Best of our wild blogs: 13 Nov 09


Joshua on MAD Lesson on Strange Plants
from Cicada Tree Eco-Place

Great Egrets
from Life's Indulgences

Mass Runaway
from Manta Blog

Panel Discussion on Economic and Environmental Sustainability
from AsiaIsGreen

Combating Climate Change: Solutions for Today and Tomorrow
from AsiaIsGreen

REDD, REDD+, or REDD++
from AsiaIsGreen

Seminar on Low Carbon Growth
from Green Business Times

Glossy Swiftlet steals nesting materials from Baya Weaver
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Why you should not walk barefoot on sand
from wild shores of singapore


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Singapore weathering climate change

However, it must still grapple with issues such as food security: Report
Grace Chua, Straits Times 13 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE is less vulnerable to the impact of climate change than other major Asian cities, but this is mainly due to its having enough resources to adapt.

The analysis is part of a new WWF (World Wide Fund for Nature) report released this week, which examines 11 Asian cities based on existing data.

Singapore remains susceptible to higher temperatures, fluctuating rainfall, higher sea levels and food security issues as it relies on neighbouring countries for food, the report said.

It noted that, for Singapore, the sea level is predicted to rise by 60cm by the end of the century, making the eroded shoreline more vulnerable to storm surges and flooding.

Previously, it was reported that a 1m rise in sea level could lead to coastal flooding and erosion.

Singapore fared well for its ability to adapt, thanks to a high gross domestic product (GDP) and access to new technologies, but the report added: 'Adaptation should not replace mitigation, but instead work in tandem with it.'

The report, Mega-Stress For Mega-Cities, graded cities such as Hong Kong, Shanghai and Ho Chi Minh City on factors such as their exposure to storms, a rise in sea level and drought; the population and assets at risk from climate change; and the cities' ability to adapt.

The large and relatively poor city of Dhaka in Bangladesh is rated the most vulnerable - its 13 million residents are at high risk from floods and storm surges.

Closer to home, in Phnom Penh - which holds 14 per cent of Cambodia's 14 million population and contributes 28 per cent of its GDP - heavy rainfall threatens rice crops and tourism.

The WWF hopes the report, timed to coincide with the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders' meeting here this week, will galvanise governments into cooperating on adaptation measures, said WWF Singapore managing director Amy Ho.

'It's not just the proportion of global emissions that one country contributes. Every country, big or small, has to do its part,' she said.

Institute of Southeast Asian Studies research associate Catherine Wong said the study showed the disparity in how well Asia's cities can adapt to climate change.

'The more developed Asian economies should help their least developed counterparts because it is in their own collective interest to do so,' said Ms Wong.

'Climate change is more than an environmental phenomenon. It comes with economic, social and political externalities that can develop into a contagion of instabilities across the region.'

She questioned, however, the absence of Laos' capital Vientiane from the list, as its adaptive capacity is among the lowest in Asia.

GRACE CHUA

Grading climate-change vulnerability
Straits Times 13 Nov 09;

THE WWF report, Mega-Stress For Mega-Cities, outlines the following threats to 11 Asian cities, in three categories:

Environmental exposure: Many of the cities in the report, such as Singapore, Dhaka, Manila, Hong Kong and Ho Chi Minh City, are in coastal areas and river deltas and face these environmental threats.

# Storm threat: Climate change is expected to increase the intensity of tropical cyclones, which will also bring storm surges and raise offshore water levels.

For example, Manila in the Philippines already suffers from the impact of tropical storms such as the recent Typhoon Morakot. It scored a 10 on this measure.

# Sea-level rise: Rising sea levels will cause saltwater intrusion into freshwater supplies and ruin crops.

Saltwater intrusion threatens, for instance, the rice crops of Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh City, which is near the Mekong Delta.

# Flooding/drought: These extreme weather events are set to increase with climate change.

Dhaka in Bangladesh lies in a large river delta and is already prone to floods. It scores a 10 on this measure.

Socio-economic sensitivity:

# Population: The number of people in a city.

# Assets threatened: The size of a city's contribution to the national economy. Since Singapore contributes to 100 per cent of the country's economy, it scores a 10 on the scale.

Inverse adaptive capacity: How much money and access to technology a city has.

This scale is inverted, so that a score of 1 means a country has a high ability to adapt, and a score of 10 means it will have great difficulty protecting itself.

Grim climate outlook for Asia: WWF
Esther Ng, TODAY Channel NewsAsia 13 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE: Erosion of Singapore's coast lines, massive landslides in Kuala Lumpur caused by flash floods, and more tropical cyclones to hit Hong Kong – these are some predictions by experts from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

But, these are the same cities least at risk from climate change.

The WWF studied 11 Asian cities and found Dhaka to be the most vulnerable to climate threats, followed by Jakarta, Manila, Kolkata and Phnom Penh.

Coastal erosion is already impacting Singapore, said the non-government organisation, and will "likely worsen with sea-level rise and increased storms". Citing a recent study, the WWF estimated the annual cost of protecting the coast to be between US$300,000 ($416,500) and US$5.7 million by 2050, and between US$900,000 and US$16.8 million by 2100.

'We have time to react'

Some experts have predicted sea levels could rise 60cm by the end of this century.

There are "counter measures" Singapore could look into, said Dr Pavel Tkalich, who heads the Physical Oceanography Research Laboratory at the National University of Singapore. "We have time to react," he said.

These include raising the level of reclaimed land, building dams and installing pumps to expel excess water into the sea.

The Marina Barrage, which cost $230 million, already does this. It acts as a tidal barrier to flash floods in low-lying areas and has pumps and gates to discharge water into the sea.

The Public Utilities Board and the National Environment Agency could not respond by press time on whether the Barrage would be adequate in dealing with further sea-level rises.

But 60cm is at the "upper limit" of climate change predictions, said Dr Tkalich. The range between which sea levels could rise is 20cm to 60cm.

The level itself is not a problem – it will become "worrying if you have tsunami or a storm surge on top of it".

Another threat is dengue. The WWF said that "dengue seems to be spreading to areas of Singapore where it previously was not found" – a sign that the climate is changing.

It ranked Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Hong Hong four vulnerability points out of 10 for dengue. Dhaka received a nine.


- TODAY/so


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Biofuel from paper waste can help cut petrol use in Singapore

Up to 25% savings if wood-based trash is converted into biofuel, says study
Judith Tan, Straits Times 13 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE could replace up to 25 per cent of its petrol usage if it converts all its paper, cardboard and wood waste into ethanol to be used as biofuel, say researchers at the National University of Singapore (NUS).

Last year, 1.5 million tonnes of paper and wood waste were generated, and nearly half was thrown away. The three scientists estimated that if this volume was converted into ethanol instead, it could replace a quarter of petrol consumption, with accompanying greenhouse gas emission savings of more than 29 per cent.

The main hurdle is that people do not separate their trash, making the logistics of conversion difficult, said Mr Allen Shi, a bio-science graduate and co-author of the paper.

He worked with his mentor, Associate Professor Hugh Tan of the department of biological sciences at NUS, and Dr Koh Lian Pin, a research fellow at ETH Zurich - the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, on the paper, which was published this year in Global Change Biology: Bioenergy.

Ethanol, found in alcoholic drinks, is a form of renewable energy and is often used in a blend with petrol.

World ethanol production for transport fuel tripled between 2000 and 2007 from 17 billion litres to more than 52 billion litres.

Most cars in the United States run on blends of up to 10 per cent ethanol, with 10 per cent mandated in some states. In Brazil, it is compulsory to blend 25 per cent of ethanol with petrol.

In Singapore, another form of biofuel made from waste cooking oil has been available since 2006. There are now more than 400 vehicles and diesel equipment here which run on it.

'Converting waste to biofuels can potentially deliver more energy than the current method of incineration, so it is in Singapore's favour to develop the technology sooner rather than later,' said Prof Tan.

Mr Howard Shaw, executive director of the Singapore Environment Council, said that Singapore's challenge is to get people to separate their garbage.

It may have to be legislated.

'If you can fine people for not flushing, surely you can fine them for not separating their waste,' he said.

Last year, 3.34 million tonnes of waste in Singapore were recycled, out of nearly 6 million tonnes of trash.


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Greening the economy: Apec declaration

Straits Times 13 Nov 09;

ECONOMIC growth must go hand in hand with sustainable development, Apec ministers declared yesterday, recognising the need to take action on climate change and work towards an outcome in Copenhagen.

Apec finance ministers also agreed to phase out fossil fuel subsidies - which are inefficient and encourage wasteful consumption - over the medium term.

But member economies will work on implementation strategies and timeframes that reflect their individual circumstances, they said.

Apec ministers said they recognised the importance of pursuing growth through clean energy and technology, and have tasked officials to study the status of green growth in Apec.

Various economies will work to improve access for Environmental Goods and Services (EGS) and develop this sector to enhance energy efficiency and sustainable forest management and rehabilitation.

The Apec ministers also noted that many climate-friendly technologies are already commercially available and will benefit from trade liberalisation.

But they were much less forthcoming when asked about their stance at the upcoming climate change negotiations in Copenhagen.

Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo said at a press conference that ministers were reluctant to 'go into details, to concede actual points at this meeting'.

'People talked generally... but the general approach was a positive one and there was consensus that there is urgency to finding an agreement and that we... should do so in the spirit of compromise, in a way which respects special and differential considerations,' he said.

BOTTOM LINE: Step in the green direction, but members hold Copenhagen cards close to their chest.

JESSICA CHEAM

Economy down, green investments up?
Business Times 13 Nov 09;

GLOBAL economies may have taken a beating in the past 12 months, but the crisis could have the unintended outcome of prolonging the life of Mother Earth, a new survey shows.

According to a study commissioned by German technology conglomerate Siemens, investments in more environmentally friendly technologies are set to increase as green shoots of growth emerge after a year-long recession.

The study polled 270 industry specialists from the government and private sectors, including more than 200 based in the Asia-Pacific region.

Some 86 per cent of respondents said that they believe the economic crisis will stimulate investment in greener technologies in the near future.

About 75 per cent of them also said that the events of the past year will create new models for managing the environment and economy.

The survey findings were released at the ongoing Apec Summit in Singapore.

For example, a new approach mooted by respondents is to consider the 'triple bottomline' impact of economic development, the report said.

This means that beyond social and financial benefits, the environmental impact of policies and business decisions should also be taken into consideration.

Nine out of 10 survey respondents also said that they think the stimulus programmes put in place by governments worldwide will be directed at activities that will pave the way for a greener future.

Emerging regional economies, in particular, have the opportunity to 'leapfrog' their developed counterparts by diving straight into eco-friendly technologies and policies, said Siemen's board member and chief sustainability officer Barbara Kux. She was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the Apec Summit.

'We don't just face a financial crisis. We face a sustainability crisis,' she said.


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Pulau Ubin one of the destinations for Apec sightseeing

All work and no play
Ansley Ng, Today Online 13 Nov 09;

Singapore - For some, it may be just a big "talk shop", but going by what some delegates at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum here say, they have had so much to do that there has been very little time to check out the island.

Back-to-back meetings have kept them from taking in the sights and sounds of the city, said delegates MediaCorp spoke to, even though some of them arrived as early as last week.

Tourism information booths dot the Suntec landscape - loaded with freebies such as chilli crab souvenirs, Singapore Flyer rides and museum visits - but have found few takers among some 7,000 delegates. "Not very much (sightseeing), too much work," said Peruvian delegate Juan Francisco Raffo, president of ComexPeru, or the Foreign Commerce Society.

"We're leaving for home after our last meeting here."

A volunteer manning one of the booths told MediaCorp that not many delegates have approached them for information, either.

Rather, it is the foreign media who have been making queries about the attractions and collecting the freebies. "They like the Night Safari," he said.

However, it could be a bit different this weekend. Ms Nawaporn Suttacheep, a civil servant from Thailand's Ministry of Finance, said: "We've been rushing from one meeting to the next. But I hope to do some shopping (tomorrow) in Orchard Road."

Relaxation and socialising is also called for tomorrow at the "Singapore Evening" event, where delegates will be treated to performances and local food at the Esplanade.

But a fortunate few did not have to wait till then.

Canadian business delegate Peter Barnes, who hails from Ottawa, took a day off on Sunday and ventured alone by train and bus to Changi Village, before hopping onto a bumboat to Pulau Ubin. "The people in the street were very helpful with directions ... I didn't get lost at all," Mr Barnes said.


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Bridge connecting Java, Sumatra to begin construction in 2014

The Jakarta Post 12 Nov 09;

Public Works Minister Djoko Kirmanto said Thursday the government was expecting to begin constructing the Selat Sunda Bridge connecting Java and Sumatra islands by the end of 2014 at the latest.

The government is now finishing the pre-feasibility study and forming a national team consisting of representatives of all related institutions.

"This team will asses the feasibility study and measure all issues related to the bridge construction, like the environment, finance, endurance, and safety," Djoko said during a media briefing at his office. The team will be headed by the coordinating minister of economy.

Newly inaugurated Public Works Deputy Minister Hermanto Dardak said the team was expected to come up with a concrete design and physical construction plan by the end of 2014. "We hope the team can finish it sooner," he said.

Hermanto said the government had considered building a tunnel instead of bridge. "So far, a bridge is the most suitable facility to connect the two islands financially and technically," he said.

The most difficult challenge to building a tunnel was the 150-meter-deep pool located between the islands, Hermanto said.

"As of today, we prefer a bridge because it can be both a tourism facility and a unique landmark of our country," he said.

However, he went on, a bridge also had its unique issues, such as from wind and waves. "The strait is part of the whole global oceanic system, so we must be careful and not disturb the system," Hermanto explained.

The bridge is expected to connect the country's two most populated islands, Java and Sumatra, stretching about 40 kilometers.

The bridge would be the longest bridge in the country, outdoing the current one, which is the Suramadu Bridge connecting Java and Madura.

"We believe that the bridge can help accelerate the flow of people and goods between the islands, resulting in a boost in national economic growth," he said. (bbs)


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Night herons in Selangor under threat from poaching

Lim Chia Ying, Photos courtesy of Dr Ahmad Ismail
The Star 13 Nov 09;

BLACK-crowned night herons are in danger of disappearing if the authorities do not act fast enough to do something for the birds.

These herons can be seen flying and roosting by the thousands at a plot of private land in Kuala Garing, Rawang.

Earlier, the birds had nested at a nearby site but were forced to move after sand-mining were carried out at the initial nesting ground.

A recent visit to the site by the Selangor Wildlife and National Parks Department (Perhilitan) and Associate Professor Dr Ahmad Ismail from Universiti Putra Malaysia’s Biology Department, however, showed that there was a cause for concern.
A group of Ahmad’s students who had visited the site to carry out research had been shocked to discover the mutilated carcasses of some of the birds.

Photos taken by the students prompted Ahmad and Perhilitan law and investigation unit head Ab Jalal Kasim to visit the site for themselves.

In May, StarMetro reported that three Vietnamese poachers had been caught stealing the eggs and chicks of the night heron, which is a totally protected wild bird under the Protection of Wildlife Act 1972 (Act 76).

They were found guilty of three charges and were fined RM5,000 each.

Ahmad said despite Perhilitan’s efforts, there were still people bold enough to slaughter the birds.

“Perhilitan is doing what it can to raise awareness among the locals. However, after seeing what had happened, we hope that a permanent location for the birds to nest would be found.

“Areas like those under electric cables can be preserved and maintained as a habitat for the birds and we can later develop this as an eco-tourism and educational site,” Ahmand said, adding that this would help safeguard the birds.

Ab Jalal said this was the second breeding season of the year for the birds and a lot of people were out to steal the eggs and kill the birds.

“Our men are monitoring the situation, but we cannot be here throughout the day,” he said.

“We have also enlisted the help of local people we can trust, like M. Sadasivam who lives nearby, to tip us off if he notices suspicious characters trying to prey on the birds.

“Sadasivam has been a great help and we need more such people.

“We also hope that the state government will help identify a breeding site for the herons so that they do not need to continuously migrate as their breeding grounds are disturbed by human activities,” he added.

Selangor state environmental committee chairman Elizabeth Wong said she was open to suggestions and advice on how to move the birds to an appropriate location.

“Space is not an issue, as we have plenty of land at the various forest reserves and state parks. The only problem is the technical and logistic side of it, as the birds might not want to move to the new site.

“It depends on the kind of habitat they need and it should not be too far away, so the birds would feel more comfortable,” Wong said, adding that she hoped Perhilitan would step up its monitoring of the site.

Wong was also ready to discuss the matter with the relevant parties to see if land under electric cables could be provided for the birds.

“I welcome any kind of feedback that the interested parties can give me so that we can start discussing the issue,” she said.

Ahmad, however, reiterated that the state government should take the lead by showing its commitment to the issue so that other related agencies would act accordingly.

“It is good if Perhilitan, the forestry department and the land office can come together for this project.

“Birds like herons are very sensitive to disturbances.

“Proper management is a must. There are also many other birds like migratory shorebirds and hornbills in various parts of the state that we hope the government can look into,” he said.


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India to free zoo elephants

Yahoo News 12 Nov 09;

NEW DELHI (AFP) – India is to move 140 elephants living in zoos across the country to safari parks and sanctuaries where the normally free-roaming animals can graze openly, an official said Thursday.

The Central Zoo Authority issued an order to India's 26 zoos to shift the animals to more spacious environments where they would be supervised by elephant keepers, B.K. Gupta, the authority's evaluation and monitoring officer, told AFP.

"It's a free-roaming animal that travels a long distance, and very few zoos have large areas to provide free movement," said Gupta. "The issue was with keeping them chained for long hours."

He said there were 140 elephants living in Indian zoos, but would not specify when or where exactly they would be sent.

The Times of India newspaper reported that each zoo would decide where to send the elephants after consulting with wildlife experts in each state.

One of India's two African elephants, named Shankar, would be moved from the Delhi Zoo to the Jim Corbett National Park in the northern state of Uttarakhand, the Times said, quoting Delhi Zoo director D.N. Singh.

The paper also said elephants in 16 circuses would be moved to new locations after an evaluation revealed sub-standard living conditions.

India is home to an estimated 25,000 wild elephants -- the most in Asia -- but their numbers have been vastly depleted by poaching and habitat loss.


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7.6 million replanted mangrove trees in Surabaya die

Amir Tejo, Jakarta Globe 13 Nov 09;

The protected forest on the eastern coast of Surabaya has lost about 7.6 million mangrove trees that were planted as part of reforestation efforts.

Officials blamed the loss on the local residents’ lack of concern about the preservation of the mangrove ecosystem.

Putu Artha Giri, an environmental official from the Surabaya government, explained that mangroves would help protect the city from all sorts of problems caused by tidal waves.

He said the local government had done its best to protect the forest, but people living along the city’s eastern coastline still needed to be educated about the importance of saving the mangroves.

In 2004, 1.8 million trees were planted along Surabaya’s coastline.

This year, the regional government has planted 50,000 mangrove trees, while the private sector contributed another 1,000 trees, Putu said. That was a good start but more support was needed, he said.

Putu said each 50 square meters of 10-meter high mangrove forest could help reduce tidal waves by one meter.

About 1,200 hectares of mangrove forest — roughly 40 percent of the total in Surabaya — have been destroyed since 2004.

Putu said Indonesians should be proud that the country’s mangrove forests amounted to 25 percent of the 18 million hectares of mangrove forests worldwide. The country’s largest mangrove area — 1.3 million hectares — is in West Papua. The rest are in South Kalimantan, West Kalimantan, East Sumatra, and East Java.

The natural causes of mangrove deforestation included sea erosion, tidal waves, tsunamis and storms, Putu said.

Man-made causes of destruction included illegal logging and the reclamation of coastline for housing, industry, fisheries and salt farming.

Putu said he hoped people would be more concerned about the survival of mangrove forests in the future, because they played significant roles in reducing erosion along coastlines and relieving the impact of global warming.


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U.S. takes brown pelican off endangered species list

Karin Zeitvogel Yahoo News 11 Nov 09;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Nearly 40 years after it was pushed to the edge of extinction by pesticide use, habitat loss and hunting, the brown pelican was Wednesday taken off the endangered species list, US officials said.

"We can celebrate an extraordinary accomplishment: the brown pelican is endangered no more," Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar said.

"It has taken 36 years, the banning of DDT and a lot of work by the US government, the states, conservation organizations, dedicated citizens and partners, but today we can say that the brown pelican is back," Salazar told a telephone news conference.

The brown pelican was listed as endangered in 1970 after its numbers had been slashed by the use of the pesticide DDT, by hunters who sought it for its feathers, and by widespread loss of its coastal habitat.

The birds' recovery and removal from the list of endangered species was due largely to a US ban on the use of DDT in 1972, Salazar said.

The population was now back up to more than 650,000 of the birds across Florida, in the coastal regions of the Gulf of Mexico and Pacific Ocean, and in the Caribbean and Latin America, Salazar said.

At its lowest point, the number of brown pelicans had fallen to around 10,000, said Tom Strickland, Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

The pelican population in the United States first began to decline in the late 19th century when hunters seeking the birds' plumage for women's hats "slaughtered them indiscriminately," said Strickland.

But the species recovered after then president Theodore Roosevelt ordered the creation of a wildlife refuge -- the first in the United States -- on the appropriately named Pelican Island off the Florida coast.

But after World War II, pelican populations again plummeted because of the widespread use of DDT and other pesticides in coastal areas to control mosquitoes.

Adult pelicans with high concentrations of DDT were unable to properly form calcium and laid eggs with thin shells, which broke before the chicks were ready to hatch.

A new threat to the bird is posed by global warming, which could see sea levels rise and wipe out huge swathes of the pelican's coastal habitat, the officials said.

"We could lose up to a million acres (405,000 hectares) of brown pelican habitat due to sea-level rise caused by global warming if modeling predictions are right," said Sam Hamilton, director of the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

"We will continue to monitor the pelican and its environment to ensure that we will never again see this beautiful bird pushed to the edge of extinction," he said.

The United States will work with government agencies and non-governmental groups in Mexico, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands to keep an eye on the health and numbers of brown pelicans, said Hamilton, adding that the bird could be relisted if numbers are seen to be falling again.

U.S. Government says brown pelicans are endangered no longer
Dina Cappiello, Associated Press Yahoo News 11 Nov 09;

WASHINGTON – Much like its death-defying dives for fish, the brown pelican has resurfaced after plummeting to the brink of extinction.

Interior Department officials on Wednesday announced that they were taking the bird off the endangered species list, after a nearly four-decade struggle to keep the brown pelican population afloat.

The bird now prevalent across Florida, the Gulf and Pacific coasts and the Caribbean was declared an endangered species in 1970, after its population — much like those of the bald eagle and peregrine falcon — was decimated by the use of the pesticide DDT. The chemical, consumed when the pelican ate tainted fish, caused it to lay eggs with shells so thin they broke during incubation.

The pelican's recovery is largely due to a 1972 ban on DDT, coupled with efforts by states and conservation groups to protect its nesting sites and monitor its population, Interior Department officials said.

"Today we can say the brown pelican is back," said Interior Secretary Ken Salazar in a conference call with reporters in Washington. "Once again, we see healthy flocks of these graceful birds flying over our shores. The brown pelican is endangered no longer."

The official announcement came earlier at a press conference at Big Branch Marsh National Wildlife Refuge in Louisiana, which is dubbed the "Pelican State". The bird has been on the state's official seal since 1804, but the pelican had virtually disappeared from its coasts in the 1960s.

"It's been a long journey," said Tom Strickland, assistant secretary for fish, wildlife, parks for the Interior Department. "It's tracked my whole adult life."

Strickland acknowledged that the bird's coastal habitat was in danger from rising seas and erosion, but he said wildlife officials were confident the bird was ready to be taken off the list.

Anthony Walgamotte, a 75-year-old retired levee worker fishing along Irish Bayou outside New Orleans on Wednesday, said he never knew the bird was in trouble. Nearby, brown pelicans rested on pilings every few hundred yards.

"They're plentiful now," he said.

The plight of the brown pelican has tracked closely with the development and birth of the nation's environmental policy and the environmental movement. It was listed as endangered before Congress passed the Endangered Species Act in 1973. And its struggle for survival, initially due to hunting for feathers to decorate hats, led to the birth of the National Wildlife Refuge System more than 100 years ago. That's when President Theodore Roosevelt created the first refuge at Pelican Island in Florida.

Nowadays the bird is prevalent along the coasts of Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Washington and Oregon, and its global population, including the Caribbean and Latin America, is estimated at 650,000. It can often be seen dramatically diving headfirst into the water to emerge with a mouthful of fish.

The Bush administration in early 2008 proposed removing the bird from the endangered species list. In 1985, the Fish and Wildlife Service eliminated brown pelicans living in Alabama, Georgia, Florida and up the Atlantic Coast from the list.

Some environmentalists Wednesday said that they would like to see populations in the Western Gulf and the Caribbean stay on the list. Along the Gulf Coast the concern is that the population lives on low-lying islands and coasts vulnerable to hurricanes and the rising sea levels expected to come with global warming. In the Caribbean, the question is whether the population has been sufficiently monitored.

"We remain very concerned with the long-term viability in the face of global warming and hurricanes," said Kieran Suckling of the Center for Biological Diversity. "We would prefer to see the federal government secure long-term agreements (along the Gulf) to ensure coastal nesting habitat is going to be restored and protected in perpetuity."

The announcement does not remove all protections for the species. It will still be protected by other laws, such as the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.

___

Associated Press writers Cain Burdeau from New Orleans and Jeff Barnard from Grants Pass, Ore. contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Fish and Wildlife Service: http://tinyurl.com/ygvbbxe

Brown pelican no longer endangered: U.S.
Deborah Zabarenko, Reuters 11 Nov 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The brown pelican, listed as an endangered species even before the 1973 U.S. Endangered Species Act existed, is officially back from the brink of extinction, the Interior Department said on Wednesday.

There are now more than 650,000 brown pelicans in Florida, the U.S. Gulf states and along the Pacific coast, as well as in the Caribbean and Latin America, up from as few as 10,000, Interior officials said.

"It has taken 36 years, the banning of (pesticide) DDT and a lot of work ... but today we can say that the brown pelican is back," Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said in a telephone briefing.

The brown pelican was first declared endangered in 1970 under the Endangered Species Preservation Act, a precursor to the current law.

Once hunted for their feathers for use in women's hats in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, brown pelicans faced further pressure from the general use of the pesticide DDT, which caused pelican eggshells to become so thin that it interfered with reproduction.

The United States banned general use of DDT in 1972. This decision also hastened the recovery of other formerly endangered species including the bald eagle and peregrine falcon.

The widespread loss of coastal habitat also played a role in the brown pelican's decline, and sea level rise resulting from climate change could have an impact on its continued recovery, the officials said.

Wednesday's announcement was the final step in the bird's recovery. by 1985, enough brown pelicans had returned to Florida, Alabama, Georgia and the Atlantic Coast to have them removed from the endangered list in those areas.

Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana hailed the recovery of this iconic bird, which is on the Louisiana flag and a symbol of the state.

"I have spent countless hours with my family watching the sunset over Lake Pontchartrain and observing pelicans feeding off at a distance," Landrieu said in a statement. "It is one of Louisiana's great sights and I am delighted the brown pelican will be enjoyed by future generations of Louisianans."

(Editing by Philip Barbara)


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The white, green and black of energy

Vikki McLeod, Science Alert 12 Nov 09;

With the inclusion of a National White Certificate Scheme in the coalitions CPRS amendments, we need to ask what is it? And what is it good for?

Australia’s stationary energy sector is responsible for more than 50 per cent of Australia’s greenhouse emissions. Government policy to transition our energy sector from carbon high to carbon lite is the key to protecting both our economy and the environment.

Internationally there is consensus: the least cost and most economic secure path to a sustainable energy future is aggressive energy efficiency (the white), permanent shift to renewable energy (the green) and strategic use of fossil fuels (the black). But this is not currently the direction the energy market is taking us.

The energy market was deregulated in the 1990s and before greenhouse abatement was a priority. It is a commodity market and generators and retailers profit by selling more energy (either green or black). The challenge is to “decouple” energy sales from energy services.

Energy sales and energy use is growing at about 2 per cent per annum. Sure, this reflects economic and population growth but it is also growth in energy waste. Australia is the bottom of the class when it comes to energy efficient economies. We could learn from California, where they have been maintaining high levels of economic growth and yet they have stabilised energy growth.

A compounding problem is that our growth in renewable energy generation is much less than 2 per cent. Consequently, the additional growth in demand is not even being met by green generation but by black generation. So despite almost ten years of a green target, renewable energy is losing market share.

Without aggressively pursuing energy efficiency, the renewable energy target will continue to chase a receding target and there is also a risk the oldest and dirtiest coal-fired power stations may remain in operation even with a CPRS. So we could end up with the same level of emissions and the same generation mix but just be paying more for it.

Aggressive energy efficiency is the rationale behind the White Certificate Scheme (WCS). A WCS is the “white” policy patch on the energy market, which would allow energy retailers to make a profit from energy efficiency. Energy efficiency becomes another commodity to be sold and marketed to clients (householders, businesses, commercial properties and industry). The other difference with WCS is that inefficient appliances must be retired: that 2nd fridge which is belching in the garage that we kid ourselves is keeping the beer cold will have to be unplugged and go.

WCS had its genesis in Australia with the New South Wales Greenhouse Abatement Scheme in 2003 and a strengthened WCS was proposed as part of the COAG endorsed National Framework for Energy Efficiency in 2004. While the recommendation was for a national scheme this was not supported by the Howard government. The South Australian, New South Wales and Victorian governments went ahead with state-based schemes as energy security measures. A national WCS would be an opportunity to harmonise the state schemes but also an opportunity to include Queensland which is struggling with large growth in energy demand.

The green, black and white markets are distinct and not fungible. The black ETS market has carbon intensity measured at the smoke stack; the white energy efficiency market is measured at the meter. The green renewable energy market is carbon neutral generation and includes commercially competitive renewable energy technologies such as wind, hydro and solar. Each market has its own cost curve and technologies.

WCS is also an opportunity to help the ailing Renewable Energy Target which is currently experiencing a market price collapse. Current REC price is $28: enough to deliver investment in solar water heaters but not enough for the more expensive renewable energy of wind, solar thermal or geothermal. Water heating was a contentious inclusion in the green market. It has long been argued that water heaters are an energy efficiency measure. A better outcome would be to take water heaters out of the green market and include them in the white market (and building codes).

With the time frame we have to decarbonise our energy sector we need to push on each of the three policy fronts - the green, black and white - at the same time.

Other governments have taken this approach. The European Union, the United States and the United Kingdom are just a few examples:

* Europe Union through the “20, 20, 20 by 2020”: 20 per cent reduction in GHE, 20 per cent increase in renewable energy, 20 per cent improvement in energy efficiency by 2020.
* USA with the California loading order and the Waxman Markey Bill.
* UK and its recent Energy White paper.

Vikki McLeod is an engineer and independent energy and carbon consultant who was responsible for the original policy design of the National Energy Efficiency Target for the COAG endorsed National Framework on Energy Efficiency. Vikki McLeod was a former Senior Adviser to Senator Lyn Allison who tabled a private members Bill for a white certificate scheme, “National Market Driven Energy Efficiency Target Bill 2007” and which has been re-tabled by the Australian Greens as “Safe Climate (Energy Efficiency Target) Bill 2009”.


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Greener power generation needed if electric vehicles are really to reduce emissions

Undercurrent of doubt over electric motors
Michael McCarthy, The Independent 12 Nov 09;

Electric cars, which emit no carbon dioxide from their tailpipe, are not the answer some people think they are to environmental transport problems, a new report claims today.

The idea that a wholesale switch to electric transport would automatically reduce CO2 emissions and dependence on oil is a myth, says the analysis prepared for the Environmental Transport Association (ETA).

In fact, says the report, a loophole in EU vehicle emissions regulations means the more electric cars produced, the more auto manufacturers can produce gas-guzzling vehicles such as SUVs while still hitting their overall emissions targets. Ultimately, this would lead to an increase in the amount of oil used and the amount of CO2 generated by the car fleet as a whole.

With transport CO2 emissions in Britain representing about a quarter of the total, electric vehicles have been enthusiastically embraced by policymakers as one of the principal ways of cutting the sector's contribution to climate change.

The Committee on Climate Change, the official watchdog which monitors the Government's progress towards its climate objectives, suggested last year that pure electric and hybrid petrol-electric vehicles could help contribute to "deep emissions cuts", and if Britain were to hit a really high target of cutting carbon by 42 per cent by 2020, 40 per cent of the cars on the road – nearly 11 million vehicles – would have to be either battery-driven, or hybrids. This year the committee suggested a more realistic aim of putting 1.7 million electric cars on the road by 2020.

Yet all this is not the panacea some people think it is, says the new report from the ETA, a green campaigning and lobby group which also provides breakdown services. Although there are significant potential benefits to be had from a switch to electric vehicles, the group argues, these are wholly dependent on changes in the way electricity is generated, energy taxed and CO2 emissions regulated.

It is already known that widespread uptake of electric cars would mean much more electricity demand, with the possible consequence of building more – possibly coal-fired – power stations. A separate piece of research last year suggested that, if all Britain's 27 million cars went electric, and were charged every day, the electricity supply would have to quadruple to cope with the new demand.

The ETA report stresses that electric cars are only really green if they are using electricity produced by renewable energy systems such as wind power. And it goes on to point out that, under new binding EU targets for cutting car CO2 emissions agreed last December, carmakers can sell up to 3.5 SUVs for every zero-carbon electric vehicle they sell and still reach their official EU target.

"While the report is not intended to dampen enthusiasm for electric vehicles, their introduction should not be viewed as a panacea," said the ETA's director, Andrew Davis. "Significant changes to the way we produce and tax power are needed before we will reap any benefits."


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Environmentally friendly buildings are better for staff productivity

Today Online 13 Nov 09;

PHOENIX - If you aren't convinced about global warming, here are some persuasive reasons to "green" your office building.

Not only do tenants in green buildings enjoy greater productivity, they also see fewer sick days taken by staff.

As for landlords, they benefit from lower vacancy rates and higher rentals, according to a landmark study conducted by the University of San Diego and CB Richard Ellis Group (CBRE).

The report Do Green Buildings Make Dollars and Sense?, released yesterday at a conference in Phoenix, Arizona, is the product of a year-long research effort and is the largest study of its kind to date.

Respondents in the study reported an average of 2.88 fewer sick days in their current green office as compared to their previous non-green office.

Some 55 per cent of respondents also indicated employee productivity had improved.

The study also showed green buildings have 3.5 per cent lower vacancy rates and enjoyed 13 per cent higher rental rates than the market.

"We have been seeking ways to make an empirical case for the economic benefits of sustainable practices, and the results of this study exceeded our expectations," said CBRE's national director of sustainability, Mr Dave Pogue.

The survey involved 154 buildings under CBRE's management, housing 3,000 tenants in 10 markets across the US.

Not only were the buildings certified energy efficient, most had adopted other sustainable practices like recycling and water conservation.

"We have now confirmed in this and other studies that green features and energy savings pays off," said Dr Norm Miller, academic director and professor at the University of San Diego's Burnham-Moores Center for Real Estate.

"Commercial real estate players have no choice but to learn how to be better in a sustainable way ... The economics of green will drive the market, not altruism or concern about global warming," said Dr Miller, adding that "green leases" would soon be the norm.

About 18 per cent of tenants, the survey showed, are willing to pay more for green space, and most believe healthy indoor environments boost staff retention (61 per cent) and client image (70 per cent).


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Cocaine, Spices, Hormones Found in U.S. Drinking Water

Christine Dell'Amore, National Geographic News 12 Nov 09;

This story is part of a special series that explores the global water crisis. For more clean water news, photos, and information, visit National Geographic's Freshwater Web site.

How's this for a sweet surprise? A team of researchers in Washington State has found traces of cooking spices and flavorings in the waters of Puget Sound.

University of Washington associate professor Richard Keil heads the Sound Citizen program, which investigates how what we do on land affects our waters.

Keil and his team have tracked "pulses" of food ingredients that enter the sound during certain holidays.

For instance, thyme and sage spike during Thanksgiving, cinnamon surges all winter, chocolate and vanilla show up during weekends (presumably from party-related goodies), and waffle-cone and caramel-corn remnants skyrocket around the Fourth of July.

The Puget Sound study is one of several ongoing efforts to investigate the unexpected ingredients that find their way into the global water supply.

Around the world, scientists are finding trace amounts of substances—from sugar and spice to heroine, rocket fuel, and birth control—that might be having unintended consequences for humans and wildlife alike.

Vanilla Seas?

When spices and flavorings are flushed out of a U.S. home, they travel to a sewage-treatment facility, where most of them are removed.

In the area around Puget Sound, the University of Washington team found, the spicy residues that remain in wastewater end up flowing into the sound's inland waterways.

Of all the flavors trickling downstream, artificial vanilla dominates the sound, Keil said. For instance, the team found an average of about six milligrams of artificial vanilla per liter of water sampled.

The region's sewage runoff contains more than 14 milligrams of vanilla per liter. This would be like spiking an Olympic-size swimming pool with approximately ten 4-ounce (113.4-gram) bottles of artificial vanilla.

For now, there's no evidence that a sweeter and spicier sound is a bad thing—salmon, which can smell such flavors, could be enjoying their vanilla-enhanced habitat, Keil said.

In an attempt to understand some of the consequences of spice in the water, Keil and colleagues plan to study whether cooking ingredients harm the reproduction of octopuses in Puget Sound.

Overall, he added, the spice project has become a successful recipe for educating people, especially schoolkids, "that everything you do is connected to the watershed."

Illegal Drugs

The link from kitchen or bathroom to coast can also grease the path for some rather unsavory substances, such as illegal drugs, experts have discovered.

After a person has taken drugs such as cocaine, heroin, marijuana, and ecstasy, active byproducts of these substances are released into the sewage stream through that person's urine and feces.

These byproducts, or metabolites, are often not completely removed during the sewage-treatment process, at least in Europe, said Sara Castiglioni of the Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research in Milan, Italy.

That means the drug-tainted wastewater can enter groundwater and surface water, which are collectively the major sources of drinking water for most people.

In a new review study, Castiglioni and colleague Ettore Zuccato found that illegal drugs have become "widespread" in surface water in some of Europe's populated areas.

For instance, in a 2008 study scientists discovered a byproduct of cocaine in 22 of 24 samples of drinking water at a Spanish water-treatment plant—despite a rigorous filtering and treatment process.

Likewise, in 2005, Zuccato found that a daily influx of cocaine travels down the Po River, Italy's longest river.

Though these drug traces are still tiny, it's possible that the potent residues could be toxic to freshwater animals, according to the study, which will be published in an upcoming issue of the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A.

For this reason, the "risks for human health and the environment cannot be excluded," the study warns.

Pharmaceuticals

Scientists are also developing a clearer picture of how legal pharmaceuticals and personal-care products—from antibiotics and morphine to fragrances and sunscreen—are flooding our waterways.

For example, previous research had revealed that up to 44.1 pounds (20 kilograms) of pharmaceuticals flow down Italy's Po River each day.

Much like illegal drugs, traces of pharmaceuticals often filter through traditional sewage-treatment processes.

These products are also found in many U.S. waterways, and studies have shown that certain drugs may cause harm to the environment—though no evidence to date has shown effects in people, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Some of the drugs that mimic hormones, such as birth control, may also throw off an animal's endocrine, or hormone-regulating, system. Some male fish in the U.S., for example, have been growing female parts due to exposure to estrogen in the water.

Researching these substances is important, Castiglioni said, "because [these] are quite unknown contaminants, and they are present in the environment in huge amounts, especially for pharmaceuticals."

To control the flow of these substances, some experts have suggested creating "green pharmacies," which would allow a consumer to send back their drugs to a pharmacist or manufacturer instead of flushing them down the toilet and into the wild.

Contaminants

Current EPA regulations say that more than 90 contaminants must be filtered out of drinking-water systems, said Cynthia Dougherty, director of EPA's Office of Groundwater and Drinking Water.

Viruses and other microorganisms are kept at bay, as are inorganic substances such as lead, cyanide, copper, and mercury. Pollutants from fertilizer runoff, such as nitrate and nitrite, are also removed.

In addition, the agency regularly studies new chemicals that may need regulation. Of particular interest right now is perchlorate, a natural and human-made chemical used in fireworks and rocket fuel, Dougherty said.

At sufficiently high doses, the chemical—found in at least 4 percent of U.S drinking water—can reduce iodine uptake into a person's thyroid gland. If continued long-term, reduced iodine can lead to hypothyroidism, according to the agency, which is now seeking input on whether to regulate perchlorate.

Ultimately, "what you really want is to not ever have things you're concerned about in drinking water in the first place," Dougherty said.

That's why it's crucial for local communities to keep a close eye on what runs into their waterways, she said.

"If you have an understanding of what your source of drinking water is and what can happen to it," Dougherty said, "you can be a more educated citizen in engaging in those issues."


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India's Food Dilemma: High Prices Or Shortages

Himangshu Watts, PlanetArk 13 Nov 09;

NEW DELHI - For a man who will inherit vast tracts of fertile farmland in Punjab, India's grain bowl, Jaswinder Singh made what seemed to him a logical career move -- he took a job with a telecoms company in New Delhi.

"I can't go back to the village after an M.B.A. Delhi has more money, better quality of life. The job is more satisfying, and you don't depend on the weather or prices set by the government," said Singh, who earns rent from his farm, while a tenant tills the land.

Singh's choice reflects a growing and worrisome trend in the nation's agriculture sector: Indian farms are failing to attract capital or talent, either from rich landlords like Singh, or the 21,000 students who graduate from India's 50 agricultural and veterinary universities.

"At present, most of the farm graduates are either taking jobs in the government, or financial institutions, or in private sector industry. They are seldom taking to farming as a profession," a report by the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation said.

The views of the foundation -- set up by M.S. Swaminathan, who led India's Green Revolution in the 1960s that helped make this vast nation self-sufficient in food -- were echoed in a poll by the National Sample Survey Organization, a government body. The survey showed 40 percent of Indian farmers would quit farming, if they had a choice -- an alarming revelation for a country where two-thirds of the billion-plus people live in villages.

SLOW GROWTH

India's farm sector has changed remarkably little since the advent of the Green Revolution, while other industries have been transformed over the past two decades. As a result, agriculture's share of the Indian economy shrank to 17.5 percent last year, from nearly 30 percent in the early 1990s.

"We are not realizing that farming is becoming an increasingly less profitable profession. There was a time when farmers had very little choice. Things have changed. Farmers would like to make a shift," said T.K. Bhaumik, a leading economist.

This has raised concerns that India's farm output could lag demand and the country -- which ranks among the world's top three consumers of rice, wheat, sugar, tea, coarse grains and cotton -- will become a large food importer unless yields jump.

"The increase in yields in the past decades have been insignificant. India sorely needs another Green Revolution," says Kushagra Nayan Bajaj, joint managing director of Bajaj Hinduthan, India's top sugar producer, which is importing raw sugar after a drought ravaged the domestic cane crop.

But the next revolution faces a tougher challenge -- in part because of the environmental damage done by the previous one. Back then, abundant groundwater was available and the soil was not degraded by pesticides and fertilizers, which initially helped boost productivity.

P.C. Kesavan, distinguished fellow at the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation, said chemicals used in agriculture had destroyed the sustainability of productivity in the long run.

"Yes, a second Green Revolution is indeed very essential -- the very need of the hour. But, it should not be the same kind of Green Revolution that the first was," he said.

In India's Punjab state, the flagship of India's Green Revolution, groundwater is declining rapidly.

"The water table of Punjab is falling at an alarming rate, especially in the central districts, due to excess drawing of groundwater," said Karam Singh, an agricultural economist at the Punjab State Farmers Commission.

Sardara Singh Johl, an economist and former chairman of India's Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices, said there would be very little water available for farming in the state. "This could severely compromise the food security of India. Government should realize the gravity of the situation and allocate funds for research to conserve groundwater," he said.

To prevent food shortages, economists and scientists are calling for a range of policy initiatives, such as allowing genetically modified crops, greater investment in irrigation, better economics in farming and greater government attention to agriculture. Keywords: FOOD/INDIA

WEATHER RISK

With 60 percent of Indian farms depending on erratic rains, it took just one failed monsoon to force India to import 5 million tons of sugar in 2008/09, after exporting a similar quantity a year earlier.

The drought, after the worst monsoon rains in 37 years, is also expected to slash rice output by 17 percent, encouraging India to begin importing rice, after being a leading exporter of the commodity for decades.

Last year, when rice stocks dwindled in many countries, India's panic move to ban exports helped push global rice prices to a record, and the country can potentially rattle the world market again.

L.S. Rathore, head of the agricultural meteorology unit of the government's weather office, said, if the monsoon fails again next year, the country would face a shortage.

"Higher imports will be the only answer to the food management issue then," he said, adding that it was unlikely that monsoon rains would fail in two consecutive years.

Still, changes in weather patterns are a major cause of worry. This year, drought-prone, arid regions of the western and northwestern states of Gujarat and Rajasthan received good rainfall, while traditionally flood-prone areas in eastern India endured a drought.

"Climate change could exert devastating impact on growth and productivity of several crops, particularly the food grain crops," said Kesavan of the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation. He said agriculture in India had always been a "gamble with monsoon" and millions of poor farmers did not have the resources to cope with the uncertainty of monsoons.

TOUGH CHOICES

Analysts say agricultural economics need to improve significantly to retain farmers like Jaswinder Singh, who handed over his farm to a tenant and works in New Delhi. But this is not easy in a country where inflation is always an election issue and a state government was voted out because onion prices soared.

"This is a million-dollar issue," said Bhaumik, the economist. "If you want to make farming more profitable, the price for farm products needs to be more remunerative. Will the middle class accept this?"

He said the government may have to allow genetically modified crops in order to improve farm revenue. "I think they will have to allow it. There are limitations on the supply side. Productivity improvement is the crux of the issue. That is why we need to have an understanding of GM foods. You have a crisis at hand," he said.

India so far has allowed genetically modified seeds only for cotton, which has boosted productivity, but use of such seeds for edible crops has always evoked strong protests.

Last month, a government panel recommended commercial cultivation of genetically modified brinjal (a type of eggplant), evoking sharp protests and a quick clarification from the government.

"Strong views have already been expressed on the Bt-Brinjal issue, both for and against. My objective is to arrive at a careful, considered decision in the public and national interest," Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said in a statement last month.

Bhagirath Choudhary, a New Delhi-based representative of the International Service for the Acquisition of Agribiotech Application, said the case for using genetically modified seeds was compelling.

"You cannot do without this technology in agriculture -- even today, and more so in the future. We are unable to increase the production because productivity is not being increased," he said.

Others are not convinced.

"My personal view is that it has so far been more glorified for what it has delivered. It is commerce-driven, more than science-based," said Kesavan of the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation. "Time is ripe now to have a large-scale brainstorming on the social, environmental and economic impact of GM crops on resource-poor, small and marginal farmers."

(Editing by Jim Impoco and Walter Bagley)


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Is Africa Selling Out Its Farmers?

Barry Malone and Ed Cropley, PlanetArk 13 Nov 09;

BAKO/JOHANNESBURG - For centuries, farmers like Berhanu Gudina have eked out a living in Ethiopia's central lowlands, tending tiny plots of maize, wheat or barley amid the vastness of the lush green plains.

Now, they find themselves working cheek by jowl with high-tech commercial farms stretching over thousands of hectares tilled by state-of-the-art tractors -- and owned and operated by foreigners.

With memories of Ethiopia's devastating 1984 famine still fresh in the minds of its leaders, the government has been enticing well-heeled foreigners to invest in the nation's underperforming agriculture sector. It is part of an economic development push they say will help the Horn of Africa nation ensure it has enough food for its 80 million people.

Many small Ethopian farmers do not share their leaders' enthusiasm for the policy, eyeing the outsiders with a suspicion that has crept across Africa as millions of hectares have been placed, with varying degrees of transparency, in foreign hands.

"Now we see Indians coming, Chinese coming. Before, we were just Ethiopian," 54-year-old Gudina said in Bako, a small farming town 280 km (170 miles) west of Addis Ababa. "What do they want here? The same as the British in Kenya? To steal everything? Our government is selling our country to the Asians so they can make money for themselves."

Xenophobia aside, a number of organizations -- including the foundation started by Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates -- argue that Africa should support its own farmers.

"Instead of African countries giving away their best lands, they should invest in their own farmers," said Akin Adesina, vice president of the Nairobi-based Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA). "What's needed is a small-holder, farmer-based revolution. African land should not be up for garage sale."

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Both sides of the debate agree on this much: a stark reality -- underlined by last year's food price crisis -- looms large over Ethiopia and beyond. The world is in danger of running out of food.

By 2050, when its population is likely to be more than 9 billion, up from 6 billion now, the world's food production needs to increase by 70 percent, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.

In Africa, which for a variety of reasons was bypassed by the Green Revolution that transformed India and China in the 1960s and 1970s, the numbers are even more bleak. The continent's population is set to double from 1 billion now.

In all, the FAO says, feeding those extra mouths is going to take $83 billion in investment every year for the next four decades, increasing both the amount of cultivated land and how much it produces. The estimated investment for Africa alone is $11 billion a year.

For deeply impoverished Ethiopia, sub-Saharan Africa's second-most populous nation after Nigeria, even a fraction of those sums is unthinkable.

Yet with 111 million hectares -- nearly twice the area of Texas -- within its borders, the answer, in the government's eyes, is simple: Lease 'spare' land to wealthy outsiders to get them to grow the food. One unfortunate consequence of that thinking is Gudina and his little plot of maize are painted as part of the problem, rather than a potential solution.

"The small-scale farmers are not producing the quality they should, because they don't have the technology," said Esayas Kebede, head of the Agricultural Investment Agency, a body founded only in February but already talking about offering foreign farmers 3 million hectares in the next two years.

"There are 12 million households in Ethiopia. We can't afford to give new technology to all of them," he said, sitting in an office adorned with maps showing possible sites for commercial farms.

Indian agro-conglomerate Karuturi Global, whose involvement in Ethiopia so far has been exporting cut-flowers to Europe, has taken the hint, branching out into food production with a sprawling maize farm in Bako. Unlike with similar land deals elsewhere in Africa, the company insists crops will be exported only after demand is met in Ethiopia -- where 6.2 million people are said to be in need of emergency food aid because of poor seasonal rains.

"Our main aim is to feed the Ethiopian people," Karuturi's Ethiopia general manager, Hanumatha Rao, told Reuters, sitting under an awning at the Bako farm as hundreds of laborers harvested maize in the fields stretching up nearby hillsides. "Whatever we produce will go to the stomachs of the Ethiopian people before it goes to the international market."

ANOTHER AFRICAN REVOLUTION

While many governments have been busy courting foreigners, in most cases from Asia or the Middle East, to increase Africa's food output, small farmers like Gudina are not totally without friends.

An initiative backed by the Melinda and Bill Gates and Rockefeller foundations is aiming to kick-start an African Green Revolution, carefully avoiding the pitfalls that had engulfed previous such attempts.

In particular, Africa boasts a dazzling array of soil types, climates and crops that have defied the one-size-fits-all solution of better seed, fertilizer and irrigation that worked in Asia half a century ago.

Its perennial tendency to corruption and official incompetence has also played its part in keeping average grain yields on the continent at just 1.2 tons per hectare, compared with 3.5 tons in Europe and 5.5 tons in the United States.

AGRA's Adesina says sub-Saharan governments are slowly realizing the importance of small farmers, who account for 70 percent of the region's population and 60 percent of its agricultural output. But he urges governments to make good on a pledge six years ago to raise farm spending to 10 percent of their national budgets.

For its part, AGRA is pouring money into research institutes from Burkina Faso in the west to Tanzania in the east to breed higher yielding and more drought- and pest-resistant strains of everything from maize and cassava to sorghum and sweet potato. Keywords: FOOD/AFRICA

"We've been studying African agriculture for several decades and the message we keep getting back from farmers is: 'It's the seeds, stupid,'" said Joseph DeVries, director of AGRA's seed improvement division. "What you're planting is what you're harvesting."

As yet, the work -- carefully packaged as "Africans working for an African solution" -- involves only conventional breeding techniques, such as cross-pollination and hybridization, as genetically modified seeds remain prohibitively expensive for farmers subsisting on one or two dollars a day.

However, AGRA does not rule out a future role for GM food crops, a stance that has stoked fears it will inadvertently pave the way for U.S. seed companies into the continent beyond South Africa, the only country that allows widespread commercial use. It also accepts a need for chemical soil additives -- a source of concern to environmentalists -- although it stresses the importance of "judicious and efficient use of fertilizer and more intensive use of organic matter."

After 10 years of research, DeVries said, AGRA has developed, among other things, a cassava variety with double its previous yield and a hybrid sorghum strain that is producing 3 to 3.5 tons per hectare, compared with 1 ton before. It is also giving grants to rural shop-keepers to try to create seed distribution networks in countries that remain too small or inaccessible to attract interest from established commercial suppliers.

"There's huge demand for these new varieties, but there's just not nearly enough investment. It's logistics, and it's also capital," DeVries said.

CASH FOR CROPS

As ever in Africa, money -- or, rather, a lack of it -- is a major problem. According to AGRA's Adesina, only 1 percent of private capital on the continent is made available to farming, due to banks' concerns about loan collateral and a reluctance to deal with farmers who in many cases are barely literate.

However, the Green Revolution push has begun to attract some serious financial players.

With AGRA providing $10 million in loan guarantees, South Africa's Standard Bank, the continent's biggest bank, has earmarked $100 million over three years for small farmers in Ghana, Mozambique, Tanzania and Uganda. The pilot scheme suggests the bank is buying an argument slowly gaining traction: That Africa, a continent more renowned for war, famine and disasters, could and should evolve into the breadbasket of the world.

With less than 25 percent of Africa's potential arable land under cultivation, according to many estimates, and its current levels of yield at rock-bottom, it is a compelling, if distant, vision.

"The first step is improving the efficiency of small farmers in Africa," said Jacques Taylor, head of Standard Bank's agricultural banking arm in Johannesburg, seat of the gold on which most of South Africa's wealth has so far been based. "Can we get them to increase their yields from just over 1 ton to 3 tons to 5 tons? That's possible. It's not a dream. It's a reality."

LAND-GRABS AND GM'S TROJAN HORSE?

Even though Standard Bank says it is keen to expand the funding, if all goes well, there is a very long way to go before such financing makes a dent in the $11 billion the FAO says has to be invested in Africa each year.

"Do we need more of this? For sure. $100 million is really a drop in the ocean when you look at the funding needs," Taylor said. "But we'd like to think this is a step in the right direction."

As such, it seems inevitable Africa will have to adopt a dual-track approach to its looming food crisis -- rolling out the red carpet for more Karuturis, but also making life easier for Berhanu Gudina and his colleagues in central Ethiopia.

While it is hard to fault the thinking behind either strategy, critics of both abound.

Across the continent, foreign deals have been condemned as "land-grabs" negotiated between barely accountable administrations and outside companies or governments who care little about poverty or development.

In one notable case, in Madagascar, a little-reported million-hectare deal with South Korean conglomerate Daewoo contributed heavily to a successful popular uprising in March against President Marc Ravalomanana.

Elsewhere, from Sudan and its numerous Gulf farmer-investors, to Republic of Congo and a group of white South African commercial farmers, to Ethiopia and its Indians, land has become a hot political potato.

The prevailing view outside governments is that the little guys are being forced to make way for the mega-deal.

"It cannot just descend on them from the sky. It has to be done in consultation with the people who occupy the land," Ethiopian opposition leader Bulcha Demeksa told Reuters. "But the government is not doing that. It is just going ahead and signing agreement after agreement with the foreigners."

Similarly, AGRA's detractors look to unintended consequences of India's Green Revolution -- particularly the environmental damage caused by widespread fertilizer use and drying up of water tables -- to argue Africa should look before it leaps.

Furthermore, says Mariam Myatt of the Johannesburg-based African Center for Biosafety, if India's experience is anything to go by, a Green Revolution would leave Africa's farmers as dependent on banks and seed and fertilizer companies as they are now on seasonal rains.

"The Green Revolution, under the guise of solving hunger in Africa, is nothing more than a push for a parasitic corporate-controlled chemical system of agriculture," she said.

With Bill Gates also pumping funding into biotech research at bodies such as the African Agriculture Technology Foundation, Myatt said, AGRA might end up as the unwitting Trojan horse that eases GM crops -- and Western corporate interests -- into Africa.

"It will go a long way toward laying the groundwork for the entry of private fertilizer and agrochemical companies and seed companies and, more particularly, GM seed companies."

(Editing by Jim Impoco and Walter Bagley)


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Asia governors endorse U.N. forest carbon scheme

David Fogarty, Reuters 12 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Six provincial governors from Indonesia, Laos and the Philippines on Thursday backed an expanded U.N. scheme aimed at protecting and conserving forests in return for carbon credits.

In a joint statement after a meeting on the sidelines of an annual gathering of Asia-Pacific leaders, the governors said the scheme, called REDD+, held the promise of boosting livelihoods for local communities, a key step in curbing deforestation.

But fair distribution of wealth was key.

"People in the cities have better education, they are richer but actually they produce carbon poison," said Abang Tambul Hussin, regent of Kapuas Hulu in Indonesia's West Kalimantan province.

"The communities in the forest area have to be more prosperous," he told the meeting, convened by the Asian Development Bank and ecosystems service firm Carbon Conservation.

Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) aims to reward developing countries for saving their forests in return for carbon offsets that they can sell to rich nations.

The United Nations hopes REDD will be part of a broader global climate pact from 2013, ushering in a potentially multi-billion dollar boost to the global carbon market.

REDD+ expands the idea to protection, restoration and sustainable management of forests.

The governors said that the REDD+ "approach offers tremendous promise in creating a new set of incentives for the preservation and sustainable management of forests," and urged world leaders to push the concept at U.N. climate talks in Copenhagen next month.

FIRES, ILLEGAL LOGGING

Four of the governors were from Indonesia, including Central and West Kalimantan on Borneo island, South Sumatra and West Papua. Attapeu province in Laos and Albay province in the Philippines also endorsed the scheme, with some of the provinces already starting pilot REDD+ projects.

Indonesia is on the front line of effort to save the world's remaining tropical forests, with deforestation responsible for more than 10 percent of mankind's greenhouse gas emissions.

But the meeting also underscored the challenges facing the scheme that many rich nations support in the hope of offsetting some of their planet-warming emissions at home.

Ensuring the money from forest carbon credits flowed to local communities, awareness of the scheme on the ground, poverty, fighting illegal deforestation and curbing the expansion of palm oil estates were among the key issues facing REDD+, they said.

"It's very important for us that people know exactly that if they take care of the forest they can have also the money," Central Kalimantan Governor Agustin Teras Narang told Reuters.

"The challenge for us is to maintain our forests, especially dealing with fires, illegal logging," but added the threat from illegal logging had eased and that the province would cap palm oil plantation coverage.

"Maybe at the end of this month, about 900,000 hectares. Enough," he said. Central Kalimantan has lost about a third of its forest area and has Borneo's largest peat carbon store.

The governor of West Papua, Abraham Octavianus Atururi, said his province still had 85 percent forest cover but pointed to the region's poverty, population of under one million, limited infrastructure and problems in monitoring illegal land clearing.

(Editing by Ron Popeski)

Asian Governors see REDD, in fight to halt climate change
WWF 13 Nov 09;

Asian Green Governor’s meeting, Singapore, 12/11/2009 - A group of Asian governors from forest rich countries, meeting in Singapore on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting, have urged APEC leaders and UNFCCC* negotiators to place forest protection, restoration and payments for environmental services at the forefront of agreed efforts to halt climate change.

The participating governors (convened by the Asian Development Bank) are targeting compensation under the emerging global forest carbon market – including the Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) mechanism – to support local development. Discussions at the meeting featured examples of specific pilot project efforts and initial REDD design concepts.

Specifically, the Heart of Borneo (HoB) Initiative was raised as a prime example of the sort of action needed in the region to mitigate the effects of climate change. The HoB was established in 2007 by joint declaration of the three Bornean governments - Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei - and commits to the preservation and sustainable development of around 240,000 km2 area of continuous forest in the Heart of Borneo.

Speaking at the meeting, Indonesia’s governor of central Kalimantan (on the island of Borneo), the Honourable Augustin Teras Narang, said:

“The Heart of Borneo Initiative is an opportunity to address climate change through REDD, sustainable forest management and payment for environmental services, but we need real incentives and equitable financing mechanisms to realise the ambitious goals of the Heart of Borneo.”

REDD financing mechanism and the HoB
Large scale carbon-rich forest landscapes such as the HoB can play a major role in achieving emission reduction targets while conserving and sustainably managing the contiguous trans-boundary forests of Borneo. The basic idea behind REDD is that countries willing and able to reduce emissions from deforestation should be financially compensated for doing so. REDD financing as a win-win instrument can bring a whole range of benefits. For HoB countries, REDD would represent a new source of financing for national and provincial conservation and responsible growth; for developed countries it would be a cost-efficient option for offsetting Greenhouse Gas Emissions.
The Heart of Borneo is globally one of the most important centres of biodiversity with record rates of endemism. In addition, the tropical forest and important peatlands of the HoB hold significant amounts of carbon and therefore, play a vital role in mitigating global warming.
Adam J. Tomasek, WWF's Leader for the Heart of Borneo Initiative, addressed the Governors and noted the opportunities and difficulties faced.

"The Heart of Borneo is a global treasure chest of ecosystem goods and services, but these life-sustaining functions are not valued or properly compensated. It is important that the bold commitments made by the three governments under the Heart of Borneo are met with new and viable financing mechanisms for large-scale forest conservation and sustainable management. Equitable compensation for REDD is not just a good idea, it is absolutely necessary,” he said.

At the closing reception, Asian Development Bank (ADB) President Haruhiko Kuroda highlighted the importance of initiatives such as REDD in addressing climate change.

“Addressing climate change, via reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation, is one of the central goals of the ADB,” he said.

The ADB and WWF are jointly supporting the Heart of Borneo initiative through mobilizing much needed financial and technical resources to deliver the goals agreed by the three Bornean governments.

* UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

Notes to editors.

Asian Green Governors Meeting
The Roundtable meeting of progressive "Asian Green Governors" was convened in Singapore on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting. They represent both those who have already begun specific efforts at the sub-national level and those just beginning to develop REDD concepts.

A Green Governors Roundtable was first convened in December 2007 on the sidelines of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) 13th Conference of the Parties (COP-13) held in Bali. That meeting promoted the still young REDD concept, and it was considered instrumental in having supported the inclusion of REDD in the Bali Action Plan as one element of the emerging post-2012 global climate change framework to be finalized in Copenhagen at COP-15 in December 2009.

The Heart of Borneo Initiative
In February 2007, the governments of Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia and Malaysia signed the Heart of Borneo Declaration to protect an area of around 240,000 square kilometres in the centre of the island and bordering all three countries. Together they emphasised the fact that these tropical rainforests have strategic, global, national and local functions, not only for citizens of these three countries but for the global human race.
The declaration is supported under important regional and international agreements such as Association of East Asian Nations (ASEAN), Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines East Asia Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA), Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC), and the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (UNCBD).


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Deforestation threatens Indonesia's Papua region

Yahoo News 12 Nov 09;

JAYAPURA (AFP) – Logging and agribusiness is threatening environmental destruction in Indonesia's Papua region, one of the world's last vast wildernesses, local leaders said on Thursday.

The governors of the two provinces in the region on the western end of New Guinea island told an international environmental conference a strategy was needed to avoid the mistakes that have decimated other Indonesian regions.

"Pressure and threats to biodiversity in Papua are increasing. Papua is becoming a target for massive agro and forestry industry investment," West Papua Governor Abraham Atururi said at the conference, jointly organised with environmental groups WWF and Conservation International.

Atururi said his government had received an increasing number of requests for development and feared environmental destruction from illegal logging aimed at clearing land for plantations.

"Papua should not repeat the failure to manage forests and biodiversity that has happened in Kalimantan (Borneo) and Sumatra," he said, referring to massive development on those islands that has seen tropical forests dwindle.

The governor of Papua province, which sits on the eastern end of the region, Barnabas Suebu, said preserving the tropical forest-blanketed region was key to helping absorb the gases that cause climate change.

"The capacity of Papua's 42 million hectares (104 million acres) of forests to process CO2 is equivalent to the carbon footprint of nearly all the population of Europe," Suebu said.

Indonesia, which spreads across over 17,000 islands, has been a key advocate for plans being floated ahead of global climate talks in Copenhagen in December that would see developing countries paid to conserve forests and peatlands.

Deforestation, largely on Borneo and Sumatra, has seen the country become the world's third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases.

Papua biodiversity conference expected to yield real actions
Niken Prathivi, The Jakarta Post 13 Nov 09;

The first Papua International Biodiversity Convention for sustainable development, which runs from Tuesday to Saturday, is expected to produce fruitful recommendations including a road map to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (Unfccc) in Copenhagen next month.

Papua Governor Barnabas Suebu said Thursday the convention being held in Jayapura was expected to inspire real actions in order to bring fresh ideas to the Unfccc.

“This [event] is one of the steps between the Unfccc in Bali in 2007 and the Copenhagen convention,” Barnabas told a press conference on the sideline of the convention Thursday.

“Our idea in organizing the four-day event is to produce applicable steps in maintaining biodiversity, especially in building sustainable development in Papua.

“The results of this convention will be presented at Copenhagen to show to the world that Papua is capable of handling environmental issues, especially in reducing emissions and mitigating global climate change effects,” he said.

Barnabas said Indonesia is now heavily dependent on Papua’s forests for biodiversity and oxygen supply. Therefore, the convention would emphasize the preservation of Papua’s forests.

Papua has a total of 41.25 million hectares of forests. Some 50 percent of the total forest area is allocated as conservation areas; 30 percent is for production forests; and the remaining 20 percent is set aside for conversion forests.

“However, of around 8 million hectares of forests that are allocated for conversion, we will probably use only a million hectares,” Barnabas said, adding that the converted land could be used for oil palm plantations that would be sustainably managed to avoid damaging the forest ecosystem.

Barnabas further said that Papua has started to apply a policy to plant 10 trees for every tree felled.

“Under this policy, the Papuan people will start to earn a living from planting and nurturing trees, rather than felling them as they used to do.”

These real actions, said Barnabas, are examples of initiatives that could be implemented at an international level through the Copenhagen event.

“So, I’m really hoping that this convention produces fruitful recommendations as a follow up to the country’s commitment in mitigating climate change and emissions.

“In Copenhagen we will definitely present what Papua has already done and is about to do [for nature conservation], and hopefully, we could earn concrete financial gains from the REDD scheme,” said Barnabas, referring to the scheme for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation.

Prominent environmentalist Emil Salim said the world had committed to prioritize sustainable development by, among other things, preserving the environment.

“With its richness and uniqueness in biodiversity, Papua could be an open laboratory for the world in finding new ways to implement sustainable development,” said Emil, a member of a presidential advisory council, adding that Papua had half of Indonesia’s total biodiversity.

“Through this convention, I really hope Papua can lead the world in methods of carrying out development without damaging the environment. We could start to give added value to our natural resources, instead of exploiting them,” he added.

West Papua Governor Abraham Oktavianus said he considered Papua a standard bearer of global forest conservation.

“Let’s do something to avoid the possible destruction of Papua’s forests,” Abraham said in a statement.


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Greenpeace demands U.S. action on deforestation

Stephen Coates Yahoo News 12 Nov 09;

JAKARTA (AFP) – Greenpeace activists from around the world chained themselves to excavators in a logged peatland forest in Indonesia on Thursday to demand more US action to stop deforestation.

Fifty activists from a dozen countries, including major greenhouse gas emitters the United States and China, also unfurled a massive yellow banner with a message for US President Barack Obama.

"Obama: you can stop this," it read, ahead of the US president's visit to the region at the weekend for a summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Singapore.

"Greenpeace is sending President Obama an urgent call to action from the frontline of climate and forest destruction," Greenpeace USA forest campaigner Rolf Skar said.

"He has promised to take decisive action on climate change, yet with just weeks left before December's critical UN climate summit, his administration is actively undermining and stalling global climate change negotiations."

The Copenhagen summit has been convened to seal a treaty to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, whose obligations to cut carbon emissions expire in 2012, but there is little hope of agreement due to long-standing differences between rich and developing countries over who should bear the burden of lowering emissions.

Indonesia is the third biggest emitter of greenhouse gases blamed for global warming, after China and the United States, and 80 pecent of its emissions are the result of deforestation.

The clearing and burning of Indonesia's peatlands account for four percent of total global emissions, according to Greenpeace.

The protest was staged in the Kampar peninsular, in Sumatra island's Riau province, where a major peatland forest is under threat from logging concessions and clearing for palm oil plantations.

Ignoring Greenpeace's calls for a logging moratorium, the Southeast Asian archipelago continues to shred its forests -- home to rare species such as tigers, elephants and orangutans -- faster than anywhere else in the world.

"Indonesia is climate change's 'ground zero'," Greenpeace Southeast Asia campaigner Bustar Maitar said.

"Stopping forest destruction here and around the globe is not only one of the quickest and most cost effective ways to combat climate change but is essential in order to avert runway climate change in our lifetime."


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Brazil: Deforestation sees biggest drop in 20 years

Marco Sibaja, Associated Press Yahoo News 13 Nov 09;

BRASILIA, Brazil – Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon dropped nearly 46 percent from August 2008 to July 2009 — the biggest annual decline in two decades, the government said Thursday.

Analysis of satellite imagery by the National Institute for Space Research shows an estimated 7,008 square kilometers (2,705 square miles) of forest were cleared during the 12-month period, the lowest rate since the government started monitoring deforestation in 1988.

"The new deforestation data represents an extraordinary and significant reduction for Brazil," President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said in a statement.

The numbers have been falling since 2004, when they reached a peak of 27,000 square kilometers (10,425 square miles) cleared in one year, according to the space research institute.

The government credited its aggressive monitoring and enforcement measures for the drop, as well as its promotion of sustainable activities in the Amazon region, an area in northern Brazil the size of the U.S. west of the Mississippi River.

But Paulo Gustavo, environmental policy director of Conservation International, said a major factor is the drop in world prices for beef, soy and other products that drive people to clear land for agriculture in the rainforest.

"The police control has improved a little, there has been success in controlling deforestation," Gustavo said. "But the main factor is the drop in commodity prices, which are the main factor in speeding up or slowing deforestation."

Satellite images from the space research institute have allowed government inspectors to increase enforcement, the government said.

The Brazilian Environment Institute reported confiscating about 230,000 cubic meters (8.1 million cubic feet) of wood, 414 trucks and tractors and 502,000 hectares (1.2 million acres) of land linked to illegal deforestation activities from August 2008 to July 2009. The government has also issued $1.6 billion in fines, the statement said.

Amazon deforestation causes 75 percent of Brazil's greenhouse gas emissions, according to the National Inventory of Greenhouse Gases.

Amazon deforestation 'record low'
Gary Duffy BBC News 13 Nov 09;

The level of deforestation in the Amazon has dropped by 45% and is the lowest on record since monitoring began 21 years ago, Brazil's government says.

According to the latest annual figures, just over 7,000 sq km was destroyed between July 2008 and August 2009.

The drop is welcome news for the government in advance of the Copenhagen summit on climate change.

But Greenpeace says there is still too much deforestation and the government's targets are not ambitious enough.

According to the Brazilian space agency, which monitors deforestation in the Amazon, the annual rate of destruction fell by 45%.

Green credentials

Welcoming the news, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva described the drop in the level of deforestation as "extraordinary".

He said climate change was the most challenging issue the world was facing.

The Brazilian government will undoubtedly view the latest figures as a boost to its green credentials coming just before the Copenhagen summit in December.

At the summit, the Brazilian government seems certain to present its efforts to reduce destruction in the Amazon as a key part of its strategy to combat climate change.

The environment ministry here is said to be proposing that around half of a 40% cut in Brazil's carbon emissions would come from reducing deforestation.

The Brazilian government wants to see an 80% reduction in the deforestation rate by 2020.

The environmental pressure group, Greenpeace, welcomed the latest drop as important, but said that there was still too much destruction in the rainforest.

In a statement, it said the president would be happy if, in 11 years time, the Amazon was being destroyed at a rate of a little less than three cities the size of Sao Paulo a year.

Some environmentalists believe that the fall in deforestation may be connected to the economic downturn, and that when things improve, the Amazon could face renewed pressure.


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