and gas continued to gush out unabated.

Two barges towed a relief drill rig, the West Triton, from Indonesia's Batam Island, near Singapore to the West Atlas rig.

The 2963km journey took more than three weeks. Last Thursday, the West Triton anchored 2km off the West Atlas, on the edge of an exclusion zone set up by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority. It began drilling through rock, dirt and sediment on Sunday and will take another another 3 1/2 weeks to plug the leak. That is, if everything goes according to plan. The operation is so delicate that PTTEP has called in a team of engineering specialists from ALERT Well Control, which helped extinguish the fires at hundreds of oilwells set ablaze as Saddam Hussein's troops fled Kuwait.

The ALERT team is providing technical and other advice on the drilling effort, including the use of electromagnetic equipment that will guide the drill down to the original well and flood it with heavy mud to block the leak.

Two ships with high-capacity water pumps are also on site to deluge the West Atlas and minimise the risk of fire.

PTTEP has refused to say how much the operation will cost, but industry analysts estimate it will easily extend into tens of millions of dollars.

PTTEP also long refused to publicly disclose how much oil was flowing from the wellhead. It now says that although the flow rate appears to be slowing, it gave AMSA an initial estimate of 400 barrels a day so it could assemble enough resources to deal with thespill.

AMSA initially began spraying the spill with dispersants brought in from Victoria, using a chartered C-130 Hercules, paid for by PTTEP. But as the dispersants started taking effect and breaking up the oil, AMSA switched to smaller and more manoeuvrable fixed-wing planes that could target specific patches of oil.

The slick was estimated to be up to 30km long, although AMSA stressed it was hard to pin down the size because of the dispersants.

Back on land, environmental groups had also immediately swung into action mode.

They were incensed by federal Resources and Energy Minister Martin Ferguson's comments that the spill was smaller than first thought and there was no threat to the coast.

The spill was evaporating naturally and AMSA would help in the process, he said.

Amid calls for all gas and oil development and exploration to stop following the spill, the industry was also playing down the crisis.

The Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association noted it was a very unusual event and was the first offshore gas well blowout since 1984.

But Australian Greens leader Bob Brown called for a judicial inquiry into how the oil rig was run and the clean-up operation.

He also wanted to know whether the dispersants were more toxic to marine life, including migrating whales, than the oil.

A direct link was drawn to the Gorgon project when WWF Australia said tracking research showed flatback turtles had left their nests on Barrow Island off WA's Pilbara coast, where Gorgon gas will be processed, for foraging grounds in the affected areas.

Greens senator Rachel Siewert flew over the spill and subsequently claimed the public had been seriously misled and the slick was merely 20km from the coast.

She said it stretched 180km from horizon to horizon.

But when AMSA announced the spill's nearest point to the mainland was in fact 130km, the senator admitted some of what she though was oil could have been algae.

There was no dispute, though, when commercial fishermen started reporting finding sea snakes and flatback turtles covered in oily slime.

Some said they could smell the detergent-like dispersant on the turtles.

AMSA has defended the use of dispersants as effective in breaking up the spill.

It says the dispersants break up the oil into small globules, which then fall into the water column where the natural breakdown of the oil is enhanced.

AMSA says most laboratory tests rated Australian-approved oil spill dispersants as "slightly toxic" to "practically non-toxic".

But marine researcher Richard Costin, who flew over the spill area with Siewert, says the dispersants and oil pose a significant risk to fish and other marine life as they sink into the ocean.

"What's at risk is all the sea grasses, all the sponges, all the corals," Costin says. "The other issue is the ingestion of oils by fish, turtles, sea snakes and cetaceans."

Environs Kimberley director Martin Pritchard has also flown over the spill.

"It's like a scene from a disaster movie: there's a sea of oil, the gas is still billowing out of the rig," he says.

"We know there've been sea snakes that seem to have died from ingesting the oil and dispersant. There've been turtles that appear to have been very sick from ingesting it.

"The dispersant is particularly bad for seagrass beds and seagrass beds are really important for dugongs (and) threatened species of turtles, and are fish-breeding areas.

"There's at least 12 species of whales and dolphins in that area.

"It's known by biologists as a marine superhighway because of the diversity of species in that area."

Environmentalists and fishermen are concerned the oil and dispersants could harm fish eggs and cause long-term harm to the Demersal Scalefish Fishery, which includes snapper and red emperors and is estimated to be worth about $8 million a year.

The Kimberley Professional Fishermen's Association is putting the company on notice that it will seek damages if its members' income takes a blow and the area's pristine brand is damaged.

But others don't have the same level of concern. Monique Gagnon, who specialises in marine health, toxicology and the petroleum industry, believes the dispersants will be diluted in 100m of water.

"The concentration of dispersants and oil in the water will remain very small," she says. "The exposure of the fish will be higher, but I don't think it will be at levels that will cause ill-effects in fish or in the marine biota."

She thinks dispersants are being used as a precautionary measure to ease public concerns and ensure no oil reaches the shore.

"I think the use of dispersants is not mandatory in this case because it is a very light crude oil and because it is so far away from any shoreline and it is in deep water," Gagnon says.

"The oil would disperse and disappear naturally and it would take a little longer.

"But dispersants makes the slick disappear a lot more rapidly and politically, economically and from the public relations point of view, it creates advantages."


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Barcoding Endangered Sea Turtles

ScienceDaily 14 Sep 09;

Conservation geneticists who study sea turtles have a new tool to help track this highly migratory and endangered group of marine animals: DNA barcodes. DNA barcodes are short genetic sequences that efficiently distinguish species from each other—even if the samples from which the DNA is extracted are minute or degraded.

Now, a recently published research paper by scientists from the American Museum of Natural History and the University of Canberra, among other organizations, demonstrates that this technology can be applied to all seven sea turtle species and can provide insight into the genetic structure of a widely-dispersed and ancient group of animals.

"This is the first study to document DNA barcodes of all species of sea turtles from around the world," says Eugenia Naro-Maciel, Marine Biodiversity Scientist at the Center for Biodiversity and Conservation at the Museum and first author of the paper published in the early online edition of Molecular Ecology Resources. "These barcodes can be used to document biological diversity in a standardized fashion and for the conservation of these charismatic and ecologically important marine animals."

DNA barcodes are relatively short segments of mitochondrial DNA. A region of the COI, or cox1 gene (cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1) has been agreed-upon by researchers as appropriate for barcoding, given that it is both highly variable and very specific. This portion of the genome mutates quickly enough to distinguish many closely related species but also slowly enough so that individuals within a species may have similar barcodes. Barcoding has been used to check the accuracy of caviar and red snapper labeling and to identify the presence of endangered whales in Asian markets, as well as other applications.

Through the current study, the research team found that all seven sea turtle species can be consistently distinguished from each other by DNA barcodes. Samples were collected from 249 individuals from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, as well as from the Mediterranean Sea. Variation between species ranged from 1.68% to 13%, while variation within each species was relatively low, ranging from 0 to 0.9%. The genetic sequence from green turtles of the Eastern Tropical Pacific population, which can be distinguished from other green turtles by their darker coloration, was identical to one found in Australia.

Analysis of the barcodes in this study used a comprehensive method based on diagnostic characters developed by co-author Rob DeSalle, curator in the Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics at the Museum, and colleagues. This method contrasts with common approaches also employed in this study, which assign sequences to the most similar genetic group (and which may not be accurate because of the sometimes arbitrary thresholds for species identity). "With diagnostic characters, we can use gene sequences to compare different groups in a manner similar to classifying animals in the field based on their unique attributes, and in line with classical taxonomy," notes DeSalle.

Naro-Maciel adds that "by identifying these animals to species and providing a standardized registry for documenting genetic diversity within this group, DNA barcoding promises to advance conservation and research." Highly migratory sea turtles face a myriad of threats worldwide from overharvest, fisheries interactions, habitat loss, climate change, pollution, disease, and other factors, and effective conservation measures are needed. The potential for DNA barcoding applications is significant: trade in the meat, eggs, leather, shell, and bone often means that the species identity or geographic origin of a product is difficult to ascertain using conventional means. Barcoding items collected by wildlife management could provide critical information and tools to those tracking international trade in wildlife products. In addition, animals trapped as fisheries bycatch or stranded onshore may be damaged beyond recognition, but identifiable through DNA barcoding. To assist in these efforts, barcode sequences from this study have been supplied to the Barcode of Life database and GenBank so that the data are freely available.

This research was funded in part by the Royal Caribbean Ocean Fund, the Regina Bauer Frankenberg Foundation for Animal Welfare, and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. In addition to Naro-Maciel and DeSalle, authors include Brendan Reid (Columbia University), Nancy FitzSimmons (University of Canberra in Australia), Minh Le, Rob DeSalle, and George Amato (American Museum of Natural History).

Adapted from materials provided by American Museum of Natural History, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.


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The bat that came out of the dark

Matt Walker, BBC News 14 Sep 09;

A tiny bat living in central Italy has emerged from the dark and started hunting by day.

This switch in hunting strategy is highly unusual among insectivorous bats, which routinely hunt at twilight or by night to avoid predators.

Yet a small group of soprano pipistrelles has been spotted brazenly flying by day in a mountain canyon within an Italian beech forest.

Only one other species of insectivorous bat frequently flies during daylight.

A research team lead by Dr Danilo Russo, a bat expert from the University of Bristol, UK and the University of Naples Federico II in Italy report the discovery in the journal Mammalian Biology.

Together with colleagues from both institutions, Dr Russo initially set out to find the roosts of another species, the barbastelle bat ( Barbastella barbastellus ), in the beech forests within a mountain canyon near the village of Villavallelonga in the Abruzzo, Lazio and Molise National Park in central Italy.

"One late afternoon, walking in the woodland, we spotted some bats flying unusually early," Dr Russo explains.

"We thought the phenomenon might be occasional, as sometimes happens, so we came back at the same time on the following days and the bats were there."

The scientists established that the bats are soprano pipistrelles ( Pipistrellus pygmaeus) , a species with a high-pitched call that is closely related to the common pipistrelle ( Pipistrellus pipistrellus ).

The bats routinely come out to forage well before sunset, commonly feeding on gnats, wasps and bugs.

Deadly trade-off

Such behaviour is extremely rare for insectivorous bats.

These bats face a trade-off. During the day there are more insects around to feed on. But the bats themselves are very vulnerable to being caught and eaten by predatory birds, which fly by sight.

So instead, the bats have evolved to fly in the dark, only emerging during the hours of twilight or darkness. That keeps the bats safe, and their echolocating ability allows them to navigate and hunt those insects that are still about.

Yet over many evenings spread over two summers, the researchers continually saw this one population of soprano pipistrelles hunting insects by day.

The bats only do so at the bottom of the canyon, where local conditions seem to provide a safe haven for day flying.

The forest canopy lining the canyon protects the bats from predators, while offering a bountiful supply of insect food.

The researchers suspect that other local populations of bats may also have become day-hunters.

But they have not been recorded before by scientists as "bat researchers seldom look for bats in daytime", says Dr Russo.

"In my career I have rarely come across a fully occasional daytime flight," he adds.

Individual bats are sometimes seen flying during the day. But they usually do so soon after hibernation, when they are starving and need to replace fat reserves depleted during the winter.

"But this behaviour, performed systematically, was absolutely new to us."

Only one other bat, the Azores noctule ( Nyctalus azoreum ), is known to regularly hunt by day.

This species hunts insects in the dry forests of the Azores, where there are no predatory birds that fly by day.


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Python "Nightmare": New Giant Species Invading Florida

Christine Dell'Amore, National Geographic News 14 Sep 09;

Already squeezed by the invasion of the giant Burmese python, Florida now faces what one scientist calls one of the U.S. state's "worst nightmares."

Africa's largest snake—the ill-tempered, 20-foot-long (6.1-meter-long) African rock python—is colonizing the U.S. state, new discoveries suggest.

Six African rock pythons have been found in Florida since 2002. More troubling, a pregnant female and two hatchlings have been found, which means the aggressive reptiles have set up house.

More dangerous than even Burmese pythons—which are known to eat alligators (alligator-python picture)—the African pythons are "so mean, they come out of the egg striking," said Kenneth Krysko, senior herpetologist at the Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville.

"This is just one vicious animal."

So far the giant snakes have been found only in a single square mile (2.6 square kilometers) of suburban area west of Miami. Pet breeders unprepared for the pythons' ferocity may have released them, Krysko said.

What's "really scary" is that the new invaders only have to cross the road to enter Everglades National Park, where Burmese pythons have already eaten thousands of native animals, he said.

With the addition of the rock python, Florida is now an established home-away-from-home for three large alien constrictors—including the Burmese species and the boa constrictor—according to wildlife biologist Robert Reed, who studies invasive reptiles for the U.S. Geological Survey in Fort Collins, Colorado.

(The Florida python crisis will be covered in a future episode of Explorer on the U.S. National Geographic Channel. The National Geographic Channel is part-owned by the National Geographic Society, which owns National Geographic News.)

Pythons Threaten Mice and Men

In its native habitat, sub-Saharan Africa, the African rock python eats small mammals, antelope, warthog, herons, and other animals.

In Florida the African snake might "eat almost any warm-blooded animal that is big enough to ingest," as the Burmese python does, USGS's Reed said.

"Dozens of species of native wildlife, from white-tailed deer to 6-foot [183-centimeter] alligators to birds, have been found in the digestive tracts of Burmese pythons in Florida," said Reed, who is also working with the Florida museum's Krysko on the Florida python problem.

Also like the Burmese python, the African snake is a constrictor. Lacking poison, it kills animals by encircling and literally squeezing the life out of them.

Florida wildlife may not be the only creatures at risk. In Africa, rock pythons are known to have attacked humans, Krysko said.

Hidden in a Florida swamp, he added, the African python "could strike you and you wouldn't even know it was there."

Python + Python = Hybrid Supersnake?

African pythons have likely already made it into the Everglades, Krysko said. If so, it shouldn't be long before they encounter their Burmese cousins.

If the two python species mate, they may spawn a hybrid species, as has happened in captivity. And because of a biological phenomenon called hybrid vigor, there's an off chance the resulting snakes could be hardier, more powerful predators—assuming they're not sterile, as many hybrids are—USGS's Reed said.

"We can't rule out the possibility," Reed said, "that the introduction of genes from a different species might do something that would allow [the rock pythons] to be even more effective at persisting in Florida and perhaps expanding."

Worse Than the Burmese Python?

The rock python's expansion mirrors the Burmese snake's explosion for some Florida conservationists—and a chance to learn from past mistakes.

"The thing that scares me the most is that this could be another Burmese python," said Kristina Serbesoff-King, invasive species program manager for the nonprofit Nature Conservancy in Florida. (Read biologist Stuart Pimm's take on tackling the Florida python crisis.)

In a 1994 report the Florida Department of Environmental Protection sounded the alarm about the explosion of invasive species in the state, whose warmth and major international ports put it at particular risk.

The report specifically named the African rock python as a threat to pets, native wildlife, and small children. The advisory, however, predicted that in Florida the African snake would be unable to breed in the wild.

"Here we are, 15 years later, and that whole ounce-of-prevention story is so glaring," Serbesoff-King said.

"There's a real opportunity to [mount] an aggressive response" to get rid of the African rock python while the giant snake is still limited to a relatively small area, Serbesoff-King added.

One model, she said, may be the "python patrol" that the Nature Conservancy set up in the Florida Keys. After the Burmese python swam from the Everglades to the island chain and began munching rare Keys wildlife, the team started searching for and capturing the snakes to slow the species' spread.

The Florida museum's Krysko and USGS's Reed both agree that the African snake must be knocked out—and now.

The arrival of the Burmese python "was the biggest, [most] devastating problem that Florida ever could have imagined," Krysko said.

"Now we have a worse one."


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Bleak future for Mediterranean mammals – IUCN

IUCN 15 Sep 09;

The latest assessment of Mediterranean mammals shows that one in six is threatened with extinction at a regional level, according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™.

The study, which assesses the status of 320 mammals in the region, except whales and dolphins, finds three percent are Critically Endangered, five percent are Endangered and eight percent are Vulnerable.

A further eight percent are Near Threatened, and three percent are Extinct or Regionally Extinct. This is the first time all Mediterranean mammals have been assessed for the IUCN Red List.

“The number one threat is habitat destruction, which affects 90 percent of the threatened species,” says IUCN’s Annabelle Cuttelod, co-author of the report. “We need international action to protect key areas and preserve natural habitats to ensure we don’t lose the rich biodiversity in this area.”

Rodents, bats, shrews, hedgehogs and moles, which make up the majority of Mediterranean mammals, are finding it increasingly hard to survive due to loss and degradation of their habitat from agriculture, pollution, climate change and urbanization, the study shows.

Large herbivores, such as deer, carnivores, and rabbits and hares are particularly threatened. Eight species from these groups have already gone extinct in the Mediterranean region, including the Mesopotamian Fallow Deer (Dama mesopotamica) and the Common Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibious).

The Mediterranean Monk Seal (Monachus monachus) and the Iberian Lynx (Lynx pardinus) are both Critically Endangered. The IUCN World Conservation Congress, held in Barcelona last October, called for international action to preserve their natural habitats.

Agriculture affects 65 percent of threatened mammals, hunting and trapping 60 percent, and invasive species 50 percent. Overall, more than one-quarter (27 percent) of Mediterranean mammals have declining populations, 31 percent are stable, while for a further 40 percent the population trend is unknown. Only three percent of species populations are increasing, often due to conservation action, according to the study.

Mammal biodiversity is greatest in mountainous parts of the region, with particularly high concentrations of threatened species found in the mountains of Turkey, the Levant, and north-west Africa. Although the Sahara has relatively low species richness, a high proportion of Saharan species are threatened.

Of the 49 threatened mammal species, 20 are unique to the region and occur nowhere else in the world, highlighting the responsibility that Mediterranean countries have to protect the entire global populations of these species.

“To ensure the survival of large herbivore and carnivore mammals in the Mediterranean, we have to restore habitats and food chains,” says Helen Temple, co-author of the study. “We need to encourage people to accept large predators, improve protected areas management and better enforce laws regarding hunting practices.”

Read the full report at: http://www.iucn.org/dbtw-wpd/edocs/2009-027.pdf

One in six Mediterranean mammals face extinction
Yahoo News 15 Sep 09;

MADRID (AFP) – One in six Mediterranean mammals is threatened with extinction at the regional level, mainly due to the destruction of their habitat from urbanization, agriculture and climate change, nature body IUCN said Tuesday in a new study.

Of the 320 mammal species assessed by the Geneva-based International Union for the Conservation of Nature, 49 were threatened, including 20 that can be found nowhere else in the world, it said in a statement.

Three percent are "critically endangered", including the Mediterranean monk seal and the Iberian lynx, another five percent are "endangered" and eight percent are "vulnerable".

"The number one threat is habitat destruction, which affects 90 percent of the threatened species," said IUCN expert Annabelle Cuttelod, co-author of the report, in a statement released in Spain.

"We need international action to protect key areas and preserve natural habitats to ensure we don?t lose the rich biodiversity in this area," she added.

High concentrations of threatened species are found in the mountains of Turkey, northwestern Africa and the Levant, the ancient land now comprising Syria, Jordan, Israel, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.

Large herbivores such as deer and rabbits, and carnivores, are particularly threatened.

Eight species from these groups, including the common hippopotamus and the Mesopotamian fallow deer, have already gone extinct in the Mediterranean region.

"To ensure the survival of large herbivore and carnivore mammals in the Mediterranean, we have to restore habitats and food chains," the report's co-author Helen Temple said.

"We need to encourage people to accept large predators, improve protected areas management and better enforce laws regarding hunting practices," she added.

The study, carried out by over 250 mammal experts, did not include whales and dolphins.

Over one-quarter of Mediterranean mammal species, 27 percent, have declining populations, 31 percent are stable and only three percent are increasing, the study found. The trend for the remaining 39 percent is unknown.

It is the first time that all Mediterranean animals have been assessed for the IUCN Red List of threatened species.


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Wildlife films: Flights of fancy

The Independent 15 Sep 09;

Feature-length wildlife films are taking off on the big screen, but this soaring success isn't a result of the usual formula of pretty pictures and earnest commentary. The secret is storytelling, says James Mottram

The environment might be in danger and our ecosystems under threat, but right now wildlife films are flourishing. Gone are the days when taking in a bit of Mother Nature meant sitting at home on a Sunday evening, tuning into BBC1 and watching David Attenborough crawl through the undergrowth to sit with silver-backed mountain gorillas. Even the proliferation of dedicated satellite channels, such as Discovery and National Geographic, is old news.

In the next two months, three very different wildlife films are set to hit the cinemas, all with high hopes of luring audiences away from their living rooms to experience the natural world on the big screen.

The first of these is The Crimson Wing, a lyrical study of flamingos living on Lake Natron in Northern Tanzania, directed by the British-born filmmakers Matthew Aeberhard and Leander Ward. "We always wanted it to be a big screen film," says Aeberhard. "You could spend an enormous amount of time developing a project for television, so why not develop one for the big screen? We wanted it to be a project that people could experience in a way you can't experience on a small television. We felt nature deserves more than that. It's something intrinsically beautiful and the big screen supports that. It helps give one the feeling that they could be there."

Indeed, if anything suggests how nature films are changing for a new generation, it's that Aeberhard and Ward decided to use Mariella Frostrup's raspy vocal patterns to narrate their film. "The trouble we found with all the temporary narrators [we tried] is that they sounded like David Attenborough!" laughs Aeberhard. "We love David Attenborough, don't get me wrong. But that's not what we wanted. We wanted to break away from that association because we're trying to tell more of a story than a standard wildlife film."

Aeberhard and Ward are backed in their ambitions by the might of Walt Disney. The Crimson Wing is the first film commissioned under the aegis of Disneynature, a newly formed company designed to release "high quality wildlife feature films in theatres", according to its executive vice-president, Jean-François Camilleri. The company was formed after Disney CEO Robert Iger saw the BBC's Planet Earth series in the States and decided to start the studio's own specialist nature division. Earlier this April, the first release in the US was Earth, a feature-length version of the Planet Earth series, which opened in the UK in 2007.

Over the next five years, Disneynature will be releasing one film a year. Following The Crimson Wing, the sub-aquatic adventure Oceans will be unveiled next April. Then, in 2011 comes Naked Beauty. "It's about the job that pollinators – bees, hummingbirds, bats, butterflies – do to help flowers produce and create what we need to survive," says Camilleri. "Einstein said that if bees disappear from the surface of the Earth, then we have four years to live." Then comes African Cats, currently being shot in Kenya, and in 2013, Earth co-directors Alastair Fothergill and Mark Linfield will present Chimpanzee.

For this proliferation of wildlife films, you can blame the penguins. When French-produced March of the Penguins was released in the US in 2005, it took a staggering $77m (£46.4m) at the box office (with another $49m around the rest of the world), as well as the Oscar for best documentary feature. "March of the Penguins made things possible because other people saw they could make money out of it," says Aeberhard. "It became a viable thing." While he denies the film was a direct influence on The Crimson Wing, the fact the French were ahead of the curve was motivating. "Britain is a key centre of wildlife programming," he says, "so it always struck us as unusual that this wasn't being done by British filmmakers."

Indeed, the French can be seen as responsible for kickstarting the whole phenomenon. As far back as 1988, Jean-Jacques Annaud's feature film The Bear enchanted audiences. Though not a wildlife documentary, its story of a bear cub trying to avoid human hunters drew in 10 million admissions in France alone. Then came Microcosmos (1996), a close-up documentary of insect life in our own backyards, from Claude Nuridsany and Marie Perennou. Produced by Jacques Perrin, he followed it with Winged Migration in 2001, a study of birds with flight footage so stunning it began with the disclaimer that no special effects were used.

Yet it was March of the Penguins that proved enormous profits were possible. The story of the yearly life cycle of the feathery critters, when it was picked up for a US release, its quirky electronic music was re-scored and Morgan Freeman was brought in to provide a silky voiceover. "I think March of the Penguins was so successful in the US that people discovered something," says Camilleri. "People always wanted to see those types of images and stories. Everybody has a strong link with nature. And all of a sudden, seeing those types of things makes people happy. And I think what we are seeing with digital projection... it makes the experience of watching those types of films – which need very high quality images and sound – very good indeed. It's much better than it was before."

Certainly, better equipment in cinemas must account for one of the reasons why audiences are leaving the comfort of their armchairs to immerse themselves in the natural world. But there are other reasons. "I think we're living in a world where those types of subjects are much more important than they could've been 20 years ago," says Camilleri. With environmental issues much more prevalent now, thanks in part to eco-documentaries like Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth, it seems audiences are much more willing to learn about our endangered planet. That said, Camilleri is keen to impress that Disneynature is primarily an entertainment company. "The goal is not to preach, to tell people what to do or not to do, but to tell stories that nature invented."

Still, as two movies due for release in October show, other filmmakers are capitalising on this increased thirst for socially aware nature films. First up is Vanishing of the Bees, directed by George Langworthy and Maryam Henein. The film takes a piercing look at a subject that has already hit the news this year – the disappearance of the honeybee due to the mysterious phenomenon known as "colony collapse disorder". This is not just about honey disappearing. With 90 food crops dependent on bees for pollination, as Dennis vanEngelsdorp, from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, says: "If we want a diet that is more than gruel, we need insect pollinators."

Later in the month comes The Cove, an exposé on what goes on off the coast of Taiji, Japan, where fishermen engage in a brutal hunt for dolphins. Directed by Louie Psihoyos, the lead, as it were, is former dolphin trainer Ric O'Barry. Back in the 1960s, he captured and trained five dolphins to play the title character in the hit television show Flipper, but since underwent a change of heart and now rallies against theme parks such as Sea World for exploiting these mammals. Here, he leads a team of underwater photographers and marine experts to capture covert footage on what is happening in the cove, a barbed wire-fenced area where sonar is used to lure dolphins to their deaths.

With cameras hidden in rocks, the film comes on like an Ocean's Eleven-style adventure rather than a po-faced nature documentary. According to The Crimson Wing's Aeberhard, it's this approach that is needed to get audiences watching nature films in theatres. "I think we were a little bit frustrated with the conventions of the television wildlife industry," he admits. "There are strict, rigid formats. There was a certain freedom in making our film that you wouldn't get with television. I'm a naturalist. I'm really interested in wildlife. But I find myself getting quite bored with television wildlife programmes. It's a limiting format. Big screen productions give one a little more artistic leeway." As he puts it, these films give more room to "tell more personal stories. Stories that aren't so much about biology, science or information". Indeed, if one thing links many of the filmmakers involved in these projects, it's artistry. "They are not just scientists doing a film," says Camilleri. "They are artistic talents." Nor is it just about shooting the natural world for the sake of capturing some Oscar-worthy cinematography. "Stories are what's important," he continues. "It's not just about animals – it could be about mountains, it could about trees, it could be about forests, it could be about winds, it could be about snow." Don't be surprised if this is Disneynature's slate for the next decade.

'The Crimson Wing' opens on 25 September; 'Vanishing of the Bees' is released on 9 October; 'The Cove' opens on 23 October. Watch a trailer for 'Crimson Wing' and enter our competition to win a year's free electricity at independent.co.uk/film .


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Apocalypse now? Dark visions at Toronto film festival

Frank McGurty, Reuters 14 Sep 09;

TORONTO (Reuters) - A new wave of documentaries at this year's Toronto International Film Festival poses a disturbing question: is environmental and social disaster on a global scale imminent and perhaps inevitable?

Doomsday visions captured by three filmmakers at the annual industry event may have seemed a bit implausible only a couple of years ago. But after the global economy's near-death experience over the past 12 months, such ideas may no longer strike audiences as radical or hard to fathom.

"Compared to ... even five years ago, a lot has changed in the consciousness of people about the environment," said director Peter Mettler about his film "Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives of the Alberta Tar Sands."

Mettler presents a bird's eye view of the sprawling oil-sands projects carved out of the boreal forests of northern Canada, capturing the massive scale of the destruction there. His is not the only film to spell gloom, and even doom.

"Colony" by Carter Gunn and Ross McDonnell is a mystery story about the pastoral world of beekeeping turned on its head by a phenomenon known as "colony collapse disorder" and its devastating impact on agriculture.

Michael Moore, always one to rake up the muck, has grabbed headlines for his take on 2008's financial market meltdown with Capitalism: the Movie," but perhaps a more ominous picture of a world in crises is painted by "Collapse" director Chris Smith.

Taken together, this wave of doomsday documentaries might make audiences wonder if they should be stocking their shelves with food and water. But Mettler, whose credits include "Gambling, Gods and LSD," says the underlying theme is, more simply, raising the consciousness of how people see the world.

"That is the essential element of the problem about the oil sands," he said. "We are short-sighted and disconnected."

PROVOCATIVE IMAGES

Development of the oil sands, the world's second-largest proven oil reserve, is having a devastating impact on water, land, air and climate, environmentalists say, in an area that eventually could be as large as England.

Filmed from the air, "Petropolis" offers a perverse, almost meditative beauty as Mettler's cameras soar over a vast wilderness from which oil-laden earth is scooped and trucked to smoke-belching "upgraders," where petroleum is extracted.

Mettler avoids bombarding audiences with facts, forcing them to come to grips, visually, with images of destruction.

"It is meant to be a provocation for analysis, for discussion," he said. "We have only been using petroleum basically for 80 years and look at the havoc it's wreaked."

"Colony" also focuses on man's impact on the environment, but in different and little-known arena -- beekeeping. It looks at how the collapse of bee colonies, which some experts blame on insecticides, is impacting the U.S. agricultural economy.

Filmmakers Gunn and McDonnell also humanize their tale by focusing on a family of beekeepers during 2008 and 2009, adding the tension of the economic meltdown to dramatic effect.

Finally, there is a single person's point of view taken to apocalyptic heights in "Collapse," which tells of Michael Ruppert, a Los Angeles cop turned futurist who sees the global financial crisis and dwindling petroleum reserves as nothing less than the beginning of the end to industrialized society.

Ruppert's ideas revolve around the notion of "peak oil," which says the world is rapidly running out of the only substance that can power civilization as we know it.

"Collapse" director Chris Smith shot what essentially is a highly focused monologue by Ruppert in what appears on screen to be an underground bunker. While he does not fully share his subject's point of view, Smith said it forced him to think.

"What I hoped to reveal was ... that his obsession with the collapse of industrial civilization has led to the collapse of his life," Smith said. "In the end, it is a character study about his obsession."

(Editing By Bob Tourtellotte)


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Clean energy to create more jobs than coal: study

Alister Doyle, Reuters 13 Sep 09;

OSLO (Reuters) - A strong shift toward renewable energies could create 2.7 million more jobs in power generation worldwide by 2030 than staying with dependence on fossil fuels would, a report suggested Monday.

The study, by environmental group Greenpeace and the European Renewable Energy Council (EREC), urged governments to agree a strong new United Nations pact to combat climate change in December in Copenhagen, partly to safeguard employment.

"A switch from coal to renewable electricity generation will not just avoid 10 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions, but will create 2.7 million more jobs by 2030 than if we continue business as usual," the report said.

Governments were often wrong to fear that a shift to green energy was a threat to jobs, said Sven Teske, lead author of the report at Greenpeace. He said that the wind turbine industry was already the second largest steel consumer in Germany after cars.

"Renewable power industries can create a lot of jobs," he told Reuters of the outlook for solar, wind, tidal, biomass -- such as wood and crop waste -- and other renewable energies in power generation. "This research proves that renewable energy is key to tackling both the climate and economic crises," said Christine Lins, Secretary General of EREC, which represents clean energy industries.

Assuming strong policies to shift to renewables, the study projected that the number of jobs in power generation would rise by more than 2 million to 11.3 million in 2030, helped by a surge in renewables jobs to 6.9 million from 1.9 million.

COAL DECLINE

Under a scenario of business as usual, the number of jobs in power generation would fall by about half a million to 8.6 million by 2030, hit by mainly by a decline in the coal sector due to wider mechanization.

Teske said that the report was not advocating creation of millions of jobs in uncompetitive labor-intensive clean energy industries propped up by government subsidies.

"Renewables must be competitive in the long run," he said. Labor costs would be higher but costs to drive a renewable power industry would be lower, for instance, in a world where it cost ever more to emit carbon dioxide from fossil fuels.

The report said that, for the first time in 2008, both the United States and the European Union added more capacity from renewable energies than from conventional sources including gas, coal oil and nuclear power.

The report suggested the wind sector alone, for instance, could employ 2.03 million people in generating power in 2030 against about 0.5 million in 2010.

"The union movement, as well as the authors of this report, believe ambitious climate action by world leaders can and must be a driver for sustainable economic growth and social progress," Guy Ryder, General Secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, said in a statement.

The report was based partly on research by the Institute for Sustainable Futures at the University of Technology Sydney.

(Editing by Michael Roddy)


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Solar power from space - moving beyond science fiction

Michael Lemonick, ScienceAlert 14 Sep 09;

Despite the enormous promise of solar power, the drawbacks of the technology remain significant. People need electricity every day, around the clock, but there’s no part of the United States that is cloud-free 365 days a year - and no solar radiation at night. You have to find some way to store the energy for those sunless periods, and there’s not yet a large-scale way to do that.

Moreover, the best locations for solar arrays - the deserts of the American Southwest - are far from the centres of population, so even under the best of circumstances you’d have to send electricity many hundreds of miles through transmission lines that don’t yet exist.

But there is a way to tap into the sun’s energy 24 hours a day, every day of the year, and send it anywhere on the globe: launch solar panels into space and beam the power back to Earth.

The concept sounds far-fetched and wildly impractical, and when the Pentagon and space enthusiasts began talking about it back in the 1960s and 1970s, it was. Recently, however, the idea of space-based solar power, or SBSP, has begun to look less like science fiction and more like a technology whose time may be coming, with the Pentagon and private companies ramping up efforts to make space-based solar power a reality.

Two years ago, the Pentagon’s National Security Space Office (NSSO) issued a report recommending that the US “begin a coordinated national program to develop SBSP”. A year ago, engineers did a small but successful experiment using some of the technology that will be employed in SBSP, taking energy from solar cells, converting it to microwaves, and then beaming it 92 miles from Maui to the Big Island of Hawaii, where it was converted back into 20 watts worth of electricity.

And last spring, the California-based Solaren Corporation signed a contract with Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) to provide 200 megawatts of power - about half the output of an average coal-fired power plant - by 2016 by launching solar arrays into space. Several other companies have announced their intentions to put up solar satellites of their own.

Doubts abound that space-based solar power will come to pass anytime soon, and for good reason: The technology involves launching a series of large satellites into space, using robotic technology to assemble the solar arrays, transmitting the energy 22,000 miles to earth using microwave technology, and then converting that energy to electricity on the ground.

The fact is, however, that all of that is now feasible - if pricey - thanks to technological advances in recent years. These include cheaper and more reliable launch technology, lighter and stronger materials for solar stations, significant improvements in the robotic technology needed to assemble the solar arrays, far more efficient solar cells, more precise digital devices to direct that energy accurately to earth, and significantly smaller and more powerful microwave transmitters and receivers.

The big question is whether this engineering feat can be pulled off at a price competitive with terrestrial solar power. So far, the Pentagon’s estimate of what it will cost - $10 billion to put a 10-megawatt experimental solar station in orbit by 2016 - is five times higher than Solaren’s and would produce far less power.

A number of factors are driving the renewed interest in space-based solar power, including the push to cut greenhouse-gas emissions and growing interest from the military. But neither of these forces would mean much if the technology was outrageously expensive or too impractical.

It was a little bit of both when SBSP was first proposed in 1968 by an engineer named Peter Glaser, who worked for the consulting firm Arthur D. Little on a variety of space-related projects. The basic components - solar cells and microwave transmitters and receivers - already existed, and as the Apollo program began to wind down, NASA was trying to figure out what to do next.

In particular, says John Mankins, who became the manager for advanced concepts for NASA during the 1990s, “They were trying to figure out what to do with the space shuttle”. One idea was to begin launching space habitats - to get large numbers of people living and working in space. “These people would need something to do,” says Mankins, “so one idea was that they’d build solar-power satellites”.

Studies showed that it was a feasible, but daunting, proposition. “This was in the days before PCs, microelectronics, robotics,” says Mankins. “The idea of something like the shuttle’s robotic arm was unimaginable. So you’d need these big crews to bolt the things together - and the satellites themselves would have had to be physically enormous. We’d need a new launch system that would dwarf the space shuttle.”

The bottom line, he says, was that it could be done, but it would have cost the equivalent of a trillion of today’s dollars to get the first kilowatt of power, and it would have taken 20 years. “The National Research Council and the Office of Technology Assessment looked at it,” recalled Mankins. “One of them said, ‘Let’s revisit this in ten years.’ The other said, ‘Let’s never consider this again.’”

In the mid-1990s, NASA did revisit the concept. Under Mankins’ direction, a team of engineers was assembled to see whether advances in technology made space-based solar power more feasible. “The basic answer,” he says, “was ‘yes’”.

In the past decade two other factors have emerged to boost the prospects of SBSP: climate change and interest from the military.

There is a growing recognition that non-carbon energy sources will be crucial if the world is going to avoid the worst effects of climate change. It’s almost inevitable that carbon emissions will end up being taxed one way or another, and when they are, renewables like SBSP will immediately become more competitive economically.

That’s what motivates Solaren and PG&E. Although it is cloaking its work in secrecy, Solaren has said it will cost roughly US$2 billion to launch a handful of satellites carrying the equipment that will be robotically assembled into a single, large solar station. One way the company plans to boost efficiency is to use parabolic reflectors to concentrate sunlight onto the solar cells.

“The biggest expense,” says Cal Boerman, Solaren’s director of energy services, “is the cost of getting into space, and we’re convinced we can get the weight down to the point where we can do this with a minimum number of launches”.

As with any SBSP system, the energy will be converted into microwaves and beamed down to a so-called rectenna - an antenna that “rectifies” the microwaves back into electricity. Solaren’s, to be located near Fresno, Calif., will consist of an array of smaller antennas that will cover about a square kilometre - far less real estate than you’d need if you were using ground-based solar cells to gather an equivalent amount of power.

Because Solaren’s satellite will be in geostationary orbit, the antennas won’t have to track it across the sky; like a satellite TV receiver, they’ll always aim at a fixed point in the sky. At 22,000 miles up, a geostationary satellite is in full sunlight virtually all the time.

As for safety, he says, the fact that the microwaves are spread out over a square kilometre means that they’d be relatively harmless to, say, a flock of birds that happened to fly through them. And if the beam should wander, the satellite will be programmed to scatter it.

Solaren isn’t the only company trying to commercialise SBSP: PowerSat, based in Everett, Wash., has recently filed patents for its own space-power system, which will use an array of hundreds of small satellites linked together rather than one large one. PowerSat says it can reduce some of the high costs of putting the technology in space by using solar energy to power electronic thrusters to manoeuvre the satellites into orbit. A Swiss company, Space Energy, is also working on SBSP. Solaren is the only one, though, with a contract with a utility. “As we talked to investors,” says Boerman, “they naturally asked, ‘Can you sell it?’”

If this first project works out, Solaren eventually wants to put in orbit satellites that can generate a gigawatt of electricity, enough to power roughly 1 million homes.

Such futuristic schemes have understandably generated a great deal of skepticism. Space experts have been debating the issue online, with some arguing that Solaren’s project will be far more expensive than the company estimates, in part because it could take more than a dozen launches - not just four, as the company stated - to get the solar station into space.

But the military’s interest in SBSP could give a major boost to the technology. According to Marine Corps Lt. Col. Paul Damphousse, Chief of Advanced Concepts for the National Security Space Office, the military is interested in SBSP for two main reasons.

The first, he said, is that “we’re obviously interested in energy security, and we’re also interested in weaning ourselves off fossil fuels because climate change could pose national security risks.” But there would also be a tactical advantage to space-based solar, Damphousse noted. When the military is operating in remote regions of countries like Iraq or Afghanistan, it uses diesel generators to supply forward bases with power.

“We have a significant footprint getting energy in,” says Damphousse, noting the need for frequent convoys of oil tankers, the soldiers to protect them, and air support - all of which is expensive and dangerous.

Being able to tap into power beamed directly down from space would clearly have a lot of appeal, says Damphousse, even if it were relatively costly. And it’s not just useful for the battlefield, he says, but also for areas affected by natural disasters, such as Hurricane Katrina.

For those reasons, Damphousse supports the idea of coordinated studies by the Pentagon and other agencies - such as NASA and the Department of Energy - that would have a stake in space-based power.

“We might, for example, do some experiments on the International Space Station, which is already up there and generating 110 kilowatts of power from its own solar cells,” he says, “rather than having to send up a dedicated test satellite.”

Such co-operation might appeal to NASA. “I suspect that NASA will start working on energy and on more advanced technology and less on, ‘Let’s get to the moon by 2018,’” says Mankins.

By undertaking some of the research and being an early customer for SBSP, the government could rapidly accelerate development of the technology. Historians of aviation agree that the government’s decision to back air mail played a major role in developing the aircraft industry, leading to technological innovations and economies of scale. The same phenomenon could take an emerging but outlandish-sounding technology and push it into the energy mainstream.
An opinion provided by OnlineOpinion.com.au - Australia's e-journal of social and political debate.


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Global Warming Could Cool North America in a Few Decades?

Kate Ravilious, National Geographic News 14 Sep 09;

Global warming could actually chill down North America within just a few decades, according to a new study that says a sudden cooling event gripped the region about 8,300 years ago.

Analysis of ancient moss from Newfoundland, Canada, links an injection of freshwater from a burst glacial lake to a rapid drop in air temperatures by a few degrees Celsius along North America's East Coast.

This event created a colder year-round climate with a much shorter growing season for about 150 years, from northern Canada to what is now Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.

The results suggest that North America's climate is highly sensitive to meltwater flowing into the ocean, said lead study author Tim Daley of Swansea University in the U.K.

The work also means that history could repeat itself: Currently Greenland's ice sheet is melting at a rapid clip, releasing freshwater into the North Atlantic.

(Related: "Greenland Meltwater Can Drain Faster Than Niagara Falls.")

In a worst-case scenario, the authors say, a sudden melt could trigger another regional cooling event—although other experts say today's extreme, human-driven warming might cancel out any strong cooling effect.

Cooling Record

Daley and colleagues studied mosses dating back more than 8,700 years that were preserved in a Newfoundland peat bog.

The ratios of two different types of oxygen in the mosses allowed the team to trace changes in atmospheric temperature over time.

When air temperatures are lower, the mosses contain less oxygen-18, a heavier version of the more common type, oxygen-16.

About 8,350 years ago, the amount of oxygen-18 relative to oxygen-16 suddenly dropped, the team reports in the September issue of the journal Geology.

Previous research had found that, around the same time, a northern ice dam burst, releasing the contents of a vast glacial lake into the Labrador Sea, between Canada and Denmark (see map).

Normally a warm ocean current called the Gulf Stream runs up the east coast of North America, helping to keep the region balmier than it should be, considering how far north it is.

But the entire glacial lake drained within less than a year, injecting a huge pulse of freshwater into the North Atlantic Ocean.

Daley and colleagues think the lake water diluted the salty ocean current and slowed the Gulf Stream, which in turn led to rapid cooling in North America.

"As a result, Canadian summer temperatures would have been similar to those currently experienced in autumn or spring," said team member Neil Loader, also of Swansea University.

Climate records from Greenland and Europe also show a sudden cooling during the same time period, but this is the first clear evidence for a North American chill.

Less Dramatic Drop

The moss data show that current climate models "significantly underestimate the impact and duration of the climate perturbation resulting from the megaflood," said Swansea team member Alayne Perrott.

This means these same models might not be accurately predicting what might happen in the future if Greenland's ice sheet continues to melt.

However, some scientists say that the data showing a prehistoric North American cool down may only indicate a coastal phenomenon.

"The study site is very close to the North Atlantic Ocean, and it is very likely that the climate change is primarily an oceanic signal," said Hans Renssen, a climate researcher at Vrije University in Amsterdam, who was not involved in the study.

As for whether today's melt in Greenland could trigger another round of cooling, Renssen thinks it's possible, but he doesn't believe the change would be as dramatic as last time.

In fact, he said, any future cooling is likely to be overwhelmed by human-caused warming, "resulting in no cooling in North America at all, only less warming than without the event."


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