Best of our wild blogs: 30 Sep 09


2-4 Oct (Fri-Sun): Break the tradition. Spare the sharks.
from wild shores of singapore

RMBR Nature Guides Recruitment
(Deadline: 1st Oct 2009) from Habitatnews

New Taxon for Malaysia
from Butterflies of Singapore

Yellow-rumped Flycatcher
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Hunters of speed and stealth
from The annotated budak

Prof Peter Ng on "Climate Change and Marine Biodiversity - Lessons from a Small Red Dot" from wild shores of singapore

Black-headed Munia mating
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Is There a "Moore's Law" for Cities?
World's Leading Experts Say "Yes" from The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond


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Every species on the planet documented in new Australian report

Sophie Tedmanson, Times Online 29 Sep 09;

Australian scientists have documented the planet’s entire known animal and plant species in a new report backed by Sir David Attenborough.

New discoveries among the 1.9 million species include 48 reptiles, eight frogs, eight mammals, 1,184 flowering plants and 904 insects, mites, spiders and scorpions.

The report, Numbers of Living Species in Australia and the World, found that in the past three years about 18,000 new species have been found globally each year. Of those, 75 per cent were invertebrates, 11 per cent were vascular plants and nearly 7 per cent vertebrates.

Sir David has described the identification and naming of species as “the very foundation of the natural sciences”.

“Unless we can be certain of exactly what organism we are considering, we cannot protect it, still less understand it,” he said.

“Listing species is the beginning of that essential process. So this report will provide a crucial reference point for all those who are acting to protect our planet for future generations.”

Compiled by the Australian Biological Resources Study, the report was described as a “fantastic contribution to the global fight to conserve biodiversity”, by the country’s Environment Minister, Peter Garrett.

"It also gives us new insight into how valuable Australia's plants and animals are, revealing we have even more unique mammals, reptiles and plants than we previously had thought,” he said.

But Mr Garrett conceded that there was still “a long way to go” to help manage the numbers of plant and wildlife species in Australia.

“We have discovered and named only about a quarter of Australia's estimated number of flora and fauna,” he said.

“We need this essential information to do a better job of managing our biodiversity against the threats of invasive species, habitat loss and climate change.”

In Australia it has been revealed that one in five species of mammals are in danger of becoming extinct. Of the 388 species scientists found naturally in Australia, 78 are listed as vulnerable, endangered or extinct in the wild.

In addition nearly 14 per cent of amphibians, 5 per cent of reptiles and 6 per cent of Australia’s birds are at risk.

However there was some good news for the country. In the past three years hundreds of new species have been discovered, while many were confirmed to be unique only to Australia.

World known species rises to 1.9 million, report says
Reuters 29 Sep 09;

CANBERRA (Reuters Life!) - The world's only catalog of known plants and animals has listed 1.9 million species globally, a rise of 114,000 on a study done three years ago, Australian researchers said Tuesday.

The number of currently accepted and described species had jumped 6.3 percent from 1,786,000 last described in 2006, Australia's Environment Minister Peter Garrett said, releasing the Numbers of Living Species in Australia and the World report in Cairns.

"The report shows that the science of species discovery is alive and well," Garrett told reporters.

Australia held one of the most diverse collections, with 87 percent of its mammals and 93 percent of reptiles found nowhere else, including iconic kangaroos and koalas.

The report updated the number of Australian species for the first time in two decades, listing 48 new reptiles, eight frogs, eight mammals, 1,184 flowering plants and 904 new species of spiders, mites and scorpions.

But one in five species were at serious risk of extinction as Australia, the world's driest inhabited continent, experiences what scientists say is an unusually rapid pace of climate warming, Garrett said.

"We need this essential information to do a better job of managing our biodiversity against the threats of invasive species, habitat loss and climate change," he said.

Around 18,000 new species were being described each year by researchers, the study said, with 75 percent of those listed in 2007 being invertebrates, 11 percent plants and 7 percent listed as vertebrate animals.

The report said the job of cataloguing species was nowhere near complete, with the world's total number of species estimated at between 5 million and 50 million.

(Reporting by Rob Taylor; Editing by Miral Fahmy)

Secret life of plants and animals vital in warming struggle
Tom Arup, The Sydney Morning Herald 30 Sep 09;

THE world must invest more in identifying plants and animal species in the wake of climate change, the author of a new audit of global species has warned.

Arthur Chapman, an Australian researcher who has written the only report known to document all of the world's known species, said the extinction threat globally from climate change and other environmental pressures made it more important than ever to know what species existed.

He said a shortage of taxonomists - scientists who identify and classify species - in a number of key fields was slowing the global rate of identifying species.

Mr Chapman's Numbers of Living Species in Australia and the World report was released yesterday by the Environment Minister, Peter Garrett, in Townsville. The report collated existing scientific data and reports from a variety of countries, research bodies and official agencies.

It found that the world now has 1.9 million identified species, while Australia has identified just short of 150,000, just a quarter of all Australian flora and fauna.

It found the best estimates of all plants and animals species are 570,000 in Australia and 11 million worldwide.

Mr Garrett said yesterday that scientific research was alive and well in Australia and that the report showed that over the past three years "we've discovered 48 reptiles, eight frogs, eight mammals, 1184 flowering plants and 904 spiders, mites and scorpions.

"But we have a long way to go - we have discovered and named only about a quarter of Australia's estimated number of flora and fauna. We need this essential information to do a better job of managing our biodiversity against the threats of invasive species, habitat loss and climate change."

Mr Chapman told the Herald that Australia was one of 12 "mega-diverse" countries, and his report showed Australia had a greater rate of endemic species than first thought.

The report found that 90 per cent of mammals and reptiles found in Australia are endemic.

It also found that the 1541 of Australia's species are now listed as threatened with extinction, making up 9 per cent of the all threatened species on the planet. There are 16,956 threatened species globally.

The Greens senator Rachel Siewert said the alarming rates of threatened species in the report highlighted the urgency in protecting "flora and fauna from processes such as land clearing, inappropriate development, disease and feral plants and animals".

Ten percent of world's major species 'at threat'
Yahoo News 29 Sep 09;

SYDNEY (AFP) – The "Number of Living Species in Australia and the World" study found 0.9 percent of the world's 1.9 million classified species were at threat, including 9.2 percent of major vertebrate species.

Australia's government-funded Biological Resources Study, the world's only census of animal and plant life, found 20.8 percent of mammals were endangered, as were 12.2 percent of birds and 29.2 percent of amphibians.

Of reptiles, 4.8 percent were considered threatened, along with 4.1 percent of fish species.

"In Australia and around the world, biodiversity is under huge and growing pressure," said environment department secretary Robyn Kruk.

"The pressures are pervasive and chronic in many places; invasive species, habitat loss and climate change in particular."

Australia was found to be home to 7.8 percent of the world's known species. Environment Minister Peter Garrett said the study had shown its wildlife was highly unique, with 87 percent of mammals and 93 percent of reptiles found nowhere else in the world.

However, the study also showed Australian species accounted for 9.1 percent of the world's threatened flora and fauna, and Garrett said vigilance was essential.

"We have a long way to go, we have discovered and named only about a quarter of Australia's estimated number of flora and fauna," said Garrett.

"We need this essential information to do a better job of managing our biodiversity against the threats of invasive species, habitat-loss and climate change."

According to the report there were likely to be some 11 million species on Earth of which only 1.9 million had been discovered, with millions of invertebrates, fungi and other organisms yet to be found and named.


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Golf club lauded for greener greens

Keppel is among 10 winners of water conservation prize
Grace Chua, Straits Times 30 Sep 09;

GOLF courses are notorious for being environmental villains, what with their high water consumption and use of pesticides.

But Keppel Club, nestled in Pasir Panjang, not far from Sentosa, is trying to shake off that image.

Yesterday, the club scored a Watermark Award for its water conservation efforts, which include installing taps that shut off automatically and using rainwater to irrigate its greens.

Also, as the course nestles up against Berlayer Creek, a saltwater mangrove swamp, the club in 2006 adopted the area - conducting regular clean-ups there and protecting its bird and plant life.

The third annual Watermark Awards, given out by the water utilities board PUB, are for organisations and individuals who take water conservation seriously.

'I think this award is a form of recognition that shows golf clubs can be green,' said Keppel Club president Edwin Khew, who is also the chief executive of waste management company IUT Global.

'Hopefully we can encourage other golf courses to do the same,' he added.

Water conservation measures, Mr Khew estimated, have cut the club's water consumption by about 20 per cent.

Of the 10 award winners, three are individuals and three are schools like Elias Park Primary School in Pasir Ris, which adopted nearby Sungei Api Api. The school conducts regular clean-ups at the small river at Pasir Ris Park.

The remaining four awards went to organisations or companies such as Hitachi Global Storage Technologies, which uses new solvent-cleaning technologies to wash machine parts, thereby reducing the amount of water used.

The winners were selected from 46 nominees.

One of the individual award winners is Sembawang grassroots leader Peter Lo, 63. He recruits volunteers for waterway monitoring and to help residents install water-saving thimbles.

So far, he has gathered about 50 volunteers, and single-handedly installed more than 100 thimbles for needy residents.

The retired businessman explained that his Hong Kong childhood, with its severe droughts and water rationing in the 1960s, drove his desire to make every drop count.

'Everything we touch, even the rice we eat every day, is related to water. It's the most important natural resource,' he said.

10 win Watermark awards
Grace Chua, Straits Times 29 Sep 09;

GOLF courses are notorious for being environmental villains, with their high water consumption and pollution with pesticides.

But Keppel Club, nestled in Pasir Panjang not far from Sentosa, is trying to shake that image.

The club was awarded a Watermark Award on Tuesday for its water conservation efforts, such as installing automatic taps and recycled-water ponds to water its golf courses with rainwater.

The club's greens also nestle up against Berlayer Creek, a mangrove swamp. In 2006, it adopted the saltwater mangroves, conducting clean-ups there and protecting its bird and plant life.

The annual Watermark Awards, given out by water utility board PUB, are for organisations and individuals who go the extra mile for water conservation. This is the third time they are being awarded.

'I think this award from PUB is a form of recognition that golf clubs can be green,' said Keppel Club president Edwin Khew, who is also the chief executive of waste management company IUT Global.

'Hopefully we can encourage other golf courses to do the same,' he added.

Water conservation measures, Mr Khew estimates, have cut the club's consumption about 20 per cent.

Of the 10 award winners, three are individuals, three are schools like Elias Park Primary School in Pasir Ris, which adopted nearby Sungei Api Api, and four are organisations or companies like Hitachi Global Storage Technologies, which uses new technologies to wash machine parts and save water.

They were selected from 46 nominations.

Read the full story in Wednesday's edition of The Straits Times (above).

10 PUB Watermark awards given out
Lynda Hong, Channel NewsAsia 29 Sep 09;

SINGAPORE : The largest number of the PUB Watermark Awards has been given out on Tuesday evening at the Marina Barrage.

Environment and Water Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim gave out 10 awards to recognise efforts in protecting and highlighting Singapore's precious water resources.

The 10 water champions are CapitaLand, Hitachi Global Storage Technologies (GST) Singapore, Housing & Development Board, Keppel Club, Elias Park Primary School, St Anthony's Primary School, Nan Hua High School, Mrs Koh-Leong Swee Ling, Mr Peter Lo Shui Sung and Mr Frederick Yeo Lye Hock.

Recipients included property developers, recreation clubs, schools and companies. One recipient even developed a new technology to help save water. - CNA /ls


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Turning waste into gold

Straits Times 30 Sep 09;

THAT old computer circuit board, printer or mobile phone we throw away without a second thought is being turned into gold, as part of the national push to minimise waste here.

For the past four years, Centillion Environment and Recycling - which specialises in extracting precious metals like gold, silver and platinum from electronic waste - has been converting 200 tonnes of rubbish into 20kg of gold residue each week.

The company, which operates a 2ha facility in Tuas, sells the metals to the jewellery industry, where they are made into bracelets and rings.

This unique waste management process can now be witnessed by the public.

Yesterday, the National Environment Agency extended the two-year-old Programme for Environmental Experiential Learning, which provides exclusive one-day tours to a number of recycling facilities used to sort different types of waste - including electronic, wood and household rubbish. Collectively, more than 4,000 tonnes of these items are recycled daily.

Those interested in finding out the ins and outs of waste management can apply for the one-day tour, which is conducted once every three months. For more information, go to www.nea.gov.sg/sei

AMRESH GUNASINGHAM


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Singapore tanker aground in Mississippi

Business Times 30 Sep 09;

(WASHINGTON) A Singapore-flagged tanker carrying more than 2.2 million litres of crude oil ran aground in the Mississippi River in the early hours of Monday, the US Coast Guard said.

'The tank vessel Eagle Tucson was travelling upbound. It was at mile marker three on the lower Mississippi River' in Louisiana when it grounded at around 0745 GMT, a Coast Guard spokeswoman said.

Four tugboats were on the scene to try to shift the grounded tanker, and two more were heading towards the boat to try to help with the effort, Lloyds MIU Casualty Service reported.

Lloyds confirmed earlier reports from the US Coast Guard that there are 'no signs of oil leaking or water ingress'. The vessel was sailing from Puerto Jose in Venezuela to Chalmette, Louisiana, according to Lloyds.

The Eagle Tucson is registered to London-based AET Inc Ltd and sails under the Singapore flag, according to the Equasis website, which posts safety-related information about ships on the Internet. - AFP


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Samoa tsunami toll may exceed 100, hundreds injured

* 8.0 undersea quake triggers Pacific tsunami alert
* Reports people swept out to sea
* Villages flattened, search for bodies in sand
(Updates with latest death toll, quotes, changes dateline)

Michael Perry, Reuters 30 Sep 09;

SYDNEY, Sept 30 (Reuters) - A series of tsunamis smashed into the Pacific island nations of American and Western Samoa killing possibly more than 100 people, destroying villages and injuring hundreds, officials said on Wednesday.

A Pacific-wide tsunami warning was issued after a huge 8.0 magnitude undersea quake off American Samoa, with reports of a small tsunami reaching New Zealand and rising sea levels in several South Pacific island nations.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center cancelled its warning, but Japan's Meteorological Agency issued a local tsunami warning for the country's eastern coast, warning of a possible tsunami of 50 cm (2 feet).

The Indian Ocean tsunami on Dec. 26, 2004 killed about 230,000 people across 11 countries.

Shortly after local radio tsunami warnings were issued in American and Western Samoa, waves started crashing into the capital of American Samoa, Pago Pago, and villages and resorts on the southern coasts of the tiny island nations, witnesses said.

"It's believed as of now, there could be a number close to 100 deaths," said Ausegalia Mulipola, assistant chief executive of Western Samoa's disaster management office.

"They are still continuing the searches for any missing bodies in the area," Mulipola told Reuters, adding the southern side of the country's main island Upolu was the worst hit.

"There have been reports of villages, where most of the houses have been run over by the sea," he said.

"Some areas have been flattened and the tsunami had brought a lot of sand onshore, so there have been reports the sand has covered some of the bodies. So we need specialised machines to search for bodies that are burried under the sand."

In American Samoa, a U.S. territory, the death toll was officially 14, but could rise, said officials.

FIVE TSUNAMI WAVES

A series of five waves hit Pago Pago, swamping the harbourside business centre and temporarily closing the airport.

Yachtsman Wayne Hodgins, who has in Pago Pago harbour, said he had heard of people being swept away.

"There was a couple and a young boy, they were clinging to the lifestandard. The water came and went very, very quickly, but it was absolutely ferocious," Hodgins told American media.

American Samoa tourism chief David Vaeafe said water levels rose about three minutes after the tsunami warning, with small villages around the capital devastated.

"Access to Pago Pago has been closed. Water had come up to the first floor. The radio station was evacuated, a lot of damage, structural damage to the steel and brick structure," Vaeafe told Australia's Sky Television from Pago Pago.

There were reports of looting in Pago Pago as people flocked into supermarkets to stockpile supplies. Fishing boats not thrown onto reefs by the tsunamis moved out to open sea for safety.

The tsunami caused waves of 1.5 metres above normal sea level off American Samoa, according to the Pacific Western Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii. But there were unconfirmed reports of waves taller than 4 metres.

Hundreds of people, including tourists, fled coastal homes and resorts to higher ground in both nations.

"As of right now, everybody is up in the high mountain ranges," said Senetenari Malele, announcer for local radio station Showers of Blessings in American Samoa.

Hundreds of people have been injured in the tsunamis.

"Injured people are being stabilised onsite by teams in the villages and will be brought over to the main hospital, but roads and communications are damaged," Western Samoa health chief Palanitina Toelupe told Reuters from the emergency ward of the country's main hospital in the capital Apia.

"So far, we are coping. We will definitely need help from overseas, but we will have to assess that later."

(Additional reporting by Adrian Bathgate and Mantik Kusjanto in Wellington, Rob Taylor and James Grubel in Canberra, Stacey Joyce in Washington, Bud Seba in Houston, Jim Christie in San Francisco, Peter Henderson in Los Angeles)

(Editing by Bill Tarrant)


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Increase in sea levels due to global warming could lead to 'ghost states'

David Adam, guardian.co.uk 29 Sep 09;

Global warming could create "ghost states" with governments in exile ruling over scattered citizens and land that has been abandoned to rising seas, an expert said yesterday.

Francois Gemenne, of the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations in Paris, said the likely loss of small island states such as Tuvalu and the Maldives raised profound questions over nationality and territory.

"What would happen if a state was to physically disappear but people want to keep their nationalities? It could continue as a virtual state even though it is a rock under the ocean and its people no longer live on that piece of land."

Gemenne said there was more at stake than cultural and sentimental attachments to swamped countries. Tuvalu makes millions of pounds each year from the sale of its assigned internet suffix .tv to television companies. As a nation state, the Polynesian island also has a vote on the international stage through the UN.

"As independent nations they receive certain rights and privileges that they will not want to lose. Instead they could become like ghost states," he said. "This is a pressing issue for small island states, but in the case of physical disappearance there is a void in international law."

Experts say it is a matter of time before global warming drives up sea levels the one or two metres it would take to force permanent evacuation of islands such as Tuvalu, the highest point of which is four metres above water. Gemenne was speaking during a conference at Oxford University to discuss the implications of a catastrophic 4C rise in global temperature, which many scientists fear will occur. Presenting the results of the largest study of its kind into how climate change could drive migration, he said rich countries such as Britain had a responsibility to help people flee the worst impacts of rising temperatures.

"Industrialised countries have a duty to provide adaptation funding to make sure the costs of migration do not have to be met by the countries where the migration will happen," Gemmene said. Such migrants should not be considered "resourceless victims" and financial assistance needed to go beyond basic humanitarian aid and pay for infrastructure such as schools and hospitals. Up to a billion people could eventually be made to move because of climate change.

The study of 23 regions where environmental degradation has caused people to move had showed that fears of millions of people flooding across borders could be misplaced. Most movement was within countries, Gemenne said.

The poorest and most vulnerable people were often unable to migrate, the research showed. "The poorest people lack the social and economic capital to escape," said Gemmene. "This has very important policy implications. People will only move if policies are in place to allow them to do so."

In a 4C warmer world, migration must be considered as a pro-active adaptation strategy, he said, rather than a last ditch catastrophic consequence.

Simon Hales of the World Health Organisation told the conference that widespread population movement would also pose a significant risk to global health. Health protection in a 4C warmer world, he said, would require "substantial redistribution" of global resources such as food, water and energy.


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Two meter sea level rise unstoppable: experts

Gerard Wynn, Reuters 29 Sep 09;

OXFORD, England (Reuters) - A rise of at least two meters in the world's sea levels is now almost unstoppable, experts told a climate conference at Oxford University on Tuesday.

"The crux of the sea level issue is that it starts very slowly but once it gets going it is practically unstoppable," said Stefan Rahmstorf, a scientist at Germany's Potsdam Institute and a widely recognized sea level expert.

"There is no way I can see to stop this rise, even if we have gone to zero emissions."

Rahmstorf said the best outcome was that after temperatures stabilized, sea levels would only rise at a steady rate "for centuries to come," and not accelerate.

Most scientists expect at least 2 degrees Celsius warming as a result of man-made greenhouse gas emissions, and probably more. The world warmed 0.7-0.8 degrees last century.

Rahmstorf estimated that if the world limited warming to 1.5 degrees then it would still see two meters sea level rise over centuries, which would see some island nations disappear.

His best guess was a one meter rise this century, assuming three degrees warming, and up to five meters over the next 300 years.

"There is nothing we can do to stop this unless we manage to cool the planet. That would require extracting the carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. There is no way of doing this on the sufficient scale known today," he said.

Scientists say that ice melt acquires a momentum of its own - for example warming the air as less ice reflects less heat, warming the local area.

"Once the ice is on the move, it's like a tipping point which reinforces itself," said Wageningen University's Pier Vellinga, citing various research.

"Even if you reduce all the emissions in the world once this has started it may be unstoppable. I conclude that beyond 2 degrees global average temperature rise the probability of the Greenland ice sheet disintegrating is 50 percent or more."

"(That) will result in about 7 meters sea level rise, and the time frame is about 300-1,000 years."

STORM

Delegates from about 190 nations are meeting in Bangkok to try to speed up U.N.-led negotiations to replace the Kyoto Protocol with a tougher climate pact.

Speakers in Oxford used history to back up their arguments on rising seas. Three million years ago the planet was 2-3 degrees warmer and the sea 25-35 meters higher, and 122,000 years ago 2 degrees warmer and 10 meters higher, they said.

"What we now see in Greenland, Antarctica could be a temporary phenomena but it could also be the start of what we saw 122,000 years ago," said Vellinga.

Sea levels have risen about 20 centimeters in the past century and that effect was accelerating, speakers said.

That rise was adding to storms such as that in the Philippines, although that single event couldn't be attributed to climate change, said Rahmstorf.

"Of course the flooding from a given storm event would be less severe if we hadn't added those extra centimeters."

About 40 million people worldwide live in flood plains, said Southampton University's Robert Nicholls. That is 0.6 percent of the global population and 5 percent of global wealth, because of valuable assets such as airports and power plants.

He was confident that coastal protection could hugely reduce lost land and assets. The cost of that speakers put at anywhere from 50 billion euros ($72.85 billion) a year by 2020 to up to $215 billion a year by 2100.


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Indonesia CO2 pledge to help climate talks: greens

David Fogarty, Reuters 29 Sep 09;

* Indonesia says to cut emissions by 26 percent by 2020
* Will make deeper cuts if rich nations give funding
* Greens say step is positive, puts pressure on rich nations

BANGKOK, Sept 29 (Reuters) - Environmentalists on Tuesday welcomed Indonesia's pledge to substantially cut the growth of its greenhouse gas emissions, saying the promise could help talks on crafting a broader global pact to fight climate change.

Indonesia is the world's third largest greenhouse emitter and steps by big developing nations to curb their emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases are a key focus of U.N.-led climate talks under way in the Thai capital until Oct 9.

Delegates from about 180 countries are trying to narrow differences on emissions reduction targets, climate finance and transfer of clean-energy technology before a December deadline to try to seal a tougher pact to replace the Kyoto Protocol. [ID:nSP450470]

In a speech to G20 leaders on Sept. 25, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said the government was crafting a policy that would cut emissions by 26 percent by 2020 from "business as usual" (BAU) levels.

The policy would be a mix of stepping up investment in renewable energy, such as geothermal power, and curbing emissions from deforestation and changes in land use.

With international support, he said he was confident Indonesia could cut emissions by as much as 41 percent.

"This target is entirely achievable because most of our emissions come from forest-related issues, such as forest fires and deforestation," he said during a working lunch in the U.S city of Pittsburgh. Reuters obtained a copy of his speech on Tuesday.

"We are also looking into the distinct possibility to commit a billion ton of CO2 reduction by 2050 from BAU. We will change the status of our forest from that of a net emitter sector to a net sink sector by 2030."

In the jargon of international climate talks, "business as usual" levels refers to what would happen if emissions grew at the same rate as has accompanied economic growth in the past.

DESTRUCTION OF RAINFOREST

Indonesia is the world's third largest greenhouse gas emitter, the country's National Climate Change Council says, mainly through loss of rainforests and forest fires. Slowing the pace of destruction is a key focus of climate negotiators trying to firm up ways to curb the pace of global warming.

Deforestation is responsible for about 20 percent of mankind's greenhouse gas emissions, so saving forests is a key part of the climate puzzle.

"This is extremely positive, that developing countries can commit to the world that this is the ambition level we are at, we can do," Kim Carstensen, head of conservation group WWF's global climate initiative, told Reuters in Bangkok.

"What's even more interesting and something that's been lacking in the negotiations is that they are willing to provide an additional 15 percent if they get financial support."

Greenpeace said Yudhoyono's comments would put pressure on rich nations to act faster on fighting climate change.

"This puts the focus firmly back on the developed world, most especially the countries who have been bleating that they won't move without the big southern emitters," said Paul Winn, Greenpeace international forest climate campaigner, in Bangkok.

"It also highlights the urgent need for financing to help developing countries take further action on climate."

Rich nations say developing nations need to include any emissions reduction steps into a post-Kyoto pact to ensure such measures can be monitored and verified. Developing countries would also need to make regular progress reports on such steps.

Developing nations are resisting this demand and say rich nations should pay substantial sums to help them adapt to the impacts of climate change and to pay for clean-energy technology. (Editing by Alex Richardson)


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Anti-Palm Oil Campaign Unlikely To Have Immediate Impact On Exporters

D. Arul Rajoo, Bernama 29 Sep 09;

BANGKOK, Sept 29 (Bernama) -- The anti-palm oil campaign by environmental groups is unlikely to have immediate effect on leading Malaysian and Indonesian exporters but could lead to trade and aid restrictions in future, the crop's pro-campaign group said Tuesday.

Alan Oxley, chairman of the World Growth International, a US-based non-governmental organisation, said despite the smear campaign in Europe and restrictions on renewal energy there, palm oil's major markets are China and India.

Despite the vigorous campaign to link palm oil to deforestation and increasing greenhouse gas emissions, it may not be sufficient to be included in the new climate change treaty being negotiated here and likely to be finalised in Copenhagen, Denmark, in December.

"I don't think it will be part of the forest component when negotiators finalise the deal. All of these claims are questionable or at best severely exaggerated," he told reporters on the sidelines of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change talk here leading up to the Copenhagen meeting.

Oxley said major palm oil producers should be wary as some groups like Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace were campaigning to pressure processors and consumers to boycott the commodity and the European Union to block import.

In fact, the EU Renewable Energy Directive restricts the availability of palm oil, he said, adding that the World Growth had launched "Palm Oil Green Development" campaign to correct the myths, misconceptions and falsehoods perpetuated by these groups.

"Even if they cannot succeed in stopping palm oil expansion through the treaty, they can restrict trade and aid to countries that converts forest land to oil palm estates," he said, adding that such a move was contrary to the Bali Agreement which states that climatic change strategies should support and not undermine economic development.

Oxley said one reason for the smear campaign is because palm oil has become a strong competitor to other edible oil such as soyabean and rapeseed, accounting for 32 per cent of global production and 59 per cent annual export.

"Demand for palm oil has increased dramatically over the years. It has a number of advantages over competitor products. When new products have an impact on markets, there is a natural process of adjustment," he said.

He said palm oil cultivation has proven to be an effective tool in combating poverty, citing Malaysia and Indonesia where 40 per cent are owned by smallholders, and similar efforts are being taken to introduce the crop in Africa, Papua New Guinea, Brazil and Laos.

"It has become a substantial export and a key contributor to poverty alleviation and higher living standards. In the 80s when palm oil was grown in Malaysia, the World Bank rated palm oil cultivation as one of the most effective ways to resolve poverty," he said.

He also said oil palm uses less land than crop-based oilseeds, using only 0.26 hectares of land to produce one tonne of oil palm, while soyabean, sunflower and rapeseed need 2.2, 2 and 1.5 hectares, respectively.

On claims that the oil palm industry was destroying forest biodiversity in developing countries, Oxley said in Malaysia, world's second largest producer, the crop was restricted to 20 per cent of the state land allocated for agricultural purposes.

"Both Malaysia and Indonesia have set aside 55 per cent and 25 per cent respectively for forest conservation while the European average is 25 per cent.

"Both countries are also important contributors to programmes to protect endangered species such as the Orang Utan," he said.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation had stated that deforestation was largely due to human settlement and not commercial crop, he added.

-- BERNAMA


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Indonesian police chief inspects biggest illegal logging catch

Nurni Sulaiman, The Jakarta Post 29 Sep 09;

National Police chief Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri visited Paser regency in East Kalimantan on Tuesday to inspect a large batch of seized timber, proving the province is still rife with illegal logging.

During the crackdown, the East Kalimantan police confiscated over 16,000 logs of high-priced meranti, kruing, bengkirai and ulin woods in Paser and Penajam Paser Utara regencies, the biggest catch ever unveiled by the police in Kalimantan.

The officers arrested two suspects but are still hunting down two others. They also seized 12 excavators, 14 bulldozers and two dump trucks belonging to the suspects.

Police found the suspects failed to show the documentation required to fell the trees.

East Kalimantan police chief Insp. Mathius Salempang and Paser police chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Hery Sasongko accompanied Bambang during the inspection.


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Forest Fires Smoke Shut Down Jambi Airport

TEMPO Interactive 29 Sep 09;

Jakarta: Forest fires in Sumatra have shutdown the Sultan Thaha Airport in Jambi since Tuesday noon, as smoke grew thicker after haze returned to the province last weekend.

“There were several uninterrupted flights from and to the airport, but after 10:30 the haze was getting thicker with visual range was only about 500 meters,” head of the airport Basuki Mardianto said.

Basuki said the airport had to be closed until the aerial visual range around the airport return to normal. Many flights were delayed and hundreds of passengers have to postpone their trip for uncertain extent of time.

A disappointed passenger told Tempo that the disruption has prevented him from attending a conference on climate change in Thailand. Arif Mundar, who said he was supposed to represent Indonesia at the meeting slammed the government for its lack of capacity in containing forest fire.

Arif said license and permit from the government for plantation companies to clear Sumatra peat land for plantation has trigger forest fires.

Based on satellite surveillance image from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the smoke drifts from forest fires spots outside Jambi, as no forest fires spotted in the the province on September 28th.

Some of the spotted fires in Sumatra include 32 in South Sumatra, 17 in Riau Province, 12 in Bangka Belitung Province, 11 in Lampung Province, two in North Sumatra, and one in West Sumatra.

SYAIPUL BAKHORI

Sarawak hit by thick haze
Stephen Then, The Star 30 Sep 09;

MIRI: Sarawak has been badly hit by a wave of thick haze from forest fires raging in Kalimantan.

Almost the entire state, except for Kapit Division, saw visibility drop to dangerous levels yesterday morning.

Northern Sarawak appears to be the worst-hit, with Bintulu recording visibility of only 1km, Limbang 3km and Miri about 4km yesterday morning.

“The Department of Environ-ment (DOE) has carried out checks and found there are no hotspots within northern Sarawak.

“The haze we are seeing here is from foreign sources,” DOE chief for Miri Division Siva Nathiran said when contacted yesterday.

“There are many hotspots in Kalimantan now.” he said.

Yesterday, a dense veil of grey haze lay low over Miri City like a shroud, blotting out the South China Sea. Even the shorelines located just 1km from the city could no longer be seen.

On a normal day, one can see the offshore oil-rigs located 10km away in the South China Sea, from Canada Hill overlooking the city.

A check with the Sarawak Meteorological Department head-quarters in Kuching showed that the entire state was just as hazy yesterday, except for the Kapit Division in central Sarawak.

A weather forecaster said there were almost 200 hotspots detected in Kalimantan.

Two months ago, local fires ravaged more than 3,000 hectares of land in Kuala Baram near the Sarawak-Brunei border, resulting in the Air Pollutant Index (API) reaching a high of 186.

In Kuala Lumpur, according to the DOE website as of 11am, Sarikei (111), Sri Aman (111) and Sibu (117) were the three areas that registered unhealthy API readings while 26 areas remained moderate and 21 registered good readings, Bernama reports.


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Oil spill pollutes Timor Sea, nears Indonesian waters

Yemris Fointuna, The Jakarta Post 29 Sep 09;

An oil spill that followed an explosion at Montara oil field in West Australia is drifting closer to Indonesian waters off Timor Island and Sumba Island in East Nusa Tenggara, prompting calls for contingency measures to prevent it from spreading further.

Director of West Timor Care Foundation, Ferdi Tanoni, said the oil spill might spread to Indonesian territory within two weeks and had sent home West Timor fishermen operating near Pasir Island.

“The Australian government must take immediate steps to stop the spill from spreading further. I have asked fishermen to bring home samples of the oil spill and dead fish as evidence,” Tanoni said on Tuesday.

“I’m afraid the oil spill will destroy our environment and marine ecosystem as the wind blows from Australia to Indonesian waters.”

Governor Frans Leburaya said Australia and the operator of the oil field should be responsible for any environmental damage caused by the oil spill.

Montara oil field is situated south of Indonesia’s Pasir Island, a popular fishing spot for many East Nusa Tenggara fishermen.

Government anticipates oil spill in Timor Sea

The Jakarta Post 29 Sep 09;

The Transportation Ministry is working with the Australian Maritime Security Authority (AMSA) to prevent an oil spill from leaks in the Montara well head platform at the West Atlas block.

Bobby R. Mama hit, secretary of the ministry’s Marine Transportation Inspectorate General, said Tuesday the AMSA had sprayed dispersant by plane and conducted oil containment and recovery efforts to keep the spill under control.

He added two AMSA ships had been allowed to enter Indonesian waters on Sept. 23 to aid in the efforts, after aerial surveillance detected small patches of weathered oil 80 kilometers off Roti Island in East Nusa Tenggara.

“We’re dealing with the oil spill and have ordered port authorities in the area to look out for possible pollution,” Bobby said as quoted by Antara.

The Transportation Ministry’s director of sea and shoreline security, Sato M. Bisri, will conduct a joint observation with Australian officials at the Montara platform on Thursday.

Bobby downplayed the risk of contamination of Indonesian waters, saying only light crude and hydrocarbon that leaked.

Indonesia and Australia signed on Oct. 3, 1996, a memorandum of understanding on prevention and settlement of oil spills.


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Thousands flee floods as typhoon nears Vietnam

Tran Thi Minh Ha, AFP Google News 29 Sep 09;

HUE, Vietnam — Typhoon Ketsana was due to slam into Vietnam Tuesday after battering the Philippines but had already caused flooding and power outages, brought down trees and sent almost 170,000 people fleeing.

The coastal region braced for the typhoon's full impact after Ketsana, which was then a weaker tropical storm, killed at least 240 people and left nearly 400,000 homeless in the Philippines on the weekend.

Flooding hit parts of Hue city, the former capital listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site, forcing residents to get around by small wooden and steel boats, an AFP reporter saw.

Fallen trees littered the streets and the Perfume River, which winds through the ancient Imperial City, had risen considerably, AFP observed.

"My house is now flooded to my knees," said one resident, out collecting wood from downed trees that he said he would use for cooking.

"We have enough instant noodles," he said.

In some places, water had come within 10 or 15 centimetres (four to six inches) of the country's main North-South railway line, AFP observed.

More than 1,000 passengers were stranded at Hue's train station, said Nguyen Ngoc Thien, president of the People's Committee, or communist local government, in Thua Thien-Hue province.

Thien, speaking on state television, said up to 50cm of rain had fallen.

"There were two dead and three injured in our province," he said, adding that 300 houses were damaged.

The front doors of many homes were fortified with wood, and the roofs had been sandbagged, AFP observed. Few people were on the streets.

"We are preparing to supply the evacuees with food and water for one month's supply," Thien said.

The typhoon was expected to strike Danang and the adjacent fishing province of Quang Nam about mid-afternoon, Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said on state television.

Authorities had lost contact with Ly Son, an island in the South China Sea, state TV reported.

Hoi An town, another World Heritage site, is located in Quang Nam.

In Danang, the country's fourth-largest city, government television showed trees toppled on roads and corrugated metal and other debris tossed around.

"What worries us is that the flooding could worsen because of heavy rain raising water levels in the rivers but in particular rising sea water which threatens coastal residents," said Duong Van Ngoc, vice-president of Phu Vang district in Thua Thien-Hue province.

Authorities mobilised several thousand police and military personnel with armoured cars to help residents escape the typhoon's path, said Nguyen The Hung of the national flood and storm control committee.

The agency said 168,585 people in six coastal provinces have been evacuated.

They were moved to schools, military camps and newly-built high-rise apartments, Voice of Vietnam radio reported.

The aid organisation World Vision said it had distributed noodle packs to 700 families.

State radio reported that electricity in the region was out.

Hung said most fishing vessels had returned to port in the area, and he urged residents who had not left their homes to stay indoors and avoid non-essential travel.

Vietnam Airlines on Monday said it was suspending flights to Hue and Danang.

Stormy weather in the past week has already killed 18 people in central Vietnam, including from drowning and electrocution, Hung said.


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Malaysia's catfish sport-fishing plan makes waves

Yahoo News 29 Sep 09;

KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) – A plan to promote sport fishing by introducing the Mekong giant catfish to a Malaysian lake has infuriated environmentalists who fear the huge fish will damage the local ecosystem.

Conservation group Friends of the Earth condemned the proposal to bring the fish -- native to the Southeast Asian Mekong basin but endangered by overfishing -- to Tasik Kenyir in eastern Terengganu state.

"To alter these ecosystems for our pleasure is not only thoughtless and selfish, it is also disastrous," said Mohamad Idris, president of the group's Malaysian branch.

"There is one thing that is of greater value than our recreation," he said. "And that would be maintaining the integrity of the lake ecosystem and the balance of the native species which cannot be duplicated or replaced."

To promote sport fishing, the Terengganu government wants to stock Tasik Kenyir with fish species that will be a draw for recreational anglers.

The plan was announced by chief minister Ahmad Said last week ahead of next month's Kenyir Lake Cup fishing competition.

Idris warned that alien fish species can displace local varieties, and that when they do become invasive, efforts to combat the problem "are usually very expensive and difficult to implement."

He said that while the Mekong giant catfish was listed as critically endangered by the World Conservation Union, efforts to save it should focus on protecting its natural habitats, not transplanting it for recreational purposes.

The Mekong giant catfish can grow up to three metres in length and reach a weight of about 200 kilograms (440 pounds) in about five years.


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Giant fish 'verges on extinction'

Jody Bourton, BBC News 29 Sep 09;

One of the world's largest freshwater fish is on the verge of going extinct.

A three-year quest to find the giant Chinese paddlefish in the Yangtze river failed to sight or catch a single individual.
That means that the fish, which can grow up to 7m long, has not been seen alive for at least six years.

There remains a chance that some escaped the survey and survive, say experts, but without action, the future of the species is bleak.

The concern for the Chinese paddlefish is that its fate will parallel that of the Yangtze river dolphin, a large mammal species that was once abundant in the Yangtze river system, but has recently been declared extinct.

A number of fish species vie for the position of the world's largest freshwater fish, including the arapaima ( Arapaima gigas ) of the Amazon river and the Mekong giant catfish ( Pangasianodon gigas ).

At up to 7m, the Chinese paddlefish ( Psephurus gladius ) is much longer than either, though it may not exclusively live in freshwater.

The fish is suspected to be anadromous, meaning it spends some of its life in marine waters before returning to the river to spawn. But it is so rare that little is known about its behaviour, life history, migration habits and population structure.

It is endemic to the Yangtze river system in China.

"It has special characteristics such as its sword-like rostrum. Some people call it the 'elephant fish' and we found out it swims on the surface of the water like a whale," says Professor Wei Qiwei, one of the leaders of the research team from the Chinese Academy of Fisheries Science in Jingzhou, China.

The last confirmed sighting of a Chinese paddlefish was made in the river on 24 January 2003.

Now scientists have published in the Journal of Applied Ichthyology the results of a three-year survey to find and locate the fish.

Professor Wei and colleagues surveyed the upper Yangtze river between Xinshi, Sichuan Province and Chongqing, covering a distance of 488.5km.

Most of this stretch of water lies within the Upper Yangtze National Nature Reserve, a protected area.

Elusive target

Between 2006 and 2008, the team used a number of boats to deploy 4762 setlines, 111 anchored setlines and 950 drift nets in a bid to catch the fish.

They failed to catch a single individual.

The team also used hydroacoustic equipment that beams sound through the water to create a picture of the river and anything in it.

This identified nine possible targets, of which two could be paddlefish, say the researchers. But they could not confirm these finds.

The fish now appears on the brink of extinction, say the scientists.

They speculate that some paddlefish may have eluded the research team, avoiding its nets and capture methods.

Professor Wei also thinks that some younger, smaller paddlefish may also still exist.

"The individuals born in the late 1980s and early 1990s should survive in the wild, since the Yangtze river system is large and it has some complicated habitats where the paddlefish could hide," he says.

But without intervention, the future for the species is bleak.

"It is not a good future for the species. Maybe we have only ten years to save the species according to the estimated life span of 30 to 40 years," Professor Wei says.

"The offspring born in 1990 will be 30 years old by 2020. It is impossible for the species to be a viable population by natural reproduction. With the current situation of ecology and environment in the Yangtze river, man assistant measures have to be taken."

With so few fish left the team proposes that modern reproduction methods need to be considered, such as using surrogates to rear the fish in captivity.

Other techniques may include preserving genetic material, cloning, or gynogenesis, where fish eggs are coerced into developing via parthenogenesis.

However the team need to find live paddlefish in order to be able to start this process.

From the middle of last century the population of Chinese paddlefish has declined rapidly due to overfishing, habitat degradation and pollution.

The construction of the Gezhouba dam in 1981 on the Yangtze river also created a barrier to the migrating fish which further affected fish stocks.

The species has been listed as critically endangered on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species since 1996.

Last chance to find

The team believe the upper Yangtze is probably one of the last places that the fish may be present and propose to focus their efforts there.

They also hope to be in a position to act if any fish materialise on the river.

"In the last three years, we have been trying to set a quick-response network along the upper-stem of the Yangtze river to save accidental catches of the paddlefish," Professor Wei says.

"However, the network not only costs money and time, but is also a great challenge."

FRESHWATER GIANTS
# Record-breaking freshwater fish (weights not included if unknown): Mekong giant catfish 2.7m, 293kg
# European or wels catfish 4.57m, 336.3kg
# White sturgeon 3.8m
# Amazon arapaima 2.48m, 147kg
# Chinese paddlefish 7m


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Bearded Vultures 'seen in India'

BBC News 29 Sep 09;

About 200 Bearded Vultures have been spotted in a remote part of India's Himachal Pradesh state, reports say.

State chief conservator of forests Vinay Tandon said the reported sighting was being checked by wildlife officials and would be "hugely significant".
Lammergeiers have been seen on India's border with China, but not in such a large group or at so high an altitude.

There has been growing concern in India over the fast dwindling population of vultures in recent years.

Experts estimate there are only a few hundred vultures left in India.

'Pleased'

Mr Tandon said four out of the five major vulture species in India are critically endangered.

"We had reports on Monday that what appears to be a very large colony of Bearded Vultures - or Lammergeiers - were spotted close to the border with China in what is known as the trans-Himalayan region," he told the BBC.

"As yet we are not able to confirm that the birds belong to this species. A team from the state's wildlife department will be making its way to the area as soon as possible.

"We are especially pleased to hear of such a large colony when in recent years the vulture population of India has been disappearing so rapidly."

Mr Tandon said that the vultures had been spotted in Lahaul-Spiti, one of the remotest districts of Himachal Pradesh.

Lammergeiers are long-winged vultures known for their unusual habit of dropping bones on to rocks to smash them open and get at the marrow.

Their world population is estimated at between 2,000-10,000 individuals.

Cattle link

South Asia's vulture population has been virtually wiped out in recent years.

Experts believe vultures have been badly affected by the use of the painkiller diclofenac in cattle.

Vultures feeding on the cattle lose their ability to reproduce.

While Bearded Vultures are not thought to have been so badly affected by the drug, their numbers have nevertheless significantly dwindled in India.

In August conservationists announced that the endangered Slender Billed vulture had twice been successfully bred in the states of Haryana and West Bengal.

Conservationists say that despite the recent sightings, urgent action is still needed to save vultures from extinction in the wild.

"With extinction in the wild likely in the next 10 years, we do not have a moment to waste. The more vultures that we can bring into captivity means a better chance of survival for these rapidly declining species," Birdlife International spokesman Chris Bowden said.


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Dutch fishermen say eel ban 'endangers' them

Martine Pauwels Yahoo News 29 Sep 09;

THE HAGUE (AFP) – A delicacy in the Netherlands where it is eaten smoked on bread, the endangered eel gets a short reprieve as of Thursday when domestic catches will be banned for 60 days in a move fishermen say threatens their survival.

The ban, aiming to boost dwindling eel numbers, "will obliterate family businesses that have earned a living from fishing for many generations," said the Dutch professional fisherman's association.

Its members have blasted the measure as "incomprehensible" and threatened to challenge it in court if it goes ahead, saying they risk losing half their annual business in the peak eel fishing months of October and November.

"Fishermen earn 50 percent of their turnover during the months affected by the ban," association spokesman Han Walder told AFP.

And while the government would make available 700,000 euros (one million dollars) a year to compensate 240 fishing businesses affected by the ban, "that amounts to just 1,000 euros per company per month", he said.

The Dutch parliament is scheduled to vote on the plan on Tuesday, and the agriculture and environment ministry said while some parties had submitted motions on the topic, none had asked for the ban to be lifted.

"The ban on eel fishing will definitely go ahead as planned on October 1," ministry spokeswoman Cindy Heijdra told AFP.

Announcing the October 1 to November 30 ban earlier this year, agriculture and environment minister Gerda Verburg conceded: "It is a big sacrifice for fishermen.

"But it is also in the interests of the industry that the eel population is allowed to recover," she said.

According to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) conservation group, the population of adult eels has dropped by 95 percent in the Netherlands in 50 years.

"Less than one percent of the 1980's stock of elvers (baby eels) remains today," said spokeswoman Clarisse Buma, adding that eels do not reproduce in captivity.

A WWF document said eels were just as much at threat of extinction as the mountain gorilla, the tiger or the panda.

"To eat eel on bread is like eating a panda sandwich," it said.

From next year, the ban would be extended by one month, running from September 1 to November 30. It will be reviewed by the Dutch government in 2012.

Some 1,000 tons of wild eel are caught in Dutch lakes and rivers every year, while 4,000 tons are raised in captivity for domestic and export consumption.

In June 2007, the eel was placed under the protection of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) -- the Geneva-based UN agency against illegal wildlife trade -- and was classified as a fish in which trade should be strictly regulated.

The European Union has asked all member states to present a plan for safeguarding the eel.

The Netherlands' first plan, which had the support of fishermen, was rejected by Brussels as insufficient in July.

It would have roped in eel fishers to help release into the Atlantic 157 tons of mature eel caught inland -- shaving some 15 percent off their annual catch.

The eels make the arduous journey to the Sargasso Sea in the North Atlantic to spawn every year, from where their offspring travel back to Europe to feed inland.

"That (initial) plan would have been sufficient to ensure the recovery of the eel population," said Walder, whose organisation has issued a "distress call" to Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende to intervene.

Walder, however, insisted that fishing was not the only cause. "It is easy to blame the fishermen. Dam walls also cause huge losses" as they bar the eels' yearly migration to the Atlantic, he said.

While the Dutch consume mainly adult eels, elvers are preferred in France and Spain, as well as in Asia to where it is exported at 1,000 euros per kilogramme (2.2 pounds).


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New film blames drug firm for plight of honey bees

Michael McCarthy,The Independent 29 Sep 09;

It's a question that has baffled the worlds of agriculture and science – what is it that has caused the mysterious deaths of honey bees all over the world in the last five years? A new film may have the answer.

Vanishing of the Bees, which will be released in Britain next month, claims the cause is the use of a new generation of pesticides that weakens the bees and makes them more susceptible to other diseases.

Narrated by the British actress Emilia Fox, the 90-minute film tells the story of what has become known as colony collapse disorder.

The problem first appeared in America in the winter of 2004, when many beekeepers across the country found that their bees had suddenly vanished, leaving behind empty hives. Since then scientists have failed to find a single cause for it.

The film goes on to suggest that neonicotinoid pesticides, some of them made by Bayer, one of the world's biggest chemical companies, may be behind the disappearances.

The pesticides include the widely-used imidacloprid (marketed under the trade name Gaucho), which has been banned in France following pressure from beekeepers. It is still in use in Britain, the US and elsewhere.

Neonicotinoids are systemic compounds, which means they are applied to seeds rather than sprayed on to growing plants. They enter into the plants themselves and affect the insect pests that consume them.

In theory, insects that are not pests should not be affected. But Vanishing of the Bees, made by the independent filmmakers George Langworthy and Maryam Henein, suggests that long-term, low-level exposure to these compounds may be having a sub-lethal but debilitating effect on honey bees.

The pesticides, it suggests, may be the final straw for a bee populationhas already been weakened in recent years by diseases ranging from the devastating varroa mite to the nosema fungus and other viruses.

In particular, the film targets Bayer, the long-established German firm which invented aspirin and is the world's fourth-largest pharmaceutical company.

Bayer rejected the allegations last night, insisting that its products did not harm bees.

"Everybody knows this is about the varroa mite, the nosema pest and a number of fungal and viral diseases," said Dr Julian Little, a UK spokesman for Bayer CropScience.

"The healthiest bees in the world are in Australia, where they have lots of neonicotinoids but they don't have varroa. If you look at a country where they have restricted the use of neonicotinoids, France, they have a worse bee problem there than they do in the UK," Dr Little added.

The British Beekeepers' Association said it did not have the evidence to say if neonicotinoids were behind honey bee declines.

"All the data we have seen so far is inconclusive," said Tim Lovett, the association's president.


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Life dries up in Kenya's Mau forest

James Morgan, BBC News 29 Sep 09;

High in the hills of Kenya's Mau forest, some 20,000 families are facing eviction from their farms - accused of contributing to an ecological disaster which has crippled the country.

The authorities are to start the process of removing them any day now. Farmers will be asked to surrender their title deeds for inspection.

If their documents are genuine, they have a chance of being resettled or compensated.

If not, they will simply be told to go.

"We are afraid. Not only me, but all of us here," says Kipkorir Ngeno, a teacher and father of six, from a village known as "Sierra Leone".

"They call us squatters - a very bad name. But this is my land. It is not illegal."

Drought and despair

Mr Ngeno is one of those accused of responsibility for droughts which have left millions of Kenyans thirsty for water and hungry for retribution.

Mau forest is Kenya's largest water tower - it stores rain during the wet seasons and pumps it out during the dry months.

But during the past 15 years, more than 100,000 hectares - one quarter of the protected forest reserve - have been settled and cleared.

Tearing out the trees at the heart of Kenya has triggered a cascade of drought and despair in the surrounding valleys.

The rivers that flow from the forest are drying up.

And as they disappear, so too have Kenya's harvests, its cattle farms, its hydro-electricity, its tea industry, its lakes and even its famous wildlife parks.

The finger of blame is being pointed at the settlers in Mau. And the solution, according to a special task force appointed by Prime Minister Raila Odinga, is to uproot the invaders and replant the trees.

Of 20,000 families living in the forest, they estimate that as few as 1,962 have genuine title deeds.

Civil conflict

"We must act now - before the entire ecosystem is irreversibly damaged," said Mr Odinga.

"We are looking at securing the livelihoods and economies of millions of Africans who directly and indirectly depend on the ecosystem."

The prime minister was speaking at the United Nations - appealing for donations of $400m (£250m) to "rehabilitate" Kenya's water supply.

If he does not act, he foresees a struggle for water and land which could escalate into a bloody civil conflict.

Because in the valleys downstream of Mau forest, farmers like Peter Ole Nkolia are running out of water, cattle, and patience.

"Those people up there need to just move," says Mr Nkolia, as he stands by the carcass of a dead cow.

"If the destruction of Mau shall continue I can assure you that a lot of people will suffer.

"What you are going to see here in Narok is just the skeletons of cattle - and maybe people."

Worse still, the water from Mau quenches thirst far beyond Kenya. Its rivers feed Tanzania's Serengeti and keep the fishermen of Lake Victoria afloat.

When you consider that Lake Victoria is the source of the Nile, you begin to grasp the scale of the crisis the Kenyan government is facing.

"This is no longer a Kenyan problem," said Mr Odinga. "Tanzania and Egypt are feeling the heat from the Mau.

"And the implications go beyond the environment. This has the potential to create insecurity as people squabble over dwindling resources."

'Buffer zone'

Chopping down the tree cover in Mau has removed a natural "pump" which keeps the ecosystem alive.

"It rains a lot in Kenya - but only in the rainy seasons. Then you have four long months with not a drop," explains Christian Lambrechts, from the Nairobi-based UN Environment Programme (UNEP).

"So you need a buffer zone - a way to ration the rain water and release it slowly into the rivers in the dry season. That buffer is the forest.

"If you remove this ecosystem, you reduce the moisture reservoir. Which means that in the dry season... 'Hakuna maji'. No water."

When the rains in Kenya stop falling, the 12 rivers which stem from the Mau forest are the lifeline for about 10 million people.

And this year in Kenya, the rains failed badly.

Narok county - the breadbasket of Kenya - was a barren dustbowl in April, the wettest month of the year. The government declared a "national emergency" with 10 million Kenyans facing starvation.

Cattle keeled over and died, in their millions. And as the drought worsened, Kenyan government was forced to bail out farmers by slaughtering their weak animals for just 8,000 shillings ($105; £65) a head.

In western Kenya, the tea plantations of James Finlay, which feed on the rivers of western Mau, have seen their yields cut to 80%. And the town of Kericho experienced water rationing for the first time in a generation.

Trouble in paradise

Wildlife tourism - another pillar of Kenya's economy - is wilting in the heat.

Lake Nakuru, the birdwatcher's paradise, is disappearing. The rivers that feed it have run dry. They come from Mau.

And in the Masai Mara, the river which hosts the world famous "crossing of the wildebeest" has fallen to its lowest ever level.

Water scarcity has brought wild animals and farmers into conflict. Deaths, injuries and compensation claims are at record highs in Narok, according to the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS).

The fuse for all these disasters was lit in Mau.

"The Mau, in a sense, is the hen that lays the golden eggs," says Paul Udoto, of KWS.

"The eggs are Lake Nakuru, the Masai Mara, the tea plantations... the farming that is being done by pastoralists.

"Once you destroy the centre - the hen - that is the Mau - then by necessity you have to lose the golden eggs."

Frequent droughts

But can deforestation really be to blame for all these catastrophes?

After all, there have always been cyclical droughts in Kenya.

The trouble is that these droughts are becoming more frequent, more severe and less predictable. Particularly since 2001 - the year when 60,000 hectares of Mau were allocated to settlers and cleared.

"At a time when the climate in Kenya is becoming drier, that is when you need to boost your ecosystem - to help it to absorb the impact of climate variability," says Mr Lambrechts.

"Go in the opposite direction, and you are going to feel those impacts much bigger. That is what we are currently feeling."

Mr Lambrechts is one of 30 officials recruited to the task force by Prime Minister Odinga.

Their report, published in July, set out in painstaking detail how more than 100,000 hectares - one quarter of the entire forest reserve - was parcelled up and cleared for settlement.

Almost 20,000 land parcels were "excised" by the governments of Daniel arap Moi and Mwai Kibaki, and handed out to farmers - which helped to boost the two presidents' popularity in the run-up to elections.

At the time, much of these excised land parcels were promised to Ogiek peoples, the original forest dwellers. But the title deeds ended up largely in the hands of local officials and incoming settlers.

Meanwhile, in the southern Maasai Mau forest, almost 2,000 plots were illegally purchased within the protected forest reserve, with the help of local officials.

Plots known as "group ranches" were expanded, subdivided and then sold on to third parties, unaware that their new title deeds may be "irregular" or "bogus".

An area of central Mau was "adjudicated" to local people who have traditional rights in the forest.

But elsewhere large chunks of the forest were occupied and squatted - "encroached" to use the official terminology - by settlers with no title claim whatsoever.

Political tightrope

The task force insists that almost all of these settlers and land owners should leave the forest as soon as possible.

But how many deserve compensation? This is a political tightrope for Prime Minister Odinga.

The task force has promised that each family will have their claim heard on a "case-to-case basis".

All holders of "genuine" title deeds will be compensated - perhaps even those high-ranking public officials who are named by the task force as having received land via irregular means.

A search for new land to resettle farmers is underway, but is already provoking controversy.

"I hope when they go to the World Bank they won't get any money," says Professor Wangari Maathai, the Nobel Laureate and environmental campaigner.

"The only reason why we are being held hostage with the Mau is because people who were in power want to be compensated."

Double-whammy

But perhaps the biggest challenge of all facing Kenya is the ecological one - the co-ordinated replanting of 100,000 hectares of indigenous forest - more than 100 million trees.

It will take decades to restore the canopy - years in which Kenyans will continue to suffer from the double-whammy of local land degradation and global climate change.

Yet among environmentalists there is some relief that, at last, Kenya has woken up to a disaster that has been brewing for decades.

Countless warnings have gone unheeded, as Ms Maathai can testify.

"I keep telling people, let us not cut trees irresponsibly... especially the forested mountains," she says.

"Because if you destroy the forests, the rivers will stop flowing and the rains will become irregular and the crops will fail and you will die of hunger and starvation.

"Now the problem is, people don't make those linkages."

In Kenya this year, everyone is making those linkages.

THE HEART OF KENYA

  • Mau forest is the largest in Kenya - the size of the Aberdares and Mount Kenya combined
  • 10 million people depend on its rivers
  • They feed six lakes - Victoria, Turkana, Natron, Nakuru, Baringo and Magadi
  • Plus eight wildlife reserves - including the Masai Mara, the Serengeti and Lake Nakuru
  • The rivers have potential for 518MW hydro electricity - 41% of Kenya's total
  • In all, the forest provides an economic benefit of 20 billion shillings (£166m) per year (UNEP)
  • But already, a quarter of its 400,000 hectares have been destroyed by farmers and loggers


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East Africa drought leaves millions hungry

Frank Nyakairu, Yahoo News 29 Sep 09;

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Drought for a fifth year running is driving more than 23 million east Africans in seven countries toward severe hunger and destitution, international aid agency Oxfam said on Tuesday.

Launching a 9.5 million pound appeal, it said the situation was being worsened by high food prices and conflict. The most badly hit nations are Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and Uganda.

Malnutrition is now above emergency levels in some areas and hundreds of thousands of valuable cattle are dying.

"This is the worst humanitarian crisis Oxfam has seen in east Africa for over ten years," Paul Smith Lomas, Oxfam's East Africa Director, said in a statement.

He said failed and unpredictable rains were ever more common in the region, and that broader climate change meant wet seasons were becoming shorter. Droughts have increased from once a decade to every two or three years.

"In Wajir, northern Kenya, almost 200 dead animals were recently found around one dried-up water source," Lomas said.

"People are surviving on two litres of water a day in some places -- less water than a toilet flush. The conditions have never been so harsh or so inhospitable, and people desperately need our help to survive."

Some 3.8 million Kenyans, a tenth of the population, need emergency aid, Oxfam said, partly because food prices have risen to 180 percent above average.

One in six children are acutely malnourished in Somalia, the charity said, while conflict meant people were less able to grow food and drought is ravaging areas where people have fled. Half the population -- more than 3.8 million people -- are affected.

In Ethiopia, 13.7 million people are at risk of severe hunger and need help, Oxfam said. Many are selling cattle to buy food. Farmers in northern Uganda have lost half their crops.

Other countries hard hit are Sudan, Djibouti and Tanzania.

Rains are due next month, but are likely to bring scant relief or even deluges that could dramatically worsen matters.

Oxfam said there were fears that east Africa could be hit by floods that would destroy crops and homes, as well as increasing the spread of water-borne diseases.

"The aid response to the crisis needs to rapidly expand, but it is desperately short of funds," the charity said, adding that the U.N.'s World Food Programme was facing a $977 million donor shortfall for its Horn of Africa work over the next six months.

"Even with normal rain, the harvest will not arrive until early 2010. People will still need aid to get them through a long hunger season," it said.

(Additional reporting and writing by Daniel Wallis; editing by Tim Pearce)

East Africa Drought In Fifth Year, Millions Hungry
Frank Nyakairu, PlanetArk 30 Sep 09;

NAIROBI, - Drought for a fifth year running is driving more than 23 million east Africans in seven countries towards severe hunger and destitution, international aid agency Oxfam said on Tuesday.

Launching a 9.5 million pound appeal, it said the situation was being worsened by high food prices and conflict. The most badly hit nations are Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and Uganda.

Malnutrition is now above emergency levels in some areas and hundreds of thousands of valuable cattle are dying.

"This is the worst humanitarian crisis Oxfam has seen in east Africa for over ten years," Paul Smith Lomas, Oxfam's East Africa Director, said in a statement.

He said failed and unpredictable rains were ever more common in the region, and that broader climate change meant wet seasons were becoming shorter. Droughts have increased from once a decade to every two or three years.

"In Wajir, northern Kenya, almost 200 dead animals were recently found around one dried-up water source," Lomas said.

"People are surviving on two litres of water a day in some places -- less water than a toilet flush. The conditions have never been so harsh or so inhospitable, and people desperately need our help to survive."

Some 3.8 million Kenyans, a tenth of the population, need emergency aid, Oxfam said, partly because food prices have risen to 180 percent above average.

One in six children are acutely malnourished in Somalia, the charity said, while conflict meant people were less able to grow food and drought is ravaging areas where people have fled. Half the population -- more than 3.8 million people -- are affected. In Ethiopia, 13.7 million people are at risk of severe hunger and need help, Oxfam said. Many are selling cattle to buy food. Farmers in northern Uganda have lost half their crops.

Other countries hard hit are Sudan, Djibouti and Tanzania.

Rains are due next month, but are likely to bring scant relief or even deluges that could dramatically worsen matters.

Oxfam said there were fears that east Africa could be hit by floods that would destroy crops and homes, as well as increasing the spread of water-borne diseases.

"The aid response to the crisis needs to rapidly expand, but it is desperately short of funds," the charity said, adding that the U.N.'s World Food Programme was facing a $977 million donor shortfall for its Horn of Africa work over the next six months.

"Even with normal rain, the harvest will not arrive until early 2010. People will still need aid to get them through a long hunger season," it said.

(Editing by Tim Pearce)


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Climate migration fears 'misplaced'

Cecilia Tacoli, The BBC Green Room 29 Sep 09;

Fears of millions of "climate refugees" crossing national borders are not supported by evidence on the ground, says Cecilia Tacoli. In this week's Green Room, she says we will fail to protect the world's most vulnerable people if misconceptions about migration continue to shape policies.

Search the internet for "migration" and "climate change" and you will find repeated warnings of a crisis in the making; of hundreds of millions of people on the move, of countries straining to cope with the pressure on their borders, and of national security under threat.

But these fears are based on many misconceptions about the duration, destination and composition of migrant flows.

There is a real risk that alarmism will divert attention from real problems, resulting in policies that fail to protect the most vulnerable people.

The longer it takes people to realise this, the bigger the true problems will become.

Firstly, the numbers of people likely to be moving have been exaggerated. Secondly, the notion commonly expressed in rich countries - that large numbers of poor people from across the planet will attempt to migrate there permanently - is clearly wrong.

Yes, hundreds of millions of people live in places that are highly vulnerable to climate change.

They face extreme weather conditions such as droughts and floods, or they live in low-lying coastal areas that are threatened by rising sea levels. Their lives and livelihoods are threatened in new and significant ways.

But this does not mean they will all migrate.

The poorest and most vulnerable people will often find it impossible to move, as they lack the necessary funds and social support. Those who can migrate will be more likely to make short-term, short-distance movements than permanent long-term ones.

Overall, long-distance international migration will be the least likely option.

Past lessons

What can we learn from the past? In northern Mali, the drought of 1983-5 affected local migration patterns, with an increase in temporary and short-distance movement and a decrease in long-term, intercontinental movement.

Similarly, recent research in Burkina Faso suggests that a decrease in rainfall increases temporary rural-rural migration.

On the other hand, migration to urban centres and to other nations, which entails higher costs, is more likely to take place after normal rainfall periods.

It is influenced by migrants' education, the existence of social networks and access to transport and road networks.

In all cases, migrants make substantial contributions to the livelihoods of their relatives and communities, by sending money, information and goods back home.

A surprisingly large proportion of the income of rural people in Africa, Asia and Latin America comes from non-farm activities, and much of it as migrants' remittances.

With climate change making farming more difficult, the need for these resources will increase.

Unfortunately, most governments and international agencies tend to see migration as a problem that needs to be controlled instead of a key part of the solution.

In doing so, they are missing opportunities to develop policies that can increase people's resilience to climate change.

Room for new views

Policymakers must radically alter their views of migration, and see it as a vital adaptation to climate change rather than as an unwanted consequence or a failure to adapt.

This means that poorer nations need to prepare for climate change at home by building up infrastructure and basic services in small towns located in rural areas that could become destination hubs for local migrants.

Options include policies that promote access to non-farm jobs in small rural towns and a more decentralised distribution of economic opportunities.

To do so, they should first of all focus on increasing the capacity of local governments and institutions in small towns to support local economic development, provide basic services and regulate equitable access to natural resources.

Richer countries, meanwhile, need to stop panicking about a mass influx of migrants that is unlikely to happen and instead focus on helping the poorer countries to face climate change.

As the richer countries have emitted most of the greenhouse gases that cause climate change, they have a duty to address the problem.

This means providing poorer nations with financial support to help them adapt to climate change, which can either reduce the need for migration or enable it to proceed in a way that is sound and sustainable.

It also means taking drastic domestic action to reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases that are causing climate change in the first place.

People are talking about migration as if it were something new, but people have always used their mobility as a means to protect themselves and escape from poverty.

The problem is not that people want to move, but that many of the most vulnerable people do not have the resources or livelihood options that will enable them to do so in a way that maintains their security.

Ironically, the failure to recognise the role of voluntary migration in adapting to climate change contributes to crisis-driven movements that inevitably increase the vulnerability of those forced to leave their homes and assets as they flee conflict and disaster.

It is worth remembering that supporting migrants can ultimately help reduce the numbers of refugees.

Dr Cecilia Tacoli is a senior researcher at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED)

This article is based on a research paper published on 28 September in the journal Environment and Urbanization

The Green Room is a series of opinion articles on environmental topics running weekly on the BBC News website


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Climate pact must include forest scheme: WWF

Yahoo News 29 Sep 09;

BANGKOK (AFP) – A leading environmental group on Tuesday urged delegates at UN climate talks in Bangkok to include plans to reward nations for saving their forests in any deal on global warming.

WWF International released a survey saying that investors showed "significant support" for a carbon market mechanism, which would address the estimated 20 percent of global carbon emissions due to deforestation.

The group released the poll as officials from 192 countries gathered in Thailand to try to agree on a text for a climate change treaty ahead of a crucial showdown in Copenhagen in December.

"Any global deal on climate change must take into account the significant role forests play in combating global warming," said WWF International director general James Leape.

The UN-backed reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) scheme is not yet part of the pact which could be signed at Copenhagen, a successor to the Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gases which expires in 2012.

The idea behind REDD is to work out how much carbon can be saved by not cutting down trees, and selling that carbon on the global market for big polluters to offset their own emissions.

Environmentalists say the world needs forests to absorb the carbon in the atmosphere that is causing climate change, and also to curb carbon emitted by rotting dead trees and burning.

The WWF said that for the survey it had questioned investors who have around seven trillion dollars of assets under management, and that they said they wanted initial public financing for any scheme.

They also wanted certainty from both international agreements and national legislation before they commit.

WWF said it spoke to 25 senior money managers, analysts and specialist sustainability investors in Europe, the United States and the Asia-Pacific region.

"If strong policies are put in place to ensure real reductions in emissions and real benefits to forest communities, investors can play a key role in supporting REDD," Leape said.

"Agreement in Copenhagen -- coupled with progress on national initiatives -- will be a signal to investors that REDD can and will succeed, and will ensure forests are more valuable standing than cut."

The Bangkok talks are the next to last before the Copenhagen meeting and the UN climate chief, Yvo de Boer, warned on Monday that time was running out to reach a deal.

There are major disagreements between developed and developing nations on the how much they will cut carbon emissions by and who will meet the enormous cost.


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Climate change measures 'crucial for Asia-Pacific'

Rachel O'brien Yahoo News 29 Sep 09;

BANGKOK (AFP) – UN experts warned on Tuesday that Asia-Pacific nations and other developing countries need support to combat climate change as they face an intensification of extreme weather such as the Philippine floods.

The comments came as a divide between rich and poor nations continued to dominate crucial negotiations in Bangkok to develop a new climate treaty before world leaders meet in Copenhagen in December.

UN climate chief Yvo de Boer said one of the "key elements" of a deal was increased support for developing countries in the Asia-Pacific region and elsewhere to step up efforts to deal with the effects of climate change.

"Typhoons, floods and extreme weather events regularly make headlines in this part of the world," de Boer told reporters.

De Boer said the devastation in the Philippines was "the most recent tragic example" of climate change affecting the region, as the death toll reached 240, with the same storm, Ketsana, also killing 22 people in Vietnam.

"The impacts are likely to become more intense over time. Dealing with emergency situations, reducing disaster risks and increasing the climate resilience is a necessity for this region," he added.

Indonesia became the latest country to announce plans for a cut in greenhouse gas emissions, saying it would cut them by more than a quarter.

Campaigners have applauded recent encouraging announcements on climate change from Asian countries including China, India and Japan, which has pledged to reduce emissions by 25 percent from 1990 levels by 2020.

Developed nations admit a historical responsibility for global warming but say developing countries should also pledge to curb their output, while emerging economies have called on rich nations to make higher cuts.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono made the pledge in a speech at a working lunch during the G20 summit in Pittsburgh on September 25 but it was only made public at the negotiations in the Thai capital, an Indonesian delegate said.

Indonesia remains one of the leading forest destroyers, with emissions from the clearing of rainforests and peatlands making it the world's third-largest greenhouse gas emitter, according to some estimates.

"We just want to tell the world that although the obligation is mainly, most of it, on developed countries, Indonesia as victims of climate change would like to do something to prevent it from worsening," senior delegate Agus Purnomo said.

In Yudhoyono's speech, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, the president said Indonesia had decided on a national climate change action plan "that will reduce our emissions by 26 percent by 2020 from BAU (Business As Usual)."

With international support Indonesia could reduce emissions by as much as 41 percent, Yudhoyono said.

UN Under-Secretary General Noeleen Heyzer said the Asia-Pacific region had experienced 80 percent of global casualties related to extreme weather events over the last seven years.

"Climate change is likely to increase both the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events as well as the number of related casualties," she told the briefing.

Heyzer, also chief of the UN's Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, said most developing countries in the region faced two inter-linked challenges: combating poverty and overcoming climate change.

"Failure to tackle one will undermine efforts to deal with the other," she said. The transition towards a low carbon economy was already happening in the region but still required "massive investments," she added.

The Bangkok talks are the second-to-last negotiating session before Copenhagen, the last chance to sign a deal to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

Meanwhile conservation group WWF International released a survey saying that leading investors showed "significant support" for a scheme that would reward nations for saving their forests in any deal on global warming.

Asia-Pacific at risk if climate change ignored: ADB
Martin Petty, Reuters 30 Sep 09;

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Asia-Pacific countries face food and energy shortages, worsening poverty and declining crop yields if they ignore climate change, according to studies released on Wednesday.

The region will suffer major social and economic changes if countries fail to adopt new practices -- from liberalizing trade to introducing better quality seeds for crops -- according to separate reports by the Asian Development Bank (ADB), on agriculture, migration and energy.

Under some scenarios, food prices could shoot up as much as 70 percent in the next 40 years as crop yields shrink, leading to a rise in malnutrition in some Asian countries, the ADB said.

"The combination of poverty in rural areas and the expected impacts of climate change and its remaining uncertainty will require careful planning...," the Manila-based ADB said.

"Targeted climate change investments and more flexible decision-making will be necessary to make the most of scarce budgetary resources," it added.

The report warned that the countries where poverty was rife such as Afghanistan, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Nepal were most at risk and least likely to respond to, or handle, the pressures of climate change.

It recommended new initiatives to reduce the chance of an agricultural disaster. These include trade liberalization, more state subsidies, distribution of improved seeds and being better prepared for environmental problems from land degradation to wetter and drier seasons.

'WORRYING PICTURE'

Without changes in farming practices, prices would rise significantly in line with diminished agricultural yields, the ADB forecast. Rice output could fall 25 percent, wheat and maize by 40 percent, causing prices to rise by 40-70 percent in the next 40 years.

"This significantly negative impact of climate change on agriculture paints a very worrying picture," said Mark Rosengrant of the International Food Policy Research Institute.

"It will worsen existing problems, adding to high malnutrition and the poor will be the most adversely affected."

The ADB report coincided with the release of a study by the World Bank on Wednesday that estimated developing countries would need up to $100 billion annually for the next 40 years to adapt to a two-degree increase in temperature.

The ADB's study also highlighted concerns about energy security, emphasizing that investment and financial support were required to steer poorer countries toward alternative energy sources and lessen dependence on fossil fuels.

"The region is well endowed with clean energy sources but faces constraints in developing them," it said.

"International financial support is essential but has been completely inadequate. The flow of financing from the developed world...is of paramount importance."

The report also highlighted potential problems of migration, internal and external, and warned about the dangers of people continuing to flock to coastal cities likely to be affected by rising sea levels.

Experts said plans needed to be drawn up to manage migration movements, with greater cooperation between neighboring countries and development of urban centers to ease pressure on swelling coastal cities such as Bangkok and Shanghai.

"We need to look at this with seriousness because of growing numbers of people moving into areas vulnerable to climate-induced impacts," said Robert Dobias, a senior ADB climate change advisor. "It's a very worrying trend."

(Editing by Jason Szep and Sanjeev Miglani)


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