Best of our wild blogs: 12 Nov 09


Dives in Singapore
from Psychedelic Nature

Supper Time
from singapore kelong

More massive construction at Sentosa until 2010
from wild shores of singapore and "Environmental Improvement Works" at Admiralty shore

Little Heron confronts a Banded Bullfrog
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Impact of sand extraction in Cambodia and Vietnam
from wild shores of singapore

Authentic, Homegrown Tourism: Creating a New “Merlion”?
from Tourism 2020

Experts Predict Great Barrier Reef Could Be World's First Gobal Ecosystem to Collapse from The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond


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Malaysia's mysterious ship city causes concern

Channel NewsAsia 12 Nov 09;

KUALA LUMPUR: Hundreds of ships mysteriously left idle off the Malaysian coast during the economic downturn are posing environmental and safety hazards, port authorities and fishermen say.

The ships are lying off the southeastern tip of southern Johor state which faces Singapore, positioned outside port limits to avoid charges and official scrutiny.

Some authorities said they believed the ships were waiting out the export slump that has deprived them of cargo, while others said they were being used to conduct illegal oil transfers.

"These vessels are not supposed to anchor there. This activity is considered illegal," Johor Port Authority assistant general manager Damon Nori Masood told AFP.

"All of these ships are off port limits, and some are just one metre away from the boundary line, making us unable to take action," he said, adding that the vessels are all believed to be foreign owned or flagged.

Damon Nori said the ships are anchored in a narrow strait known as the "traffic separation scheme" (TSS) – designed as a free passage area to allow authorities to control the movement of vessels in and out of the port.

The huge flotilla is illuminated at night, presenting the illusion of a floating city off the coast. Malaysian newspaper reports have said there are several hundred vessels now gathered there.

Fishermen from coastal villages have complained about seeping pollution which is threatening their livelihood, and Damon Nori said the idle ships pose a safety hazard for vessels attempting to enter the port.

"These ships are blocking the way of the vessels coming to our anchorage, because they need a bigger space when they turn into the anchorage but the TSS is just full of vessels, big or small," he said.

"This anchoring is very much disturbing the passage. The enforcement agency should clear up the area, as there are also concerns over oil spills causing environment issues," he added.

Azlan Mohamad, a fisherman in the area for the past two decades, said that some 300 to 400 ships were parked in the area, causing harm to the industry with oil spills and illegal cleaning of their tanks.

"The ships sit in our fishing area and make our fishing difficult. The ships also dump sludge at night to avoid detection," he told AFP.

"When we ask the ship not to throw anchor, they ignore us and often tell us to fish elsewhere. They are very arrogant," the 43-year-old told AFP.

"The anchored vessels have affected the income of some 3,000 fishermen. Our daily catch has fallen and the oil spills have made our lives more difficult as they damage our nets."

Port authorities declined to identify which agency they believe is responsible for dispersing the ships, and various maritime authorities contacted by AFP passed the buck or said they were unaware of the problem.

The New Straits Times this week quoted Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) officials as saying that eight tankers had been seized in recent days for offences including illegal tank cleaning.

"Some of the dilapidated ships that were left there for quite some time may have been used to cover the illegal oil transfer activities," MMEA's southern region head Che Hassan Jusoh reportedly said.

"Oil transfers or bunkering, where one ship transfers its cargo of oil to another while at sea, can only be done once these vessels have a domestic merchant shipping license for such activities," a Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency official told AFP.

The process is licensed because of the marine pollution that can occur if it is not done correctly and the transfers must take place in specially gazetted areas because of the danger of fire.

But senior marine police officials say they are mostly hamstrung by ambiguous laws and that there is "no black and white" legislation empowering them to clamp down.

However, an official from the marine department in the transport ministry disagreed.

"The law does not directly say anchoring (is illegal), but it falls under 'any other activities' in the section. Everybody in the maritime agencies knows this is illegal," said Fuad Naemoon.

Under the law, the owner, master or agent of an errant ship can be punished by up to two years in jail and a fine, according to Fuad, who heads the port and seafarer division in the southern region office that oversees Johor.

"The enforcement units should be pro-active," he said, pointing a finger at the marine police and MMEA.

"This has happened for almost two years and the number of ships there is increasing since the economic crisis. The government is suffering losses if these ships continue not to report (their presence) and are not paying dues."

He said the illegal anchoring has also caused submarine cable failures, which have resulted in disruption to telecommunication services for countries including Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia.

- AFP/so

Illegal oil deals in anchored fleet
The flotilla might have been used to camouflage illegal oil transfers along the coastline. -NST
By Syed Umar Ariff, New Straits Times 10 Nov 09 AsiaOne

JOHOR BARU - The recent seizure of several tankers off Pengerang, Kota Tinggi, may shed some light as to why there is a small flotilla of ships anchored there.

Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency southern region commander First Admiral Che Hassan Jusoh said the flotilla might have been used to camouflage illegal oil transfers along the coastline.

He said the MMEA had carried out investigations since early this year in the area, concerning the "gathering" of the ships as frontpaged by the New Straits Times recently.

"Some of the dilapidated ships that were left there for quite some time may have been used to cover the illegal oil transfer activities off Pengerang. We are also bringing them in for other offences as well," said Che Hassan yesterday.

On Saturday and Sunday, he said, eight vessels were detained by the MMEA for illegal oil transfer, illegal tank cleaning (which can only be done at docks to mitigate marine pollution), failing to announce entry in foreign waters and for not paying for a permit to anchor in local waters.

The first three ships were detained on Saturday. MT Rahmah 1 and MT Jet were found to have been involved in illegal oil transfer while MT Ktos II for failing to pay for the permit.

Che Hassan said all the ships were detained at 2.8 nautical miles south of Tanjung Setapa, Pengerang at 11.38am.

Initial investigations revealed that 303,000 litres of marine gas oil were found on Rahmah 1. Some 1,000 litres of it had been transferred to the MT Jet.

Rahmah 1 is registered in Panama and owned by an Indonesian shipping company, while Jet and Ktos II did not have any shipping documents.

"Checks revealed that there were 17 Indonesian crewmen on the three vessels. They are being detained to facilitate investigations."

The other five ships were detained on Sunday during an operation called Ops Perkasa Selatan. They were MT Suwito (registered in Jakarta, Indonesia); Her Chang (La Paz, Bolivia); MT Antago Power and MT Antago 5 (both San Lorenzo, Honduras); and, Eastern Hill, the crew of which did not possess any shipping documents.

Che Hassan said the Suwito was believed to have been conducting illegal tank cleaning activities while the others had failed to inform the authorities of their arrival in local waters.

He said the ships were located within a stone's throw of each other, 3.8 nautical miles southeast of Tanjung Setapa.


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Vietnam sand exporters hit by new laws

Vietnamnet.com 11 Nov 09;

VietNamNet Bridge – Sand exporters have complained to the Prime Minister after falling foul of new regulation.

In early November, sand batches were stuck at seaports after the Government told provinces on September 29 to stop exporting sand, construction gravel and materials for ground leveling. Meanwhile, many provinces had allowed companies to dredge passages for ships to shelter from storms and dredge some waterways and sell the sand as compensation.

These companies said that they had invested hundreds of billions of dong in these projects but were left facing a loss once the sand exporting ban came into practice.

According to Deputy PM Hoang Trung Hai’s document dated September 9, provinces and cities has to stop exporting sand, construction gravel and materials for ground leveling to curb rampant sand exploitation and export. The Ministry of Construction was asked to set up inspection groups and suggest solutions for sand export. However, this document doesn’t suggest banning the sale of licensed projects.

On September 30, the General Department of Customs instructed local customs agencies to stop fulfilling sand-exporting formalities leaving many sand batches stuck at ports.

Later, on October 7, the Construction Ministry issued a document, allowing the export of sand gained from passage dredging projects at estuaries and seaports, which were approved by competent agencies. However, they’re still having trouble getting past customs.

“We invested 300 billion dong to dredge the passages of the Dinh and Phan rivers. Now we are suddenly banned from sand export,” said Nguyen Van Dung, director of the Bao Thu Industrial Investment and Industry JS Company in Binh Thuan.

Director of the Tat Dai Thanh Company in the central province of Phu Yen, Nguyen Thi Mai Thanh, said that its 160 billion dong is “stuck” because they cannot export sand.

Le Xuan Ninh of the Cat Bien Trade and Service Company in Quang Binh province, said the company is losing billions of dong because they cannot export sand. It has had to pay warehouse fees and equipment leasing fees each day due to the slow customs clearance formalities.

Sand exploiters in Quang Tri, Phu Yen, Ninh Thuan and Ba Ria – Vung Tau also complained about the halt of sand export. Officials of coastal provinces like Nghe An, Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Thua Thien – Hue, Quang Nam, Quang Ngai, Binh Dinh, Phu Yen, Ninh Thuan, Binh Thuan and Ba Ria – Vung Tau have asked the government to allow business to continue exploiting sand for export.

These provinces said that sand dredged from estuaries has no local market. If this kind of sand is not exported, it will be thrown away to the sea. This will affect the sea ecological system and hinder ship traffic.

An official from the General Department of Customs told VNExpress online newspaper that sand exploitation was recently rampant, harming the environment and causing landslides. Meanwhile, the price for construction sand in the local market had risen and sand shortages were reported. Some countries in the region like Singapore and Cambodia stopped sand export. In Vietnam, the government decided temporarily stopping sand export for these regions. The General Department of Customs asked local bureaus to implement the Government’s decision.

The Construction Ministry permits exploitation and export of salty sand but the government’s decision is temporarily stopping export of sand of all kinds. The Finance Ministry told the General Department of Customs to temporarily halt sand exports.

This matter has been reported to the government and awaits a solution.

According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and the Ministry of Transport, the cost of dredging estuaries and passages at seaports is over 1.2 trillion dong annually, from the state budget.

The policy that allows enterprises to export sand in 2007-2009 has helped reduce the spending while local budgets benefit from export tax, natural resource tax and environmental protection tax.

This sand is not used in construction. It is exported, mainly to Singapore, to serve sea encroachment projects.

VietNamNet/VNE


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Dredging operations descend on Kampot, Cambodia

Vong Sokheng and Sebastian Strangio Phnom Penh Post 11 Nov 09;

Ly Yen, a 50-year-old Traey Koh fisherman, said the removal of the sand, which he said is intended for export to Singapore, had resulted in riverbank collapses.

SAND-DREDGING operations are on the rise in Kampot province, according to local fishermen, who say they are concerned about the possible environmental degradation and loss of livelihood stemming from the operations.

Villagers from Traey Koh commune, in Kampong Bay district, say that for the past two months, dredgers belonging to the local Keo Tha company have been plying the Kampot River between areas upstream of Kampot town and the ocean, unloading sand into large container ships moored offshore.

Neak Sen, a representative of 300 fishing families in Traey Koh commune, said 10 dredging boats – each with an estimated capacity of 500 cubic metres – were operating in the river, each extracting two loads per day.

“We are very concerned about our future livelihoods while the operation takes place offshore,” he said, estimating that it stood to impact around 1,000 people in Traey Koh and Chong Kreal communes.

Ly Yen, a 50-year-old Traey Koh fisherman, said the removal of the sand, which he said is intended for export to Singapore, had resulted in riverbank collapses.

“We are concerned about the collapse of the riverbank and declines in our fish and crab catches,” he said.

Hallam Goad, a Kampot-based adviser for housing rights group Sahmakum Teang Tnaut, said the company appears to have “ramped up” its operations in the past 10 days.

The Kampot operation appears to violate a ban on sand exports announced by Prime Minister Hun Sen in May and July this year, due to its adverse environmental effects.

Traey Koh commune chief Pov Son said Keo Tha, which was dredging before Hun Sen’s ban, was given an official dispensation to continue operations last month, “in order to relieve flooding in the town”.

Keo Tha is reputedly owned by a high-ranking official in the Ministry of Defence, said Try Chhoun, a provincial coordinator for local rights group Adhoc.

White gold

The situation in Kampot bears a striking resemblance to that in Koh Kong, where the Hong Kong-based Winton Enterprises, in partnership with the local LYP Group of companies, is extracting thousands of tonnes of sand per week from the province’s coastal estuaries, also for export to Singapore.

The operations have also provoked the ire of local fishermen, who held a series of protests last month demanding a halt to the dredging.

At the time, Pech Siyon, director of Koh Kong’s Department of Industry, Mines and Energy, told the Post that permission for the continuation of the Winton/LYP operation had also been granted to prevent flooding in the provincial town.

Mu Sochua, a Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker who represents Kampot, said she did not know the details of the operations there but said the CPP’s selective application of the ban was unsurprising.

She said monopoly concessions were granted to companies – especially those connected with powerful okhna, or tycoons – who funnelled a portion of their profits back to the party coffers. Such concessions, Mu Sochua said, often failed to take into account the environmental and social impacts.

“These people have depended on fishing for many generations. Pumping out the sand is extremely detrimental to their livelihoods,” she said.

Som Vichet, deputy director of the provincial Department of Industry, Energy and Mines, said he did not wish to discuss the issue over the phone.


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Construction of clean coal/biomass plant on Jurong Island begins

China Huaneng plant to draw new petrochemical investors
EDB says some have reserved land at Tembusu, but not started on projects
Ronnie Lim Business Times 12 Nov 09;

CHINA Huaneng Group's latest $2 billion clean coal/biomass cogeneration investment on Jurong Island - which is expected to shave 10 per cent off customers' utilities bills - will be a catalyst in helping to draw new petrochemical investors at the greenfield Tembusu sector.

The project will contribute significantly to the petrochemical island's integration strategy, 'especially as competitive utilities options are particularly critical to the energy and chemical industry, which is a large consumer of steam and power', said Economic Development Board (EDB) chairman Leo Yip at its groundbreaking yesterday.

While he did not specifically say so, the project should encourage chemical companies, which Mr Yip said, 'despite adopting a cautious approach during the recession, are continuing their project studies on new investments, in readiness for the upturn'.

A number of petrochemical investors have already reserved land at Tembusu, but have not started building their projects yet, according to Julian Ho, who heads a multiple portfolio including chemicals at the EDB, but he declined to name them.

Germany's Lanxess is, for instance, expected to start building its 400 million euro (S$832 million) synthetic rubber plant at Tembusu around mid-2011. Others in the wings include the Jurong Aromatics Corporation US$2 billion project and possibly Mitsui Chemicals.

Despite still-shaky economies, Cao Peixi, China Huaneng president and chairman of Huaneng Power International - which bought Tuas Power for $4.2 billion - said that the group was confident enough about the Singapore market to give the go-ahead to its Tembusu Multi-Utilities Complex (TMUC).

'Investing in Singapore is an important part of Huaneng's global strategy,' he said.

'We will leverage on our expertise and resources to support Tuas Power's growth and maintain its competitive advantage in the Singapore energy market . . . at the same time, we also hope that we will be able to contribute to Singapore's energy diversity and security.'

The TMUC project - which will use low-sulphur coal (80 per cent of the fuel mix) and palm shell kernels and wood waste (20 per cent) - will provide 160MW of electricity and about 1,000 tonnes of steam per hour when completed. It will also provide chilled water and treat industrial waste.

Because of the use of biomass, the plant's advanced technology such as special circulating fluidised boilers, and careful handling of the coal and coal ash, TMUC's emission levels will even be lower than some oil-fired power plants.

Furthermore, as each unit of electricity is produced at a lower cost, it will translate to cost savings of about 10 per cent of a customer's utilities bill compared with energy generated by a gas-fired plant, the company said.

Lim Kong Puay, Tuas Power president and CEO, said that while the original plan was to build the entire project at one go, it will now do so in tandem with customer demand. This will see the project being done in two phases, with part of the clean coal/biomass cogeneration plant ready by 2012, and the rest by 2014.

Financing for the $2 billion project will come from equity from the parent company, as well as from bank financing.

While the 2,670MW Tuas Power currently has a 24-25 per cent share of Singapore's electricity market, Mr Lim declined to give a figure on what its targeted share of the utilities market on Jurong Island will be, come 2014. 'The Jurong Island market is big enough for a new player,' he would only say.

'We see the standalone TMUC project as a long-term investment commitment, and as is (with China Huaneng's go-ahead), we are already seeing renewed interest coming from potential customers there.'

Construction of S$2b multi-utilities plant begins on Jurong Island
Ryan Huang, Channel NewsAsia 11 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE: Construction works have begun on the Tembusu Multi-Utilities Complex - a S$2 billion facility on Jurong Island for generating steam, chilled water, electricity and treating industrial waste.

The multi-utilities plant is expected to help develop Singapore's petrochemical sector, as well as bolster the country's energy security.

"As a utilities provider, it is important to put in the necessary infrastructure in place, and this will provide the impetus for new investors to invest in Jurong Island," said Lim Kong Puay, president & CEO, Tuas Power.

The move is in line with the nation's plans to develop the Tembusu area of Jurong Island as a new petrochemical sector over the next five years.

The new plant is expected to be about 10 per cent more cost-efficient than conventional ones due to synergies from producing the various utilities. One example is the simultaneous production of steam and electricity.

The facility will be completed in two phases, and will be partially ready by 2012. The rest of the complex will be ready by 2014.

The facility will be run by Tuas Power, which is a member of China Huaneng Group. It represents one of the most significant Chinese investments in Singapore and is expected to further enhance the island's position as a platform for firms to go international.

Leo Yip, chairman, Singapore Economic Development Board, said: "We welcome the opening of Tuas Power's Tembusu Multi-Utilities Complex to enhance the range of third party utilities options as well as competitiveness on Jurong Island.

"With Asia becoming an increasingly important consumer of energy and chemical products, Singapore is well positioned to be a strategic base for Chinese energy and chemical companies seeking to internationalise and access new markets to drive business opportunities."

- CNA/sc

Cheaper power for petrochem firms
Jonathan Kwok, Straits Times 11 Nov 09;

PETROCHEMICAL companies looking to set up processing plants at the Tembusu area of Jurong island can look forward to around 10 per cent of savings on their utility bills, with the construction of Tuas Power's $2 billion multi-utilities plant there.

The plant, with an initial opening planned for 2012, will supply steam, chilled water and electricity, which when co-produced, will lead to higher efficiency.

These cost savings will be passed on to customers through more competitive rates, which will be around 10 per cent lower when compared to energy from gas-fired plants, said Mr Lim Kong Puay, president and chief executive of Tuas Power, at the plant's official ground-breaking ceremony on Wednesday.

Tembusu is an as-yet-undeveloped area in the northwest of Jurong island that the Economic Development Board has earmarked for growing the petrolchemicals industry.

With a US$3 billion (S$4.17 billion) petrochemical cracker complex by Shell to be completed on Pulau Bukom by the first quarter of next year, Mr Julian Ho, executive director of energy, chemicals and engineering services at EDB, expects interest from downstream companies to set up processing facilities at Tembusu.


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From Singapore to the world: an urban strategy that sells

New programme with World Bank to take urbanisation expertise and investments to growing cities
Oh Boon Ping, Business Times 12 Nov 09;

(SINGAPORE) The base is Singapore. The first projects are cities in Mongolia, China and Vietnam. And there's money to be made for investors and a whole new world of amenities in store for the developing world.

A new global urban strategy has been officially launched in Singapore, with three projects in the pipeline.

A joint initiative with the World Bank, the strategy builds on Singapore's extensive city management and public-private partnership (PPP) experience to help developing countries as they take advantage of the economic opportunities associated with rapid urbanisation.

Under the programme, participants will receive help with planning, preparation and management of cities that are environmentally sustainable.

The World Bank will also pursue 'wholesaling' strategies to target an expanding number of cities by working with financial intermediaries and municipal funds for assistance to local governments.

'Urbanisation is a vital phase of development and, if managed well, it can be a key driver of long-term economic growth in a country,' said World Bank chief Robert Zoellick.

'That's why it is so important for the global community to help developing countries address the urbanisation challenge. It is fitting to launch our Urban Strategy in Singapore, a world-recognised leader in urban planning.'

Private sector investment in Asia has been on the decline since the 1997 Asian crisis and new engines need to be found, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said at a summit yesterday.

Except for China, investment as a share of GDP in emerging Asia fell about 10 percentage points following the 1997 crisis and has remained essentially unchanged over the past five years.

'Asian investments have not kept pace with the growth of exports and corporate profits,' said Mr Tharman.

'Investing in Asian infrastructure is not a silver bullet for curing current account imbalances, but it comes close.

'Current estimates of the gaps in infrastructural investment vary, but they are all large. In a recent study, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) estimated that Asia needs to spend about US$8 trillion over the next 10 years - to build and maintain new power, transport, water and sanitation and telecommunications infrastructure.'

Based on some estimates, cities are projected to expand by another two billion people in the next two decades, while 90 per cent of urban population growth is expected to occur in the developing world.

The programme's maiden projects will be undertaken by the Singapore Cooperation Enterprise (SCE), the World Bank, the governments of Mongolia and Vietnam, and the municipal government of Chongqing to assist in developing a regulatory and financing framework to prepare public-private partnership (PPP) projects for private sector investment.

The cooperation will focus on developing commercially viable infrastructure projects in water and environmental management, power, expressways and roads.

The World Bank and SCE will also jointly organise workshops to share Singapore's public and private sector expertise, experiences and best practices in structuring PPP infrastructure projects.

It is expected that these projects will lead to collaboration on other projects with the respective countries, which in turn open up opportunities for Singapore's private sector players to assist the countries as investors and advisers.

'As a city-state, Singapore has learned many lessons in urban management, often after years of experimentation,' Mr Tharman said.

'This is an exciting partnership with the World Bank, which will allow us to share what we have learned with others at a time of massive urbanisation in Asia.'

Separately, the Government of Singapore Investment Corp (GIC), manager of more than US$100 billion of the city-state's foreign reserves, will make more direct investments in infrastructure assets, Teh Kok Peng, president of GIC Special Investments, said yesterday.

He said direct investment in infrastructure is more attractive than through funds because it offers higher returns.

World Bank launches new Urban and Local Government Strategy
Yasmine Yahya, Channel NewsAsia 11 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE: The World Bank on Wednesday launched a new Urban and Local Government Strategy in Singapore to help developing countries manage their urban growth.

The strategy offers a number of tools to do this, such as an Urbanization Review that allows countries to examine demographic trends, impacts on land and housing affordability and other key urban planning criteria.

There is also an ECO Cities Programme, which can help countries audit the status of their urbanisation progress, and analyse what steps to take next.

The World Bank also announced that its Urban Hub has taken on its first three projects, where it will provide advisory services and capacity-building training to China, Southern Mongolia and Vietnam.

The Urban Hub, based in Singapore, is a research centre for urban solutions. The hub aims to leverage on Singapore's expertise in urban development and the World Bank's own global development knowledge and operational experience to benefit developing countries worldwide.

Among the projects that were taken on, the Urban Hub will provide advisory services to China's Congqing Expressway Group to help them structure a transaction to sell toll-roads to international investors.

It will be involved in capacity-building in Southern Mongolia to develop mining infrastructure, and it will also advise Vietnam on the development of a financing framework for public-private partnership.

- CNA/yb

Roads and rail as engines of growth
Asia has to invest much more in such projects, says Tharman
Fiona Chan, Straits Times 12 Nov 09;

ASIA needs to invest much more heavily in infrastructure projects such as roads and rail, and the private sector in particular should chip in, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said yesterday.

By doing so, Asian economies can spur growth and reduce global savings and investment imbalances, he said at the inaugural World Bank-Singapore Infrastructure Finance Summit here.

Developed countries like the United States have been overspending, while developing ones in Asia have not been spending or investing enough - a situation that was a major contributor to the recent financial crisis.

Now that US consumers are cutting back on spending, Asia will have to drive its own growth by ramping up consumption and investment, especially in infrastructure, he said in his opening address.

Infrastructure refers to the building blocks of economic development. It includes basic utilities like water supply, power grids and telecommunications, as well as transport links like roads and railways, which enable a city to do business.

'Investing in Asian infrastructure is not a silver bullet for curing current account imbalances, but it comes close,' he said.

In fact, this is where Asia's under-investment is most pronounced despite the promise that new investments in this sector will bring the highest social and economic returns, said Mr Tharman.

Investing to remove infrastructure bottlenecks will improve connectivity, reduce the cost of transactions, grow markets and enhance foreign trade, he noted.

It will also contribute directly to improving the lives of Asia's citizens by making health care, modern sanitation and electricity available to them.

A recent Asian Development Bank study found that Asia needs to spend an estimated US$8 trillion (S$11.1 trillion) over the next 10 years to build and maintain projects such as power, water, transport, telecommunications and sanitation, said Mr Tharman.

But governments in the region cannot do it on their own, he added. This is where the private sector comes in. It now accounts for just 20 per cent of infrastructural investments in Asia.

Asian governments have been trying to develop Public-Private Partnerships (PPP), in which private companies can finance, develop and operate infrastructure projects for the public sector in exchange for fees, he said.

But following the financial crisis, many projects have been delayed or withdrawn as funding costs have risen.

Efforts were advanced at yesterday's summit, with the Singapore Cooperation Enterprise and World Bank signing Memorandums of Understanding with Mongolia, Vietnam and China's Chongqing city to embark on PPP infrastructure projects.

These involve giving advisory services to the Chongqing Expressway Group Company on how to sell toll roads to world investors, helping South Mongolia to develop mining infrastructure and advising Vietnam on a financing framework for PPPs.

These memorandums mark a milestone in the World Bank-Singapore Urban Hub initiative, launched in June to help developing countries with urban development solutions.

Yesterday's summit was held under the auspices of the Urban Hub, and is planned as an annual event hosted by Singapore and the World Bank.

The summit aims to bring together policymakers, industry leaders and businesses to discuss infrastructure financing and urban development solutions.

Innovative financing for urban strategy: Zoellick
World Bank chief tells BT about a vision that will change cities
Vikram Khanna, Business Times 12 Nov 09;

(SINGAPORE) The accelerating pace of urbanisation, its special challenges and the huge appetite for urban projects was what prompted the World Bank to launch an urban strategy, according to Bank president Robert Zoellick.

The World Bank officially launched the strategy yesterday at the inaugural Infrastructure Finance Summit, which was organised by the World Bank Group, Singapore's Ministry of Finance and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), in association with Financial Times (FT).

Mr Zoellick, who served as US trade representative from 2001 to 2005, was later vice-chairman of Goldman Sachs before taking over the helm of the World Bank in July 2007.

In a wide-ranging interview with BT, he spelt out the key elements of the Bank's urban strategy and how it hopes to leverage the expertise of Singapore, as well as innovative financing mechanisms. He also discussed the challenges of protectionism and the World Bank's approach to climate change issues.

'For the first time in history, more than half of all people live in urban areas,' said Mr Zoellick. 'And two billion more people will move into urban areas over the next 20 years.'

He added that about 90 per cent of urbanisation is taking place in the developing world - and the pace is scorching: 'Today, we're seeing urbanisation taking just a decade when it might have taken 100 years in Europe or North America.'

Mr Zoellick pointed out that urbanisation poses special challenges. Cities have to develop appropriate infrastructure that takes into account energy, environmental as well as spatial concerns.

He said that the Bank is seeking to tap the expertise of Singapore - for example, in areas such as water systems, zoning regulation and user charges for infrastructure, and share it with other countries.

'There's a huge appetite for this,' he said. 'Whether it's China, India, Indonesia, all around the world. And the question is not only how to manage urbanisation to avoid some of its costs, but also how to make it a tool of growth. Because there is no developed country that hasn't gone through an urbanisation process.'

Financing also poses special challenges, said Mr Zoellick. He noted that while most Asian countries now have the fiscal space to spend on infrastructure, they are finding it hard to raise financing. Moreover, infrastructure is usually driven by engineers in public works departments, who don't focus on financing issues.

'One challenge is how to interconnect government money, private money and multilateral development bank funds,' he said, adding that the Bank will also focus on linking infrastructure development with capital markets. 'The region's finance and capital markets are underdeveloped, especially in local currencies. So there's a need to develop bond markets, equity markets and, eventually, the ability to sell infrastructure assets to a broad investor class.'

Mr Zoellick revealed that the World Bank Group will soon establish an asset management company managed by its private sector arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), which will launch a US$500 million-US$1 billion fund.

'It looks like we're going to get some funding from sovereign wealth funds and pension funds to make long-term investments, mainly in Africa and Latin America,' he said. 'This changes the Bank's financing model from just issuing debt or making loans or investments, to being a financial intermediary of new sources of capital.'

On trade issues - a key focus of Apec - Mr Zoellick said that protectionism 'is always a worry' at times of high unemployment, such as now, when it is running at around 10 per cent in the US. But he added that, so far, protectionist actions, while large in number, have been relatively minor. 'So I would call it a low- grade fever, not influenza. But we shouldn't take anything for granted.'

Mr Zoellick pointed out that in dealing with protectionism, the World Bank's first line of defence is to work with the World Trade Organization (WTO) to identify the actions countries are taking - 'to name and shame, as appropriate'.

But he also called for an 'offensive agenda' to take trade liberalisation forward. 'The starting point for that would be to complete the Doha Round,' he said, referring to the multilateral trade negotiations under the auspices of the WTO. 'I was a trade minister for four years. I believe that there's a deal on the table,' he added. 'It would make some significant openings in agriculture and manufactured goods.'

But the reasons for completing the Doha Round go well beyond market opening and raising confidence, according to Mr Zoellick.

'The Doha Round reflects the trade agenda as at the late 1990s - it's been 10 years,' he said. 'We're going to have to deal with some other issues, like how to improve the services trade, which has become extremely important for a lot of economies.

' We also have to ensure that environmental and trade issues are not in conflict . . . So the world needs to keep the trade agenda current, and relevant to the challenges of the world economy.'

Mr Zoellick said that the World Bank is active in climate change-related issues, including providing financing to enable countries to switch to more efficient forms of energy. Here too, it is exploring innovative financing methods, such as carbon credits. However, funding for clean technologies and development go together in project funding, he said. 'You can't look at climate change financing as a separate box.'

He acknowledged, however, that some developing countries, such as India, were concerned that funding for climate change should not come at the expense of funding for development. 'We need to show how we can make the whole greater than the sum of its parts,' he said.

Finally, on his vision for the World Bank, Mr Zoellick said the ultimate goal is 'the modernisation of multilateralism'. He wants the Bank to be 'a true multilateral global institution, that draws countries together in a partnership'.

For example, it wants to work as a partner with countries like Brazil, China and India 'not only to help them, but to use their knowledge to help some of the poorest countries'.

'And we want the donors, the developed countries, to feel that there is a system that doesn't just take from them, but from which they will also benefit - for example, by countries creating multiple poles of growth and assuming responsibilities.'

Internally at the Bank, Mr Zoellick said: 'We have to see ourselves as problem solvers, not just analysts of problems. We have to emphasise the role of the private sector more and we have to constantly challenge ourselves to improve results and effectiveness.'

The Bank must constantly interconnect three things, he added. 'One is cutting-edge knowledge and learning. Second is to make sure that our investments promote markets, institutions and capacities. So even if we're doing US$60-70 billion in activity a year, that's a drop in the bucket in international finance. But if we can in the process help develop carbon markets, microfinance markets, local currency bond markets, the effect will be much greater. And third, we want to be more innovative with financial tools.

'We, as an institution, have to maintain a spirit of dynamism, alertness and anticipation of what's happening in the marketplace.'

9 Singapore govt agencies tapped for Urban Hub
Bigger role seen for S'pore in growth of developing countries
Arthur Sim, Business Times 13 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE is expected to play a bigger role in the growth of developing countries in Asia through the new World Bank-Singapore Urban Hub.

Speaking on the sidelines of the global launch of the World Bank Urban Strategy yesterday, Kamran Khan, head of the World Bank Office Singapore (East Asia Infrastructure Finance Practice Group) said: 'We are working with at least nine Singapore government agencies. The idea is that we get Singapore involved in World Bank operations so Singapore's expertise can be exported to developing countries.'

While the World Bank's team here will grow, it is not expected to be big, Mr Khan said: 'It's not about moving World Bank operations to Singapore - because that would defeat the purpose of taking advantage of what Singapore has to offer.'

Mr Khan, who also moderated a panel discussion on the financing of regional government infrastructure initiatives, said many such projects face roadblocks, bogged down by inefficient public-private partnerships.

Speaking to The Business Times, he said Singapore offers 'a very strong and effective model' on how to make the public sector efficient.

'The public entities in Singapore are one of the most efficient in the world,' he said. 'They are professional and act almost like the private sector, but they protect the interest of the public sector, which is a very unique thing.'

He also singled out Singapore's capabilities in strategic planning and sequencing of investments, adding: 'These are incredibly difficult things for governments to do.'

Mr Khan emphasised Singapore's role in the Urban Hub project by saying: 'The hub is about doing projects in developing countries with Singapore's assistance. It is not about building Singapore. It is about expanding Singapore's influence and knowledge across the region.'

John Roome, director of sustainable development (East Asia and Pacific Region) at the World Bank, cited public housing, water management and public administration as areas the World Bank is keen to adopt in its urban strategies.

'In the analysis of how to create an economically and environmentally sustainable city, there are quite a lot of lessons that are taken from Singapore,' he said.

Mr Roome, who also spoke at the global launch of the World Bank Urban Strategy yesterday, said: 'When we think of our financial intervention, we will think about how it can be leveraged.' And it intends to 'think more holistically'.

The new Urban Strategy will focus on the core elements of the city system - management, finance and governance.

It also aims to help cities and national governments address urban poverty by expanding policy-based intervention and scaling up services for the poor.

The Urban Strategy supports city economies as engines of growth and outlines a range of strategies to drive this growth. In addition, it aims to encourage progressive urban land and housing markets, and promote a safe and sustainable urban environment.


Read more!

First public housing project along Punggol Waterway to have eco-friendly features

Maggie Chong/Dylan Loh, Channel NewsAsia 11 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE: Singapore's first public housing project along the Punggol Waterway will have eco-friendly features and resort-like designs.
The 1,200-unit waterfront project will be launched in the middle of next year.

The firm behind the winning design is a partnership between international architectural firm Group8asia and local design company Aedas.

They stole the crown with a distinctive sky terrace concept which creates public spaces along the waterway.

More than 100 design firms from Europe and Asia took part in the Punggol Waterfront Housing Design Competition.

They had to submit plans that matched the housing board's theme of "Green Living by the Waters".

HDB said the waterfront flats will be kept affordable.

National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said: "New HDB estates look like private condominiums, but don't cost as much as private condominiums.

"New innovative construction methods like pre-fabrication reduces cost and construction time. And that's one of the reasons why we are able to keep the cost of construction down." - CNA/vm

Resort-style design for waterfront flats
Punggol housing project to feature flats with roof gardens and sky terraces
Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 12 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE'S first waterfront public housing project in Punggol will offer 1,200 flats featuring sky terraces, roof gardens and panoramic views of the Punggol Waterway.

The Housing Board (HDB) yesterday unveiled the winning design for the first batch of flats that will line the 4.2km waterway. They will be launched for sale by the middle of next year.

The 4.9ha project's unique design will feature blocks of flats that will 'step down' towards the water like terraces, and have solar panels on their rooftops to supply power to common areas.

National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said the winning design 'offers a new lifestyle option for Punggol residents'.

'Its distinctive sky terrace concept will create quality public spaces along the waterway for the community, keeping the kampung spirit alive,' said Mr Mah, who announced the winning team behind the design at the HDB's annual awards held at HDB Hub yesterday.

International architectural firm Group8asia and local firm Aedas clinched the top prize for their refreshing, resort-style design, which was inspired by Asia's rice fields and dense rainforests, said Group8asia's principal architect, Mr Manuel Der Hagopian.

'Singapore has a close relationship with water and we wanted to design something that reflected that,' said Mr Hagopian, who is Swiss and has 10 years of industry experience.

The project's design enables a high percentage of flats to have views of the waterway, and allows for many green, open spaces such as open courtyards and sky gardens - all leading to the water.

Mr Hagopian incorporated high Swiss standards of sustainability in the project, maximising natural light and ventilation. The project will aim to achieve the highest green building award, he said.

The naming of the winning design brings to a close the Punggol Waterfront Housing Design Competition that the HDB launched in December last year.

The two-stage design competition, which attracted 108 entries with a good mix of local and foreign firms, had a theme of Green Living By The Waters.

Surbana International Consultants, B4FS Arquitectos and RSP Architects received merit awards for their designs.

HDB deputy director (physical planning) Chong Fook Loong said the board wanted to seek innovative ideas on how to get the best value out of the waterway.

The new housing project and the upcoming Punggol Waterway and Promenade are part of the 'Punggol 21-plus' vision unveiled by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in his National Day Rally speech in 2007.

By 2011, there will be 23,000 completed homes in Punggol, said HDB.

The Government aims to build an extra 21,000 homes along the waterway - 60 per cent HDB flats and 40 per cent private ones.

HDB hopes to offer the first batch of waterfront flats for sale next year, and residents are expected to get their flats by 2014 or 2015.

Mr Mah also presented 12 awards to seven winners in the categories of construction safety, quality and design.

He recognised the contribution by industry partners towards Singapore's successful public housing programme.

'But, success brings with it a new set of challenges, one of which is meeting the rising expectations of Singaporeans for quality public housing,' he said.

This is why HDB and its partners should continue to keep abreast of technological improvements and innovation to make HDB flats and estates even better, said Mr Mah.

Among the winners were China Construction and Surbana International, which won multiple awards.

HDB award winners

Construction Safety Award
# China Construction (South Pacific) Development (Building)
# Thong Huat Brothers (Main upgrading)

Design Award
# Surbana International Consultants (Three awards for new housing, two for main upgrading)

Quality Award
# China Construction (South Pacific) Development
# Kian Hiap Construction
# Kienta Engineering Construction
# Sim Lian Construction
# United Premas

Living the green life in the north-east
Today Online 12 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE - This is how you can live - in an eco-friendly way - along the waterfront in the north-east of Singapore.

Residents can look forward to resort-style housing, which will set the benchmark for the rest of the developments along the 4.2-km waterway.

Architecture firm Group8asia, in partnership with Aedas, were declared winners yesterday in the Punggol Waterfront Housing Design Competition.

Announcing this at an HDB awards ceremony, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said the distinctive sky terrace concept will create quality public spaces along the waterway for the community, to keep the "kampung spirit" alive.

Mr Mah also said the construction cost, as well as its maintenance, will be within the benchmarks set for public housing.

The winner was picked through a two-stage competition, which tapped on the private sector's expertise to generate exciting housing design forms to realise the theme of "Green Living by the Waters".

The development, comprising 1,200 units, is scheduled for launch in the middle of next year.


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SMEs can 'seize the green space'

Alicia Wong Today Online 11 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE - As Singapore works with developing nations, can it seize the "obvious opportunity" to be a leader in the "green space" as well?

Many guests from overseas come here asking for green solutions by local firms, noted Singapore Business Federation chief executive Theng Teng Dar, who was at the Economic Strategies Committee industry forum.

One example he cited was a small and medium enterprise that uses a unique technology to reduce carbon emissions from traditional power plants in China.

Mr Theng warned against missing this "obvious opportunity" because the "Singapore brand fits very well into this green space".

"(With the) infrastructure and various know-how in Singapore, there's a lot of opportunity for enabling environment-friendly growth in the region," said Mr Santosh Madugula, the founder of the Institute of Corporate Professionals.

The Singapore brand is "very much wanted", according to another participant who said his experience with the Indian Government revealed a "demand for Singapore quality and expertise". "How do we gear up, with Government help, to leverage on tier two and three cities?" he asked, referring to cities in countries like China and India that are smaller than metropolises such as Beijing and Mumbai.

Labour movement chief Lim Swee Say, who was a panelist, noted that even as China urbanises, Chinese companies see Singapore as a "solution partner, and not a competitor".

"If we're good enough, we can think of (other countries') urbanisation as an opportunity for the Singapore economy," he pointed out. For instance, Singapore could be a "platform for innovation (and) come up with future solutions today" for roll-out to other cities.


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China to loan two pandas to Singapore for 10-year period

Asha Popatlal, Channel NewsAsia 11 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE : China will also be loaning two baby pandas to Singapore for a 10-year period, as part of a collaboration between the China Wildlife Conservation Association and Wildlife Reserves Singapore to mark the 20th anniversary of Sino-Singapore relations.

According to Wildlife Reserves, Singapore will be the 7th country to get these animals on loan - after the US, Japan, Austria, Australia, Spain and Thailand.

There are only 1,600 pandas in the world, of which 268 are in captivity, with only 30 of these outside China.

But Singaporeans won't get to see these bears soon.

They will arrive in the second half of 2011, but they will have to be quarantined for a month, and there will be a further 5 months of acclimatisation.

The baby pandas will be housed in the zoo's new attraction, the River Safari, and visitors will probably get their first glimpse of them in the first quarter of 2012.

The pandas will be located in a special area to be constructed - a 1,600 sq-metre climate-controlled enclosure that is fully air-conditioned with temperature set between 18 and 22 degrees Celsius and humidity controlled at 50-60 per cent all year round.

Ambient conditions will be adjusted to simulate the 4 seasons similar to their natural habitat.

Since the pandas' diet consists mainly of bamboo - they consume some 20 kg a day - the zoo will be planting 8,000 sq metres of bamboo plantation to cater for this.

Property firm CapitaLand will be adopting the pandas with what it called a significant donation over the 10-year period.

This is not the first time Singaporeans will see pandas here. The city-state had a pair on loan for 100 days in 1990. - CNA /ls

China sending two pandas to Singapore
Furry 'envoys' - a symbol of close friendship - to arrive in 2011
Peh Shing Huei, Straits Times 12 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE is getting a pair of black and white furry envoys from China to mark the milestone of 20 years of diplomatic relations.

Visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao announced yesterday at an Istana state banquet that a pair of giant pandas will be delivered to Singapore, as he expressed confidence that Singapore-Sino relations will reach 'a new high'.

The endangered creatures, which China rarely sends overseas, will arrive here in 2011 and Chinese diplomacy experts believe it is a sign of deepening friendship between the two nations.

'It reflects the importance of Singapore in China's foreign policy. Beijing does not send out pandas lightly,' said international relations analyst Shi Yinhong of Renmin University.

Singapore joins an exclusive club of overseas panda hosts, becoming only the seventh country since 1994 to receive the black and white creatures from China.

The pair of pandas, a one-year-old female and a two-year-old male, are from the Wolong panda reserve in China's south-western Sichuan province.

After a period of acclimatisation in Singapore, they will be unveiled to the public as the resident stars of the new $140 million River Safari, slated to open in 2012. The furry creatures will be here for a joint research on pandas and will stay for 10 years.

'The presence of giant pandas in Singapore would deeply capture the hearts of Singaporeans across all walks of life,' said the Singapore Foreign Ministry in a statement yesterday.

'They would also be a fitting symbol of the close friendship and strong ties between Singapore and China as we celebrate 20 years of diplomatic relations next year.'

President SR Nathan, who hosted the five-course banquet in honour of Mr Hu and his wife, hailed the anniversary as 'the cusp of a new chapter' in bilateral relations.

'Singapore remains committed to being a close partner in China's developmental process. Our two flagship projects - the Suzhou Industrial Park and the Tianjin Eco-city - symbolise the close ties and deep mutual understanding between Singapore and China,' said Mr Nathan, in a dinner attended by several Singapore Cabinet ministers, including Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong.

Mr Nathan added that Mr Hu's three-day state visit - his first since he assumed the presidency in 2003 - is a significant milestone in ties between the two countries.

After congratulating Mr Hu on the impressive parade at the Tiananmen Square on Oct 1 during China's 60th National Day, Mr Nathan assured the Chinese leader that Singapore wants an economically vibrant and successful China, playing a role in the region along with other major powers.

'Singapore wants China to continue to grow and succeed in all its endeavours. We also believe China's continued engagement with Asia will progress with shared understanding and consensus among the nations of Asia,' he said.

Mr Hu, who arrived here yesterday after a state visit in Malaysia, said that he was 'deeply impressed' with the new developments in Singapore since his last visit in 2002.

'With a government known for its efficiency, pragmatism and enterprising spirit, and a people hard-working, talented and constantly striving for improvements, you have made remarkable achievements in building a modern country that enjoys political stability, economic prosperity and social harmony,' he said, after reviewing the Guard of Honour at the Istana.

Mr Hu also met President Nathan and Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew for talks yesterday, with the Chinese leader praising Mr Lee as the founder of Sino-Singapore relations. Their meeting stretched half an hour longer than its scheduled 45 minutes.

Mr Hu will meet Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and SM Goh today, before giving an address at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation CEO summit tomorrow and joining a politically star-studded ensemble of Apec leaders at Suntec City and the Istana this weekend.

For now, though, the buzz is all about the black and white cuddly ambassadors from China. 'I think the pandas will be great attractions, especially for families because kids will love them,' said auditor Jasmine Koh, 23.

'This is really exciting news. I can't wait to see them.'

Additional reporting by Lin Zhaowei

Panda envoys meant for select few
China's diplomatic gift always signals close ties with receiving nation
Peh Shing Huei, Straits Times 12 Nov 09;

THEY are cute, cuddly - and China's ultimate diplomatic weapons.

While some countries send birds, dogs or even oxen to nations in the name of friendship, none can match the pandas that China ships out.

Pandas are natural ambassadors of goodwill with their iconic black eye patches, jolly expression and roly-poly gait.

As national treasures of China, they are the most tangible sign of close ties between Beijing and the receiving country.

'They are for the countries which not only enjoy very good relations with China, but are also important to us,' said analyst Shi Yinhong from Beijing's Renmin University. 'We don't have that many to give around the world.'

Their rarity - there are only about 1,800 of them - lends an element of exclusivity to their presence at home and when they are dispatched abroad.

Just seven nations have received Chinese pandas since 1994, with Singapore being the latest, after the United States, Japan, Australia, Thailand, Spain and Austria. Taiwan also received a pair - Tuan Tuan and Yuan Yuan - last year, as a reflection of and a means of encouraging warming cross-strait ties.

The panda's diplomatic role has a long history: In the 7th century, Chinese Empress Wu Zetian was said to have given two to the Japanese court.

The Chinese Communist Party revived the practice in modern times, and 'panda diplomacy' gained international fame when Hsing Hsing and Ling Ling were dispatched to the United States in 1972, following then-President Richard Nixon's historic visit to China.

'If you look at China giving out pandas, they do it on very critical occasions,' said international relations observer Li Mingjiang from the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies. 'When they gave it to the US, it was when Sino-US ties were moving towards a much warmer stage. It was the same when the mainland gave two to Taiwan last year.'

Same with Japan: it received two pandas last year as relations improved after years of friction during Mr Junichiro Koizumi's term as prime minister.

In Singapore's case, Chinese President Hu Jintao announced that the dispatch of the furry envoys was to mark the 20th anniversary of diplomatic ties next year.

In Prof Shi's view, bilateral ties are already good, so the sending of pandas to Singapore suggests a strong message from Beijing that it would like to take its relations with Singapore to the next level.

'It has more to do with the close relations between Singapore and China, especially since China embarked on its reform policy in 1978. Singapore rendered China a lot of help in its economic policy, and Deng Xiaoping and Lee Kuan Yew enjoyed a special personal relationship,' he added. 'In some way, this is China's way of saying thanks.'

Given that the panda is an endangered species, whatever the message it is intended to convey, a decision on Beijing's part to send them abroad is never taken lightly. There are only about 30 pandas outside of China and despite their cuddly appearance, pandas are poor breeders.

As a result, international environmental groups have raised concern in the past about the creatures being loaned commercially. Now if they are sent out at all, it is for the purpose of scientific research.

While serious research continues - not least how to raise panda birth rates - there is no denying the star power and rapturous welcome given these black-and-white Chinese ambassadors.

'Nixon being presented with pandas in 1972 set off a 'pandamonium' in the United States that the Chinese greatly profited from, both psychologically and materially,' veteran China watcher June Teufel Dreyer of the University of Miami noted.

Australia is projecting one million visitors a year at its Adelaide Zoo - a 70 per cent surge - when its pandas arrive at the end of this month. Zoo tickets for the first few months have to be pre-purchased.

For China, the panda is an ace in its efforts to project 'soft power'. What better way to win hearts than a 100kg bundle of warm, fuzzy fur.

TAKING TIES TO A NEW HIGH

'China and Singapore enjoy geographical proximity, friendly sentiments and a shared language, and the foundation of the friendship between our two peoples is strong. Since the establishment of diplomatic relations, we have advanced our cooperation in all areas by bringing into play our respective strengths... As next year marks the 20th anniversary of our diplomatic ties, we are prepared to send a pair of pandas to Singapore for joint research. I am convinced that, with the concerted efforts from both sides, China-Singapore relations will reach a new high.'

Chinese President Hu Jintao

AN ONGOING SUCCESS STORY

'Relations between Singapore and China are excellent. This is in part due to the close personal relationships between us and our ministers...but more importantly, in our joint efforts in enhancing mutual cooperation in various areas...This strong relationship between Singapore and China is an ongoing success story. We are on the cusp of a new chapter as we celebrate the forthcoming 20th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between our two countries next year. I am confident that we will build upon the strong foundation of our excellent relationship and foster Singapore-China relations to continue to grow and flourish in the years to come.'

Singapore President S R Nathan

Singapore rolling out red carpet for very special guests
Lim Wei Chean, Straits Times 12 Nov 09;

IF YOU are impressed with preparations for visiting dignitaries this week, then you will be floored by the red carpet being rolled out for two very special VIPs - Very Important Pandas.

The pandas do not hit town until late 2011. But much work has to be done ahead of their arrival in Singapore, as part of a 10-year collaboration with the China Wildlife Conservation Association.

Their staple diet - bamboo - has to be planted, the posh climate-controlled enclosure built and the keepers trained. A team of experts from China will come over to provide guidance.

The aim is help conserve the endangered species, raise awareness, and to start a breeding and research programme.

A key step will be taken today when Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Chinese President Hu Jintao witness the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding for the project.

Ms Fanny Lai, chief executive of Wildlife Reserves Singapore, said the pandas will be the star attractions in the new US$140 million (S$194 million) River Safari facility that will open in 2012. 'We are very excited about this,' she said. 'It is the dream of every zoo in the world to be able to work with the giant pandas.'

The one-year-old female and two-year-old male have been bred in captivity at the Wolong panda reserve in China's Sichuan province. They will undergo one month of quarantine in Singapore and will need another five months to acclimatise to their new surroundings before they make their public debut in 2012.

Home will be a spacious 1,600 sq m enclosure. It will simulate the four seasons the pandas are used to, with air-conditioning set at between 18 deg C and 22 deg C and humidity at 50 per cent to 60 per cent. The park is also planting different species of bamboo to meet their dietary requirement of about 20kg of the grass a day.

The pandas will be named after they arrive, but Ms Lai said they have yet to work out how it will be done. She added that while the programme was for 10 years, it could be extended. She declined to say how much it will cost to maintain the pandas, but it takes about $1 million a year to upkeep an animal exhibit zone in the Singapore Zoo. CapitaLand has signed on as a corporate sponsor for an undisclosed sum.

Cuddly pandas are a huge draw for any zoo, but their presence in Singapore has a serious side for Ms Lai - initiating a successful breeding programme.

There are about 1,800 pandas in the world, including 268 in captivity. The 30 that are in zoos outside China have produced 12 babies, and Ms Lai hopes Singapore can add to the number. The bears coming here have twin siblings, which will increase their chances of reproduction.

Giant pandas, which are found only in China, are threatened by loss of habitat, poaching and a low birth rate. Females in the wild normally have a cub once every two to three years. Any offspring will be returned to China, which considers pandas a national treasure.

It is not the first time that Singapore has hosted pandas. In 1990, a pair, An-An and Xin-Xing, were here for 100 days. In 1988, Jiao Jiao the performing panda visited with the Shanghai Acrobatic Troupe.

China sends two furry friends
Today Online 12 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE - Two China baby pandas will be doing their bit to promote Sino-Singapore friendship.

To mark the 20th anniversary of the two countries' relations next year, China will be loaning the pandas to Singapore for 10 years, it was announced last night following a meeting between visiting President Hu Jintao and President S R Nathan.

Singapore is only the seventh country to get these animals on loan - after the United States, Japan, Austria, Australia, Spain and Thailand, according to Wildlife Reserves Singapore.

The latter is working with the China Wildlife Conservation Association to bring the pandas here as part of a joint collaboration to promote giant panda conservation, raise public awareness of conservation and implement a giant panda breeding research programme.

There are only 1,600 pandas in the world; of which 268 are in captivity, with only 30 of these outside China.

However, Singaporeans - who last played host to a pair of loaned pandas for 100 days in 1990 - will not be getting to see these bears soon.

The pandas - a male and female aged two and one - will arrive in the second half of 2011 and will then have to be quarantined for a month.

They will then be given five more months of acclimatisation.

The two pandas will be housed in the zoo's new attraction, the River Safari.

Thus, visitors will probably get their first glimpse of the cuddly creatures in the first quarter of 2012.

The pandas will be located in a new special area, a 1,600-sq-metre climate-controlled enclosure that's fully air-conditioned with temperature set between 18° and 22° Celcius and humidity controlled at 50 to 60 per cent all year round.

Ambient conditions will be adjusted to simulate the four seasons similar to their natural habitat.

And since their diet consists mainly of bamboo - they consume 20kg a day - the zoo will be planting 8,000-sq-metres of bamboo to ensure the pandas never go hungry.

Property firm CapitaLand will be a adopting the two bears with what it called a significant donation over the 10-year period. Asha Popatlal


Read more!

Use Of Nuclear Energy Is Safe In Malaysia

Bernama 11 Nov 09;

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 11 (Bernama) -- The use of nuclear energy to generate electricity in the country is safe and can also increase the long-term national energy security, Director-General of Malaysian Nuclear Agency (Nuclear Malaysia) Datuk Dr Daud Mohamad said Wednesday.

He said the use of nuclear technology could be considered safe based on the number of nuclear plants worldwide.

"We know that nuclear technology is a clean and safe technology which had been developed over 50 years ago. Besides, it does not release the greenhouse gas effects," he told reporters after the opening of the 3rd National Seminar on Public Information on Nuclear Energy (PINE3) here today.

Dr Daud said nuclear power was deemed by the world as the future source of energy because in most places, the electricity generated by the nuclear plant was cheaper than any other alternative sources.

Hence, he said public awareness on the importance of the use of nuclear technology to generate electricity should be enhanced.



Dr Daud said several other aspects should also be made clear to the public, especially in terms of technology, safety and the disposal of nuclear waste, before the plan to use nuclear to generate electricity was to be implemented in Malaysia.

"In view of the current renewed interest on the utilisation of nuclear energy for electricity generation for long-term national energy security and sustainable development, Nuclear Malaysia has placed greater emphasis on nuclear energy in its public information efforts, without neglecting the non-power applications of nuclear technology in various socio-economic sectors.

"These sectors include the agriculture and biotechnology, medicine and healthcare, environmental and natural resource management, research and development, and education and training," he said.

Members of the public who are interested to learn more about nuclear power are welcome to visit the Nuclear Malaysia Complex in Bangi, Selangor or its website at www.nuclearmalaysia.gov.my.

-- BERNAMA


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36,000 Hectares of Aceh’s Leuser Ecosystem Lost to Logging

Jakarta Globe 11 Nov 09;

The equivalent of about 10,000 football fields of forest have been lost each year for the past five years in Aceh’s Leuser ecosystem due to illegal logging and the clearing of land for palm plantations and new roads.

The head of Leuser’s Administrative Agency, Fauzan Azima, said in early 2005 that forest covered 1,982,000 hectares, but by late 2009 it only spanned 1,946,000 hectares.

“The damage to the Leuser ecosystem’s forest in the last five years is 1.8 percent of the total area, or 0.36 percent average deforestation annually,” Fauzan said. “That means the area loses 7,200 hectares a year.”

The agency gathered the data from satellite images from the NASA’s Landsat program. Based on the images, the regions of Rawa Tripa in Nagan Raya and Southwest Aceh; Rawa Kluet, South Aceh; Karang Baru and Manyak Payed, Aceh Tamiang; Lawe Mamas and Lawe Alas, Southeast Aceh; and a corridor between Peunaron and Lokop Seurbajadi, East Aceh, have been most affected.

Mining, transmigration and natural disasters were also found to have contributed to deforestation in the area.

“We are really concerned with the deforestation of the Leuser ecosystem. Moreover, the protected forest has been named one of the nation’s strategic areas,” Fauzan said, adding that his agency would intensify land and air patrols and monitoring to curb the rate of deforestation.

Currently, the agency is rehabilitating 2,500 hectares of land in Aceh Tamiang, from a total of 15,000 hectares planned for reforestation.

“We are also employing a cultural approach to the people who damage the forest, as well as educating them about the borders and the importance of the Leuser ecosystem for the livelihood of Aceh’s people and the world in the future,” Fauzan added.

The Leuser ecosystem, which stretches across 11 districts in Aceh and North Sumatra, is well known for being home to many endangered species of flora and fauna, including the rhinoceros, orangutans, tigers and elephants native to Sumatra.

Last month, Greenomics Indonesia announced that from 2006 to 2009, some 200,329 hectares of trees in Aceh were systematically cut down to supply woods for post-tsunami reconstruction in the province.

Although Aceh’s governor, Irwandi Yusuf, has imposed a moratorium on logging, deforestation in the province has continued due to illegal logging operations. Despite this, Yusuf has claimed that the moratorium has saved about 500,000 hectares of Aceh’s forest as the government prevented five major logging companies from working in the area. Nurdin Hasan


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Palm biodiesel exports rise despite NGO attacks

The Star 12 Nov 09;

KUALA LUMPUR: Local palm biodiesel exports to the European Union (EU) and the United States have continued to rise this year despite the ongoing attacks on palm oil greenhouse gas (GHG) emission issues as well as anti-palm oil campaigns by non-governmental organisations, said Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB) director-general Datuk Dr Mohd Basri Wahid.

As at end-August, some 167,846 tonnes of local palm biodiesel had been exported compared with a total of 182,108 tonnes exported in the whole of 2008.

“I expect the palm biodiesel export for 2009 will match last year’s figure,” Basri said at the final day of MPOB’s International Palm Oil Congress 2009 (PIPOC 2009) yesterday.

However, production volume so far this year was under 10% of the total installed capacity of the local biodiesel plants in operation, he said.

Malaysia currently produces almost two milllion tonnes of palm biodiesel per year.

“Despite the approved 91 biodiesel licences, the number of plants built and in operation is still very low given the current high feedstock (palm oil) prices,” Basri said.

Basri said only seven biodiesel plants were in operation. “Eleven new plants are under construction while 52 plants are still under planning,” he added.

He expects palm biodiesel demand to remain slow going forward given the strict EU’s legislation on GHG emission and the land use issue in the United States.

Furthermore, weak demand for the B5 fuel programme in the domestic market is not helping the progress of palm biodiesel in the country, leaving producers with no margin to sustain production.

“The Plantation Industries and Commodities Ministry will soon be submitting a paper to the Cabinet on proposals to deal with the palm biodiesel issues and possibly introduce B3 fuel,” said Basri.

Meanwhile, The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) secretary-general Dr Vengeta Rao said the RSPO principles and criteria (P&C) for independent smallholders were expected to be completed by the first half of 2010.

RSPO hoped to come out with the generic P&C for independent smallholders by February and this would lead to more smallholders working towards getting the RSPO certification and start producing more certified sustainable palm oil, he said.

At the same time, the RSPO P&C for local smallholders under the Government schemes was still under development while the RSPO P&C for Indonesian smallholders under schemes was now completed, he added.

He also said RSPO expected its membership to increase to 400 by year-end from 389 currently. — By HANIM ADNAN


Threat to market access looms
Hanim Adnan, The Star 12 Nov 09;

KUALA LUMPUR: The climate change and sustainability issues promoted by the “greenies” groups in the West to label palm oil as unsustainable are fast turning into political agendas and will soon become trade barriers imposed by Western countries to hamper the export of palm oil by producing nations, said Malaysian Palm Oil Council deputy chief executive officer Dr Kalyana Sundram.

He said growing concerns over the environmental issue by developed countries could translate into limiting the market access for palm oil through innovative non-tariff trade barriers and levying discriminatory tariffs mainly to protect and promote their own crop industries.

To successfully compete in the developed countries’ markets, palm oil producers had to succumb to the constantly changing “sustainable” requirements imposed by the developed nations and the non-govermental organisations (NGOs), Kalyana said at a panel discussion on “Trade and Environmental Challenges: A Reconcilliation” at the close of Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB) International Palm Oil Congress 2009 (PIPOC 2009).

Indonesia Palm Oil Commission president Dr Rosediana Suharto said: “Fighting with the NGOs on the issue of carbon emissions in the peatland areas is a sheer waste of energy.

“Talking to industry people either business-to-business or government-to-government will be a much better platform for oil palm planters to be heard.”

She claims that NGOs would change their objectives depending on where they got their financial resources from.

Indonesia which is the third largest carbon dioxide emitters in the world, is heavily criticised by NGOs given its oil palm plantations’ expansion into peatland areas.

By 2010, Indonesia’s palm oil production is expected to increase by about 21 million tonnes.

To counter the negative claims on palm oil, United Plantations Bhd director of research Dr Gurmit Singh said Malaysia, for example ,must form a strong, articulate team to challenge the unfounded accusations by NGOs and developed nations that are against palm oil.

In this regard, the work by the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil certification programme for oil palm planters was honourable, he said. However, the RSPO needs to iron out the issues on the greenhouse gas emission by the EU with its planter members, as “many believe that the strict RSPO eight principles, 39 criteria and 25 indicators were enough to address the issue on sustainability.”

Netherlands Embassy in Malaysia’s agriculture counsellor Adrie de Roo said sustainability was the key political issue that was of priority to the Netherlands.

He said about one million tonnes of palm oil was exported to Rotterdam annually.

“There are many consumers like Unilever as well as Malaysian palm oil companies with refineries in the Netherlands like IOI Group and Sime Darby, providing jobs to our people,” he said, adding that the country has an unbiased and balanced position on palm oil.


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New crocodile hopes in Cambodia

Guy De Launey, BBC News 10 Nov 09;

Conservationists say there is fresh hope for one of the world's rarest reptiles.

DNA tests have found 35 pure-bred Siamese crocodiles at a wildlife sanctuary in Cambodia.

There are fewer then 250 of the species left in the wild, but the crocodiles at the sanctuary could now form the basis of a captive-breeding programme.

Siamese crocodiles may be smaller than some other species, but they're easily capable of breaking human limbs.

So for the conservationists at the Phnom Tamao wildlife rescue centre, taking DNA samples was a hazardous task.

In February this year, they wrangled and wrestled 69 of the beasts so they could gather genetic information.

And now it turns out all the hard work was worth it.

Thirty-five crocodiles have been confirmed as pure-bred Siamese - including six adults which may be suitable for starting off a captive breeding programme.

And more than two dozen younger crocs may be released into the wild when they are old enough.

The discovery continues a remarkable comeback for the species.

Siamese crocodiles were declared extinct in the 1990s - before a small population was discovered in Cambodia's Cardamom Mountains.

But the conservation organisation Fauna and Flora International has warned that any celebrations would be premature.

Siamese crocodiles mature slowly.

So it will take 15 years before the breeding programme comes to fruition.

And in the meantime, everything from poaching to hydroelectric projects pose a threat to crocodiles and their habitats.


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Australian dam project shelved to save fish, turtles

Yahoo News 12 Nov 09;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Australia on Wednesday rejected plans to build a massive new dam, despite pleas it is needed to provide water to residents, because of its feared impact on endangered fish and turtles.

Environment Minister Peter Garrett said the 1.8 billion dollar (1.7 billion US) Traveston Crossing Dam, in Queensland state, would have had an irreversible impact on Australian Lungfish, the Mary River Turtle and Mary River Cod.

"It is clear to me that the Traveston Dam cannot go ahead without unacceptable impacts on matters of national environmental significance," Garrett told reporters.

"The area that would be flooded by this proposal is a critical habitat for populations of these species."

The state government had pushed for the dam, with Premier Anna Bligh saying it was "absolutely critical" for the future of southeast Queensland.

"We are the fastest growing region in Australia and the people who are moving here need to drink water, their families need water to bathe, the industries that employ them need water to operate," Bligh said.

Garrett's decision paves the way for a 10-day consultation process on alternatives, including the possibility of desalination plants, with the government set to announce a final decision on November 25.

The Australian Lungfish, the sole Australian survivor of a family of fishes that have been around since the dinosaurs, has fins that resemble flippers.


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New life for Croatia's griffon vultures

Lajla Veselica Yahoo News 11 Nov 09;

BELI, Croatia (AFP) – Rescued and nurtured for nearly a year, then fitted with a satellite transmitter, Letricia appeared reluctant at first to leave its island sanctuary and embark on its long, uncertain migration.

The last of eight griffon vultures to be released into the wild last month from the northern Croatian island of Cres, it eventually took wing searching for food.

Griffon vultures are extinct in many European countries and are endangered in Croatia, but this sanctuary at the picturesque village of Beli has rescued, healed and released 95 birds since it was set up in 1993.

For the first time, two of those climbing high into the sky -- including Letricia -- have been equipped with satellite transmitters which can stay on for years, providing data on their location, altitude, speed and course.

Others are marked with cheaper rings and wing-tags for identification and monitoring, which is how one of the Croatian birds was discovered in Chad, in central Africa.

"When I saw them flying for the first time, I was fascinated," said Goran Susic, a 51-year-old ornithologist who runs the sanctuary.

When the project began there were only around 20 pairs of vulture griffons on Cres. It has now been raised to some 70 pairs, more than half the species' total number of pairs in Croatia where they live on four northern islands.

Still, their survival is at risk on several fronts. One is the decline of sheep farming, as the scavengers eat mainly sheep carcases.

Another is creeping urbanisation which is destroying their habitat, while tourists often disturb their nests and they also suffer the collateral damage of farmers trying to poison wild boar.

Croatia's griffon vultures are the only ones which nest as low as 10 metres above sea level, often secreted in high cliffs from where their young all too easily fall into the waves below.

The first shelter at Beli was far too small for these birds of prey, which have a wingspan of 2.4 to 2.8 metres (eight to nine feet).

"They were kept in rather poor conditions -- in an overcrowded cage where they could not fly -- until they reached a sufficient weight to be released. Although we were saving them, it was a kind of torture," Susic recalled.

A new shelter, more than 20 times bigger, opened in May, and visitors can observe the birds from close range from a special viewing room.

Their release into the wild has also been made less traumatic.

"Before we transported them in boxes or bags to the top of the island where they were kept in small cages overnight prior to be released," Susic said.

"It was an enormous stress that we wanted to diminish."

This year the eight birds were separated on the eve of the big event in a part of the sanctuary to make their departure less stressful.

Four birds will remain in Beli, as for various reasons they cannot survive in the wild. Eleven will be cared for and then released in 2010, by when they should have learned to eat, fly and behave in a group.

The birds of prey fly across Europe and parts of Asia at a height of 6,000 to 7,000 metres (19,800 to 23,100 feet) and speeds up to 160 kilometres (100 miles) per hour, until they are five years old.

Then the survivors return to nest on Cres, where a pair, mating for life, has one young every two years on average.

Griffon vultures do not have a sense of smell but compensate for that with perfect sight. They communicate using wing signals at a distance of up to 10 kilometres.

Letricia was rescued in Poland and recovered at Warsaw zoo before it was returned to Croatia. Another vulture, named Neven, was injured in a car crash on a road in southern France, where it remained with a mate.

And there was Banco, eaten by leopards after landing in an unroofed cage at Salzburg zoo in Austria.

"Maybe their troubles are just beginning as they go back in the wild," said Angela Flemming-Pedersen, a Swiss visitor to the sanctuary, as she watched the birds fly away.

"Vultures are a symbol of cleansing your soul and letting things go," said Mieka Dado, another visitor from Maastricht in the Netherlands.

"We all have to do that at some point in our lives," added the 47-year-old holistic therapist, who plans to stay in Beli for a month as one of dozens of volunteers from across Europe.

Griffon vultures are endangered in all European countries except in Spain, home to 18,000 pairs representing 95 percent of the species in Europe.

Many countries where they were extinct, such as Bosnia, Bulgaria, France, Israel and Italy, have programmes to reintroduce them.

Despite Susic's enthusiasm, he worries authorities are not so keen on his project.

"If it was a 'good-looking' attractive species like dolphins, it would be different," he lamented. "Sometimes I feel like we're begging for mercy"


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Drastic action may save reefs

University of South Australia, Science Alert 12 Nov 09;

Australian marine scientists have issued an urgent call for massive and rapid worldwide cuts in carbon emissions, deep enough to prevent atmospheric CO2 levels rising to 450 parts per million (ppm).

Professors Charlie Veron (former Chief Scientist, Australian Institute of Marine Science) and Ove Hoegh-Guldberg of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and The University of Queensland, have urged the world's leaders to adopt a maximum global emission target of 325 parts per million (ppm).

This will be essential, they say, to save coral reefs worldwide from a catastrophic decline which threatens the livelihoods of an estimated 500 million people globally.

This is substantially lower than today's atmospheric levels of 387 ppm, and far below the 450ppm limit envisaged by most governments attending Copenhagen as necessary to restrain global warming to a 2 degree rise, on average.

“This may take a long time. However, climate change is an intergenerational issue which will require intergenerational thinking,” Professor Hoegh-Guldberg said.

“If CO2 levels are allowed to continue to approach 450 ppm (due by 2030–2040 at the current rates at which emissions are climbing), reefs will be in rapid and terminal decline world-wide from mass coral bleaching, ocean acidification, and other environmental impacts associated with climate change,” Professor Charlie Veron, Professor Hoegh-Guldberg, Dr Janice Lough of COECRS and the Australian Institute of Marine Science and colleagues warn in a new scientific paper published in the Marine Pollution Bulletin.

“Damage to shallow reef communities will become extensive with consequent reduction of biodiversity followed by extinctions,” they said.

“Reefs will cease to be large-scale nursery grounds for fish and will cease to have most of their current value to humanity. There will be knock-on effects to ecosystems associated with reefs, and to other (marine) ecosystems.”

The researchers say that coral deaths due to bleaching were first observed when global atmospheric CO2 levels passed 320ppm in the 1970s. By the mid-1980s, at 340 ppm, sporadic, highly-destructive events were being recorded.

In the paper, published in Marine Pollution Bulletin 58, they argue for a long-term limit “below 350ppm” to be set.

Prof Veron told the British Royal Society recently that Australia's Great Barrier Reef would be on ‘death row' unless urgent action was taken to stem global carbon emissions.

“We are tracking the IPCC's worst case scenario. The global CO2 situation, tracked by temperature and sea level rise, is now following the worst case scenario,” he says. “The people meeting at Copenhagen need to hear this message.”

At the same time CO2 emissions are turning the oceans more acidic, causing damage to corals and all life with a carbonate skeletons or shells and, if unchecked, potentially leading to mass extinctions of ocean life like those of the geological past.

“We are already well above the safe levels for the world's coral reefs. The proposed 450ppm/2 degree target is dangerous for the world's corals and for the 500 million people who depend on them,” Professor Hoegh-Guldberg said.

“We should not go there, not only for reasons of coral reefs, but for the many other impacts that are extremely likely.

“We deduce, from the history of coral bleaching, that the safe level for coral reefs is probably about 320 or 325ppm.

"From fossil air taken from ice cores we know the world has not exceeded 300ppm for at least the last 760 000 years, so we are already in dangerous territory.

"We are already way outside the limits that mother earth has been operating within for millions of years.”

"Then there is sea level rise. The latest scientific consensus that the minimum sea level rise we can expect globally is 1 m. The IPCC's earlier estimates on this are now seen as far too conservative. A metre of rise will displace at least 30 million people and contaminate the underground water supplies of many coastal cities with salt.

"Tens of millions of people are going to be displaced. This is not just about corals. Big issues of food security and regional security are also at stake, and we all need to wake up to the fact that climate change is not simply about warm days.”

"It will cost less than 1 per cent of GDP growth (over the next 50 years) to sort this problem out. In times of war individual countries have devoted anything from 40 to 70 per cent of their GDP to the war effort, so the effort required to cease emitting carbon is far, far smaller.

“It is completely affordable, completely achievable.

“The consequences of not cutting carbon emissions sharply are extremely serious for humanity. It is time all people understood this.”


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