Best of our wild blogs: 1 Dec 09


say “no” to Captive Whale Sharks
from isn't it a wonder, how life came to be

Climate & Consumption
from Story of Stuff

Sat 05 Dec 2009 - Sungei Buloh Anniversary Walk
from Habitatnews

“Raising a Family” – A photographic exhibition
from Bird Ecology Study Group

13 Dec (Sun): Screening of "End of the Line"
from wild shores of singapore

From Tiny To Giant @ Pulau Hantu Dives
from colourful clouds

Perching Asian Paradise-flycatcher
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Venus Drive
from Singapore Nature

In dengue-infested Indonesian village: clinic or trees?
from the Reuters Environment Blogs

World requires radical new economic models to fight poverty and mitigate global warming from Mongabay.com news


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Floating tankfarm may be sited off Pulau Sebarok

Outcome depends on metocean, sea current monitoring feasibility studies
Ronnie Lim, Business Times 1 Dec 09;

SINGAPORE's first floating oil and petrochemicals tankfarm could be built off Pulau Sebarok - 9 km south of the mainland - if the latest sea current and physical environment studies to be carried out there show it to be a feasible location.

Sebarok - already used for on-land oil storage by Dutch tankfarm operator Vopak and PetroChina-owned Singapore Petroleum Company - has been identified by JTC Corporation as a possible site for such Very Large Floating Structures (VLFS), a just- called JTC tender shows.

The island is also very close to Pulau Bukom, where the Shell refinery is, and not far from Singapore's main oil and petrochemicals hub, Jurong Island.

JTC is seeking a consultant to carry out sea current monitoring and metocean studies there - the latter referring to the physical environment near an offshore platform, such as, the wave and wind strength.

The move to build such floating oil storage has become more urgent given that Jurong Island - with 75 per cent of its 3,000 hectares already taken up or reserved - is fast running out of land needed for projects for Singapore's growing oil and petrochemicals refining and trading hub. That is why JTC earlier this year also embarked on building the $890 million first phase of the Jurong Rock Cavern to store oil underground.

Recent JTC estimates show that even with 3.5 million cubic metres of new oil storage to be added to Singapore's existing 4.6 million cu m of capacity, there will still be a shortfall of at least three million cu m of capacity.

The latest Pulau Sebarok study - part of its phase two study which includes environmental impact, engineering design, business model and security of the VLFS - follows a search in February this year for potential sites.

It will involve the consultant carrying out sea current monitoring with an acoustic doppler current profiler at the VLFS location for two months, plus conducting metocean design data analysis to establish design and operational wind, wave, sea current and water level conditions via hydraulic modelling.

JTC indicated earlier this year that it will decide whether to build the VLFS depending on the outcome of the phase two studies which will be completed in March next year.

The earlier phase one studies, completed in late-2007, showed such VLFS to be technically feasible and comparable in cost to land-based oil storage.

The studies established that to be economical, the minimum storage capacity of a VLFS should be 300,000 cu m, or equivalent to that of a very large crude carrier.

It would comprise two rectangular modules, each measuring 180m by 80m by 15m and with 150,000 cu m of capacity. Preliminary cost estimates show that a VLFS would cost at least $180 million.


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Realising Jurong Island's potential

Business Times 1 Dec 09;

Completed 21 years in advance, the island has become a magnet for petrochemical investments

FROM seven idyllic islands to one big bustling petrochemical centre, the formation of Jurong Island in the last 14 years has been nothing short of extraordinary. Even more striking is how reclamation works on the island recently ended - 21 years ahead of schedule.

'We had defied great odds to complete this reclamation ahead of time,' said JTC Corporation chairman Cedric Foo at Jurong Island's reclamation completion ceremony in September.

Jurong Island is the answer to a vision that came about as early as in the 1960s. Back then, Singapore was among the top three oil refining centres in the world, but it was looking for a 'quantum leap' to maintain its edge in the petrochemical industry.

'Regional countries were also planning to set up refineries for their own domestic market,' Minister for Trade and Industry Lim Hng Kiang recounted at the reclamation completion ceremony. 'We realised that we needed a quantum leap to stay ahead of the competition.'

What Singapore needed was to build up and integrate the petroleum industry with the petrochemical industry. But there was insufficient industrial land on the mainland to house more chemical companies. 'This gave rise to the bold idea to reclaim and join seven southern islands into what we know today as Jurong Island,' Mr Lim said.

Three oil giants were already operating on three of the islands - Esso on Pulau Ayer Chawan, Singapore Refining Company on Pulau Merlimau and Mobil Oil on Pulau Pesek.

The other four islands - Pulau Ayer Merbau, Pulau Pesek Kecil, Pulau Sakra and Pulau Seraya - also became important pieces of the vision.

In 1991, JTC became the agent for developing Jurong Island. Working closely with various government agencies, it delivered the necessary infrastructure and services such as roads, drains and utilities.

Reclamation works began in 1995 and a fair number of challenges cropped up as Jurong Island took shape.

For instance, in 2005, the authorities had to divert and realign a stretch of the Jurong Island Highway - together with 17 pipelines and 4 core fibre-optic cables - to meet ExxonMobil's needs for a contiguous plot of land next to their current cracker.

'This was a mammoth undertaking,' Mr Lim said. 'JTC worked closely with the affected companies and agencies to devise innovative solutions to minimise disruption to business operations on the island.'

Alternative ways

Disruptions to the import of sea sand also posed a risk to progress. But 'we opened up alternative sources of sand supply and explored other ways to meet our needs', Mr Lim said.

The aim was to complete reclamation works in 2030. But as demand for land on Jurong Island surged, JTC brought the third and fourth phases of the project forward and completed the reclamation well ahead of schedule.

Jurong Island is today the cornerstone of Singapore's energy and chemical industry. It spans 3,000 hectares - a giant compared with the seven islands which occupied a total land mass of just 991 ha.

Not only has Jurong Island grown in size, it has also grown in economic clout. In 2000, 61 petrochemical companies invested $21 billion on the island. Today, there are 95 firms pouring in over $31 billion into fixed assets.

The recession had at one point forced some companies to postpone projects on Jurong Island. But with the economy picking up, some plans are back on track.

For instance, China Huaneng - the new owner of Tuas Power - will go ahead to build a $2 billion clean coal and biomass cogeneration plant on Jurong Island. Reports also note that Jurong Aromatics Corporation could resume its US$2 billion petrochemical investment.

Because of strong investor interest, Jurong Island is running out of space. Some 75 per cent of the 3,000 hectares of land has been taken up or reserved by oil and petrochemical investors, JTC told BT recently. 'JTC is in discussions with companies for the remaining 25 per cent,' the agency's spokeswoman said. In his speech at the reclamation completion ceremony, JTC's Mr Foo said that the agency will continue to improve infrastructure on Jurong Island to anchor more investments.

One new facility Jurong Island will be getting is a barging terminal. This will give chemical companies an alternative transport option to trucking - there are only a few roads which trucks carrying hazardous materials can use to get to the island currently. The terminal will be built on the western part of the island and the first phase of the project will be ready by 2011.

New roads

There could also be a new road link to Jurong Island. JTC has completed a preliminary study on building another road from the mainland, which would cater to the growing working population. Some 38,000 people pass through the island's checkpoint daily. JTC still needs to iron out details such as the position and cost of the second link, which could be ready by 2017.

To boost security on Jurong Island, JTC will also introduce a biometric access system at the checkpoint. The system should be completed by 2011.

'We will continue to find ways to adjust the Jurong Island profile to bring about stronger integration for greater operating efficiencies by the companies, and in particular to include new entrants,' said Minister Lim.

'Our vision is for Jurong Island to be a global energy and chemical hub. We intend to achieve a critical mass of feedstock, move to higher value chemical chains which produce speciality chemicals and advanced materials, and partner companies in developing new chemical products.'

A series of articles sponsored by JTC.


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How to go green: Be energy-efficient

Big carbon emission cuts can come from simple fixes: Experts
Grace Chua, Straits Times 1 Dec 09;

EFFORTS to use new energy technologies are hampered by businesses' reluctance to toss out their expensive and energy-inefficient equipment, said head of the International Energy Agency's (IEA) energy efficiency and environment division Richard Bradley.

That is why boosting energy efficiency is still the best and easiest way to cut carbon emissions before 2030, he said.

This is because equipment, buildings and transport infrastructure all have lengthy lifespans, he explained. For example, 80 per cent of power plants in the United States built since 1890 are still in operation. Some still burn coal, belching carbon dioxide which leads to warming when it accumulates in the atmosphere.

Mr Bradley spoke to reporters yesterday before the start of sustainable energy conference

EnviroAsia, which begins today, a week ahead of the United Nations climate conference in Copenhagen.

The IEA is the energy policy and statistics agency of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

'In the near term, the biggest reductions will come from energy efficiency,' Mr Bradley said.

Only after 2030 will major changes such as electric cars or nuclear energy be implemented on a larger scale, even though they are already in the works now. 'Many of the energy decisions for the next decade are being made now or have already been made,' he said.

Meanwhile, seemingly small energy-efficiency improvements - such as reducing the amount of standby power that cable set-top boxes use - can lead to big energy savings. Likewise, refurbishing existing equipment to make them more efficient will save energy.

However, it will take government policies, such as regulating standby power or light bulbs, to bring about those changes, he added.

Commenting on energy efficiency, Dr Michael Quah of Singapore's Energy Studies Institute said fixes could be simple, but such low-hanging fruits were often not plucked because of poor planning. 'Sometimes, we set wrong KPIs (key performance indicators) without thinking,' he said.

He gave an example: If buildings are constructed with the aim of making them as cheap as possible, they would not be as energy-efficient as if they were built to reduce costs over their entire life cycle.

Asked for his opinion on the possible outcome of the Copenhagen climate talks, Mr Bradley said he was encouraged by the US and China's announcements of emission targets.

'What we are now seeing is that the major economies are coming forward and indicating their willingness to put that general framework (for emission cuts) in place,' he said.

At EnviroAsia, he will lecture on energy trends in Asia and speak at a panel on energy-efficient technologies.


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Focus on sustainability could open up US$1 trillion ICT market

Wong Siew Ying, Channel NewsAsia 30 Nov 09;

SINGAPORE: Experts said on Monday the growing focus on sustainability and lower carbon emissions is set to benefit the infocomm and technology (ICT) sector.

Speaking at an industry forum, observers said this could open up a US$1 trillion market for ICT products and services that aim to cut carbon emissions and costs.

Singapore – with its highly qualified workforce, research and development programmes and financial incentives for green investments – is in a good position to ride the new wave of ICT innovation, said industry players.

They said SMART grid technology, which uses digital technology to deliver electricity from suppliers to consumers, can help Singapore further reduce its energy use.

Peter Lacy, head of sustainability practice, Accenture, said: "There is a potential to save S$280 million by 2020 by applying SMART grid in terms of transmission and distribution... the new connections required to enable SMART grid will potentially deliver another S$300 million in terms of revenue growth."

Industry players said companies and ICT players can collaborate further to lower their carbon footprint. Some US$500 billion, out of various economic stimulus packages, could be injected into sustainable technologies over the next two years.

Tan Yen Yen, chairman of Singapore Infocomm Technology Federation, said: "In China and India, there are a lot of infrastructure build-ups, so when we talk about infocomm, they certainly can play an enabling role.

"Together with IDA International, we are also working with them as they look at e-government services in many of these countries."

The International Energy Agency has forecast that up to US$45 trillion could be invested globally to achieve an energy-secured and low-carbon economy by 2050.


- CNA/so

Green IT Awards to recognise firms with outstanding sustainable IT practices
Jonathan Peeris, Channel NewsAsia 1 Dec 09;

SINGAPORE: The search is now on for companies to be nominated for Singapore's first ever Green IT Awards.

The awards are jointly organised by the Singapore Business Federation and IBM Singapore. They aim to acknowledge Singapore-based enterprises that initiate and implement outstanding sustainable IT practices.

Green IT covers everything from the environmentally responsible use of computers and related IT resources to the use of energy efficient CPUs, servers, data storage, as well as reduced resource consumption and proper disposal of e-waste such as printer cartridges.

The awards will be hosted as part of EcoWorld 2010 and will comprise two categories - the "Enterprise Green IT Award" for multi-national corporations located in Singapore, and the "Small & Medium Business Green IT Award" for local SMEs.

The deadline for the first round of submission for the awards is 31 January 2010, which will be followed by judging and shortlisting in February.

Another round of interviews and even a site visit will then take place in March, before the award presentation in April.

- CNA/sc


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Damaged South Kalimantan coral reefs cover 530 ha

Antara 30 Nov 09;

Banjarmasin, South Kalimantan (ANTARA News) - Of 13,330 hectares of coral reefs in South Kalimantan, some 530 hectares have been damaged by sedimentation and pollution.

Based on a study conducted by the South Kalimantan environmental agency and the provincial fishery and maritime service, most of the damaged coral reefs were covered by coal, Rakhmadi Kurdi, head of the South Kalimantan environmental agency said here on Monday.

"The Bunati coral reef area is currently in poor condition as many of the corals have died due to sedimentation and coal," he said.

Apart from Bunati, coral reefs in Batulicin and Tanah Laut coastal areas were also damaged or died, he said.

Almost all rivers in South Kalimantan experienced sedimentation and the muds later went into th sea, he said.

About the pollution caused by coal, he explained that companies usually washed their barges carrying coal in beaches.

"Therefore, I have asked concerned district authorities to ban washing barges in sea because it is violation of the law," he said.

Another factor which caused coral damages in the province was stealing of corals by villagers who later sold the corals.

In Indonesia, the death-rate of coral reefs is fairly high among other things because of human activity to bomb the fish. A report said that the damage and the death of coral reefs reach 40-45% from the coral reefs area of 1.5 million hectare.


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Bali's governor proposes a 1,000 turtle kill quota despite protests

Ni Komang Erviani, The Jakarta Post 30 Nov 09;

Despite protests from animal lovers, Governor Made Mangku Pastika admits the Bali administration has proposed to the Ministry of Forestry regarding a plan to utilize a quota of 1,000 turtles per year for various religious and ceremonial purposes.

"We proposed the quota for ceremonial uses. We never proposed the *slaughter' of turtles to cook lawar *a traditional Balinese dish of mixed meats - either pork, turtle, chicken and fish with vegetables and spices*," the governor pointed out.

The proposal is based on the number of customary villages in Bali, which is around 1,000. Each village holds a grand ceremony at least once a year.

"We have made an accurate calculation of each village's turtle needs," he said.

Pastika went further, saying a proposal was made to prevent people from committing illegal turtle poaching. Balinese Hindu people strongly believe turtles to be sacred animals and some large-scale ceremonies require the use of turtles.

However, in addition to ritual purposes turtle meat in the past was widely consumed, pushing Bali's turtle population to the brink of extinction.

Turtles are protected under the 1990 Conservation of Biodiversity and its Ecosystem Law.

Illegal turtle traders can face up to five years in jail and a Rp 100 million (US$10,000) fine.

Previously, an expert from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) Indonesia strongly opposed the governor's plan to ask for a turtle quota.

Program coordinator of WWF Indonesia Creusa Hitipeuw stressed the proposal would open the turtle trade for the sake of ceremonies.

"This will affect Bali's tourist industry," he said.

Bali was for a long time seen as a notorious haven for the illegal trade of turtles.

Thousands of turtles were shipped and slaughtered for human consumptions.

"We can reach an agreement on the use of turtles in various religious activities," Hitipeuw said.

According to data from the Turtle Conservation and Education Center, Bali only needs 80 turtles a year for religious purposes, far less than the 1,000 turtles proposed by Pastika.

Data from Pro Fauna, an environmental NGO, revealed shocking statistics. Prior to 1999, the turtle trade in Bali reached 27,000 to 30,000 per year. After 1999, the number of turtles traded in Bali declined to 2,000 per year.

This year, Bali has traded 500 turtles from Lombok, Sulawesi, Maluku and Sumatra, WWF recorded.


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Shark nets trapping other marine life

Jo Skinner, ABC News 1 Dec 09;

Rescue teams free an eight-metre humpback whale caught in shark nets off Coolangatta Beach on the Gold Coast on 1 September 2009. (ABC News: TV still)

The Queensland Government has released details of marine animals caught in shark nets off the Queensland coast.

Sixteen dolphins, six whales, one dugong, 109 sting rays and 30 turtles were inadvertently caught in the nets in the past 12 months.

All of the whales and turtles were released but 12 dolphins, the dugong and 27 stingrays died.

Shark Control Program spokesman Tony Ham says the government is working to reduce shark nets' impact on other marine life.

"We're currently working on a sausage-style bait to try and discourage dolphins from stealing baits from our drumlines - so that they don't become habituated to the shark control gear and hopefully that will lead to a reduction of captures as well," he said.


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Crown-of-thorns sea stars threaten Shirahama coral reefs

Japan Times 30 Nov 09;

OSAKA (Kyodo) The coral reefs of Shirahama, Wakayama Prefecture, are being devoured by an explosive increase in poisonous starfish, and only five volunteer divers armed with tongs are combating them to save the rich marine environment.

The crown-of-thorns starfish ("oni-hitode") originally lived in subtropical seas. But after the 1990s, they started appearing off Kyushu and Shikoku as well as Wakayama, apparently because of global warming and eutrophication caused by the development of coastal areas of Japan.

Unless drastic eradication efforts are mounted, the coral reefs of Shirahama, a popular tourist spot on the Kii Peninsula, could be decimated within one or two years, experts warn.

"If we keep removing (the starfish) in limited areas on a regular basis, there should be some effect," said Katsuyuki Nakaya, 53, who runs a shop catering to divers and chairs an environmentalist group based in the city of Wakayama.

The five volunteer divers, including Nakaya, must wear protective gear when prying the starfish off the coral because of the creatures' poisonous thorns.

Kushimoto, another Kii port east of Shirahama, was hit by a massive onslaught from the pest from 2004 through 2007.

The municipal government of Kushimoto, also a popular diving and tourist spot, gave subsidies to divers who helped remove around 60,000 of the starfish over the four-year period. This apparently resulted in only 3,000 crown-of-thorns starfish sightings in 2008.

Nakaya and the other four divers are shouldering the entire cost of their starfish-removal activities, including boat fuel. They have asked the Wakayama Prefectural Government and other bodies to help.

"Coral reefs have been destroyed by humans. Humans should take responsibility and protect (the environment)," Nakaya said.

Tatsuo Motokawa, a professor at Tokyo Institute of Technology, said corals live in shallows with temperatures 18 or higher near over 80 countries.

The area accounts for only 0.1 percent of the world's seas, but about one-third of all ocean fish live among them, the reason coral is dubbed the "oasis of the sea."

However, only one-third of coral reefs are believed to be healthy.


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Save 'special' carnivores plea

Matt Walker, BBC News 30 Nov 09;

Giant otters, monk seals, walruses, spectacled bears, giant and red pandas and the odd-looking fossa are among the carnivores most in need of conserving.

That is according to the most-detailed study yet of the evolutionary history of carnivores and their relationships. It examined 222 carnivore species including big cats, wolves, bears, seals, otters and their relatives.

It found that some species are so distinctive that special efforts should be made to ensure their survival.

Details of the research are published in the journal Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.

Despite the popularity of carnivores and the large number of studies done on them, scientists still do not completely understand how they evolved, and how modern species are related to one another.

"There are many questions that are yet to be answered in a satisfying manner," says Professor Ingi Agnarsson of the University of Puerto Rico in San Juan, who led the new study.

For example, the relationships between the cat-like families, known as feliforms, is unresolved.

"Even the relationships among the big cats, lion, tiger, leopard etc are really very poorly understood," he says.

The same is true for many dog-like species, such as racoon dogs, foxes, African and Asian wild dogs and wolves, and scientists have struggled to understand how bears are related to each other and other carnivores.

A particular problem has been finding out which animals are most closely related to red pandas.

In an attempt to resolve many of these issues, Prof Agnarsson and colleagues Laura May-Collado of the University of Puerto Rico and Dr Matjaz Kuntner of the Slovenian Academy of Science and Arts in Ljubljana, produced the first evolutionary tree for all carnivores.

They created it by studying 222 living carnivore species, and 17 subspecies, out of the 270 or so species of carnivore thought to exist.

That meant the researchers could check the relationships between 82% of all living carnivores, as compared to 28% studied in the previously most comprehensive review.

They also included four extinct species, such as the sabre-tooth cat and giant short-faced bear.

The scientists studied how carnivores are related by comparing sequences of the cytochrome b gene, and checking how they varied between species.

"The gene we use is unusually reliable," says Prof Agnarsson.

They know that from other evolutionary studies that use the same gene, and because most of their own findings agree with previous research.

The new study supports the split of carnivores into two main evolutionary groups: dog-like carnivores called Caniforms and cat-like carnivores called Feliforms.

But it did throw up a few surprises (see Confused carnivores), which the researchers say will need further research to resolve.

As well as unpicking the relationships between carnivores, the study enabled the team to identify those species that are unusually distinct.

Among these unique carnivores are the monk seal, giant otter and sea otter, giant and red panda , spectacled bear, Liberian mongoose, otter civet, Owston's palm civet, the fossa of Madagascar, which looks much like a dog that climbs trees (pictured above right), and the binturong of south-east Asia, which is also called the Asian bearcat.

"Some of the high-priority taxa for conservation have received very little attention and should be considered carefully in future conservation planning," says Prof Agnarsson.

The team's study supports ongoing efforts to conserve animals such as the monk seal and giant panda.

But it suggests more needs to be done to safeguard of the futures of other carnivores such as the giant otter, fossa and walrus.

"Our analysis suggests we should pay careful attention to what is happening to walrus populations," says Prof Agnarsson.

"Our analysis suggests we should pay careful attention to what is happening to
populations," says Prof Agnarsson.

"This species is extremely evolutionary distinct, as it contains a lot of evolutionary history not shared with any other species. So it is important in terms of biodiversity," he warns.

The species was recently listed as 'least concern' by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, suggesting it is not in imminent danger.

"But now we are not sure anymore that the species is 'safe'. Our results suggest we should fight to keep it safe," says Prof Agnarsson.

In a separate but related effort, the Zoological Society of London runs an EDGE (Evolutionary Distinct and Globally Endangered) of Existence programme that highlights the precarious conservation status of a range of animals beyond the carnivores.

On that list is 100 of the rarest animals including the Chinese giant salamander, Bactrian camel and blue whale.

KEEP IT IN THE FAMILY
# Generally, carnivores can be divided into two superfamilies: dog-like (Caniformia), and cat-like (Feliformia)
# Dog-like carnivores are traditionally split into dogs and their relatives, and a group comprising bears, racoons, weasels, seals and the walrus
# Cat-like carnivores are split into a range of groups, including cats, mongooses, hyenas and civets

CONFUSED CARNIVORES
# The new study generally supports the traditional carnivores groups. However, it also finds that:
# The kinkajou of South America is not related to racoons as thought
# The red panda (above) may actually be most closely related to dogs and their relatives
# South American jaguars are more closely related to Asian leopards and snow leopards than other big cats


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Vultures should be allowed to return as 'nature's waste managers' in Spain

Mad cow regulations deprived vultures of carcasses to feed off, reversing revival of European populations, say researchers

Giles Tremlett, guardian.co.uk 30 Nov 09;

Europe's carrion-guzzling vultures should be allowed to return to their old jobs as nature's waste managers, according to scientists who say the birds are suffering as they increasingly depend on being fed by people.

Stringent regulations brought in because of mad cow disease in 2002 meant the carcasses of dead cows, as well as sheep, goats and other livestock, could not be left in the open. Carrion was crucial part of the vultures' diet, but the birds now do much of their feeding at managed carrion centres set up by authorities.

The change means a gradual, decades-old revival of vulture populations around Europe is grinding to a halt. Vultures fed by humans find it harder to reproduce and farmers complain some have taken to attacking live animals.

"The effects of this policy include a halt in population growth, a decrease in breeding success, and an apparent increase in mortality of young age classes," a group of Spanish researchers said in a letter to Science magazine.

Population growth has flattened out over the past decade after two decades in which vultures, which had been systematically poisoned by farmers, had flourished. The number of griffin vultures in Spain, for example, increased from 3,500 pairs to 18,000 between 1979 and 1999.

Last year 20,000 pairs were counted but there is evidence that populations have begun to decline rapidly. One observatory near Segovia, central Spain, reported a 40% drop over five years. Another observatory in La Rioja, northern Spain, reported an 80% drop, and says local vultures have stopped reproducing completely.

Spain, which is home to 90% of Europe's griffin, cinereous and bearded vultures, has asked the European Union to relax the ban on leaving dead livestock where they fall. "For centuries there was no problem in leaving carcasses out," said Juan Antonio Gil, of Spain's Bearded Vulture Foundation. "The vultures cleaned them up."

"Now carcasses have to be collected and disposed of centrally, with all that means in terms of costs and the energy used," he said. Rather than spend money on tractors, trucks and diesel fuel, he said, the task could be done for free by vultures.

"The most efficient and ecologically friendly way to dispose of carcasses it to let the vultures do the job," he said.


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A case for maintaining biological diversity

Muhammad Hatta and Ahmed Djoghlaf, Jakarta Post 30 Nov 09;

The glass of clean water you drink is probably purified by a wetland or the root system of an Indonesian forest. The medicine you take may also have come from nature's warehouse of services and the trees around your house actually work to trap dust, dirt, and harmful gases from the air you breathe. This list goes on.

Our natural ecosystems perform fundamental life-support services and represent the biological diversity that is the fruit of billions of years of evolution, shaped by natural processes and, increasingly, by the influence of humans.

In simple terms the value of biological diversity can be compared with financial markets. A diverse portfolio of species stocks, as with business stocks, provides a buffer against fluctuations in the environment (or market) that cause declines in individual stocks.

This stabilizing effect of a "biodiverse" portfolio is likely to be especially important as environmental change accelerates with global warming and other human impacts.

It is therefore outrageous that this web of life, of which humans are an integral part, is being rapidly eroded by human action. Species created over billions of years are being destroyed at an alarming rate which is 1000 times higher than the natural rate shrinking nature's basket of goods and services.

Indonesia is particularly endowed with a very high level of this biodiversity, spread over its 1.8 million square kilometer of land and of 5.8 million square kilometer of water area. The country is among the 17 mega-diverse countries of the world in terms of its rich biological diversity.

The country holds 12 percent of mammals, 16 percent of reptiles and 17 percent of birds placing it in the top rank globally. This rich biodiversity is protected through a complex network of biosphere reserves, wildlife sanctuaries, national parks, ecotourism parks, forest parks and hunting parks spread over 28 million hectares.

Considering that in 1981 this protected network of life was limited to only 7 million hectares, the recent expansion is a wonderful achievement for the country.

Outside the protected landscape the Indonesian Ministry of Environment has also increased the number of floras and faunas being bred in captivity from 171 species in 2006 to 416 species in 2008.

Despite these major successes the country is not immune to the global trends in which human activities are creating the greatest wave of extinction of species since the natural disaster which wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.

The past few hundred years, humans have increased species extinction rates by as much as 1,000 times the background rates that were typical over Earth's history of 6 billion years.

The latest government data about deforestation rate, including degradation and fragmentation, states that deforestation rate in 2000-2005 stood at 1.08 million hectares and is expected to spread to 1.6 million hectares per year in future.

Worryingly for biodiversity, lowland forest, which is the most diverse area for biodiversity, is the most threatened forest due to conversion of land use, moving farm, irreversible forest management, development of infrastructure, mining, fires and various illegal activities.

This is worrying for the government as an estimated 40 million Indonesians living in rural areas depend on the biodiversity around forests for their sustenance.

For example, studies indicate that the total annual economic value of some environmental services in Maros Karst Regions Pangkep (KKMP) touches Rp 2 trillion (about US$220 million) per year.

Obviously, there is no substitute then to reverse this negative trend of biodiversity loss and the government is considering ambitious plans, such as increasing marine conservation area from 4.7 million ha to 20 million ha by 2020.

Such plans of course depend upon not only the Indonesian people but also on the attitude of the global community. The biggest bottleneck to biodiversity destruction globally is lack of appreciation of the value and importance of this natural resource.

Private companies, landowners, fishermen, and farmers take most of the actions that affect biodiversity industry related to the above mentioned stakeholders can therefore play an important role by recognizing the extent to which they actually rely on natural resources and how their work affects ecosystems.

Governments have traditionally been considered solely responsible for managing the public services of ecosystems, but it is now clear that markets can also contribute to this task, often without spending public money.

One initial option is to take voluntary action, the importance of which cannot be under estimated in view of the current crisis in the financial and related industry. Including environmentally sustainable and socially ethical practice by setting shared standards is a recognized good practice.

Of course, self-regulation is a privilege, not a right so maintaining the public trust through proper monitoring and compliance mechanism is essential to keep the privilege of self-regulation.

Alternatively, companies may extend to a "life cycle" analysis of its raw material supply chains, employee lifestyle choices, and the biodiversity impacts of how customers use and dispose of their products. Benchmarks may be defined internally or relative to other leading firms in the same (or another) sector.

In the case of companies with a relatively large "footprint" on the land or seascape - such as energy, mining, agriculture, forestry or fisheries - conservation action may be linked explicitly to the environmental impacts of the companies' operations.

Several interesting and innovative mechanisms are currently being tried, such as carbon offsets, standards and certification etc. to make industry biodiversity friendly in their operations.

The CBD supports promotion of such new ideas and practices and has taken two decisions in 2006 (Brazil) and 2009 (Germany) for actively engaging business in biodiversity conservation, sustainable use and sharing of benefits.

Prof Muhammad Hatta is the Indonesian Minister of State for the Environment and Dr. Ahmed Djohglaf is the Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of the international Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), in Montreal, Canada.


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Bordeaux banks on biodiversity

Suzanne Mustacich Yahoo News 30 Nov 09;

BORDEAUX, France (AFP) – It was a crisp autumn day in the vineyards of Saint Emilion, the vines asleep for the winter, as winegrowers, scientists and children planted hedges to create habitats for mites needed to prey on vine pests.

This marked the debut of an ambitious biodiversity project launched by pioneering French vintners in a bid for sustainability.

The biological diversity of Saint Emilion's 8,000-hectare vineyard landscape, intertwined with wine since Roman times and protected by UNESCO as a World Heritage site since 1999, has been precariously reduced by urbanization, chemical vine treatments, and one-crop farming.

The long-term goal of the community project, unveiled to coincide with St. Catherine's Day when "all trees take root", is an attractive and functional landscape.

It will come with dozens of kilometres of interlinking green corridors that allow animals to move between 1,100 wine estates, and reduce soil erosion, vine treatments and fertilizer and pesticide run-off.

The corridors, for the moment, however, are few, far between, and fragile. Where a variety of crops grew 50 years ago, grapevines reign supreme, often cultivated from the edge of the ditch alongside the road to within steps of the cellar door.

"In Saint Emilion, vineyard land sells for between one and three million euros per hectare, so when we let grass or poppies grow, it seems incomprehensible," said Xavier David-Beaulieu, owner of Chateau Coutet, a 14-hectare estate with one hectare of woods and prairie.

Viticulture has made the area wealthy but monoculture provides an ideal habitat for pests like spider mites and leafhoppers to colonize and infest a field, destroying the grape quality and yield.

For decades, chemicals provided the answer, but led to a vicious cycle of dependency.

"When you treat with insecticides only three percent of the bugs are a menace to the vineyards, the other 97 percent are useful," said Patrice Hateau, director of Chateau Fombrauge.

In the case of spider mites, the insecticides also kill their natural enemy, the predatory mite Typhlodromus. "Just one Typhlodromus per vine leaf means you don't have to treat for red or yellow spider mites."

Herbicides, used to make the vine rows pristine, exacerbate the problem. "Ninety percent of the bugs live at soil level."

"The more an environment is complex, the less vulnerable it is," said Maarten van Helden, a researcher in Integrated Pest Management and Biodiversity at the National School for Agricultural Engineers (ENITA) and consultant on the Saint Emilion project, which is now part of a larger biodiversity study in France, Spain and Portugal awaiting approval from the European Union.

A rare oasis for fauna and flora is 55-hectare Chateau Figeac, a legendary estate in Saint Emilion. The vineyard dates to the 2nd century AD and has been continuously inhabited ever since. Owners have fought the temptation to replant the 15-hectare greenbelt with vines.

"The trees are my luxury," said owner Thierry Manoncourt.

"Chateau Figeac is a condensed picture of everything we need to do in Saint Emilion," said Philippe Bardet, the winegrower-activist behind the project, which now has the support of 26 public organisations.

Over the last 20 years, he has planted hedges and allowed grass cover, using this "functional landscape" to produce healthy grapes with fewer chemical interventions. Natural predators attack grape worms, and grass grown between the vines reduces diseases like mildew and rot by 30 percent.

One campaign he led reduced obligatory vine treatments of the pernicious Golden Flavescence disease by 63 percent, and won the support of 1,400 vintners.

Encroaching towns on either side of Saint Emilion pose another threat. And vintners need only drive as far as the city of Bordeaux, also planted with grape vines by the Romans, to see a vineyard landscape threatened by urbanization.

At Chateau Pape Clement, a short cab ride from city hall, where Hateau is also the director, he succinctly states: "We have 385 neighbors, and 385 menaces."

Street lights attract swarms of insects and a neighbouring hospital wanted to "sanitize" a water basin that provided a friendly habitat for "good" bugs and plants.

Yet even in this "hostile" environment, Hateau has successfully reintroduced biodiversity as a substitute for insecticides.

"This year I see the difference. In 2005 we left the grass to grow in the alleys. Since the 2008-2009 season we haven't used any herbicides. We've had to use very little insecticides and what we do use is organic."

Hateau, like Bardet and many other Bordeaux vintners, eschews organic and biodynamic farming.

"We are on the third path -- we take the best of the 'lutte raisonnée' (moderate use of pesticides), the best of biodynamic and the best of organic viticulture," said Hateau. "This is sustainable viticulture, and in my opinion, the only sustainable future.

This year, Hateau planted a kilometre of nearby urban thoroughfare with "Sustainable Tom Thumb" wild flower mix, and is considering a custom-blend for Pape Clement.

He believes biodiversity will give him a competitive edge in terms that will resonate with fellow vintners.

"From the point when you limit your chemical interventions, you will reinforce the identity of your terroir. We are trying to free our terroir to express its complexity. People can share consultants, copy our methods, but no one can copy our terroir. It's the one thing that cannot be copied."


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Plan to breed lab monkeys splits Puerto Rican town

Jill Laster, Associated Press Yahoo News 30 Nov 09;

GUAYAMA, Puerto Rico – Puerto Rico has such a bad history with research monkeys running amok that some residents are stunned that its government has tentatively approved a plan to import and breed thousands of primates for sale to U.S. researchers.

Bioculture Ltd., with facilities at 19 sites around the world, has secured construction permits and hopes to begin operating next summer in Guayama, a small, depressed mountain district in southeastern Puerto Rico.

They want to turn the Caribbean territory into a major supplier of primates, much to the dismay of islanders already dealing with a plague of patas monkeys — descendants of lab escapees that run though backyards, stop traffic and destroy crops.

The company, based in the African island nation of Mauritius, says the operation will employ at least 50 people and buy fruit from local farmers, an important consideration on an island where unemployment is nearly 16 percent.

"This will help many people in the community," said Olga Colon, a local school principal who has collected 300 signatures in support of the facility. She said Bioculture has pledged to buy supplies for her school.

But the project is opposed by many — from Guayama Mayor Glorimari Jaime to Puerto Rican actor Benicio del Toro, who says it's unethical to breed monkeys for research, and renowned primatologist Jane Goodall.

"We know now that monkeys have minds, personalities, and, above all, they have feelings," Goodall said during a recent visit to Puerto Rico. "What we do for monkeys in medical research — if you were a monkey, it would be torture."

Local residents have filed a lawsuit supported by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals that says Bioculture failed to submit a full environmental impact statement or hold public hearings.

They say Bioculture allegedly paid fees for a $2 million project, when the project costs $12 million. The company denies the allegations.

A judge could decide as early as Monday whether to order an injunction to halt construction. Either side could appeal the ruling to the state Court of Appeals.

The company expects to soon apply for permits to import monkeys to Puerto Rico.

Bioculture's facility, the first in a U.S. jurisdiction, plans to start with 1,000 Crab-eating Macaques, natives of Southeast Asia, and eventually hold up to 3,000.

The U.S. territory has long struggled to control hundreds of patas monkeys, descendants of primates that escaped in recent decades from research projects and now thrive in the lush tropical environment.

No labs want the patas monkeys because they're no longer right for research, and many are diseased. There isn't much demand from zoos, either. So rangers from the island's Department of Natural Resources trap and kill them.

Wilson Nazario Torres fears the people of Guayama will suffer like those in his hometown, Lajas, which has been overrun by patas monkeys. The three that live in his back yard are so used to humans, he can't scare them away.

"If this project was offered in any state in the United States, they wouldn't allow it," said Roberto Cintron, a 46-year-old resident of Carmen, a Guayama neighborhood close to the facility site. "So they come to an isolated community, a neglected community, and offer jobs, and people buy it."

Bioculture Vice President Moses Mark Bushmitz said some groups are just trying to stir up panic. It happens at all new facilities.

The Guayama facility is one of many already inside the United States, he said, where about 70,000 research monkeys were used in 2007, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The company assures people in Carmen and all of the Guayama district that its monkeys can't escape multiple levels of security.

"You have monkeys in MIT, you have monkeys in Harvard," Bushmitz said. "So why isn't it an issue if the monkey will escape in Harvard, but it is an issue if a monkey will escape in Carmen?"

Bushmitz called the protesters a small minority.

"This area was neglected for so many years," he said. "The people here have no chance. The young guys have no work."

But Carla Cappalli, a local animal rights activist, says opponents will keep fighting, no matter what the judge rules.

"This is going to be a long case," she said. "We're going to fight this to the end."


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Kangaroos May Hold Key To Preventing Skin Cancer: Study

Miral Fahmy, PlanetArk 1 Dec 09;

SYDNEY - Understanding how kangaroos repair their DNA could be the key to preventing skin cancer, according to Australian and Austrian researchers.

The teams are investigating a DNA repair enzyme found in kangaroos and many other organisms, but not humans, that is very effective in fixing a particular type of damage linked to many skin cancers.

The research is led by Dr Linda Feketeova and Dr Uta Wille from the ARC Center of Excellence for Free Radical Chemistry and Biotechnology at the University of Melbourne, along with scientists from the University of Innsbruck, Austria.

"As summer approaches, excessive exposure to the sun's harmful UV light will see more than 400,000 Australians diagnosed with skin cancer," Feketeova said in a statement.

"Other research teams have proposed a "dream cream" containing the DNA repair enzyme which you could slap on your skin after a day in the sun. We are now examining whether this would be feasible."

The groups are simulating kangaroo skin's exposure to harmful ultraviolet light in the laboratory, and then analyzing the DNA repair process, which Wille said resulted in a number of chemical by-products that have not been seen before.

"But there is still much to investigate before this "dream cream" will be available at the pharmacy, so don't throw out your sunscreen just yet," Feketeova added.

The research will be published in the upcoming edition of Chemical Communications.

Over-exposure to sunlight is to blame for at least two-thirds of cases of melanoma, a notoriously difficult to treat cancer of the skin, as DNA in sunburnt skin cells becomes damaged, leading to genetic mutations.

(Editing by David Fox)


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Kenya seizes tonne of ivory, arrests 65 in major operation

Katie Collins, Reuters 30 Nov 09;

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya has seized 1,100 kg of ivory and arrested 65 people in the past three months in a major international operation stretching across six African nations, its director of wildlife said on Monday.

Julius Kipng'etich of the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said the seizures and arrests were carried out in an international operation aimed at tackling wildlife crime in Africa.

"Kenya's elephant population, like those of other African countries, continues to suffer from intensified poaching to supply increasing amounts of ivory to international markets," he said in a statement.

Rising complexity of wildlife crime required a sophisticated law enforcement response, he said, adding the operation involved KWS and Interpol operating across Kenya, Burundi, Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda and Tanzania.

"(This) is among the biggest hauls ever recorded... it shows the ability and will of law enforcement to tackle wildlife crime effectively," said Peter Younger, Manager of Interpol's Africa wildlife crime program in a statement.

Interpol has been working with African police forces and customs, wildlife and security agencies to target local ivory markets, airports, border crossings and known smuggling points.

Six of those arrested in the exercise, dubbed Operation Costa, were foreign nationals. Firearms, ammunition, vehicles, big cat skins and other illegal wildlife products were also seized.

Almost half the ivory confiscated in Kenya was seized at Nairobi's main airport, Jomo Kenyatta, and authorities believe huge quantities were destined for markets in the Far East.

"The illegal ivory trade is not just about smugglers and poachers, there are far-reaching consequences to this and all wildlife crime," said Younger.

"Law enforcement officers have been killed, people are threatened with violence, and corruption and the wider economic impact on a country are all linked to these types of crime."

(Editing by Jon Boyle)

Kenya ivory seizure 'reflects poaching rise'
Helen Vesperini Yahoo News 30 Nov 09;

NAIROBI (AFP) – Wildlife officials here Monday displayed more than half a tonne of recently-seized ivory, reflecting a rise in poaching they said was prompted by the controversial sale of stockpiled tusks last year.

The seizures in Kenya were part of what officials said was the largest-ever anti-poaching operation in East Africa, involving authorities in six states.

"Tons of illegal ivory have been seized and hundreds of people arrested in the largest-to-date international operation targeting wildlife crime across Eastern Africa," the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said.

KWS official Patrick Omondi said the seizures showed an increase in poaching in Kenya and elsewhere, and highlighted a clear link with the UN-authorised one-off sale of more than 100 tonnes of stockpiled ivory by four southern African countries in 2008.

"We've seen an increase in poaching in the country and one of the factors is the sale," said Omondi.

"Kenya opposed it on the grounds it would stimulate illegal killing," Omondi said.

An official from Interpol's wildlife crime unit said: "The argument was that if we sold those stockpiles it would satisfy demand and put an end to poaching.

"That argument was false. When that ivory was sold, poaching was stimulated," the official said.

Interpol and other regional and international organisations were involved in the seizure operations that also included Burundi, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda.

Detailed results from those countries have not yet been released.

The 568 kilos (1,252 pounds) put on display by Kenyan authorities in Nairobi on Monday was in addition to 532 kilos seized in the initial phase of the operation some three months ago.

The wildlife service's security chief, Peter Leitoro, claimed the seizures were a serious blow to poachers who were increasingly sophisticated and dangerous.

"We have seen the criminals getting more organised. In the past the charcters you were dealing with had bows and arrows. Today they are individuals with firearms," he told reporters.

The wildlife service used sniffer dogs to detect much of the ivory on display.

The ivory trade was banned in 1989 because poachers were wiping out elephant populations.

Kenya's elephant population shrank from 160,000 in 1973 to one tenth of that by the time the ban was introduced.

The ban on the international trade in ivory, the establishment of the KWS and anti-poaching measures have enabled the population to climb back up to some 35,000 currently.

The controversial UN-approved auction in October last year involved Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe and was conducted under the supervision of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).


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Tree Harvester Offers to Save Indonesian Forest

By NORIMITSU ONISHI
Norimitsu Onishi, The New York Times 29 Nov 09;

TELUK MERANTI, Indonesia — From the air, the Kampar Peninsula in Indonesia stretches for mile after mile in dense scrub and trees. One of the world’s largest peat swamp forests, it is also one of its biggest vaults of carbon dioxide, a source of potentially lucrative currency as world governments struggle to hammer out a global climate treaty. The vault, though, is leaking.

Canals — used legally and illegally — extend from surrounding rivers nearly into the peninsula’s impenetrable core. By slowly draining and drying the peat land, they are releasing carbon dioxide, contributing to making Indonesia the world’s third biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, after China and the United States.

The leaks were evident to a family of fishermen from this village, just south of the peninsula, as they paddled up a creek in a dugout canoe.

“I can tell the peat land’s leaking because the water here is getting browner and more acidic,” said Amiruddin, 31, who like many Indonesians uses only one name, as his wife, Delima, 29, scooped up the creek’s coffee-colored water to drink.

Forests like the one on the Kampar Peninsula are at the center of a growing battle over the shape of a new climate treaty and efforts to curb the destruction and degradation of forests. Though countries are expected to reach only a broad agreement at next month’s summit meeting in Copenhagen, governments, scientists, businesses and environmentalists are already arguing over what kinds of forests should qualify as carbon reducers and what kinds of projects should be rewarded financially.

The arguments over the Kampar have become particularly heated, not just because of its ecological importance, but because, so far, the most detailed plan to stop the leaks from the peat land comes from an unlikely source: a giant paper and pulp company that, according to its critics, has been one of the driving forces of deforestation in Indonesia. The company, Asia Pacific Resources International Limited, or April, says it wants to create a ring of industrial tree plantations around the peninsula’s core to preserve it.

What is more, it hopes to receive carbon credits for doing so under a United Nations program to reward nations for conserving forests and reforesting degraded ones. The program, Reducing Emissions From Deforestation and Forest Degradation, or REDD, is expected to be part of a new climate treaty. Unlike the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, a new treaty is expected to tackle deforestation, which alone accounts for 20 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Halting deforestation in tropical forest nations like Indonesia and Brazil, the world’s fourth biggest emitter, is considered crucial to reining in global warming.

Developing nations that preserve forests would be paid with carbon credits that they could sell to industrialized nations seeking to meet emissions reduction targets. Though the program’s specifics will probably take months or years to be worked out, more than a dozen projects of the United Nations program are already under way in Indonesia, backed by such diverse entities as conservation groups, the Australian government and Merrill Lynch, in addition to paper and pulp companies.

Environmental groups say the paper and pulp companies, after years of despoiling Indonesia, should not be rewarded under the program.

“They are the ones that did the damage,” said Michael Stuewe, an expert on Indonesia at the World Wildlife Fund. “Now they’re saying: ‘We were bad boys. Now we’re good. So give us the money.’ ”

The companies argue that the United Nations program could provide them with the financial incentives to preserve forests even as they expand their operations, a goal supported by the Indonesian government, which sees the paper and pulp industry as a mainstay of the country’s economic development.

“We could perhaps reduce the annual Indonesian emissions by 5 percent with this one project,” said Jouko Virta, April’s president of global fiber supply, referring to the company’s plan to ring the peninsula’s core. “It’s so significant. One project.”

Everyone agrees, at least, on the importance of saving the Kampar Peninsula, a nearly one-million-acre peat bog on the equator inhabited by Sumatran tigers, bears, monkeys, crocodiles and other wildlife.

Most of the peninsula remains free of humans, though small fishing camps can be found up its creeks. More significantly, illegal loggers can be seen operating in bases set up along some canals and creeks. And east of here, near a village called Pulau Muda, more than a dozen houses flank a long canal jutting into the peninsula, in what appears to be the biggest human settlement on the Kampar.

Made up of decomposed trees and plants, sometimes as deep as 50 feet, the waterlogged land stores billions of tons of carbon dioxide. But once drained or cleared, the peat land releases many times more carbon dioxide than the deforestation of rain forests. Most experts believe that, as with rain forests, the protection of peat swamp forests will be eligible for carbon credits under the United Nations program.

The Kampar Peninsula is one of the last tracts of green left in central Sumatra, where forests have been cleared to make way for palm oil plantations and industrial tree plantations, especially those belonging to April and its chief rival, Asia Pulp and Paper, both owned by Indonesian conglomerates. According to the World Wildlife Fund, here in Riau, the province where the two companies have their main mills and plantations, two-thirds of the area’s forests have disappeared in the past quarter century.

Illegal loggers have also clear-cut vast chunks of forest. Migrants often slash and burn land for farming, sometimes inside national parks; like people elsewhere in Indonesia, they are often encouraged by local governments seeking to populate areas for economic or political reasons, in defiance of officials from the understaffed Forestry Ministry.

April, which, with its partners, has government-issued concessions across a third of Kampar, says its ring of acacia plantations around the core will block off any such encroachment, though it says it needs to acquire more land to complete the circle. On plantations already in operation, the company uses a sophisticated network of canals and dams that minimizes leakage from the peat land, environmental groups acknowledge.

If April acquired control over the core, it could be paid for protecting it. The company says it believes that it can be, at the very least, rewarded for the ring, about half of which would be turned into acacia plantations and half left as natural forests or what it calls “conservation areas.”

“The carbon we are storing in the conservation areas could be financed through REDD,” Mr. Virta said in an interview at April’s 4,300-acre mill, about two hours west of here by car.

Agus Purnomo, who leads the government’s National Council on Climate Change, said it would take months or years of negotiations after next month’s climate conference to determine whether April’s ring would be entitled to carbon credits.

Much will depend on whether an agreement includes stipulations against the conversion of natural forests into industrial tree plantations. Indonesia, like other countries with paper and pulp industries, counts industrial tree plantations as forests.

Environmental groups caution against any project of the United Nations program involving the conversion of natural forests into industrial tree plantations. Bill Barclay, policy director at the Rainforest Action Network, said the priority in Indonesia should be to “halt further conversion of natural forests” and “further draining of peat lands.”

But that kind of argument finds little traction in a nation with an economy that is still developing.

Mr. Purnomo, of the country’s climate change council, said government officials were worried that Indonesia’s ranking as the world’s third biggest emitter of greenhouse gases would increase pressure to reduce emissions.

“Are we going to remain underdeveloped because of that?” he asked.

Since starting operations on a new concession near here in September, April has brought jobs to Teluk Meranti. As part of its community outreach, it has brought a new generator to increase the supply of electricity and construction material to renovate two mosques. Still, Teluk Meranti had yet to buy April’s vision of the future. Villagers remained overwhelmingly opposed to the company’s presence here, opponents and supporters of the company said.

“We don’t know what we’ll get,” said Firdaus, a 39-year-old man operating a makeshift convenience store. “What rights do we have?”

He was unaware of April’s ring project. But, yes, he had heard of the importance of peat from environmental groups. “We were told,” he said, “to protect the peat for the climate.”


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Communal forests no longer on Indonesia's map

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 30 Nov 09;

Indonesia may no longer contain the world's third-largest expanse of forest after the government decided to remove communal forest from the map to end conflicts over the ownership status of forested land.

The decision was proposed during a workshop held by the Forestry Ministry to seek solutions to long-standing forest problems.

"It will give clear ownership status to communal forest," Hariadi Karodiharjo, a member of the National Forest Council, told The Jakarta Post on Friday.

Senior officials from the Forestry, Public Works, Energy and Mineral Resources and State Environment Ministries, local administrations and law experts attended the workshop held Thursday.

The Forestry Ministry said that as of 2006, half of the 31,864 villages in 15 provinces occupied forested land. The ministry did not specify the total area of communal forests.

"If a village converts about 10,000 million hectares, there remains at least 16 million hectares of communal forests," the director general of planology at the Forestry Ministry, Soetrisno, said.

Indonesia claimed to have 120 million hectares of forest, the world's third-largest rain forest after Brazil and the DR Congo.

Soetrisno warned population growth, high poverty rates and regional autonomy would remain serious threats to forest stewardship.

He voiced concern about the massive tracts of forest converted into plantations, particularly in South Kalimantan and Central Kalimantan, adding that many plantations were in operation before the central government agreed to changes in provincial spatial planning laws.

In South Kalimantan, permits for plantations have been provided to 155,400 hectares, while Central Kalimantan has awarded licenses for 3.1 million hectares of plantation.

The workshop also discussed mining operations in forests.

"Many mining companies have secured permits from the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry without informing the Forestry Ministry," Hariadi said.

The 1999 Forestry Law prohibits mining companies from operating open-pit mines in protected forests.

The Indonesian Mining Association has called on the government to revise the 1999 law and a 2004 presidential decree that allows only 13 firms to operate in protected forests.

Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan acknowledged the abundance of natural resources in protected areas that could not be exploited.

Padjajaran University environmental law expert, Asep Warlan Yusuf, suggested the government issue laws on natural resource management to help resolve overlapping forest use.

He said demands to revise the 1999 law were one-sided.

"The most effective way is to enact a natural resources law for all stakeholders to manage forests. It would minimize conflicts resulting from the commercial use of forested areas," he said.


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Rich World Should Pay Africa To Preserve Forests

Tansa Musa, PlanetArk 1 Dec 09;

Rich World Should Pay Africa To Preserve Forests Photo: David Lewis
Logs lie next to a rusting barge on the banks of the Congo river October 7, 2004.
Photo: David Lewis

YAOUNDE - The developed world should pay African countries to preserve their vast forests to help the fight against climate change, some of the continent's governments will argue at next month's summit in Copenhagen.

The position of the group of equatorial African countries -- home to the world's second-largest rainforest after the Amazon -- underscores rifts between industrialized nations responsible for the bulk of greenhouse gas emissions and the developing world seeking compensation to keep development in check.

"African countries of the Congo Basin are not part of the problem, but they are part of the solution by preserving the rainforest which acts as a defense against global warming," said co-chair of the Congo Basin Forest Fund (CBFF) and former Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin.

"In so doing, they deprive millions of their people who depend on the forest for their livelihoods. The rest of the world, particularly the industrialized North, must recognize this and understand that somebody has to pay the price for preservation," he said.

The Congo Basin forests cover an estimated 200 million hectares and provide food, shelter and livelihood for more than 50 million people.

CBFF is associated with the Congo Basin Forest Partnership, a U.N. registered group with ten member states -- Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and Sao Tome and Principe.

According to the CBFF, the forests have been storing an estimated 500 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year, offsetting about 1.7 percent of global emissions of the gas widely blamed for global warming.

But growing populations, expanding subsistence agriculture, road construction, mining and rising Asian demand for hardwood lumber have intensified pressure on the Congo Basin, which has been depleted at a rate of 1 percent per year.

Last month, the group representing the Central African states warned they would not endorse any agreement on climate if the international community does not provide adequate compensation for preserving the forests.

"Developed countries have the moral obligation to ensure proper compensation to countries and populations that are being denied access to their natural resources," said Cameroon's forestry and wildlife minister Elvis Ngolle Ngolle.

Beyond acting as a sink for carbon dioxide emissions, the Congo Basin forests also contain the most diverse grouping of plants and animals in Africa, including rare and endangered species.

Brazil, home to a large chunk of the Amazon rainforest, is also lobbying for a mechanism in the global climate talks that would reward forest preservation.

(Editing by Janet Lawrence)


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Group condemns bulldozing of UNESCO tribal reserve in Paraguay

Yahoo News 30 Nov 09;

RIO DE JANEIRO (AFP) – A group of Brazilian ranchers is bulldozing a UNESCO reserve inhabited by an indigenous Indian tribe with no prior contact with the outside world, an native rights group said Monday.

Survival International said the UNESCO bioreserve in Paraguay's Chaco region is home to the only uncontacted indigenous tribe in South America outside of the Amazon -- the Ayoreo-Totobiegosode.

"The Totobiegosode's land is being destroyed as we speak," said Stephen Corry, director of Survival International.

"Given that their land falls within a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, we hope that UNESCO can play a part in stopping this destruction and pressing for the recognition of their land rights."

The group says a Paraguayan government representative and two relatives of the tribe attempted to enter the region, but were barred by employees of the ranchers' company, Yaguarete Pore S.A.

Survival International said the reserve was intended to protect both the Indian group but also species including the jaguar, "an irony given that a Spanish language translation of that word, yaguarete, is the name of the company bulldozing the reserve."

Satellite photos show that thousands of hectares of the reserve have been destroyed, even though the company has had its license to operate there withdrawn by the Paraguayan government, Survival International said.

UNESCO biospheres are designated under the United Nation's agency's "Man and Biosphere Program," and are intended to promote conservation and sustainable development.

There are over 500 designated sites in over 100 countries, according to UNESCO. The Chaco region in Paraguay was designated in 2005.


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Hong Kong's carbon footprint 'second highest in world'

AFP Google News 30 Nov 09;

HONG KONG — Hong Kong has the second highest carbon footprint per capita in the world, due to the city's high consumption patterns and large volume of imports, according to a survey released in Norway.

The study, conducted by a group of Norway-based scientists, compared the greenhouse emissions of 73 economies and found Hong Kong with a per capita footprint of 29 tonnes per year, second only to Luxembourg's 33 tonnes.

The results prompted calls for Hong Kong, a city of seven million, to strengthen measures to cut its greenhouse gas emissions.

Titled "Carbon Footprint of Nations: A Global, Trade-linked Analysis", the research paper was published in the Environmental Sciences and Technology Journal in June. But the results did not come to the public's attention until they were reported by the daily South China Morning Post on Monday.

Using global data from 2001, the study put Hong Kong's carbon footprint among the highest, larger than the United States' 28.6 tonnes, Singapore's 24.1 tonnes and United Kingdom's 15.4.

Most of the environmental impact comes from the manufacturing and transportation of imported goods, with only 17 per cent of emissions from domestic activities.

The figure is significantly higher than one released by the Hong Kong Environmental Protection Department -- 6.7 tonnes per capita -- which took into account local emissions, such as from transport and power generation, but excludes emissions from the production of imported goods.

A spokeswoman for the Environmental Protection Department declined to comment on the statistics but said the government abides by international guidelines on greenhouse gas emissions.

Bill Barron, a professor from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology's Institute for the Environment, said the government needs to tackle the problem.

"Hong Kong is an economy that is extremely dependant on trade. Therefore the city is tied to the ecological footprints that these imports make," Barron said.

He added that the government is avoiding its responsibility to reduce greenhouse emissions.

Pollution has become an increasing health and economic problem for the financial hub in recent years.

Emissions from the southern Chinese factory belt over Hong Kong's northern border have combined with local emissions from power generators and transport to park a thick haze over the city for most of the year.


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Antarctic melt may push sea levels to 1.4 metres: study

Marlowe Hood Yahoo News 1 Dec 09;

PARIS (AFP) – Quickening ice loss in West Antarctica will likely contribute heavily to a projected sea level rise of up to 1.4 metres (4.5 feet) by 2100, according to a major scientific report released Tuesday.

Scientists long held that most of Antarctica's continent-sized ice sheet was highly resistant to global warming, and that the more vulnerable West Antarctic ice block would remain intact for thousands of years to come.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) -- whose 2007 report is the scientific benchmark for the UN December 7-18 Copenhagen climate summit -- did not even factor melting ice sheets into its forecasts for rising seas.

But studies since then show huge loss of ice mass, mainly as a result of warmer ocean temperatures, according to the review by more than 100 experts on the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.

The new evidence suggests that West Antarctica in particular will add "tens of centimetres" to the global ocean watermark, which is predicted to go up two to nine times higher than the IPCC forecast, according to the report.

Even the relatively modest IPCC projection of a 18-59 centimetre (7-23 inch) increase by 2100 would render several island nations unlivable and wreak havoc in low-lying deltas home to hundreds of millions.

Ironically, the impact of global warming on the region is set to intensify over the next century due to the successful effort to repair another kind of damage to the environment -- depletion of the ozone layer.

A hole in the ozone layer caused by the release of CFC (chlorofluorocarbon) gases has cooled temperatures and shielded most of Antarctica from global warming, the report found.

"The most astonishing evidence is the way that one man-made environmental impact -- the ozone hole -- has shielded most of Antarctica from another, global warming," said John Turner, head of climate research for the British Antarctic Survey and lead editor or the review.

The stable temperatures -- and in some areas additional cooling -- over much of the vast Antarctic continent during the last 30 years has been offered as evidence by climate skeptics that global warming trends were exaggerated or simply false.

But with measures to control the CFC gases, the scientists said they expected the hole to "heal" in around 50 to 60 years, leading to additional warming of about 3.0 Celsius (5.4 Fahrenheit) by century's end.

Already today, 90 percent of the Antarctic Peninsula's glaciers have retreated in the last few decades, though the bulk of the continent's ice sheet has so far shown little change.

The 550-page report highlights several other recent findings:

-- Earth's most powerful ocean current, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, has warmed faster than the global ocean as a whole. This is set to disrupt the region's ecosystems, including the rise of alien species that compete with and replace native Antarctic inhabitants.

That process has already begun on the Antarctic Peninsula, where rapid warming has resulted in the expansion of plant, animal and microbial communities -- many of them introduced by humans -- on newly thawed land.

-- Sea ice loss and ocean acidification are directly affecting wildlife, and could reduce Antarctica's rich biodiversity, from the bottom to the top of the food chain.

Tiny krill have declined significantly, and in some areas Adelie penguin populations have dropped due to reduced sea ice and prey. In other regions, however, notably Ross Sea and East Antarctica, populations of the flightless birds have remained stable or gone up.

-- Levels of carbon dioxide and methane, the two main greenhouse gases, are higher and increasing faster than at any time in the last 800,000 years. At the same time, recent studies show that small changes in climate over the last 11,000 years -- the last ice age -- has caused rapid ice loss along with shifts in ocean and atmospheric circulation.

Antarctic to feed major sea rise
Richard Black, BBC News 1 Dec 09;

Sea levels are likely to rise by about 1.4m (4ft 6in) globally by 2100 as polar ice melts, according to a major review of climate change in Antarctica.

Conducted by the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR), it says that warming seas are accelerating melting in the west of the continent.

Ozone loss has cooled the region, it says, shielding it from global warming.

Rising temperatures in the Antarctic Peninsula are making life suitable for invasive species on land and sea.

The report - Antarctic Climate Change and the Environment - was written using contributions from 100 leading scientists in various disciplines, and reviewed by a further 200.

SCAR's executive director Dr Colin Summerhayes said it painted a picture of "the creeping global catastrophe that we face".

"The temperature of the air is increasing, the temperature of the ocean is increasing, sea levels are rising - and the Sun appears to have very little influence on what we see," he said.

SCAR's report comes 50 years to the day after the Antarctic Treaty, the international agreement regulating use of the territory, was opened for signing, and a week before the opening of the potentially seminal UN climate summit in Copenhagen.

High rise

Two years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected that the global average sea level would probably rise by 28-43 cm (11-16in) by the end of the century.

But it acknowledged this figure was almost certainly too low, because it was impossible to model "ice dynamics" - the acceleration in ice melting projected to occur as air and water temperatures rise.

Launching the SCAR report in London, lead editor John Turner from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) suggested that observations on the ground had changed that picture, especially in parts of the West Antarctic ice sheet.

"Warmer water is getting under the edges of the West Antarctic ice sheet and accelerating the flow of ice into the ocean," he said.

By the end of the century, he said, the sheet will probably have lost enough ice alone to raise sea levels globally by "tens of centimetres".

The remainder of the projected rise would come from melting of the Greenland cap, melting of mountain glaciers in the Himalayas and Andes, and the expansion of seawater as it warms.

A number of research teams have come up with similar projections.

But this is the first time that an international body such as SCAR has endorsed the likelihood that sea levels will rise enough to threaten some of the world's biggest cities by the end of the century.

Cold store

The Antarctic Peninsula - the strip of land that points towards the southern tip of South America - has warmed by about 3C over the last 50 years, the fastest rise seen anywhere in the southern hemisphere, according to the report.

But the rest of the continent has remained largely immune from the global trend of rising temperatures.

Indeed, the continent's largest portion, East Antarctica, appears to have cooled, bringing a 10% increase in the sea ice extent since 1980.

This report backs the theory that it has bucked the global trend largely because of ozone depletion - the chemical havoc wrought over 30 years by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and other agents in the stratosphere above the polar region.

"We used to have a big blanket of ozone, and when we took it away we saw a cooling," said Professor Turner.

"The Antarctic has been shielded from the impacts of global warming."

But, the report concludes, that will not last forever.

The ozone hole is expected to repair itself in about 50 years, now that the Montreal Protocol has curbed the use of ozone-destroying substances.

As it does so, the SCAR team predicts that greenhouse warming will come to dominate the temperature change across Antarctica, as in other parts of the planet.

Doubling of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere would warm the continent by 3-4C, it says.

The majority of Antarctica is so cold that a rise of this magnitude in air temperature would have little impact.

But more warming of the oceans would speed ice loss still further, the report concludes.

On the basis of declines seen around the Antarctic Peninsula, it would also be expected to bring significant reductions in the abundance of krill, a key foodstuff for baleen whales and other animals.

Among humankind, the frozen continent was once a preserve of explorers and scientists.

But now, about 30,000 tourists a year visit, some setting foot on outlying parts of the peninsula.

This increased human traffic, plus the warming on land and sea, are going to change the region's ecology, according to Julian Gutt, allowing organisms to enter and survive that were previously excluded through climate or simple geography.

"A good candidate is the stone crab (aka king crab) such as those found throughout Norwegian waters - they're more than a metre across from toe to toe.

"There are hints of it hopping across from South America - and that could completely change the ecosystem on the sea floor," said the Alfred Wegener Institute researcher.

About one third of one percent of Antarctica's land surface is ice-free; but already, non-native species are competing with native mosses for this meagre resource, Dr Gutt noted.

Major cities at risk from rising sea level threat
Hannah Devlin and Robin Pagnamenta, The Times Online 1 Dec 09;

Sea levels will rise by twice as much as previously predicted as a result of global warming, an important international study has concluded.

The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) calculated that if temperatures continued to increase at the present rate, by 2100 the sea level would rise by up to 1.4 metres — twice that predicted two years ago.

Such a rise in sea levels would engulf island nations such as the Maldives in the Indian Ocean and Tuvalu in the Pacific, devastate coastal cities such as Calcutta and Dhaka and force London, New York and Shanghai to spend billions on flood defences.

Even if the average global temperature increases by only 2C — the target set for next week’s Copenhagen summit — sea levels could still rise by 50cm, double previous forecasts, according to the report.

SCAR, a partnership of 35 of the world’s leading climate research institutions, made the prediction in the report Antarctic Climate Change and Climate. It far exceeds the 0.59 metre rise by the end of the century quoted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in 2007. This was based on a “business as usual” approach by governments that allowed temperatures to rise by 4 degrees. It will underpin the negotiations in Copenhagen.

SCAR scientists said that the IPCC underestimated grossly how much the melting of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets would contribute to total sea-level rises.

One of the world’s leading experts on climate science has called for the world to intensify efforts to control global warming by actively removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

In an interview with The Times, Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC, said that geo-engineering, where carbon is stripped from the atmosphere using specialist technologies, would be necessary to control runaway damage to the climate. “At some point we will have to cross over and start sucking some of those gases out of the atmosphere.”

He added that world leaders meeting in Copenhagen should aim for a tighter target of no more than a 1.5C rise in global temperatures.

The IPCC report predicted that the melting of ice sheets would contribute about 20 per cent of the total rise in sea levels, with the majority coming from the melting of glaciers and the expansion of the water as it warms. It said that it was not able to predict the impact of melting ice sheets, but suggested this could add 10-20cm.

The SCAR report uses detailed climate observations over the past century linking temperature to sea levels to produce a more sophisticated estimate. It puts the likely contribution from ice sheets at more than 50 per cent.

The calculations were carried out by Stefan Rahmstorf, Professor of Physics of the Oceans at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany. Sceptics seized upon his figures as further evidence of the unreliability of climate change predictions.

“It’s 50cm, 60cm, 100cm — 60m if you ask James Hansen from Nasa,” said Benny Peiser, director of the Global Warming Policy Foundation . “The predictions come in thick and fast, but we take them all with a pinch of salt. We look out of the window and it’s very cold, it doesn’t seem to be warming. We’re very concerned that 100-year policies are being made on the basis of these predictions”


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Nearly half of Venice underwater

Yahoo News 30 Nov 09;

ROME (AFP) – Much of the historic Italian city of Venice, including St. Mark's Square, was underwater Monday following a meteorological depression combined with natural tide waters, officials said.

The tide monitoring centre said 45 percent of the Renaissance city was swamped when the lagoon rose 131 centimetres (more than four feet).

Venice was flooded 50 times between 1993 and 2002, with the worst 'acqua alta' on November 4, 1966, when the city was submerged by 1.94 metres of water amid catastrophic flooding throughout the country.

In February 1986, levels reached 1.58 metres above normal, and in December 2008 waters surged 1.56 metres.

The city has for years been wrestling with the problems posed by the threat of rising sea levels. Last year local authorities confirmed they were looking at a scheme to raise the city's buildings to meet the problem.

Under Operation "Rialto", local officials and engineers were looking at using piston-supported-poles placed at the bottom of each structure to lift buildings by up to a metre.

In April 2007, the United Nations cultural organisation UNESCO warned that Venice was one of its designated World Heritage sites that was threatened by climate change.


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Solar panel costs 'set to fall'

Roger Harrabin, BBC News 30 Nov 09;

The cost of installing and owning solar panels will fall even faster than expected according to new research.

Tests show that 90% of existing solar panels last for 30 years, instead of the predicted 20 years.

According to the independent EU Energy Institute, this brings down the lifetime cost.

The institute says the panels are such a good long-term investment that banks should offer mortgages on them like they do on homes.

At a conference, the institute forecast that solar panels would be cost-competitive with energy from the grid for half the homes in Europe by 2020 - without a subsidy.

Incentive programmes for solar panels in Germany, Italy and Spain have created manufacturing volume that's bringing down costs. Solar panel prices dropped 30% last year alone due to an increase in output and a drop in orders because of the recession.

But Heinz Ossenbrink, who works at the institute, said China had underpinned its solar industry with a big solar domestic programme which would keep prices falling. There are large-scale solar plans in the US and India too.

Panels had been expected to last for 20 years and price calculations were based on this (with a free energy source, purchase and installation represent almost the entire price of solar power).

But Dr Ossenbrink says the institute's laboratory has been subjecting the cells to the sort of accelerated ageing through extremes of heat, cold and humidity that has long been a benchmark for the car industry.

Long lifetime

It has shown that more than 90% of the panels on the market 10 years ago are capable of still performing well after 30 years of life, albeit with a slight drop in performance.

Dr Ossenbrink says 40-year panels will be on the market soon.

A key goal for solar is what is known as grid parity. That is the point when it is as cheap for someone to generate power on their homes as it is to buy it from the grid.

It varies from country to country depending on electricity prices, but the institute estimates that Italy - which has a combination of sunny weather and relatively high electricity prices - should reach grid parity next year. Half of Europe should be enjoying grid parity by 2020, it estimates.

Cloudy northern countries like the UK could wait further, possibly up to 2030. But the day would come when solar panels on homes would be cost-competitive without a subsidy, even in Britain.

Dr Ossenbrink says: "Basically everything (in the industry) is bound to grow still further. Growing further means less cost. Less cost means grid parity."

"We have been surprised in the past five years at the drop in prices. It's due to good incentive programmes first in Germany then Spain and Italy. That created a kind of a boom that was helping industry to reduce costs and get into profitability. And when an industry is in profit it drives on its own."

Owning solar

Professor Wim Sinke, from Utrecht University in the Netherlands, who leads the solar umbrella group the European Photovoltaic Technology Platform, says the industry has even greater ambitions.

"The target of the sector as a whole is to reach grid parity in almost all of Europe over the next 10 years. So by 2020 we should have grid parity in most of Europe," he told BBC News.

Key sticking points for domestic solar, he said, would be the lack of flexibility in electricity grids to take in surplus generated energy and difficulties with finance.

Dr Ossenbrink said: "What I would like to see is the finance sector saying solar power is a product like financing a house - except they can predict the value of the solar panel much more safely than they can predict the value of the house in a volatile market.

"Electricity will never be given away free. Banks should offer mortgages on people's solar panels like they do on homes - the bank should own the panel, then it would transfer to the householder when the loan has been paid off. It would be perfect for life assurances."

It will take much longer for solar to match fossil fuel power at the point of generation, the institute says, as wholesale electricity prices are much lower than retail prices.


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