Best of our wild blogs: 20 Oct 09


Begin from Home: a new nature blog!
Featuring shore trips by Mich.

Hot hot afternoon at Pasir Ris
from wonderful creation and wild shores of singapore and Singapore Nature

Blossom-headed Parakeet sighted
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Scaly-breasted Munia eating casuarina seeds
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Catching Up With A Diminuitive Kingfisher
from Life's Indulgences

Semakau Inter Tidal walk on 18 Oct 2009
from Where Discovery Begins

Breaking the Tradition
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

William Cho’s Photography Showcase
from AsiaIsGreen


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Beauty is all around in Singapore

Former MP and artist Ho Kah Leong says inspiration for his paintings is close to home
akshita nanda, Straits Times 20 Oct 09;

Veteran artist Ho Kah Leong enjoys painting scenes of natural beauty and says he will never run out of material in Singapore.

'You can find natural beauty in every corner in Singapore,' says the former Member of Parliament, who has been exhibiting his landscapes for more than 20 years and is proud to claim that the island city is his main source of inspiration.

'Beauty is not just grand mountains and huge, spectacular scenes. You can find beauty in smaller things as well,' he says. His latest solo exhibition is on display at the Tembusu Art Gallery in Hill Street until Oct 29 and is titled Splendour Of Lakes And Hills. The 20 artworks capture views in natural parks around Singapore, such as the lake at West Coast Park and Bukit Timah Hill.

Dr Ho is donating 30 per cent of the proceeds from the sale of his artworks to the Make A Wish Foundation, a charity that grants the wishes of children with life-threatening illnesses. Thirteen of his paintings are produced in a calendar, 300 pieces of which will also be donated to the foundation.

Fund raising for charity is a habit from his 30 years in politics, says the 72-year-old artist, who stepped down as MP for Jurong in 1996.

Some proceeds from his exhibition of scenes of Pulau Ubin last year went to the charity B'Well in Geylang East, which caters to the health-care needs of senior citizens.

Pulau Ubin is one of his favourite places to paint because many corners remain rustic in spite of the resort that has been developed there.

He packs his painting materials and visits the islet whenever he can on weekends. 'It's sometimes hard to carry all the painting materials and jump on the bumboat but I'm used to it,' says the artist, who swims three times a week and is a strong advocate of regular exercise.

He first began studying painting while studying at Chung Cheng High. He says he is greatly inspired by Impressionists such as Claude Monet, as well as pioneer artists such as Chen Wen Hsi.

His paintings pay homage to the Nanyang school of art, which captures the flavour of life in the tropics, and has been influenced by Western art.

'Singapore is a tropical country. We should try to capture its light and colour and paint the subject matter of South-east Asia,' says Dr Ho, who was principal of the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts from 1997 to 2003. He was also senior parliamentary secretary from 1984 to 1997.

He does not paint with a brush. Instead, for 'freer expression', he coils up a piece of rice paper, which he then dips in acrylic or oil paint. 'I think the effect is quite good,' he says, pointing at a painting of a lotus pond in Kampung Java Park that is reminiscent of Monet's Water Lilies.

He thinks his strokes have 'become bolder and more colourful' and is eager to hear feedback on his work.

'I will accept not just the positive but also the negative. Right now, I receive very few negative comments, which is not good for an artist who wants to go further,' he says.


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Resident and NParks torn over fate of tree

Straits Times Forum 10 Oct 09;

OUT of concern for the safety of my family and the residents in my neighbourhood, I engaged an arborist, at my own cost, to check on a roadside tree just outside my house compound.

He found the tree to be structurally weak and recommended felling due to probable tree branch failure. This was communicated to the National Parks Board (NParks) for permission to fell the tree, but the request was rejected on the grounds that the tree was worth conserving.

Tree branches have fallen on several occasions. On April 23, one of the main trunks fell into my compound, damaging my landscaped garden. NParks was notified to fell the tree for the safety of the residents in the neighbourhood and to compensate for the damage to my garden.

NParks' reply was: "In our opinion, we believe that strong gusty winds caused the failure of the co-dominant tree trunk. Based on the foregoing, the incident was totally unforeseeable and beyond the control of NParks. There was no negligence on the part of NParks."

Where is the consideration for the safety of the property and people living around this tree or the disregard for the opinion of an independent professional arborist?

Dr Lawrence Soh

NParks will replace tree of contention
Straits Times Forum 20 Oct 09;

I REFER to the Forum Online letter, "Resident and NParks torn over fate of tree" (Oct 10), by Dr Lawrence Soh.

In May 2006, Dr Soh's arborist recommended that the tree outside his house be removed. NParks inspected the tree and concluded that it could be rejuvenated through careful pruning. The tree responded well to treatment. It flowered in October last year, and was healthy.

In April, strong winds and rain during a Sumatran squall damaged the tree. This being a relatively large specimen for this species, we monitored it to see whether it would recover after the storm. Since it is not recovering well, we have decided to replace it.

Ng Cheow Kheng
Assistant Director,
Streetscape Projects
National Parks Board


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Animals objectified in Art

Serene Ong, channelnewsasia.com 19 Oct 09;

SINGAPORE: Animal lovers and naturalists should be making a beeline to 2902 Gallery for an unusual visual interpretation on the relationship between Man and Animal. Presented by three rising photographers, the ANIMAL exhibition explores the role of Man as both an intimate observer and a detached voyeur in the natural kingdom.

Lending a scientific slant to the showcase is award-winning photographer Zhao Renhui. The 26-year-old, who graduated with first class honours from London's Camberwell College of Arts, has won a number of accolades for his work, ranging from the AOP Student Photographer of the Year Award to the United Overseas Bank POY Art Award.

Explaining the zoological element in his art form, Zhao said: "I am interested in the cultural roles that animals have to play in our contemporary society. What I investigate with my art is the relationship that humans have with animals. These investigations often lead me into studying the behaviours which we have towards animals, the structures which govern our understanding towards animals and how society has classified and objectified the animal form.

"I am showing two series of works in this exhibition. One series is on the portraits of stuffed animals in the museum and the other tells a story of an expedition into the wild. Both of these works question the animal form being objectified in our contemporary society. They contemplate the animal form as a shell without a soul. Some of the expedition images are rather ambiguous, showing only traces of an animal."

By juxtaposing lifelike taxidermied animals and wildlife images, his collection challenges the idea of 'natural' and rouses further reflection on the concept of 'a living thing', re-labelling the mundane and encouraging critical viewpoints.

Zhao, whose fascination with animals and photography started from a young age, has also been involved in wildlife conservation projects that shape his understanding of Man's contemporary relationship with animals.

"In 2007, I visited the tiger farms in China as part of my research. I was awarded a grant from my university to do a research on animal establishments. The photography project was not about saving tigers but rather, on our ironic relationship with tigers. I was shocked and excited when I first learnt about these farms in China. The primary concern at first was the ethics involved in tiger-farming, but it shifted after an actual visit to the farms.

"For example, I found out that there were more tigers in captivity in the United States than all the wild tigers in the world. A lot of conservation money is being spent on the conservation of tigers when a lot of aesthetically insignificant species are left to die.

"The problem here was that as an animal, the tiger seemingly enjoys an attractive aesthetic appeal in our society, therefore the amount of time and finances spent on the conservation of the tiger outweighs that of the last two toads struggling to survive in the Amazon basin... I decided at one point of time to look into how we react to animals in our society, rather than comment on how animals are in society," he said.

His artistic pieces, along with thought-provoking works by photographers Serena Teo and Derrick Choo, are on display at the 2902 Gallery, The Old School at Mount Sophia, till October 21.


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Cost of creating recycling culture in Singapore high: MM

Straits Times 20 Oct 09;

IT WILL cost Singapore an arm and a leg to create a recycling culture in public housing estates, the way the Japanese have done in their homes, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew believes.

He was responding to a Singapore Management University student, who noted that Singapore fell behind other Asian countries like Japan, Taiwan and South Korea in recycling and energy efficiency.

Ms Ng Yi Qi, a first-year arts and social sciences student at the university, asked how Singapore could do more to mitigate against climate change.

'I do not believe we can ever equal the Japanese. They are most thorough, the most disciplined, the most cohesive nation,' MM Lee replied.

'When they decide to do something, they do it. I remember one energy crisis, and they said: 'No hotel, no room anywhere should be lower than 25 deg C'. And, well, I just sweated away.'

He said Singapore is studying Japanese innovations in energy efficiency, just as it learned about productivity from them.

On recycling, the main problem is that the single rubbish chute in every Housing and Development Board flat encourages residents to throw everything into it, instead of separating their recyclables from food waste as the Japanese, Taiwanese and South Koreans commonly do.

'We have thought about this very carefully, but just restructuring the buildings to make the lift stop on every floor...may cost nearly $100,000 per flat. You start putting two or three chutes into every flat, where do you find the space and what will it cost?' he asked.

He also did not believe that a global deal for reducing greenhouse gas emissions could be found at December's international summit in Copenhagen. This is because major countries like the United States and China are all waiting for each other to move before committing to specific targets.

Singapore is also preparing to rebut the likes of Japan and Australia, which believe that Singapore should be subjected to firm targets because of its high per capita emissions from its industries.

Such targets would slow down Singapore's growth. He felt the imposition would be unfair because half or three-quarters of Singapore's manufacturing goods are for export or goods consumed elsewhere.

CLARISSA OON


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Recycling Goes From Less Waste to Zero Waste

Leslie Kaufman, The New York Times 19 Oct 09;

At Yellowstone National Park, the clear soda cups and white utensils are not your typical cafe-counter garbage. Made of plant-based plastics, they dissolve magically when heated for more than a few minutes.

At Ecco, a popular restaurant in Atlanta, waiters no longer scrape food scraps into the trash bin. Uneaten morsels are dumped into five-gallon pails and taken to a compost heap out back.

And at eight of its North American plants, Honda is recycling so diligently that the factories have gotten rid of their trash Dumpsters altogether.

Across the nation, an antigarbage strategy known as “zero waste” is moving from the fringes to the mainstream, taking hold in school cafeterias, national parks, restaurants, stadiums and corporations.

The movement is simple in concept if not always in execution: Produce less waste. Shun polystyrene foam containers or any other packaging that is not biodegradable. Recycle or compost whatever you can.

Though born of idealism, the zero-waste philosophy is now propelled by sobering realities, like the growing difficulty of securing permits for new landfills and an awareness that organic decay in landfills releases methane that helps warm the earth’s atmosphere.

“Nobody wants a landfill sited anywhere near them, including in rural areas,” said Jon D. Johnston, a materials management branch chief for the Environmental Protection Agency who is helping to lead the zero-waste movement in the Southeast. “We’ve come to this realization that landfill is valuable and we can’t bury things that don’t need to be buried.”

Americans are still the undisputed champions of trash, dumping 4.6 pounds per person per day, according to the E.P.A.’s most recent figures. More than half of that ends up in landfills or is incinerated.

But places like the island resort community of Nantucket offer a glimpse of the future. Running out of landfill space and worried about the cost of shipping trash 30 miles to the mainland, it moved to a strict trash policy more than a decade ago, said Jeffrey Willett, director of public works on the island.

The town, with the blessing of residents concerned about tax increases, mandates the recycling not only of commonly reprocessed items like aluminum, glass and paper but also of tires, batteries and household appliances.

Jim Lentowski, executive director of the nonprofit Nantucket Conservation Foundation and a year-round resident since 1971, said that sorting trash and delivering it to the local recycling and disposal complex had become a matter of course for most residents.

The complex also has a garagelike structure where residents can drop off books and clothing and other reusable items for others to take home.

The 100-car parking lot at the landfill is a lively meeting place for locals, Mr. Lentowski added. “Saturday morning during election season, politicians hang out there and hand out campaign buttons,” he said. “If you want to get a pulse on the community, that is a great spot to go.”

Mr. Willett said that while the amount of trash that island residents carted to the dump had remained steady, the proportion going into the landfill had plummeted to 8 percent.

By contrast, Massachusetts residents send an average of 66 percent of their trash to a landfill or incinerator. Although Mr. Willett has lectured about the Nantucket model around the country, most communities still lack the infrastructure to set a zero-waste target.

Aside from the difficulty of persuading residents and businesses to divide their trash, many towns and municipalities have been unwilling to make the significant capital investments in machines like composters that can process food and yard waste. Yet attitudes are shifting, and cities like San Francisco and Seattle are at the forefront of the changeover. Both have adopted plans for a shift to zero-waste practices and are collecting organic waste curbside in residential areas for composting.

Food waste, which the E.P.A. says accounts for about 13 percent of total trash nationally — and much more when recyclables are factored out of the total — is viewed as the next big frontier.

When apple cores, stale bread and last week’s leftovers go to landfills, they do not return the nutrients they pulled from the soil while growing. What is more, when sealed in landfills without oxygen, organic materials release methane, a potent greenhouse gas, as they decompose. If composted, however, the food can be broken down and returned to the earth as a nonchemical fertilizer with no methane by-product.

Green Foodservice Alliance, a division of the Georgia Restaurant Association, has been adding restaurants throughout Atlanta and its suburbs to its so-called zero-waste zones. And companies are springing up to meet the growth in demand from restaurants for recycling and compost haulers.

Steve Simon, a partner in Fifth Group, a company that owns Ecco and four other restaurants in the Atlanta area, said that the hardest part of participating in the alliance’s zero-waste-zone program was not training his staff but finding reliable haulers.

“There are now two in town, and neither is a year old, so it is a very tentative situation,” he said.

Still, Mr. Simon said he had little doubt that the hauling sector would grow and that all five of the restaurants would eventually be waste-free.

Packaging is also quickly evolving as part of the zero-waste movement. Bioplastics like the forks at Yellowstone, made from plant materials like cornstarch that mimic plastic, are used to manufacture a growing number of items that are compostable.

Steve Mojo, executive director of the Biodegradable Products Institute, a nonprofit organization that certifies such products, said that the number of companies making compostable products for food service providers had doubled since 2006 and that many had moved on to items like shopping bags and food packaging.

The transition to zero waste has its pitfalls, however.

Josephine Miller, an environmental official for the city of Santa Monica, Calif., which bans the use of polystyrene foam containers, said that some citizens had unwittingly put the plant-based alternatives into cans for recycling, where they had melted and had gummed up the works. Yellowstone and some other institutions have asked manufacturers to mark some biodegradable items with a brown or green stripe.

Yet even with these clearer design cues, customers will have to be taught to think about the destination of every throwaway if the zero-waste philosophy is to prevail, environmental officials say.

“Technology exists, but a lot of education still needs to be done,” said Mr. Johnston of the E.P.A. He expects private companies and businesses to move faster than private citizens because momentum can be driven by one person at the top.

“It will take a lot longer to get average Americans to compost,” he said. “Reaching down to my household and yours is the greatest challenge.”


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Blogging to help save sea turtles in Malaysia

New Straits Times Asia One 20 Oct 09;

KUALA TERENGGANU: Conservationists Prof Chan Eng Heng, 59, Chen Pelf Nyok, 28, and Chang Kew Fong, 25, plan to stay awake for 24 hours on Sunday, just so they can blog.

But it is not because the trio want to set a personal record of how much they can write before hitting the sack.

They are doing it for the turtles as they hope the blogathon will help raise funds for the newly-established Turtle Conservation Centre in Setiu.

The centre aims to restore the depleted wild population of fresh water, terrestrial and marine turtles in the country, especially in northern Terengganu.

The blogathon will begin at 9pm.

"We will be publishing a blog post every hour about freshwater and marine turtles.

"If there are things that you'd like to know about marine and freshwater turtles but never knew who to ask, this is your chance.

"You have until Sunday to submit the questions and we will post the answers," said Chan, who is also the centre's co-founder.

For Chen, this will be her third run at blogging for 24 hours.

She had participated in two blogathons in 2006 and 2007 previously.

"My third blogathon should be easier as I have Prof Chan and Fong for company.

"And we are not taking shifts either.

"We don't have a strategy as yet on staying awake for the whole day but we won't be brewing coffee," she said, adding that there would be three guest bloggers.

Blogathon nets funds for turtle sanctuary
New Straits Times 29 Oct 09;

KUALA TERENGGANU: They may have had a pot of coffee ready but it was adrenaline that kept conservationists Prof Chan Eng Heng, Pelf Chen Nyok and Chang Kew Fong blogging around the clock.

It paid off well as they raised RM4,500 for the newly-established Turtle Conservation Centre (TCC) in Setiu.

The blogathon was part of efforts to raise funds for the RM2.5 million complex aimed at conserving the species and to provide a site for research and outreach programmes.

TCC also aims to restore the depleted wild population of fresh water, terrestrial and marine turtles in the country, especially in the northern part of the state.

The blogathon, which started at 9pm on Sunday, recorded 700 hits.

"More importantly, we managed to generate interest among the public about turtles. We even had kids as young as 9-years-old participating," Chan, who is also TCC's co-founder, told the New Straits Times.

Chan said Max Gen Sdn Bhd, a vacation incentive service provider sponsored a four-night stay for two at a hotel in either Bali, Indonesia or Pattaya or Phuket in Thailand as well as a two-night stay for two at a hotel in either Langkawi, Genting Highlands, Pulau Perhentian, Penang, Port Dickson or Kuantan.

The winners will be announced today on the www.turtleconservationcentre.org


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Start planning for Pacific warming refugees: scientist

Yahoo News 18 Oct 09;

MAJURO (AFP) – Many Pacific islands in danger of being obliterated by rising sea levels should seek relocation aid at the UN climate change conference in Copenhagen, a Fiji-based scientist said.

"By 2100, I don't see how many islands will be habitable," professor Patrick Nunn, a climate change researcher at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji said at the weekend.

Nunn is chairing the Pacific Climate Change Roundtable meeting in the Marshall Islands capital Majuro opening Monday where 14 Pacific countries and territories are devising their strategy for the December conference.

New scientific projections show the pace of sea level is faster than the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projected in its 2007 report, Nunn said.

"We're now looking at a more than one metre (three feet) sea level rise by the end of the century," he said.

For low-lying coral atoll nations such as the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, and Tuvalu habitation will become impossible.

"The biggest challenge is getting policy makers to understand the need for a profound change in the way Pacific people live," he said.

"Relocation is one of the most difficult things to talk about and to convince people that the home they've lived in for centuries is no longer a viable option," said Nunn, who has researched climate change for 24 years from his Fiji base.

Mitigation and adaptation projects were being proposed for low-lying areas to withstand sea level rise, but Nunn said "there are no real options in Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands and other atolls other than to move people."

He added the problem was not restricted to atolls.

"In most larger islands in the Pacific, there is much less concern for sea level rise because they have a hinterland to move to. It's not as easy as it sounds."

There were three times the Tuvalu population of around 12,000 living in the low-lying Rewa Delta region on Fiji's main island of Viti Levu who would also be affected by sea level rise, he said.

The professor said it was urgent that political leaders of countries with low-lying areas start planning for relocation.

"If relocation is to happen by 2050, then by 2020 a plan must be in place," he said.


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Rising seas threaten Shanghai

Global warming and melting glaciers are raising sea levels, leaving people in coastal areas vulnerable to flooding
Elaine Kurtenbach, Business Times 20 Oct 09;

This city of 20 million rose from the sea and grew into a modern showcase, with skyscrapers piercing the clouds, atop tidal flats fed by the mighty Yangtze River. Now Shanghai's future depends on finding ways to prevent the same waters from reclaiming it.

Global warming and melting glaciers and polar ice sheets are raising sea levels worldwide, leaving tens of millions of people in coastal areas and on low-lying islands vulnerable to flooding and other weather-related catastrophes.

Shanghai, altitude roughly three metres above sea level, is among dozens of great world cities - including London, Miami, New York, New Orleans, Mumbai, Cairo, Amsterdam and Tokyo - threatened by sea levels that now are rising twice as fast as projected just a few years ago, expanding from warmth and meltwater. Estimates of the scale and timing vary, but Stefan Rahmstorf, a respected scientist at Germany's Potsdam Institute, expects a one-metre rise in this century and up to five metres over the next 300 years.

Chinese cities are among the largest and most threatened. Their huge populations - the Yangtze River Delta region alone has about 80 million people - and their rapid growth into giant industrial, financial and shipping centres could mean massive losses from rising sea levels, researchers say.

The sea is steadily advancing on Shanghai, tainting its freshwater supplies as it turns coastal land and groundwater salty, slowing drainage of the area's heavily polluted flood basin and eating away at the precious delta soils that form the city's foundations.

Problem area

Planners are slow in addressing the threat, in the apparent belief they have time. Instead, Shanghai has thrown its energies into constructing billions of dollars worth of new infrastructure: new ports, bridges, airports, industrial zones, right on the coast.

'By no means will Shanghai be under the sea 50 years from now. It won't be like the Day After Tomorrow scenario,' says Zheng Hongbo, a geologist who heads the School of Earth Science and Engineering at Nanjing University.

'Scientifically, though, this is a problem whether we like it or not,' says Mr Zheng, pointing to areas along Shanghai's coast thought to be shrinking due to erosion caused by rising water levels.

Chinese legend credits Emperor Yu the Great with taming floods in Neolithic times by dredging new river channels to absorb excess water. In modern times, the city has been sinking for decades, thanks to pumping of groundwater and the construction of thousands of high-rise buildings.

Today, Shanghai's engineers are reinforcing flood gates and levees to contain rivers rising due to heavy silting and subsidence.

'We used to play on the river banks and swim in the water when I was growing up. But the river is higher now,' says Ma Shikang, an engineer overseeing Shanghai's main flood gate, pointing to homes below water level near the city's famed riverfront Bund.

Twice daily, the 100-metre barrier, where the city's Suzhou Creek empties into the Huangpu River, is raised and lowered in tandem with the tides and weather, regulating the city's vast labyrinth of canals and creeks.

The 5.86-metre high flood gate is built to withstand a one-in-1,000 years tidal surge; the highest modern Shanghai has faced so far was 5.72 metres, during a 1997 typhoon.

Levees along the Bund and other major waterways are 6.9 metres high, providing better protection than in Miami, New York and many other cities. But they still would be swamped if hit by a surge like Hurricane Katrina's 8.5-metre onslaught.

Shanghai is considering building still bigger barriers - such as those in London, Venice and the Netherlands - to fend off potentially disastrous storm surges, most likely at the point 30 kilometres downstream where the deep, muddy Huangpu empties into the Yangtze.

Sang Baoliang, deputy director of the Shanghai Flood Control Headquarters, has been to see the Thames Barrier, which protects London, and the Deltaworks series of storm barriers and dams in the Netherlands, where two-thirds of the population lives on land below sea level, much of it reclaimed from the sea.

Like many Chinese officials, some of whom deem the topic too sensitive to discuss, Mr Sang is cautious about what China might do.

'We are studying this, but it is extremely complicated,' said Mr Sang, as shots from surveillance cameras at dozens of flood gates flashed on a full-wall screen.

'If the research determines that indeed the sea level will rise further, then we will need to build the walls higher. But this is still under research,' he said.

Such projects usually require several decades of planning and construction, and with sea levels rising, they likely will have to be adjusted, given the unknowns of climate change.

'Nobody - no municipal or provincial government, and no central government agency - is preparing adaptation plans for Shanghai or the Yangtze Delta,' says Edward Leman, whose Ottawa-based consultancy Chreod Ltd has published research on the issue. 'They must begin now, as investments and decisions made today will have a major impact in the coming years.'

Nearly a quarter of mankind lives in low-lying coastal areas, and urbanisation is drawing still more people into them.

'The tendency of coastal and port locations to become playgrounds for architects and developers has become a global phenomenon in recent decades,' says Gordon McGranahan, director of the human settlements group at the International Institute for Environment and Development, an independent think tank in London.

Mr McGranahan helped author a 2007 report by the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development that put the number of people living in areas vulnerable to such flooding at 40 million people, with trillions of dollars of homes and other assets at risk. By the 2070s, the number could rise to nearly 150 million, it says.

Precarious situation

Extreme weather will aggravate the already precarious situation for many: in September, Tropical Storm Kestana left 80 per cent of the Philippine capital, Manila, under water. Newspaper photos showed much of Haikou, on China's southern coast, flooded, as Vietnam evacuated more than 350,000 people from the storm's path.

In years to come, some Pacific islands, such as tiny Tuvalu, are expecting complete inundation. Vietnam's environment ministry estimates that more than a third of the Mekong Delta, where nearly half the country's rice is grown, will be submerged if sea levels rise by one metre.

Impoverished Bangladesh is spending billions of dollars on dikes and storm shelters, while seeking international aid to help it adapt to flooding that could force up to 35 million of its people to relocate by 2050.

Though much of its land is arid, China likewise has millions of people living in densely populated tidal flats and coastal valleys who already must be evacuated during typhoons. Many of the country's biggest cities are threatened, the OECD report says.

'What has been specific to China has been the enormous coastward migration, unfortunately just at a time when it would have been better not to settle in low-elevation coastal areas,' Mr McGranahan said.

Traces of former sea walls show that much of today's Shanghai, which sits between a flood basin and the sea, was under water or marshland until the seventh or eighth century AD. Over thousands of years, ancient settlements expanded and withdrew as water levels ebbed and rose.

In the future, communities unable to move may instead end up adapting buildings and infrastructure to accommodate higher water levels, says Hui-Li Lee, a landscape architect who is working on several projects in the region.

'There are many things we cannot account for, but if we know an area is going to flood, then we have to plan for that,' Mr Lee said.

'When we look at a map, we have to think that 30 years later or 50 years later everything will be below sea level.' - AP


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Indonesia to promote forest, ocean at international climate conference in Bali

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 19 Oct 09;

Indonesia will promote the roles of forests and oceans to absorb emissions to tackle human-induced climate change during an international conference on climate change in Bali next week.

About 600 scientists of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will gather in Bali from Oct. 26 to Oct. 29 to finalize its fifth assessment report on climate change matters.

“Our delegates will demonstrate the ability of forest and ocean to absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions,” head of climate change and air pollution at the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency (BMKG) Advin Aldrian said Sunday.

He predicted that Indonesia’s total emissions would shrink significantly if the CO2 absorbed in forests and oceans were counted.

“We will seek clarification from the IPCC on putting Indonesia as the world’s third largest emitter (after the US and China),” he said.

The IPCC, a world body on climate science matters, was set up by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and United Nations Environment Program (UNEP).

Advin said that Indonesia would send 29 delegates to the conference, including the BMKG’s chairwoman Sri Woro Harijono, environmental expert Emil Salim, members of the National Council on Climate Change (DNPI) Agus Purnomo and Amanda Katili Niode, and senior official from the state ministry for the environment, Masnellyarti Hilman, and ocean expert Agus Supangat.

Indonesia, the world’s third largest forest nation with 120 million hectares of rainforest, has long been linked to poor forest management.

Massive forest fires since 1997 have been blamed as the main cause for Indonesia’s position as the third largest emitter in the world.

A study by DNPI shows Indonesia’s emissions were about 2.3 gigatons in 2005 of which 80 percent were from the forestry sector. This could jump to 3.6 gigatons by 2030.

The Guinness Book of World Records also claimed the deforestation rate in Indonesia was the global highest, equivalent to three soccer fields cleared every hour.

Indonesia, however, took the lead in promoting the role of the ocean in dealing with climate change to international forums by hosting the World Ocean Conference (WOC) in Manado in May.

Indonesia covers 5.8 million square kilometers including land and oceans, with more than 81,000 kilometers of coastline and millions of people living in coastal areas.

Advin said that Indonesian delegation would reveal a series of research results dealing with ability of forests and oceans to absorb CO2 emissions.

“We will also ask the rich nations to assist developing nations by providing technology assistance and capacity building to calculate emissions absorbed in forests and oceans.

The IPPC has warned that the world needs massive emissions cuts to reduce the CO2 concentration to prevent average global temperatures from rising by an additional 2 degrees Celsius.

It is predicted that climate change will increase average global temperatures and bring about changes in weather patterns, causing sea levels to rise, and increasing frequency of extreme weather events such as storms, floods and drought.

A study by the Asian Development Bank predicted average temperatures could rise by up to 4.8 degrees Celsius by 2100, which could cause sea levels to rise by up to 70 centimeters.


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Open ocean 'needs protecting'

ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
Science Alert 19 Oct 09;

An international team of scientists has called for the creation of marine protected areas in the open oceans to protect the world’s sea life from growing damage and loss caused by overexploitation, pollution and other human impacts.

The open oceans make up 99 per cent of the total region inhabited by life on Earth – yet are currently among our least-protected ecosystems, the researchers say in an opinion article in the world’s leading ecology journal.

They argue that pelagic ecosystems – the high seas – are in as urgent need of protection as the coastal areas where marine protected areas (MPAs) have already been declared, or areas that fall within national maritime boundaries.

“Pelagic ecosystems now face a multitude of threats including overfishing, pollution, climate change, eutrophication, mining and species introductions,” the researchers warn in the journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution (TREE). These threats can act together to cause far greater damage to marine food chains, fish stocks and ecosystems.

“Mobile pelagic species also suffer from the cumulative impact of sublethal stressors. Chronic exposure to chemical and acoustic pollution from shipping, military activities or oil and gas exploration and exploitation can lead to immunosuppression and reproductive failure in marine mammals ,” they add.

The high seas provide almost 80 per cent of humanity’s fish supplies, carry out half the photosynthesis (conversion of solar energy to sustain life) that takes place on the planet and, through their ability to absorb CO2, are a dominant influence over the speed and extent of climate change.

“It is clear from declines in many species that there is inadequate protection for pelagic biodiversity and ecosystems,” the researchers from Australia, South Africa and Poland say.

“Fewer protected areas exist in the open ocean than in any other major ecosystem on Earth,” explains Professor Bob Pressey of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, a co-author of the article.

“Although there is growing support for the idea of marine protected areas in the open oceans, critics have argued they would be difficult and costly to enforce and manage in the ever-changing ocean environment.

“However my colleagues and I consider that recent advances in conservation science, oceanography and fisheries science can provide the necessary evidence, tools and information to operate these ‘ocean parks’ for the conservation of marine species that live in the high seas.

“But, to be frank, we won’t know how difficult it is until we try,” he adds.

The scientists argue ocean protected areas should be seen as simply another form of MPA, except that they will extend in three dimensions – across the surface and deep into the water itself.

They note that on the high seas, there is no single global body with the authority to establish protected areas or to regulate access to and use of an area for more than one purpose.

However they say progress can be made through Regional Fisheries Management Organizations, the International Maritime Organisation and by individual countries doing more to protect the outer parts of their 200 mile sovereign territories.

They point out that establishing the Pelagos Marine Sanctuary in the Mediterranean had the effect of encouraging countries such as Italy to tighten controls over the discharge of industrial
pollution into the sea.

By reducing the cumulative impact of human activities on the world’s oceans, MPAs can help to mitigate the severity of particular threats that cannot be directly controlled: “For example, if pelagic systems of the Black Sea had not suffered severe pollution and overfishing, they would have been less vulnerable to invasive species,” the say.

“Despite the challenges highlighted here, there are also enormous opportunities for MPAs in the pelagic ocean: weak private property rights, limited habitat transformation and potentially lower costs of protected area management,” the researchers say.

“We believe that pelagic MPAs have now come of age as an important tool in the planet’s last frontier of conservation management.”


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Palm oil: Malaysia rejects criticisms

Business Times 19 Oct 09;

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 19 (Reuters) Malaysia wants to standardise the way palm oil's impact on the environment is calculated, senior officials said on Monday, as it seeks to counter criticism that the industry fuels climate change.

Next year the European Union, a top biofuels consumer, will impose a target to only accept biodiesel that can reduce CO2 emissions by at least 35 per cent versus fossil fuel, which risks cutting out palm oil which the EU considers to save only 19 per cent.

'We are willing to let the EU scrutinise our system,' Malaysian Palm Oil Board Chairman Sabri Ahmad told Reuters at the sidelines of a regional conference. 'We should be the ones coming up with the standard, since we know palm oil best and we have nothing to lose.'

Officials say there is no clear timetable when Malaysia will present its own system to compute palm oil's greenhouse gas savings, although a major government-sponsored study due to be presented next month will form the basis.

Environmentalists say the rapidly growing palm oil sector is not only responsible for the loss of vast areas of tropical forests that soak up carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, but emits warming gases during processing.

The board chairman said a major saving could come through capturing methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, produced during the processing of palm oil fruit bunches. Flammable methane can be burned to produce electricity on-site.

A tonne of crude palm oil can produce anything from 400 to 900 kilograms of methane, analysts say.

Based on current studies, palm oil's greenhouse gas savings range from 19 per cent to 72 per cent over fossil fuels, making it difficult to decide on a standard value for the tropical oil, said Malaysian Palm Oil Council Chief Executive Yusof Basiron.

That becomes a problem for governments wanting to draft biofuel legislation. 'The low and erroneous values would be used to the advantage of detractors, who accuse the industry of not being sustainable, as is happening at the moment,' he told the conference. So far, studies conducted by the Malaysian Palm Oil Board show that palm oil with methane capture at mills can achieve 62 per cent greenhouse gas savings\. \-- Reuters


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WWF: Halt to forest loss a key to stabilising climate

WWF 19 Oct 09;

Buenos Aires, Argentina – WWF is challenging global leaders to back an ambitious target on stopping forest loss as a major element of efforts to avert the looming climate catastrophe.

In his keynote address at the XIIIth World Forestry Congress on Monday, WWF International’s Forests Director Rodney Taylor urged participants of the Congress, including government leaders, NGOs and businesses, to support a global target of zero net deforestation by 2020.

WWF is proposing a groundbreaking global benchmark for action on forests to avoid dangerous climate change and curb biodiversity loss.

Despite conservation efforts, deforestation continues at an alarming rate – 13 million hectares per year, or 36 football fields a minute. It generates almost 20 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions and halting forest loss has been identified as one of the most cost-effective ways to keep the world out of the danger zone of runaway climate change.

Taylor said that zero net deforestation by 2020 is “a common target – one that sets the scale and urgency with which these threats need to be tackled to maintain the health of the planet.”

“This is an opportunity to build consensus on how the forest sector can help achieve an early peak of greenhouse gas emissions and a rapid 80 percent decline in emission levels by 2050.”

“But this is a global target, and we can only do it together.”

Taylor called the Congress timely in the lead up to the climate conference in Copenhagen this December, where rich countries have been urged to commit to cut emissions by at least 40 percent by 2020. They also need to contribute financial support of at least USD 160 billion per annum to developing countries, enabling them to deviate at least 30 percent from business as usual emissions by 2020.

In particular, governments must bolster this commitment by backing the REDD mechanism. Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation in Developing Countries (REDD) is a mechanism to provide financial incentives on a global scale to conserve forests rather than convert them.

“Rich countries can provide funds to support developing countries in their efforts
to curb deforestation, through REDD initiatives,” Taylor said. “All governments should support the inclusion of a REDD mechanism as a credible and compensated form of
emissions reductions within a post-2012 UN climate treaty.”

Potential investors recently surveyed by WWF said they would be ready to support a REDD based forest carbon market if certainty and support were forthcoming from the international community and key national legislation.

WWF is proposing a target of “zero net deforestation by 2020 because it will consolidate efforts to halt deforestation across various international initiatives and set a global benchmark against which the success of these efforts can be measured.

“Zero net deforestation” does not mean "zero deforestation.” "Zero net deforestation" acknowledges that some forest loss could be offset by forest restoration and afforestation on degraded land. In addition, a net target leaves room for change in the configuration of the land-use mosaic, provided the net quantity, quality and carbon density of forests is maintained. However, the world´s natural forests must be conserved to maximize reduction of forest-based greenhouse gas emissions and biodiversity conservation,

“The forest sector, for its part, can contribute through the conservation and
sustainable use of forests, but the foresters cannot do it alone,” Taylor said. “The integration of other sectors, particularly agriculture, energy and finance, is key for formulating sustainable land-use policies and planning processes.”

The World Forestry Congress, held only every six to seven years, brings together thousands of key decision makers and industry representatives from forest industry, including senior forestry officials, policy makers, and major industry and NGO representatives.

The WFC serves as a forum for governments, universities, civil society and the private sector to exchange views and experiences and to formulate recommendations to be implemented at the national, regional and global levels. The Congress also provides an opportunity to present an overview of the state of forests and forestry in order to discern trends, adapt policies and raise awareness among decision and policy makers, and the public.


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Bushmeat consumption soars as forest cover declines

WWF 19 Oct 09;

Cambridge, UK - New analytical techniques have revealed that the scale of bushmeat trade in Central Africa may be much larger than originally thought, according to a study published today by TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network.

The study, based on an analysis of food balance sheets provided by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s statistical database FAOSTAT, strongly supports the view that the current situation surrounding bushmeat hunting in Central African rainforests is precarious. According to the analysis, bushmeat extraction rose considerably in the Congo Basin between 1990 and 2005, despite the overall decrease in forest cover in Central Africa.

Cameroon appears to be exceeding—by more than 100%—an estimated sustainable offtake of 150 kg of game meat per square kilometre of forest, and Gabon and the Republic of Congo are both close to this limit. The greatest rise in bushmeat production was in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the yield rose from 78,000 tonnes in 1990 to 90,000 tonnes in 2005. In the Republic of Congo, production almost doubled, from 11,000 to 20,000 tonnes per year in the same time period.

“While the FAOSTAT bushmeat data are probably underestimates and should be regarded with caution, the data are the most readily available official sources of information on production of wild meat in the Congo Basin and are valuable indicators of bushmeat production and consumption trends,” says Stefan Ziegler, Programme Officer with WWF Germany, and author of the report.

Wildlife is a significant and direct source of protein for more than 34 million people living in the Congo Basin and bushmeat hunting is a key component of many peoples’ livelihoods in Central Africa.

Earlier studies have demonstrated that bushmeat extraction increases with human population growth. However, the latest study finds that bushmeat consumption increases significantly with personal wealth too.

“Bushmeat consumption is higher in countries with large urban populations, and the increasing urbanization in the Congo region is likely to place even greater pressure on wild animal populations there,” says Ziegler,

“The danger is unsustainable offtake of wild game will lead to a collapse in wild animal populations and widespread human hunger in the region,” says Ziegler.

Unsustainable harvest levels are widely believed to be the most immediate threat to the region’s forest mammals.

“Local people have hunted for centuries, for food and for barter, but the last 20 years have seen the emergence of a commercial bushmeat market due to rural people being increasingly drawn into the cash economy,” says Nathalie van Vliet, TRAFFIC Bushmeat Strategic Advisor.

“The impacts of subsistence hunting was previously balanced by the fact of the hunting was done on a rotation basis on alternate tracts of forest areas. However, shifts in human population dynamics and socio-economic factors are leading to rising, and increasingly unsustainable demands on wild animal populations.”

An earlier WCS study found that offtake by commercial hunters in south-eastern Cameroon was ten times more per immigrant hunter than for local subsistence hunters.

“What is clear is that management strategies to prevent over-harvesting need to be implemented and measures put in place to provide alternative sources of protein for the inhabitants of the region.”

However, the study also indicated that the development of animal husbandry may not be an ideal solution to provide substitute protein for game meat.

The study, Application of food balance sheets to assess the scale of the bushmeat trade in Central Africa, was launched today at the Convention on Biological Diversity’s Bushmeat Liaison Group Meeting, currently taking place in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Further to the results of the study, TRAFFIC is encouraging countries in Central Africa to enhance enforcement efforts and establish concrete law enforcement mechanisms targeted at curbing commercial bushmeat poaching. “Central African countries can cooperate in addressing this growing problem through the development of a regional enforcement plan and creating the political will to combat commercial bushmeat poaching in regional fora such as the upcoming Yaounde +10 Summit." says Germain Ngandjui, TRAFFIC's representative in Central Africa.


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Spanish wetlands shrouded in smoke as overfarming dries out peat

National park which was once a 'paradise' now on fire and churning out tonnes of CO2
Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk 19 Oct 09;

They are meant to be Spain's most important inland wetlands, but yesterday the lagoons at Las Tablas de Daimiel national park were not just dry, they were burning. Stilted walkways stood on baked earth and rowing boats lay stranded on the ground. Observation huts revealed no birds, just an endless stretch of reeds rooted in cracked mud.

Only 1% of the park's surface remains wet, but the real catastrophe is happening underground. "If you see smoke it is because the dried-out peat under the ground has begun to self-combust," a park worker warned visitors. Occasionally, the fire breaks to the surface, sending up puffs of white smoke.

Scientists warn the wetlands are losing the lining that once retained water, with deep cracks opening up in the worst areas. Park authorities worry the damage may prove irreversible.

Park director Carlos Ruíz believes this is a life-or-death moment for one of Spain's 14 national parks. "We are at a point of no return," he said in a recent report. Spain's environment ministry, which runs the failing park, this week banned Ruiz from talking to the Guardian, but scientists who know the wetlands all agree on what is happening.

The aquifer which once fed the lagoons now lies 50ft below them. Farmers near the park have sunk thousands of wells, some 300ft deep, and have spent years pumping out more water than goes in. Furthermore, the Guadiana river, which used to flow into the Tablas de Daimiel, has disappeared.

"People have been warning that it was going to dry out for 20 years," said Luís Moreno of Spain's Geological and Mining Institute.

As the peat burns, an area that once trapped carbon dioxide has started releasing vast quantities of it. "We saw the first smoke in August but the fires must have been burning for a while," said Moreno. "It is a very difficult thing to control. It could burn for months."

Many worry the political will does not exist to save a park where the last few lagoons are still a refuge for egrets, coots and other waterfowl.

"Daimiel was once a paradise, with thousands and thousands of birds," said Santos Cirujano, of Spain's Higher Scientific Research Council. "If they want to save it, they can, but that requires a will to conserve it."

Environmentalists want Unesco to shame Spain by removing Daimiel and its surrounding area from the list of international biosphere reserves.

A plan approved two years ago to revive the aquifer by cutting down on irrigation is not working, environmentalists say, as local officials protect farmers. "Rather than fix the problem here, they use the Tablas [problem] to ask for more money and demand water be pumped in from elsewhere," said José Manuel Hernández, a local environmentalist who sits on the park's consultative board.

"There are thousands of families who live off agriculture in the area, and it is going to take time to change the way people farm," said José Luis Martínez, head of agriculture at Castilla La Mancha's regional government.

Spain's environment ministry this week pledged to pump water over from the Tagus river basin early next year. But the last time that was attempted, 95% of the water was lost along the way. Furthermore, in a country where water is fought over bitterly, the decision has provoked angry reactions from Tagus farmers.

Some scientists have predicted that Spain's thirsty agriculture cannot survive in the next decade, as aquifers are exhausted and global warming cuts rainfall. Last year, Barcelona was forced to import water in tankers to supply the city.

But Pepe Jimenéz, head of Spain's national parks, denied the situation in Tablas was irreversible. "We are buying up land around the park and buying water rights too," he explained. "The rate at which the aquifer is declining is slowing down but it will take time before it can provide water to the park."

Manuel Martín grows melons and giant pumpkins on a modest plot where the river Guadiana once sprung generously from the ground. Now the barren river bed is pitted with cracks and subsidence holes. Half a dozen water mills remain stranded along the banks. The land around, however, boasts huge, overhead "pivot" sprinklers for cereal crops.

"The lagoon here used to be full all year round but I haven't seen water since 1985," Martin said. "Our grandparents managed to irrigate their fields without making the water disappear. They should ban those pivot sprinklers until it comes back."


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Thailand Urged to Stop Construction of Salween Dams

The Irrawaddy 19 Oct 09

Fifty-one human rights and environmental groups have submitted a petition to the Thai government calling for it to halt the construction of dams on the Salween River.

Thailand is in partnership with Burma and other countries to construct five dams on the river.

The petition was submitted to the government during a meeting of the Association of Southeast Nations People’s Forum in Hua Hin, Thailand.

Sai Sai, the coordinator of the Salween Watch Coalition, said, “The Salween dams will only mean more fighting and more refugees fleeing to Thailand.”

Attacks by Burma’s military government on armed units of the United Wa State Army, which controls the roads between the intended 7,110 megawatt Ta Sang dam and the Thai border, would lead to a massive new refugee influx into northern Thailand, the group said in a statement on Monday.

Thai military sources recently estimated about 200,000 refugees in Shan State are expected to enter northern Thailand through Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai provinces if wider armed conflicts break out in the area between government forces and ethnic armed groups.

The environmental groups also said that various dam projects on the Salween River will not provide guaranteed energy security for Thailand, as military operations and human rights violations committed by government troops have increased recently around the planned Hat Gyi dam site in Karen State and the Ta Sang dam site in Shan State.

“Building dams in Burma’s war zones makes no sense if Thailand wants a stable power supply,” said Montree Chantawong of the Thailand-based environmental group Towards Ecological Recovery and Regional Alliance (TERRA), which includes more than 20 international and regional environmental organizations.

In June, more than 3,500 ethnic Karen refugees fled to Thailand following a military offensive launched by government troops against Karen National Liberation Army Brigade 7 in order to control roads and power transmission routes to the planned 1,360 megawatt Hat Gyi dam, according to a statement issued by TERRA.

A memorandum of understanding was signed in June 2006 between Burma’s Department of Electric Power, the Thai energy authority EGAT and China’s Sinohydro Corporation to build the Hat Gyi dam.

The Thailand-based Shan Sapawa Environment Organization said that a community of 15,000 people around Keng Kham in Shan State was forced to move 10 years ago because of work on the Ta Sang dam and most had fled to Thailand.

Thailand currently depends on Burmese natural gas for 12.2 percent of its
total power capacity and has recently suffered from supply
interruptions, according the groups’ statement.

Five dams are under construction or in the planning stages on the Salween River. Four will export electricity to Thailand, and one to China.

The National Power Development Plan of Thailand, which includes electricity from the dams on the Salween River, is to be completed by the year 2014, according to environmental groups.


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China begins resettling 330,000 for water project

Yahoo News 19 Oct 09;

BEIJING (AFP) – China has begun resettling up to 330,000 people to make way for a much-delayed multi-billion dollar project to divert water to meet growing demand in the parched north, state media said Monday.

People in the central provinces of Henan and Hubei are being moved to make way for a canal from the Danjiangkou reservoir in Hubei to Beijing, Xinhua news agency said.

Under the project, waters from a tributary of the Yangtze river, the country's longest, will be diverted to arid northern China.

The canal is part of the central line in a projected 400-billion-yuan (58-billion-dollar) project originally envisioned as a three-line system of canals and pipes.

Environmentalists have long criticised the project for its huge costs, while warning of corruption in the building and resettlement processes.

Water was originally slated to begin flowing from the central line to Beijing by 2010 but was postponed to 2014 largely due to the resettlement issue, earlier reports said.

The delay will further complicate water shortages in northern China that experts blame on global warming, drought, and rising demand in the booming Beijing region.

Currently water is being diverted from parched Hebei province to provide emergencies supplies for neighbouring Beijing.

According to plans, in 2014 about 13 billion cubic metres (460 billion cubic feet) of water is expected to be channelled along the central canal from the Yangtze tributary every year, with one tenth earmarked for Beijing.

Costly plants to treat badly polluted water along the project's eastern line have also put construction and delivery of water on that line behind schedule, earlier reports said.

The difficulties on the eastern and central line also prompted the government to postpone construction on the western line which was slated to begin in 2010.

China's Great Hydro project
Billions of tonnes of water will be moved from the south to north
Peh Shing Huei, Straits Times 21 Oct 09;
# 330,000 people relocated
# Costs 3 times more than Three Gorges Dam

China has started to relocate 330,000 people as it pressed ahead on yet another awe-inspiring massive engineering adventure as ambitious as the construction of the Great Wall.

The South-to-North Water Transfer Project, or Nanshui Beidiao, will move billions of tonnes of water from the south of the country to the north, a diversion of hundreds of kilometres through pipes and canals.

Even as experts continue to debate the wisdom of the gargantuan hydro scheme, the authorities are pressing forward to overcome the limitations posed by northern China's arid landscape.

The project requires the uprooting of entire villages in central Henan and Hubei provinces to make way for a canal that would carry water from the Yangtze River to thirsty regions in the north, including capital Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province, reported the official Xinhua news agency.

The mass migration is the largest after the Three Gorges Dam - the world's largest hydroelectric project - forced more than 1.4 million people to leave their hometowns.

Hundreds of thousands are expected to be displaced for the eastern and central routes in the water diversion project. More will be affected once details of the western route are released.

But hydro expert Yang Jun of the Beijing University of Astronautics and Aeronautics believes the sacrifice is worth it. 'The South-to-North Water Transfer Project is critical to this country,' he told The Straits Times. 'Whatever sacrifices the people have to make, it will be just a short-term adjustment.'

According to Xinhua, the resettled villagers will be given cash and land for their losses. Aside from compensation for their homes, each family will be given new arable land in new villages. They will also get an annual subsidy of 600 yuan (about S$120) per person for 20 years.

But earlier this year, the villagers complained that they were forced to sign agreements to move and that they were offered less than half the land they currently have.

But their complaints are not likely to drown a five-decade-long project that was first mooted by Mao Zedong in 1952.

While the north accounts for 37 per cent of the country's total population and 45 per cent of cultivated land, it has only 12 per cent of its water resources. Yet in the south, about 1,000 billion cubic metres of water from the Yangtze empties into the sea each year.

It took the Chinese government nearly five decades of research and planning to finally approve the world's largest water transfer project in 2001, in large part to ensure last year's Beijing Olympics would not be a parched Games.

But the US$62 billion (S$86 billion) plan - which is three times more expensive than The Three Gorges - has been delayed repeatedly because of environmental concerns and migration challenges.

The three proposed routes - eastern, central and western - to channel water to the north from the Yangtze are in various stages of blockages.

The central route, which involves the relocation of villages in Hebei and Hunan, will not start flowing until 2014, four years behind schedule.

The delays have raised questions on whether the western route, to be built on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and yet to be started, is even viable.

More importantly, some experts wonder if the project could ever satisfy the north's thirst even if all three routes are to be completed.

The official China.org news portal, which is under the State Council Information Office, had warned in a commentary that the project should not be seen as a panacea to the country's water woes.

Still, the ambitious enterprise will go on. Said Prof Yang: 'It will succeed, largely because this country has strong political will... This is a huge project for the development of the Chinese people.'

Additional reporting by Lina Miao


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Thailand threatens to delay Asean pact over rice

Business Times 20 Sep 09;

(BANGKOK) Rice-exporter Thailand threatened to delay an Asean free trade agreement unless it can get a 'fair deal' on tariffs from the Philippines, the world's biggest buyer of the food staple, Thai officials said yesterday.

The 10 members of the Association of South-east Asian Nations - of which Thailand and the Philippines are members - are due to ratify an Asean Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA) at their summit in Thailand this week.

The trade pact is among the steps that Asean, with a combined population of 540 million, is taking towards becoming an EU- style grouping.

'Thailand will make its final proposal at the Asean summit meeting this weekend that it would not ratify the ATIGA pact if it cannot get fair deals from the Philippines on the rice issue,' a senior commerce ministry official told Reuters.

Thai Commerce Minister Porntiva Nakasai was quoted as saying in a local newspaper that Thailand could not accept the Philippines' offer to compensate for its delay in cutting tariffs on rice imports by giving Thailand an annual tariff-free rice import quota, saying the amount was too small.

According to the Asean free trade pact, Philippine rice import tariffs should be cut to 20 per cent from 40 per cent by Jan 1, 2010.

But Manila is insisting that rice is classified under a 'highly sensitive list' that allows import tariffs to stay at 35 per cent.

The Philippines is proposing to give Thailand a quota of 50,000 tonnes of tariff-free rice annually to compensate for not meeting the tariff target, while Thailand has demanded 360,000 tonnes, another senior commerce ministry official said.

Trade ministers from the two countries need to try to resolve the dispute during the Asean summit this weekend at Thailand's beach town of Hua Hin, the official said.

'It depends on the policymakers whether they want Asean to move on, or to be such a less progressive trade cooperation,' he said.

Thailand, the world's biggest rice exporter, exported 10 million tonnes of rice in 2008 of which 599,677 tonnes went to the Philippines, the world's biggest rice importer, according to Thailand's commerce ministry data.

From January to August 2009, Manila bought 116,322 tonnes of rice from Thailand, mostly premium grade for high-end restaurants. Vietnam has mainly snatched the market for lower quality rice grades by offering better prices, traders said.

Vietnamese newspaper Liberty Saigon yesterday reported that Vietnamese rice exporters have agreed to sign export contracts for 250,000 tonnes of rice with the Philippines for the year 2010\. \-- Reuters, Xinhua


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EU farm ministers refuse to okay new GM maize strains

Yahoo News 19 Oct 09;

LUXEMBOURG (AFP) – European Union farm ministers refused to give their seal of approval on Monday to plans to allow the import of genetically-modified maize from US growers, diplomats said.

During a meeting of European Union agriculture ministers in Luxembourg dominated by crisis in the dairy sector, nations were unable to agree on proposals to greenlight the latest batch of so-called 'Frankenstein foods.'

Agriculture Commissioner Mariann Fischer Boel sought the go-ahead for two strains of corn produced by Monsanto and another by rivals Pioneer to be cleared for import by European firms.

Several sources told AFP that the decision would ultimately be left up to the commission itself, because if no agreement can be reached by the ministers Brussels will have free rein to choose.

Fischer Boel argued that a shortage of soya for animal feedstuffs and over-reliance on US exporters meant the EU had to get over old fears about new products.

She slammed regulations that meant one large shipment of soya was turned back from EU borders this summer because traces of unauthorised GM maize, that she said were harmless, were found in its containers.

"We have to rely on science and not on emotions," said Fischer Boel. "The commission will take a clear decision and that will be a yes," she vowed.

Only a handful of genetically modified crops have been approved for cultivation in the European Union, but of them only Monsanto's MON810 maize, approved in 1998, is so far being grown.

The MON810 case has become a source of transatlantic friction. The United States has warned Europe against using environmental issues as an excuse for protectionism.

Six European countries -- Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary and Luxembourg -- had adopted safeguard clauses to ban its cultivation on their territory.


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Electric Cars Don't Deserve Halo Yet: Study

Timothy Gardner, PlanetArk 20 Oct 09;

NEW YORK - Electric cars will not be dramatically cleaner than autos powered by fossil fuels until they rely less on electricity produced from conventional coal-fired power plants, scientists said on Monday.

"For electric vehicles to become a major green alternative, the power fuel mix has to move away from coal, or cleaner coal technologies have to be developed," said Jared Cohon, the chair of a National Research Council report released on Monday called "Hidden Costs of Energy: Unpriced Consequences of Energy Production and Use."

About half of U.S. power is generated by burning coal, which emits many times more of traditional pollutants, such as particulates and smog components, than natural gas, and about twice as much of the main greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.

Nuclear and renewable power would have to generate a larger portion of U.S. power for electric cars to become much greener compared to gasoline-powered cars, Cohan, who is also president of Carnegie Mellon University, said in an interview.

Advances in coal burning, like capturing carbon at power plants for permanent burial underground, could also help electric cars become a cleaner alternative to vehicles powered by fossil fuels, he said.

Pollution from energy sources did $120 billion worth of damage to human health, agriculture and recreation in 2005, said the NRC report, which was requested by the U.S. Congress in 2005 and sponsored by the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

Electricity was responsible for more than half of the damage, the report said.

Electric cars have other benefits such as reducing imports of foreign oil. But they can also have hidden costs

Materials in electric car batteries are hard to produce, which adds to the energy it takes to make them. In fact, the health and environmental costs of making electric cars can be 20 percent greater than conventional cars, and manufacturing efficiencies will have to be achieved in order for the cars to become greener, the report said.

Emissions from operating and building electric cars in 2005 cost about 0.20 cents to 15 cents per vehicle mile traveled, it said. In comparison, gasoline-powered cars cost about 0.34 cents to 5.04 cents per vehicle mile traveled.

The report estimated that electric cars could still cost more than gasoline-powered cars to operate and manufacture in 2030 unless U.S. power production becomes cleaner.

Hybrid gasoline-electric vehicles with batteries that are charged by the driver hitting the brakes scored slightly better than both gasoline-powered cars and plug-in hybrid cars, which have batteries that are charged by the power grid. (Editing by Christian Wiessner)


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Nissan bets on battery power, electric car future

Car maker and its parent Renault will manufacture both
Anthony Rowley, Business Times 20 Oct 09;

JAPAN'S second biggest car marker, Nissan, and its French parent Renault intend to sink a huge investment into producing batteries for electric cars in the belief that electric vehicles will account for 10 per cent of the global car market by as early as 2020, Carlos Ghosn, head of both companies announced last night.

He spoke on the eve of the Tokyo Motor Show where interest in electric cars is expected to be at an all-time high as concern over global warming and environmental pollution mounts around the world.

Nissan and Renault are taking a 'long-term bet' on electric cars and are distancing themselves from other leading motor manufacturers by deciding to manufacture both electric vehicles and the batteries that power them.

The electric car is 'no longer day dream - the technology allows it now', said Mr Ghosn, who is president and CEO of Nissan and chairman and CEO of Renault.

The era of 'cheap oil is ending', declared Mr Ghosn, and oil prices, already at US$78 a barrel can only rise as economic recovery sets in and demand for energy rises. Electricity to power motor vehicles, on the other hand, can be generated from oil, coal, nuclear, solar and other sources, he noted.

Other leading motor manufacturers plan to 'buy' batteries from outside, but battery makers are wary of sinking major investment into producing them without a guarantee of future demand, Mr Ghosn said. Nissan and Renault can overcome this problem by producing both, he claimed.

'Our intention is to be a big player in the industry,' Mr Ghosn told the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan. 'The investment is very costly', but Nissan and Renault believe it will be justified in view of the potential for electric cars.

China has developed technologies for producing 'relatively' cheap car batters, while Japan and South Korea have the ability to produce high power electrical energy sources, said Mr Ghosn. Nissan hopes to take advantage of both technologies.

Future car growth will come mainly from emerging markets such as China, India, Brazil and Russia, Mr Ghosn said, but initial demand for electric cars will come chiefly from the US, European and Japanese markets.

Governments are anxious to see a significant switch to electric powered vehicles and are willing to invest in the battery-charging infrastructure needed to support the introduction of such vehicles on a major scale, he said.

Nissan is currently negotiating with governments in 30 countries around the world with a view to agreeing on such infrastructure building, Mr Ghosn noted.

Nissan will begin an 'offensive' to market electric cars in the US market next year, followed by similar drives in Japan and Europe, where Renault will be a source of supply, he said. The fact that most electric cars can cover a maximum of 160 kilometres before needing their batteries charged is no barrier to their mass use, the Nissan president and CEO claimed. In the US, most car owners drive less than 100 kilometres a day and in Japan less than 50.

The cost of providing charging and recharging infrastructure for electric car batteries is far from prohibitive, at both the household and community level, he said. And, the electric car is more energy-efficient than conventional motor engines, he added.


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Energy Out of the Blue: Generating Electric Power from the Clash of River and Sea Water

Two pilot projects are testing the potential of "salt power", a renewable energy that relies on the differing salinities at river mouths to make watts

Adam Hadhazy, Scientific American 19 Oct 09;

In the hunt for alternatives to polluting and climate-warming fossil fuels, attention has turned to where rivers meet the sea. Here, freshwater and saltwater naturally settle their salinity difference, a phenomenon that two pioneering projects in Europe will try to harness to generate clean energy.

This concept of "salt power"—also known as osmotic, or salinity-gradient, power—has been kicked around for decades, and now, proponents hope, technology has advanced enough to make it economically competitive.

On November 24, the world's first large-scale prototype facility for developing a form of salt power called pressure-retarded osmosis is expected to begin fully operating in Norway. "The big reason to build this thing is to answer important questions [about osmotic power], and while we've done a lot of theoretical studies, we need live experience," says Stein Erik Skilhagen, vice president of osmotic power at Statkraft, Norway's state-owned power utility that built the plant. The prototype will have no customers, although the very small amount of electricity it generates will technically be directed into the power grid.

Statkraft's approximately $5-million prototype plant is a converted paper mill in the seaside village of Tofte, about 60 kilometers south of Oslo. The plant's pressure-retarded osmosis setup will place freshwater and brine on either side of a semipermeable membrane that prevents the passage of salt particles but allows water through. Water from the fresh side naturally flows into the salty side, generating pressure equivalent to a column of water 120 meters high. This pressurized water can be used to turn a turbine to make electricity. Statkraft's goal is to yield five watts per square meter of membrane, although current capacity is about three watts. If successful, the utility hopes to build a commercial salt power plant for paying customers around 2015 with a targeted cost ranging from seven to 14 cents per kilowatt-hour (pdf) (at current euro–dollar conversion rates), which at the low end would be competitive with coal and natural gas prices.

To the south in the Netherlands, a Dutch research firm called Wetsus has fired up its own salt power experiment to evaluate what is essentially a saltwater–freshwater battery.

Wetsus, with the collaboration of a spin-off company called Redstack, is pursuing a version of salt power dubbed "blue energy". A pilot-scale installation that is about two times the size of a big American refrigerator is up and running in Harlingen, by the Wadden Sea, says Gert Jan Euverink, Wetsus's deputy scientific director. The technology relies on reverse electrodialysis, wherein a series of fresh and saltwater streams are diverted via underground pipes to opposite sides of two kinds of membranes. These let sodium or chlorine ions—the constituent elements of salt—dissolved in the water to pass into separated freshwater streams. This builds an electrical potential across the membranes, like a battery, and this charge reacts with iron to form an electric current. Joost Veerman, a researcher at Wetsus, says the company aims to get five watts per square meter of membrane, the same result as Statkraft's process.

Neither Statkraft nor Wetsus expects to crank out more than just a few kilowatts—enough to boil water—with their initial experiments. Instead, they plan to demonstrate what could be scalable, commercially viable energy production as well as determine if salt power endangers the health of source-water estuaries. Statkraft estimates salt power's worldwide electricity-generating potential at up to 1,700 terawatt-hours, or about 10 percent of global demand.

Salt power is attractive for several reasons: For one, unlike renewable energy technologies for harvesting solar or wind power, salt systems are not dependent on the weather and could provide baseload (constant, predictable) electricity like that supplied by coal, natural gas and nuclear energy. "The river water is flowing into the sea 24/7, so you have a constantly available source of energy," Skilhagen says. He also points out there are no emissions besides brackish water, which swirls in the river's mouth anyway.

Unlike conventional hydropower, a saline power plant does not require damming off a waterway, and it may require less infrastructure than, say, riverbed-mounted turbines or floating fleets of generators for equivalent tidal and wave power. A salt power plant, including its membrane stacks, turbines, cleaning facilities and offices, could actually be located in a riverside industrial complex's basement, for example, or constructed underground within a riverbank with pipes extending into the waterway, Statkraft's Skilhagen says—a big advantage for incorporating such facilities into already-developed, populated coastal areas.

Membrane design and performance remain the biggest hurdles for both Statkraft's and Wetsus's approaches. The membranes must be made more efficient, durable and resistant to microbial buildup, or so-called biofouling. Pretreating the pumped-in water by filtering out organic matter and river-borne debris helps, but this critical step consumes energy and is expected to be expensive, Skilhagen says, adding that it is too early to know just how expensive.

Accordingly, experts remain cautious about salt power's prospects. "Both these methods are promising and certainly worth researching," says Ari Seppala, a mechanical engineer and thermodynamicist at the Helsinki University of Technology in Finland, "but both may still need a breakthrough innovation before commercialization." Seppala sees no physical or chemical showstoppers standing in the way of producing much-improved membranes, although he also points out that a better, membrane-free method could yet be found for exploiting salinity differences to yield electricity.

Another key uncertainty: a salt-power plant's effect on the local aquatic environment. "This is a completely new process that has not been tested on this scale," says Menachem Elimelech, a professor of chemical and environmental engineering at Yale University. "I doubt there will be no [environmental] impact at all." If the ecological footprint is minimal and the membrane technology advances, however, he adds that salt power could be a "significant renewable energy option."


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The Great Transition

A tale of how it turned out right
Andrew Simms, BBC News 19 Oct 09;

Western governments, including the UK's, are desperate to restore the global economy along "business as usual" lines. But, argues Andrew Simms, that is a short-sighted approach; a radical, green-tinged redevelopment would bring much bigger environmental, social and economic benefits.

If someone offered you a plan that would get rich countries on to a radical path of deep, immediate carbon cuts to tackle climate change and also solved a great swathe of social problems, would you take it?

A team of scientists and economists at the New Economics Foundation (nef) has come up with one.

It's called The Great Transition.

It provides a blueprint - or rather, a greenprint - for how the UK can make a step-change in delivering quality of life for all, whilst living within our collective environmental means.

What may shock some people is that it will do this even as the UK economy stops growing in a conventional economic manner and GDP falls significantly.

Economic madness

For decades, the addiction of business and politics to economic growth has steamrollered all attempts to make the economy environmentally sustainable.

The assumption of "growth forever" sits behind every major industrialised economy. Yet, as the great economist Kenneth Boulding put it: "Anyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist."

One thing is sure: in spite of being well-intended, the recent Climate Change Committee call for more electric cars and nuclear power was a disastrously inadequate distraction from the type, scale and speed of measures actually needed.

So how did we find this holy grail of policymakers - a genuine win-win in which environmental imperatives, social objectives and the economy are brought together?

In short, by coming up with the equivalent of a new economic sat-nav. Because if the only navigation system you have keeps directing you over a cliff, it's time to reprogram it.

Only by including in economic calculations the social and environmental costs of business-as-usual can we properly assess the alternatives.

Alarm warming

At one extreme, of course, allowing runaway climate change to occur is infinitely expensive and therefore unthinkable.

So no cost below that should be too much to avoid it.

But even over the next few decades, simply by factoring-in reasonable, even highly conservative, estimates of how much we can save by tackling social and environmental problems with proven solutions, the results are astonishing.

Despite the destructive economic events of the last two years and the fact that we're now, perhaps, no more than 86 months away from a new, more perilous phase of global warming, governments are preparing a return to business-as-usual.

The costs of doing so, we forecast, are huge.

Between 2010 and 2050 the cumulative cost of climate change would range from £1.6 trillion to £2.5 trillion ($2.6 trillion to $4.1 trillion).

And the cumulative cost of addressing social problems associated with high levels of inequality is £4.5 trillion.

The Great Transition tackles climate and inequality at the same time.

It puts the UK economy on a rapid decarbonisation diet that puts us on track to playing our fair part in an effective global deal.

These cuts will avoid between £0.4 trillion and £1.3 trillion in environmental costs.

Simultaneously, progressive redistribution toward Danish levels of equality, we calculate, could generate £7.35 trillion of social value.

What is saved and generated in terms of cost and income more than compensates for the drop in GDP that happens as we consume fewer resources.

Mending Britain

How will it happen? First we need to get a real picture of what is going on in the economy. That means having a proper set of accounts that include real environmental and social value.

If we do that, what looks like radical and expensive change turns out to be a new direction we cannot afford to miss.

This is what we call the "great revaluing" - ensuring that prices reflect true social and environmental costs.

Next, following on from the ground-breaking, comprehensive work of social epidemiologists Richard Wilkinson and Kate Picket, whose work demonstrates that more equal societies almost always do better - against a host of indicators ranging from crime to health to the environment - we propose a "great redistribution" to mend so-called "broken Britain".

In the face of recent, catastrophic market failures, the "great re-balancing" then sets out a new productive relationship between markets, society and the state.

It builds a more effective "ecology of finance" so that money and investment flows to where it is most needed - such as the low carbon transition of our energy, housing and transport systems.

A national Green Investment Bank, for example, with start-up funding from windfall taxes on fossil fuel company profits, could provide initial capital.

It's a big, bold plan that tears up business-as-usual.

The details can be argued over; but given the scale of the challenge, we believe that this is one time when we really can say "there is no alternative".

Chilling tale

All change is threatening. Change to new ways of living - even if familiar to people in other cultures and different generations - we find hard to imagine.

But failures of imagination can be fatal.

When Greenland was occupied by Icelandic and Scandinavian settlers in the early Middle Ages they soon made themselves at home with familiar customs and methods of food cultivation.

When the great chill bit deep in the 15th Century, instead of adapting by learning from the climate-adjusted indigenous people, who they dismissed as skraelings (wretches), they clung to what they knew, and died out.

Far from that grim scenario, today the great re-skilling of society to manage this transition could even break the zombie walk of consumer society and bring us alive again as individuals and communities.

The Great Transition is a tale of how it turned out right.

Andrew Simms is policy director of nef and a co-author of The Great Transition

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


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Deadlines loom for creating new economy to avoid climate catastrophe

WWF 19 Oct 09;

Gland, Switzerland - The world has just five years to initiate a low carbon industrial revolution before runaway climate change becomes almost inevitable. But the good news is that it can be done and that the long term benefits will be immense, according to a new analysis from WWF.

Climate Solutions 2 (CS2) is the first analysis to put timetables to the industrial transformations needed to limit global carbon emissions to below the 2˚C level scientists identify as presenting unacceptable risks of runaway climate change. It was prepared for WWF by Climate Risk, a company known for its work on climate change for global insurers and infrastructure providers.

The report found that beyond 2014 the feasible upper limits of industrial growth rates will make it impossible for market economies to meet the carbon targets required to keep global warming below 2°C. The report also found that market measures alone will not be enough to deliver emissions reductions on the scale required and that delays will increase the levels of direct intervention needed in the economy.

"Climate Solutions 2 tells us that we need to start making the change to a low-carbon economy today,” said Kim Carstensen, who leads WWF’s Global Climate Initiative. “The transformation will require sustained growth in clean and efficient industry in excess of 20 per cent a year over a period of decades.

“The report's modelling shows how we can sustain these growth rates but also makes it clear this will be the fastest industrial revolution witnessed in our history.

"The findings of this report offer a pragmatic, sobering and urgent warning to world leaders that the window of opportunity to act on climate change is rapidly closing. The time for playing politics with our future is long past."

The way forward, according to the report, is simultaneous action on all greenhouse gas emissions from all sectors, with market measures backed with a full range of other policies including energy efficiency standards, feed-in tariffs for renewable energy and an end to “perverse “ subsidies for fossil fuel use.

According to the report, countries not pursuing all carbon abatement options in all sectors will tend to develop least-cost industries first and only develop other low carbon industries as they become affordable.

Computer modelling and historical records agree that sequential development of industries, which would result from undue reliance on a single mechanism such as a rising carbon price, will make it impossible to meet emissions targets on time. Industries that come online later will have to grow considerably faster because of the delays in start-up and will be hit harder by constraints on available resources, labour and expertise.

"This analysis shows that we can win the fight against runaway climate change by transforming all sectors of our economies concurrently, by creating stable long-term investment environments that don't seek immediate returns and through focusing on key industry sectors,” said Dr Stephan Singer, who leads WWF’s Global Energy Initiative.

The industries that will lead the transformation are renewable energy generation, carbon capture and storage, energy efficiency, sustainable low-carbon agriculture and sustainable forestry. With the clean industrial revolution under way and sustained by a strong policy framework all renewable energies become competitive with fossil fuels between 2013 and 2025 – a highly conservative estimate based on just 2% annual rises in fossil fuel prices and no price on carbon.

"The wind, the sea and the sun will cost the same today, tomorrow and into the future, unlike coal,” said Singer. “They can be the basis for a cleaner world where energy supplies are more secure and where we have the best chance of preventing dramatic climate changes that could endanger our cities, our food supplies and the natural environment that we have always depended on."

Climate Solutions 2 calculates that the extra investment worldwide is expected to be US$17 trillion up to 2050 – or less than 15% of the funds currently managed by institutional investors. The returns on that investment are expected to flow back into investor’s pockets from 2027 and in some cases even earlier.

For renewable technologies, the cumulative investment to 2050 worldwide will total US$7 trillion, but it is expected generate returns to investors of around six times as much.

"Climate Solutions 2 draws a line in the sand that we cannot cross,” said Castensen. “It reinforces that we have reached a pivotal moment in our history where the window of opportunity which remains to prevent runaway climate change will soon disappear entirely.

“Most immediately and importantly, the basis for this transformation has to be laid in Copenhagen in December with a fair, binding and effective new global deal on climate change.”


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