Best of our wild blogs: 2 Dec 09


Kids can go wild on the shores this December!
from wild shores of singapore

Courtship of the White-throated Kingfisher
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Banded Woodpecker harvesting ants
from Bird Ecology Study Group

From West to East On a Saturday Morning
from Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature

Dairy Farm Road
from Singapore Nature

Kopstein’s Bronzeback
from Creatures Big & Small

Two wheels for a change
from The Straits Times Blogs

Very Large Floating Structures may be located near Pulau Jong from wild shores of singapore

Meeting Tam in Borneo: our last chance to save Asia's two horned rhino from Mongabay.com news

Whale Song - 'Pop Culture' of the Planet's Largest Species
from The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond

Blogging wildlife rangers drive microconservation
from Mongabay.com


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Town council to remove trees at Marsiling

But some Marsiling Rise residents say the garden is source of community pride
Esther Ng, Today Online 2 Dec 09;

SINGAPORE - For 10 years, the trees - an assortment of mango, jackfruit, drumstick, soursop and neem - have been carefully tended by a group of residents from Blocks 116 and 117 at Marsiling Rise.

Now, the trees look likely to be cut down, giving rise to the question of whether town councils should follow the letter of the law in disallowing the planting of trees and plants in common areas - or if they can show some discretion when residents take ownership of their surroundings.

Sembawang Town Council is planning to remove the "unauthorised planting" in the turf area between two residential blocks.

Dismayed about the decision conveyed in a notice last month, 31 residents sent the town council a petition on Nov 5.

"Political leaders have exhorted us to develop a sense of pride in our community, and we have taken this to heart and have spent money tending to our garden," wrote retired doctor Praema Raghavan, who has spotted Golden Orioles, Munias, Koels, Bulbuls among the trees.

But the plea failed to persuade the town council.

On Monday, the group spotted contractors surveying the area, two weeks after the last correspondence from the town council explaining why it could not accede to their request.

In an email to Dr Praema, senior property manager Terence Chan said: "While it has been our town council's policy to allow planting by residents, the plants should be kept in pots neatly arranged in front of their flat units.

"For residents who wish to carry out in-ground planting, we have also worked with the Residents' Committee to provide a community garden at Blk 116 for such activity.

"We believe this is a more balanced approach in catering to the hobby and community bonding of residents as well as maintaining the aesthetics of the estate."

According to Dr Praema, the plot of land where the trees are located had been saved once before.

This time, though, Member of Parliament Hawazi Daipi said he learnt of the situation only when contacted by MediaCorp.

Efforts by housing board residents to take ownership of their community have been in the news recently, for example, when the HDB set up a new community relations department.

And at a ministerial walkabout in October, Minister Lim Hwee Hua praised a petition by another group of residents, who were trying to convince the National Parks Board to allow them access to tend their herb garden at Bishan Park while the latter was undergoing upgrading.

"This is a very good reflection of a sense of ownership," Mrs Lim had said.

Dr Praema is still hoping that Marsiling Rise residents' efforts will similarly not go to waste.

"The garden has educational value. Kindergarten teachers bring their kids here for excursions," she told MediaCorp.


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Turning disability into capability

Straits Times 2 Dec 09;

Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam was interviewed by Bruce Nussbaum of BusinessWeek at the ICSID World Design Congress on Nov 23. We carry today an edited excerpt of the interview, which took place at the Suntec City Ballroom.

How did Singapore create itself over the past 50 years, and come to be as it is today?

Our advantage is the fact that we are just a small piece of rock, nothing under the ground, no minerals. Only a collection of people, who were not meant to come together as a country. That has been our advantage, because our only basis for survival is to invest consistently in every talent and skill, and be willing to do something differently - different from other cities in Asia, and different from the rest of the world.

I was at the Marina Barrage recently with a group of residents from my constituency. The Barrage converts rainwater and sea water into a freshwater reservoir using advanced membrane technologies, developed over the years. It also uses the best foreign technologies - a Dutch company supplied seven massive pumps. People were flying kites on top of the structure, itself really beautiful. So it is now also a lifestyle venue.

It's an example of how we turn disability - the fact that we have no natural resources - into capability, using science and technology and by borrowing the best from the rest of the world. So I think that's at the heart of it: the vulnerability, the constant state of anxiety. That is the way we know we've got to be a little more ingenious than others.

What seems to be a very important issue here is generating local talent, bringing in external talent and integrating it. How does that work?

About one-third of our population is foreign-born, as it is in London. In New York, about 45 per cent of the adult population is foreign. But the big difference is that London is part of Britain, and only 10 per cent or less of the British population is foreign-born. New York is part of the United States, and the Americans know it is their country. We are both city and country, and that's our challenge.

We can survive only if we are a global city. We've got to be as open as other global cities, a place where people can spend part of their lives regardless of where they come from. But we've also got to be a country for our own citizens. That means managing this place not just as an economy or a conglomeration of businesses, but also as a society - an inclusive society that nurtures every citizen to reach his or her highest potential in life.

Singapore's success has come in large part from the technology and engineering-centred, top-down economic and social model. It is a model of efficiency. In 2003, the Economic Review Committee recommended remaking Singapore into a centre of creativity, originality and innovation. Now these capacities are associated with a different model - a human-centred, social science, bottom-up model. My question is how successful is Singapore today in making this transition to this current model?

We are doing more and need to do more to create an environment that depends on ideas coming up from individuals, and not just system efficiencies. We need the effervescence of ideas coming up naturally through the schools, through the polytechnics, our technical colleges or ITEs (Institutes of Technical Education) and our universities. The whole thrust of educational policy in the last decade has been to give these ideas and new types of talents the maximum chance of emerging.

It is a difficult exercise, because meritocracy is fundamental to Singapore, and standardisation comes very naturally to meritocracies. Standardisation is a disadvantage in education if we are trying to breed different types of talent. So how we break out of this is by creating different pathways from the mainstream, each of them meritocratic, where you have to show that you've got something different from the rest.

To get into the School of the Arts is highly competitive. But you are measured not just on your exam scores, but also on whether you can show through your track record and at the audition that you have something different. We are also doing it in the sciences, in design and applied technology, and in many public schools that are offering their own niches of excellence. Our schools and teachers are being given autonomy. We've learnt from the best private schools in the US and elsewhere, and brought the lessons into a publicly funded, meritocratic system. So it is this mix of planning, top-down support and ground-up initiative that's driving education.

We shouldn't try to be like someone else. Zurich doesn't try to be like San Francisco or London. It doesn't try to be like the most exciting cities. But Zurich attracts talent, especially talent with families. It's got its own edge, and it is a very attractive city.

We have to be ourselves. And that means not abandoning our strengths. I think our cardinal strength is our ability to integrate people of very different cultures, people who in fact started off with very different aspirations although we're now converging. That doesn't happen by chance. It happens through careful planning, and sometimes intrusive regulation.

There's nothing more intrusive than our rules: For example, requiring every public housing precinct and every block to have a spread of ethnic groups. That's also how you ensure that the primary schools around the corner have the spread of ethnic groups. And how we get a convergence of aspirations and a sense of sameness in each new generation. We can't leave these things to the market, or let things splinter the way we can all see happening in some other parts of the world.

It requires advance planning, and a consensus between the people and the Government - that this is the way we want to go. If we were a city among many in the country, it wouldn't matter. If San Diego goes down, Austin, Texas will come up or someone else comes up. But if we go down, the country goes down.

So it requires a steady hand, always looking over the horizon. We don't leave things entirely to chance. That's a disadvantage in some ways but it's also the way we survive and how Singapore stays relevant.

I was out birding yesterday with my wife and one of the places we went to look at birds was an old British air force base that has been transformed into a Singapore aerospace area. I wanted to ask you: What are the kinds of industries that you think Singapore should be getting into at the very high end of manufacturing?

First, we build on existing capabilities. The example you gave, of aerospace, is an interesting one. It's built on precision engineering and electronics capabilities, both existing industries. Existing capabilities don't die. We take them, build adjacent capabilities, develop new industries and jump onto new curves.

It's not something you can plan for well in advance, because you don't know how the world will change. But if you keep investing in your capabilities, businesses will grow.

ST Aerospace is now the leading company globally, in third-party maintenance and repair. It is not owned by an airline, and has no captive client. How did they do it without a national airline feeding them with contracts? By building capabilities.

What about the medical sphere? How is that doing?

It's a growth industry globally, and we are well positioned to participate in it. Companies in the biomedical field tell us the main advantage of Singapore is the fact that we are English-speaking and we have in the same laboratories and buildings people from all over the world. There's no formula but there's real advantage in bringing together people who've grown up differently and worked in different parts of the world.

I think heterogeneity now is a great driver of growth as opposed to homogeneity, which can actually dampen growth. And that is a major strength for Singapore.

Forty years after we started, it has turned out to be a great asset in a knowledge-based world. We are the natural place in Asia for Indians, Chinese and South-east Asians to feel at home.

What other industries do you think Singapore is into and should be into at that level?

The whole area of urban solutions is a massive opportunity. What is happening in Asia today and over the next 20 years is a tremendous social transformation and a huge challenge - making cities liveable, managing water resources and sanitation, keeping the air clean and the place green. This is something where Singapore has built up a solid experience, and something we can share and participate in.

Are you a little more optimistic today about the future of Singapore in the present global economy than you were perhaps a year ago, when things were pretty gloomy?

I'm more optimistic and it's not because we are past the worst of the crisis. There is tremendous opportunity coming up in Asia.

It is not just a story of Asia's rise, but about the East moving towards the West. It's about the huge infusion of knowledge and ideas that comes from borrowing practices from the West, in numerous fields. And it is also about the West moving to the East.

A few years ago, the global premiere of I La Galigo, a Buginese epic story about creation, took place in Singapore, before it was cast in Indonesia and the rest of the world. It is also interesting that Wu Guanzhong, one of the most significant artists in China and the world today, recently donated 133 of his best oil and ink pieces to Singapore. He did so because Singapore was where the East was moving to the West, and the West moving East.

That is our role as a global city in Asia. We are a meeting place, but never static, always borrowing ideas and influencing each other. And it will shape our society in ways that we cannot fully predict today.

The ICSID World Design Congress Singapore 2009 is a parallel event of the Singapore Design Festival, spearheaded by the DesignSingapore Council of the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts.


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Johor issues warning of floods with high tides, rain

The Star 2 Dec 09;

JOHOR BARU: The Johor Baru City Council (MBJB) has issued a flood warning here.

Its mayor Mohd Jaffar Awang said the council was issuing the warning after the Malaysian Meteorological Department predicted high tides of over 3m here.

“We anticipate tides as high as 3.6m from Dec 1 to 8, Dec 15 to 21 and Dec 30 to 31,” he said, adding that heavy rains coupled with the high tides posed a high risk of flooding.

Mohd Jaffar said the council had taken precautionary steps for the flood season, including freezing the leave of staff involved in the council’s flood operations centre.

Among other measures were sending flood warning notices to flood-prone areas and placing a mobile generator at Dataran Bandaraya in case of power outage in the area, he said.

He said that MBJB had also taken counter measures to curb flooding in the city.

This included carrying out service and maintenance on all equipment at the Sungai Segget, Sungai Ayer Molek, Sungai Chat and Parit Utama Abdul Samad floodgates to ensure the gates worked properly.

“We have also prepared a flood relief and management guidebook for all departments in the council to ensure that relief centres are initiated in case a floods,” said Mohd Jaffar.

He said the public could get in touch with the flood-centre secretariat at 07-2244 139.


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Muhyiddin Opens RM7.8 Billion First Private Coal-Fired Power Plant at Iskandar Malaysia, Johor

Bernama 1 Dec 09;

PONTIAN, Dec 1 (Bernama) -- Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin today opened a 2,100MW (Megawatt) coal-powered Tanjung Bin Power Plant, the country's first private coal-fired plant, owned by Malakoff Corporation Berhad.

He said the whopping RM7.8 billion plant, incorporated with the latest clean coal technologies such as electrostatic precipitators and Flue Gas Desulphurisation, would generate adequate electricity to fuel the growth of Iskandar Malaysia, the country's 2,217 sq km southern region economic corridor,

Iskandar Malaysia is three times the size of Singapore and 48 times the size of Putrajaya, the Federal Government Administrative Centre.

"The plant is subjected to stringent scrutiny by the Department of Environment which has a Continuous Emissions Monitoring System connected on-line to the department," he told reporters after opening the plant whose construction began in 2003 and was completed in 37-and-a-half-month.

Saying that the plant has the latest green and environmental-friendly technology, Muhyiddin said that it was part and parcel of the technological advancement that the Government was looking forward to in this country.

The plant comprises three identical 700MW units which have 2,100MW capacity and makes up close to 42 per cent of Malakoff's total domestic power generation capacity of 5,020MW or about 25 per cent of Peninsular Malaysia's installed capacity.

Earlier, in his speech, Malakoff Chairman Tan Sri Abdul Halim Ali said the successful opening of the Tanjung Bin Power Plant was a milestone for Malakoff as a leading Independent Power Producer in Malaysia.

The plant is a pioneer as one of the biggest private coal-fired plants in South East Asia.

It will become an integral part of the Johor southern region's socio-economy as it will ensure there will be sufficient energy to fuel Iskandar Malaysia's rapid growth.

-- BERNAMA


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Indonesian graft harms case for forest carbon offsets: Human Rights Watch

Stephen Coates Yahoo News 1 Dec 09;

JAKARTA (AFP) – Rampant corruption in Indonesia's forestry sector costs the government two billion dollars a year and undermines plans to use forest conservation to offset carbon emissions, a report said Tuesday.

US-based watchdog Human Rights Watch (HRW) said graft at every level of the country's logging industry had to be overcome before investors could have any confidence in proposed carbon credits linked to protected forests.

Between 2003 and 2006, annual revenue lost to mismanagement and corruption in the timber industry was equal to total public health spending at all levels of government, it said.

"In recent years almost half of all Indonesian timber has been logged illegally at a staggering cost to the Indonesian economy and public welfare," said the report entitled "Wild Money: The Human Rights Consequences of Illegal Logging and Corruption in Indonesia's Forestry Sector".

"Corruption and untransparent, unaccountable revenue flows in Indonesia are so widespread that a new expression has come into common usage in the Indonesian language for such uncontrolled funds, 'wild money' (dana liar)."

The unreliability of government figures on forest management and the routine falsification of wood harvest reports pose major obstacles to Indonesia's plans to link its forests to international carbon markets, it said.

A UN-backed scheme that will be on the table at the UN climate summit in Copenhagen later this month would see rich countries pay developing countries like Indonesia to preserve the carbon locked in their forests.

The Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries (REDD) scheme envisages a global market where polluters offset their emissions by buying credits for carbon saved in protected forests.

As much as 20 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions, which contribute to climate change, are estimated to come from forest destruction.

"Pressure to address climate change has created a booming interest ... in markets to offset carbon emissions through direct payments to countries like Indonesia, whose extensive but endangered forests act as carbon sinks," HRW said.

"Without dramatic improvements in the governance of Indonesia's timber sector ... investors can have no confidence that the offset payments will in fact go to the preservation of forests as a means to avoid carbon emissions rather than to further fund a deeply mismanaged and corrupt system."

Australia is at the forefront of efforts to establish the workability of such a scheme and is funding one of the world's biggest REDD pilot projects in Indonesia's Kalimantan region.

Some environmental activists however say REDD will not reduce global carbon emissions and threatens to destabilise carbon markets with a flood of cheap and dubious credits.

"Inadequate oversight and conflicts of interest raise a red flag over whether Indonesia can become a reliable carbon-trading partner," HRW deputy programme director Joseph Saunders told reporters in Jakarta.

"The partners must ensure that a rigorous, transparent and enforceable tracking system is in place before financing projects ... (otherwise) you risk exacerbating the problem.

"Until the lack of oversight and transparency are taken seriously, pouring more money into the leaky system from carbon trading is likely to make the problem worse, not better."


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Riau Seeking Compensation From Advanced Countries

Bernama 1 Dec 09;

JAKARTA, Dec 1 (Bernama) -- While Greenpeace recently put Riau's forests in the international spotlight, Riau authorities have said that advanced countries should help compensate its forest preservation efforts, Indonesia's Antara news agency reported.

"We in Riau need funds to protect the forests from illegal logging activities and to solve the root of the illegal logging problem, namely poverty among the local community," Zulkifli Yusuf, head of the Riau provincial forest service, said in Pekanbaru last week.

Advanced and neighbouring countries should give concrete aid for the protection of the province's forests which have contributed fresh air to the whole world, especially close neighbouring countries for at least nine months every year, he said.

Zulkifli said it would not be fair if international NGOs and some advanced countries demanded Indonesia to protect its forests and bear the costs alone, while other benefiting countries contributed nothing for the forest preservation done by Indonesia, he said.

He said 8.5-million-hectare-large Riau Province has 4.3 million hectares of forest areas, consisting of permanent production forest measuring 1.6 million ha, limited forest production of 1.8 hectares, and 279,000 hectares of protected forest.

"A representative from an advanced country came here and promised to give Rp10 million (US$3,582) for every hectare of forest area which is protected. But it's just an empty promise while the people of Riau need food everyday and can't wait for empty promises made by advanced countries," he said.

The Riau official statement was made coinciding with the presence of Greenpeace Southeast Asia in Kampar Peninsula forest in Riau Province.

Greenpeace had established a Climate Defenders' Camp in the heart of the Sumatran rainforest in the Riau forest since the end of October to focus on international attention on the critical role that protecting tropical forests has in averting climate change in the run-up to the UN Copenhagen Climate Summit, which begins on 7 December.

The international NGO, however, handed over the Defenders Camp to local communities on Sunday.

"The `Climate Defenders Camp` stands as a symbol of our solidarity with the local communities in their fight to end deforestation in the Kampar Peninsula. We will keep working with them and our other partners on this issue. We will ensure that their voices, as well as those of many others who desire a decent and habitable world for their children, are heard in Jakarta and in Copenhagen", said Von Hernandez, Executive Director, Greenpeace Southeast Asia, at the handover ceremony.

Vowing to keep taking their message directly to President Susilo and other world leaders, Greenpeace says that thousands of people worldwide have sent petitions and letters to the Indonesian leader urging him to take immediate steps to halt deforestation and peatland destruction in the country, which accounts for the vast majority of Indonesia`s emissions.

"The Indonesian government should thank Greenpeace for helping them to protect the forests, as the government doesn`t seem to have much of an idea how to do this at the moment. The government needs to look closely at the problems Greenpeace has raised regarding forestry regulations and the issuance of permits and should take urgent action", said Intsiawati Ayus, National Member of Parliament for Riau Province who attended the handover ceremony and who will be participating in the Copenhagen climate talks.

Von Hernandez said his group had worked over the last five weeks with local communities to protect the Kampar Peninsula had shown world leaders that forest protection was an important piece of the solution if the world was to avert climate chaos.

"World leaders cannot waste any more time in delivering a fair, ambitious and legally binding climate deal in December. We will continue to press our demands for such a deal to include a commitment to set up a global fund to end deforestation in countries like Indonesia," added Bustar Maitar, Greenpeace Southeast Asia Forest campaigner.

Responding to the Greenpeace action in Riau, Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan in Jakarta on November 19, ordered APRIL (Riau Andalan Pulp and Paper - RAPP) mill to halt its forest clearing activity on the carbon-rich peatlands of the Kampar Peninsula, pending review of their permits.

Greenpeace campaigner Bustar Maitar hailed the decision and expected the Forestry Minister to do a comprehensive review of all the existing permits and concessions for pulp and paper companies in the Kampar Peninsula.

Meanwhile, Indonesian new State Minister for Environmental Affairs Gusti Muhammad Hatta in Banjarmasin last Friday (Nov. 27) said the rate of forest destruction in Indonesia reaches 1.1 million hectares a year.

He said the government meanwhile could only rehabilitate up to 500,000 hectares a year.

He said temperature had now rose up to four degrees making the sea level to rise up to 80 centimeters high.

If the condition is ignored 30 to 40 million people in the country would be threatened to become victims of the impact of global warming such as floods, natural disasters and others.

Forestry minister Zulkifli Hasan said he had tightened the issuance of licenses for conducting tree felling for industry, mining or plantation development.

-- BERNAMA


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Forest Carbon Scheme Hopes For Green Light In Copenhagen

David Fogarty, PlanetArk 2 Dec 09;

SINGAPORE - While nations bicker over the size of emissions cuts and climate funds, saving forests has turned out to be among the least contentious issues in U.N. climate talks and has achieved the most progress.

The reason, analysts and the world body say, is that curbing deforestation is an easy win for the climate and most countries support a U.N. scheme that aims to reward developing nations for protecting their remaining forests.

That bodes well for major U.N. climate talks that start next Monday in Copenhagen, where the scheme, called reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD), is likely to make further progress, though a number of issues need to be resolved.

Investors such as banks and some rich nations are pushing for REDD to be a success, potentially ushering in a carbon trading scheme from 2013 that could be worth billions of dollars a year.

"If anything is going to be delivered at Copenhagen it's going to be REDD," said Paul Winn, forest and climate campaigner for Greenpeace Australia.

"That is because we are looking at a huge global emissions source. There is also the recognition that it is a relatively cheap, easy form of emissions reductions," he told Reuters.

Forests soak up huge amounts of planet-warming carbon dioxide, such as emissions from burning fossil fuels. But the U.N.'s Food and Agricultural Organization says about 13 million hectares (32.5 million acres), or an area roughly the size of England, are destroyed annually.

That means deforestation contributes about 20 percent of mankind's greenhouse gas emissions annually, according to the U.N. climate panel, although a recent study says new calculations show the figure is about 12 percent.

MOST ADVANCED

"I think it's a foregone conclusion that REDD will be part of the new agreement. Ironically it's actually the most advanced now," said Tony La Vina, chairman of the REDD negotiations within the U.N. climate talks.

La Vina, of the Philippines, says the scheme still faced hurdles and more talks were needed to seal a broad framework.

But he said he had been surprised that, overall, the issue had been far less contentious than other parts of the climate negotiations, such as emissions targets and funding to help poorer nations adapt to global warming.

Financing for REDD was not a problem, he said.

"Developed countries are at the door with the funding and the capacity-building and support and they just want to make sure certain things are met," he said.

Bigger problems were trying to finalize which institutions would manage the cash, how to ensure developing nations had a say in how to use the money and the extent of the market's role in providing some or eventually all of the funds.

The broad idea of REDD is to reward developing countries with valuable carbon offsets for every tonne of CO2 that is saved from being emitted by protecting forests and rehabilitating them through replanting or sustainable management.

The problem is that such carbon measurement and accounting is complex and time-consuming to put in place, requires laws to be enacted, officials to be trained and investors to be assured that the scheme won't be undermined by corruption.

Ensuring the forests aren't simply cut down later, or that deforestation is displaced to another region or country, is another concern, and analysts say REDD's final technical design will have to take account of these issues.

ROLE OF THE MARKET

More immediately, La Vina said there was still debate in the negotiations over the role of the market.

"My reading is that the debate is not really about control. It's really about offsets," La Vina said, with some developing nations fundamentally opposed to REDD using carbon credits.

La Vina said there had been fights over how to enshrine the legal rights of indigenous people in a formal REDD pact and wording to protect the conversion of natural forests into plantations. But he expected further negotiations in Copenhagen and perhaps afterward would iron out differences.

Another issue is how to get nations up to speed for REDD.

The draft text backs a phased-in approach, allowing poorer countries to build up capacity to implement REDD projects on the ground depending on their circumstances before finally moving into actions that are measured according to results.

Winn of Greenpeace said one idea was to focus initially on setting benchmarks for curbing deforestation, so-called proxies, since this was easier.

"With deforestation proxies, you can do it at a national level, it is reasonably easily measured by satellite monitoring and you don't have get into more difficult areas of working how much carbon each hectare of forest (is locked away)," said Winn.

There was likely to be strong political pressure in Copenhagen to champion REDD, said Andrew Deutz director of international government relations at the Nature Conservancy but a formal agreement on REDD might have to wait till all the other pieces of a U.N. climate puzzle fell into place.

(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

FACTBOX: Sticking Points For Forest CO2 Scheme At Copenhagen
PlanetArk 2 Dec 09;

A U.N.-backed scheme that aims to reward developing nations for saving or rehabilitating their forests has made major progress during climate negotiations over the past two years and is likely to advance further at talks in Copenhagen.

But several issues still need to be resolved and will be discussed when negotiators from around the world meet in the Danish capital from next week to try to reach agreement on the outlines of a tougher global climate pact.

Here are some of the sticking points facing the scheme called reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD).

FINANCE

Rich countries, the United Nations and institutions such as the World Bank are putting up money to develop REDD. The problem is who manages the cash and governs how it will be used.

There are fundamental differences between developed and developing countries over whether the World Bank and other big lending agencies should disburse funds, or whether the United Nations should handle the money.

Developing countries have criticized the World Bank for being dominated by the United States and inflexible in its lending.

The United States and Australia tend to favor bilateral funding, to ensure a flow of forest carbon offsets to their future domestic emissions trading schemes.

SAFEGUARDS

One of the thorniest issues. It is widely agreed that for REDD to work, indigenous people or local communities need to be consulted and play a key role in fighting deforestation.

The problem is how to enshrine their rights into legal language all nations can accept. The current REDD draft negotiating text refers to the U.N.'s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, but these references are still in square brackets and therefore still up for negotiation.

Tricky, too, is how to ensure the full engagement of indigenous groups, plus maintaining an area's biodiversity and including all these into an internationally accepted regime that measures, reports and verifies steps to curb deforestation.

Protecting natural forests from being turned into plantations is another problem. The current draft text has two options, namely that any REDD scheme should not provide incentives for the conversion of natural forests and safeguarding the conversion of natural forests. Greens, such as WWF, prefer the first option.

The final choice of words is still to be made. Another problem is that the U.N. hasn't fully nailed down what the definition of "natural forests" is.

SCOPE

Lots more debate likely here. Should REDD just focus on curbing deforestation and build a reward structure on that basis, which is what Brazil wants?

Or should it be "REDD+," which would also recognize efforts to enhance carbon stocks, conservation of forests and sustainable management of forests?

India and others would like this option since they say they have stopped most deforestation and instead want to be rewarded for efforts to protect and expand what's left.

Brazil also objects to REDD becoming a purely market-based scheme with money flowing from the sale of carbon offsets, fearing rich nations would buy the credits and so avoid cutting emissions at home.

Others, such as Indonesia, back a market-based scheme and are working closely with Australia to bring this about.

(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)


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Jakarta businesses vow to protect biodiversity

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 1 Dec 09;

Businesspeople attending an international biodiversity conference here plan to produce a charter that will require them to help stop the alarming levels of environmental destruction.

A draft of the conference's declaration, which is called the Jakarta Charter, says integrating biodiversity into business strategies could contribute to poverty reduction and sustainable development.

"The Jakarta Charter will be open for signatures to all companies in the world that adhere to its principle," Ahmed Djoghlaf, executive secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) said on Monday.

He said the Jakarta Charter on Business and Biodiversity would be submitted for adoption at the convention's meeting in Japan in Oct 2010.

Representatives from about 200 companies worldwide in mining, fisheries, construction, forestry, tourism and cosmetics gathered in Jakarta for the three-day biodiversity conference.

The draft says the sustainable management of biodiversity will become a source of future operations in the business community.

However, it said that mainstreaming biodiversity into business should be enhanced through voluntary corporate action.

State Environment Minister Gusti Muhammad Hatta told the conference that biodiversity in Indonesia faced serious threat including from high population growth, deforestation, illegal trade, invasive alien plant species and climate change.

To make it worse, Hatta said that Indonesia had no regulation that could force business players to protect biodiversity in their operational sites.

Hatta's office plans to submit a draft bill on genetic resources to the House of Representatives, which will be used as an umbrella regulation to protect biodiversity.

He said the business community should contribute to environmental conservation to help preserve biological resources that are used for raw material by companies.

Indonesia, which has ratified the CBD, has 12 percent (515 species) of the world's mammals, the second-highest level after Brazil, and 17 percent (1,531 species) of total species of birds, the fifth-highest in the world. The country is also home to 15 percent (270 species) of amphibians and reptiles, 31,746 species of vascular plants and 37 percent of the world's species of fish.

Executive director of the ASEAN Center for Biodiversity, Rodrigo Fuentes, told reporters that biodiversity loss was a forgotten crisis in the region that received little attention in the media.

"The sad story is we are losing plants, animals and other species at an alarming rate due to deforestation, large-scale mining and other irresponsible activities," he said. "Biodiversity loss poses a significant threat to the ASEAN people's food security, health and livelihood."


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Marine Aquaculture Could Feed Growing World Population

ScienceDaily 1 Dec 09;

Marine aquaculture could play a large role in feeding humanity in the coming decades, although substantial changes will be needed to reduce its reliance on terrestrial agriculture and other external feed subsidies.

The oceans could become the source of more of humanity's food if steps are taken to expand and improve marine aquaculture, according to a study published in the December 2009 issue of BioScience.

As the world's population continues to grow, lack of fresh water and space mean that terrestrial agriculture is unlikely to be able to meet food demand, according to Carlos M. Duarte of the University of the Balearic Islands, Spain, and his seven coauthors. Freshwater aquaculture, which is largely confined to the tropics, is expanding, but its reliance on fresh water may limit long-term growth. Fisheries catches have been declining globally for two decades, and although conservation measures and a shift in consumption patterns could allow some recovery, marine aquaculture holds more potential for sustained growth.

Marine aquaculture is already on the rise: production has increased ten-fold over the past 30 years and is expected to exceed fisheries catches within 20 years. Yet Duarte and his colleagues argue that its continued growth will depend on adapting current techniques so that the food needed to feed marine animals is itself derived from marine aquaculture, rather than harvested from the wild or derived from agriculture.

This goal is achievable, they maintain, if more animals low on the food chain are cultivated, including more plankton and algae. These could be used as food for both humans and for fish. New technology will also help, by allowing marine aquaculture operations to be expanded into more exposed, offshore locations. Although some environmental impacts can be expected from the expansion of marine aquaculture, these are modest compared to those resulting from food production on land.

Adapted from materials provided by American Institute of Biological Sciences, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.


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Hong Kong markets selling endangered shark fins: US study

Yahoo News 1 Dec 09;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – High-tech forensic methods show that some shark fins on sale in Hong Kong markets come from endangered shark populations, proving the need for stronger trade regulations, a new study said Tuesday.

US scientists using a type of DNA testing said they were able to trace the geographic origin of shark fins on sale in Hong Kong and show that endangered species are being targeted by the trade.

The group is calling for the March 2010 meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) to draw up trade regulations to protect hammerhead and other shark populations.

"This trade has operated for years and years under the cover of darkness," said Demian Chapman, a lead author of the research who is based at Stony Brook University's Institute for Ocean Conservation Science, near New York.

"Our work shows that the scalloped hammerhead fin trade is sourced from all over the globe and so must be globally tracked and managed."

The group's research, to be published Tuesday in the Endangered Species Research journal, describes how the team analyzed fingernail-sized DNA samples from 62 scalloped hammerhead shark fins they purchased in a Hong Kong market.

The researchers used a technique known as "genetic stock identification" or GSI to examine each fin's mitochondrial DNA sequence.

The process is based on a DNA test developed in 2005 to distinguish between similar types of hammerhead shark and has been used to trace the geographic origin of some fish, sea turtles and marine mammals.

The study was the first time the technique had been applied to sharks and allowed the researchers to trace the geographic origin of 57 of the 62 purchased fins.

They found 21 percent of the Hong Kong fins came from endangered scalloped hammerhead shark stocks in the western Atlantic.

"The fact that scalloped hammerhead shark DNA shows strong population DNA signatures means that we can trace the geographic origin of most of their fins sold at markets," said Mahmood Shivji, a senior author of the research.

"From a broader perspective, this type of DNA forensic testing of fins will be an incredibly useful tool to prioritize areas for conservation and ensure sharks aren't wiped out in particular regions by excessive fishing," added Shivji, who heads the Guy Harvey Research Institute and Save Our Seas Shark Center at Nova Southeastern University in Florida.

Shark fins, which are often used to make a soup that is considered a rare delicacy by some, are highly sought after.

Just one kilogram (2.2 pounds) of scalloped hammerhead shark fin can sell for about 120 dollars in Hong Kong for use in soup, according to the researchers.

"Inadequate protection, combined with inexorable pursuit, has placed many shark species at grave risk," said Ellen Pikitch, executive director at the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science.

The group hopes their research will encourage nations meeting in Qatar next year for the CITES conference to list scalloped hammerheads and five other shark species under the organization's Appendix II.

The listing "would require permits for, and monitoring of, all trade in these species across international boundaries," they said.

"The international shark fin trade must not continue to operate in secrecy," said Chapman.

DNA Reveals Origins of Shark Fin Soup
LiveScience.com 1 Dec 09;

Every year, millions of shark fins are sold at Chinese markets to satisfy the demand for shark fin soup, a dish considered a delicacy, but it has been impossible to pinpoint which sharks from which regions are most threatened by this trade.

Now DNA research has traced shark fins from the burgeoning Hong Kong market all the way back to the sharks' geographic origin.

The scientists found that in some cases fins from scalloped hammerhead sharks came from endangered populations thousands of miles away.

The findings highlight the need to better protect these sharks from international trade, the researchers say. About 73 million sharks are killed for this trade each year, of which 1-3 million are hammerheads, according to Ellen Pikitch a professor of marine science at Stony Brook University in New York. These sharks are particularly prized for their large fin size, and just 1 kg (2.2 lbs) can sell for about $120.

"This trade has operated for years and years under the cover of darkness," Demian Chapman, a researcher at the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook University, said in a statement. "Our work shows that the scalloped hammerhead fin trade is sourced from all over the globe and so must be globally tracked and managed."

Chapman and his colleagues used a technique called "genetic stock identification" or GSI, to analyze DNA samples from 62 scalloped hammerhead shark fins that had been obtained in the Hong Kong fin market. By examining each fin's mitochondrial DNA sequence - a section of the genetic code passed down by the mother and traceable to a sharks' regional birthplace - the researchers were able to exactly match 57 of the 62 fins to an Atlantic or Indo-Pacific ocean origin.

The team also analyzed mitochondrial sequences taken from 177 live scalloped hammerheads in the Western Atlantic and determined that the species is further divided into three distinct stocks in this region: northern (U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico), central (Belize and Panama), and southern (Brazil). The scientists traced 21 percent of the Hong Kong fins back to these Western Atlantic stocks. Scalloped hammerheads in the region have been categorized as endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) since 2006. This coastal species appears to have collapsed in the western North Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico.

"The fact that scalloped hammerhead shark DNA shows strong population DNA signatures means that we can trace the geographic origin of most of their fins sold at markets," said Mahmood Shivji, director of the Guy Harvey Research Institute in Florida and an author of the study. "From a broader perspective, this type of DNA forensic testing of fins will be an incredibly useful tool to prioritize areas for conservation and ensure sharks aren't wiped out in particular regions by excessive fishing."

Protection for hammerhead sharks will be considered at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) at its March 2010 meeting in Qatar.

The U.S. has proposed that CITES list the scalloped hammerhead and five other shark species under the organization's Appendix II, which would require permits for, and monitoring of, all trade in these species across international boundaries. Knowing the species and geographic origin of fins being traded would allow management and enforcement efforts to be allocated more effectively.

The findings were published online today in the journal Endangered Species Research.


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Rhino poaching surges in Asia and Africa

IUCN 1 Dec 09;

Rhino poaching worldwide is on the rise, according to a new report by TRAFFIC and IUCN.

The trade is being driven by Asian demand for horns and is made worse by increasingly sophisticated poachers, who now are using veterinary drugs, poison, cross bows and high caliber weapons to kill rhinos, the report states.

Since 2006 the majority (95 percent) of the poaching in Africa has occurred in Zimbabwe and South Africa, according to new data. “These two nations collectively form the epicentre of an unrelenting poaching crisis in southern Africa,” said Tom Milliken of TRAFFIC.

The report, which was submitted to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) ahead of its 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (CoP15) in March, documents a decline in law enforcement effectiveness and an increase in poaching intensity in Africa. The situation is most serious in Zimbabwe where rhino numbers are now declining and the conviction rate for rhino crimes in Zimbabwe is only three percent. Despite the introduction of a number of new measures, poaching and illicit horn trade in South Africa has also increased.

“Concerted action at the highest level is needed to stop this global crisis of rampant rhino poaching,” said Amanda Nickson, Director of the Species Programme at WWF International. “We call on the countries of concern to come to COP 15 in March with specific actions they have undertaken to show their commitment to stopping this poaching and protecting rhinos in the wild.”

The report also raises concerns regarding the low and declining numbers as well as the uncertain status of some of the Sumatran and Javan rhino populations in Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam.

“Sumatran and Javan rhino range countries need to increase efforts to better assess the current status of many of their rhino populations - to enhance field law enforcement efforts - prevent further encroachment and land transformation in rhino areas - and improve biological management of remaining rhinos to ensure the few remaining Sumatran and Javan Rhino numbers increase,” said Dr. Bibhab Kumar Talukdar, Chair of the IUCN/SSC Asian Rhino Specialist Group

Most rhino horns leaving southern Africa are destined for medicinal markets in southeast and east Asia, especially Vietnam, and also China. The report highlights Vietnam as a country of particular concern – noting that Vietnamese nationals operating in South Africa have recently been identified in rhino crime investigations. In addition, concern has been expressed about the status of Vietnam’s single Javan rhino population.

However, the report does note that in some areas populations of rhinos are increasing. “Where there is political will, dedicated conservation programs and good law enforcement, rhino numbers have increased in both Africa and Asia,” said Dr Richard Emslie, Scientific Officer of IUCN’s African Rhino Specialist Group.

IUCN’s Rhino Specialist Groups and TRAFFIC were mandated to produce the report by CITES. The data collection and report writing for the report was partially funded by WWF and partners.

Full report

'Global surge' in rhino poaching
BBC News 2 Dec 09;

Rhino poaching around the world is on the rise despite efforts to protect the animals, a report warns.

The global surge in the illegal trade has been driven by demands from Asian medicinal markets, the study by conservationists concluded.

It suggests that a decline in law enforcement is the main reason for the rise in poaching in Africa.

The report found that 95% of rhino poaching in Africa since 2006 had occurred in Zimbabwe and South Africa.

The data was compiled by Traffic, the global wildlife trade monitoring network, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), with funding from WWF International.

The findings have been submitted to the secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), ahead of a key gathering in March.

The authors added that poachers were now adopting much more sophisticated techniques such as veterinary drugs to kill their prey.

'Unrelenting poaching'

"Concerted action at the highest level is needed to stop this global crisis of rampant rhino poaching," said Amanda Nickson, director of WWF International's species programme.

"We call on the countries of concern to come... in March with specific actions they have undertaken to show their commitment to stopping this poaching and protecting rhinos in the wild."

The report documented a "decline in law enforcement effectiveness and an increase in poaching intensity in Africa".

It said that the "most serious" situation was in Zimbabwe, where rhino numbers were "declining, and the conviction rate for rhino crimes is only 3%".

Until recently, the nation's rhino population had enjoyed a recovery and had been stable for a number of years.

But they also found that poaching and illegal trading in rhino horn were on the increase in South Africa, despite the introduction of a number of new anti-poaching measures.

Between 2006 and 2009, the report listed 210 rhinos as being illegally killed in South Africa, with a further 235 being poached in Zimbabwe.

"These two nations collectively form the epicentre of an unrelenting poaching crisis in southern Africa," stated Tom Milliken, a Traffic researcher.

Traffic and IUCN added that Asian species, including Sumatran and Javan rhinos - found in Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam - were also a cause for concern.

"Sumatran and Javan rhino range countries need to increase efforts to better assess the current status of many of their rhino populations," observed Dr Bibhab Kumar Talukdar, chairman of the IUCN Asian rhino specialist group.

He called for enhanced protective measures, such as preventing the loss of rhino habitat and better "biological management", in order to ensure that the remaining rhinos had the best possible chance of survival in the future.

However, the report concluded that some nations had taken considerable steps to improve protection measures.

"Nepal, in particular, seems to have successfully addressed a serious poaching crisis," it observed.

But it warned that the growing market for rhino horns in Asia, primarily for medicinal use, meant that all nations had improve their efforts to protect the threatened species.

The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species places the African black rhino (Diceros bicornis) in the critically endangered category.


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Five eco-crimes we commit every day

Dave S. Reay, New Scientist 1 Dec 09;

WHEN the UN Climate Change Conference opens in Copenhagen next month, all eyes will be on the delegates' efforts to broker a deal that will prevent catastrophic global warming. Yet amid all the talk of caps, targets and trading, it is easy to forget who is ultimately responsible for the mess we find ourselves in. I have long argued that climate change begins at home. Each of us in the developed world has played our part in creating this problem and, while there is no doubt that coordinated global action is needed to tackle it, we can each be part of the solution.

So, ask yourself this: how green am I really? You might think you are doing your bit for the environment, but even if you shun bottled water, buy local produce and reuse your plastic bags, chances are that you have some habits that are far more environmentally damaging than you realise. What's more, if everyone else is doing these things too, their detrimental effects really add up.
1 Coffee

Take coffee. Its vendors are in the vanguard of those promoting more "sustainable" products, with organic and fair trade options now widely available. Starbucks even boasts a programme it calls Shared PlanetTM programme - the irony of that trademark appears to be lost on them - which has the declared aim of minimising the company's environmental impact and increasing involvement with local communities.

That's no bad thing, as far as it goes: fair trade can help to stop the exploitation of farmers, and buying organic may ensure more sustainable production techniques. But the average cup of black filter coffee is still responsible for 125 grams of CO2 emissions. Of this, two-thirds comes from production and most of the rest from brewing.

Opting for the more prosaic joys of instant coffee reduces that figure to around 80 grams. Yet that still means a six-a-day caffeine habit clocks up more than 175 kilograms of CO2 each year. That's the equivalent of a flight across Europe - from London to Rome, say. Add milk, and the methane belched by dairy cows means you increase your coffee's climate-changing emissions by more than a third.

It doesn't end there, though. The environmental group WWF has calculated that it takes 200 litres of water to produce the coffee, milk, sugar and cup for just one regular takeout latte. So if everyone ditched their pre-work coffee fix that would do wonders for the planet.
2 Toilet paper

Then there's toilet paper. Like coffee companies, loo paper manufacturers have long provided options for environmentally conscious consumers. Top of the list is 100 per cent recycled paper, which avoids much of the energy use and emissions associated with harvesting and processing new wood. Every kilogram of recycled tissue saves some 30 litres of water and between 3 and 4 kilowatt-hours of electricity. Since 1 kilowatt-hour of grid electricity is responsible for around 500 grams of CO2, that means a saving of 1.5 to 2 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of tissue.

Recycled toilet tissue is most widely used in Europe and Latin America, but even there it still only accounts for 1 in 5 rolls. In the US it remains very much a niche product. The average American gets through 23 toilet rolls each year, adding up to more than 7 billion rolls for the country in total. Of these, just 1 in 50 are from 100 per cent recycled fibres. As Greenpeace pointed out earlier this year, this not only wastes energy and water, it also puts additional logging pressure on old-growth forest in North America, forests which play a vital role in supporting native biodiversity.

The reason toilet roll made from new wood is preferred is quite simple: its long fibres produce the softest and fluffiest paper. Every time paper is recycled, the fibres become shorter, making for an increasingly rough bathroom experience. Recycled paper can't compete on softness so some use of new wood by the toilet paper industry may be inevitable. Sourcing Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) approved toilet tissue will help to ensure that any new wood fibres that are added to the mix have come from sustainable forestry projects that protect, rather than threaten, old-growth forest ecosystems.
3 Fast fashion

Next on my list of everyday decadence is fast fashion. In 1990, global textile production stood at 40 million tonnes. By 2005 that figure had risen to around 60 million tonnes. This surge in manufacture and consumption has been helped by fast-moving fashion trends and sweatshop price tags. As a result, much of the clothing we buy ends up being discarded long before it has worn out. In the UK, where the average item is worn for less than a third of its useful lifespan, more than a million tonnes of clothing are thrown away each year. The bulk of it ends up buried like woolly lasagne sheets in landfill sites or being used as multicoloured incinerator fodder.

Even the global economic crisis appears to have had little impact on our love affair with fast fashion; UK clothing sales this summer were up 11 per cent on the same time last year. If we can't entirely kick the habit, we can at least dispose of the evidence in a greener way.

At present, in the UK and US, only around a quarter of unwanted textiles are reused or recycled. Recycled textiles have many uses, from mattress fillings and upholstery to bags and shoes, but the truly green alternative is reuse. The energy required to collect, process and sell a reused item of clothing is only 2 per cent of the energy required to manufacture a new garment. Every kilogram of virgin cotton preserved by reusing second-hand clothing saves 65 kilowatt-hours of energy, equivalent to about 32.5 kilograms of CO2. For polyester, the savings rise to 90 kilowatt-hours per kilogram.

The clothing and textile sector in the UK alone is responsible for more than 3 million tonnes of CO2 emissions each year. Switching to second-hand alternatives could therefore yield some big energy savings and cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.
4 Laundry

Fast fashion has created textile mountains in many homes, yet the environmental cost of this excessive consumption has an even less conspicuous twin: the energy used to launder it all. Cleanliness has become a touchstone of domestic life since advertisers convinced us that our shirts must always be "whiter than white", our sheets should forever smell of spring flowers, and that to be dressed in freshly laundered clothes at all times is a badge of success. We live in a "wear once and wash" culture. In fact, only about 7.5 per cent of the average laundry load in the UK is thought to be heavily soiled. Much of the rest is made up of items that are stuffed into the washing machine simply because they are on the floor instead of in the wardrobe (Sustainable Fashion and Textiles by Kate Fletcher, Earthscan, 2008). This habit is shockingly wasteful in terms of water, detergents and energy.

One study found that over 80 per cent of the CO2 emissions produced during the life cycle of a single polyester blouse arose from cleaning and drying it. The percentage can be even higher for items made of cotton, as they tend to require far more energy-hungry drying.

It is easy to see how these emissions stack up. A full load in a washing machine uses around 1.2 kilowatt-hours of electricity per cycle and tumble drying clocks up a further 3.5 kilowatt-hours, resulting in over 2 kilograms of CO2 emissions per wash. With four or five loads per household per week, the total annual emissions from each home can easily pass the half-tonne mark. That's a significant proportion of the 10-tonne annual emissions of the average European. Line drying, washing at lower temperatures and ensuring full rather than partial loads will all help to reduce laundry emissions. For the largest cuts, simply washing less frequently is the way to go.
5 Food wastage

Of all the facets of overconsumption that plague both human society and the global environment, food wastage is the most shocking. US households throw away around 30 per cent of their food, worth $48 billion every year. Similar levels of wastage are seen in Europe. In the UK, some 6.7 million tonnes of food is binned annually. Most of this joins the layers of unwanted clothing in landfill sites, where it decomposes, emitting the powerful greenhouse gas methane. Potatoes top the pile, with 359,000 tonnes going uneaten each year. Bread and apples are not far behind. Meat and fish are next, accounting for over 160,000 tonnes, followed by 78,000 tonnes of cooked rice and pasta. A staggering 4.8 billion grapes go the same way, as do 480 million yogurts and 200 million rashers of bacon. The annual cost to UK consumers of all this waste is £10 billion and the cost to the environment is the equivalent of an extra 15 million tonnes of CO2 (The Food We Waste, WRAP, 2008).

The cost of food wastage reverberates down the supply chain, increasing requirements for storage, transport and packaging. But the biggest impact by far comes in food production. For almost all the food we buy, the bulk of its greenhouse gas emissions arise here. This is especially true for meat and dairy produce. For example, 40,200 tonnes of milk are wasted each year in the UK, adding up to the equivalent of 40,000 tonnes of CO2. This is comparable to the annual CO2 emissions of 10,000 cars, or of flying 30,000 people from London to New York and back.

In their 2008 report, WRAP, the UK's Waste & Resources Action Programme, examined just why people throw so much food away. The most common reasons were that the food had been left on plates after a meal, was out of date, or simply "looked bad". WRAP is now running a campaign to reduce food wastage. It aims to promote better management of food at home by encouraging people to prepare the right amount of food, keep an eye on use-by dates, and store food in appropriate conditions. As consumers we should also think more carefully before we shop. Check what you have already got, make a shopping list and, most importantly, don't do the weekly shop when you are hungry.

This list is far from complete and you may disagree with my choices. Perhaps you would include air conditioning, flushing toilets or popular science magazines on your list. Maybe you consider soft toilet roll or your morning latte as non-negotiable. If so, join the debate in the comments below. What's not in doubt, though, is that the cumulative effects of our everyday decisions can make a big difference to the global environment. Knowing just how damaging they are today may help us to make better choices tomorrow.

Gas-guzzling gadgets

Widescreen TVs

Last year, consumer electronics became the biggest user of electricity in UK homes. TV sets have led the regime change. As prices have fallen, size and energy demands have risen. Some plasma TV screens now measure more than 150 centimetres and, assuming average use, cause the emission of almost a tonne of CO2 each year. In 2005, TV sets used 8 per cent of the electricity consumed in the UK and this is predicted to almost double by 2020 (The Ampere Strikes Back, UK Energy Saving Trust; bit.ly/4h7IM7). This will mean an increase from just over 5 million tonnes of CO2 annually to more than 8.5 million tonnes. In the US, emissions attributable to TV use now top 30 million tonnes a year.

Plug-in air fresheners

Compared to watching TV on screens so large that they need a reinforced wall to hang on, the energy used by a plug-in air freshener seems positively spartan. At about 1 watt each their electricity demand is tiny, but they are busy wafting their approximation of apple and cinnamon odours around our homes 24/7. For a plug-in fanatic, half a dozen of them chugging away all year will emit the equivalent of 28 kilograms of CO2 - another tiny addition to the less fragrant outpourings of our power stations.

Patio heaters

The must-have garden accessory of a few years ago, the patio heater remains the domestic antithesis of climate change mitigation. The little useful heat that does manage to redden the foreheads of those clustered nearby comes at a cost of around 10 kilograms of CO2 for just four hours' use.

In-car gizmos

Instead of I-spy and guess-the-colour-of-the-next-car, in-car entertainment is now more likely to feature a plug-in games console or a passenger TV screen. Meanwhile, the badly folded map book has given way to intermittent commentary from a dashboard-mounted satnav. The extra energy demands of such devices, together with ever more powerful aircon systems, can result in fuel efficiency plummeting by more than 20 per cent.

Dave S. Reay is at the University of Edinburgh, UK. His new children's book on climate change is called Your Planet Needs You! and is published by Macmillan Children's Books


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Europeans Could Save Planet For $3 A Day: Study

Pete Harrison, PlanetArk 2 Dec 09;

BRUSSELS - Europeans could help cut climate warming emissions to much safer levels for just 2 euros ($3) each per day, but they would also have to cut back on driving and meat eating, a report said Tuesday.

Other long-term changes would include using the train instead of flying for journeys of under 1,000 km, said the report by the Stockholm Environment Institute, commissioned by Friends of the Earth Europe (FOEE).

The study targets a European cut in climate-warming emissions such as carbon dioxide to 40 percent below 1990 levels over the next decade.

"It's not just about investment, it's also about lifestyle changes," said FOEE campaigner Sonja Meister. "This report shows one pathway that would see air travel in the EU cut by 10 percent by 2020 and travel in private cars by 4 percent."

"Travel by rail would rise by 9 percent, and meat consumption would be reduced by about 60 percent," she added.

The European Union has pledged to cut emissions of carbon dioxide, the main gas blamed for climate change, to 20 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.

It also says it will cut by nearly a third if other rich nations agree to follow suit when they meet for global climate talks in Copenhagen in December.

But many scientists say much deeper cuts are needed from rich nations to keep the climate temperature increase below 2 degrees Celsius.

Poorer countries preparing for Copenhagen say industrialized nations caused the climate problem in the first place and should cut emissions to 40 percent below 1990 levels.

That could be achieved in Europe for a cost of 2 trillion euros, or around 2 percent of cumulative gross domestic product (GDP) over the next decade, said the report.

"Put another way, this cost would be the equivalent of temporarily holding GDP constant for about one year before resuming normal growth," it added.

The cost equates to about 2 euros per European per day, but that does not take account of the positive impact of job creation and reduced spending on hydrocarbon imports.

True to FOEE's politics, the assessment excludes the use of nuclear energy or carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology that would allow European power suppliers to keep on burning coal. It also rules out most carbon offsetting.

Instead, it assumes Europeans will accept higher taxes and make major lifestyle changes -- something politicians have not yet dared demand.

Such lifestyle changes could be continued to 2050, leading to a 90 percent cut in emissions, said the report.

Journeys in private cars would be cut to 43 percent of all journeys by 2050, compared to roughly 75 percent today, while people would switch from air travel to rail for 80 percent of the flights being made today of less than 1,000 km.

Wind power would be scaled up from its current 3.3 percent share of generating capacity to 22 percent in 2020 and 55 percent in 2050.

(Reporting by Pete Harrison)


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BP Starts Alaskan Oil Spill Cleanup, May Take Weeks

Joshua Schneyer and Yereth Rosen, PlanetArk 2 Dec 09;

NEW YORK/ANCHORAGE - BP Plc on Tuesday began cleaning up an oil spill from a leaky Alaskan pipeline, but said it has not determined what caused the leak or how much material spilled onto the snow-covered tundra.

The leak is the latest setback for the British oil giant. A major Alaskan spill in early 2006 revealed pipeline corrosion issues at BP-controlled Prudhoe Bay, the largest U.S. oilfield complex, which the company has sought to fix.

"We are implementing the spill cleanup plan," said BP spokesman Daren Beaudo in Anchorage.

BP started removing oil mist from a road adjacent to the 18-inch (45-cm) diameter leaky pipeline, but response crews have not been able to reach the main spill area yet, Beaudo said.

The line, which was idle when a leak was discovered by workers on Sunday, serves the 31,000 barrel per day Lisburne field at Prudhoe Bay, whose total production tops 400,000 bpd. Impact on production was "minimal," BP said.

It may take days or weeks to remove the oil and determine whether BP's leak caused environmental damage, an Alaskan official said.

"It's going to take a while, but they will clean it down to the tundra when they're done. That'll be a few days to a couple of weeks," said Dale Gardner, an Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation official.

"They won't know until they clear everything away how far it penetrated and whether the tundra is affected or not."

BP has not determined what caused the pipeline leak or how much material leaked, Beaudo said. A situation report said the affected area covered 8,400 square feet (780 square meters).

An ice plug was recently found in the pipeline, which prompted BP to shut the line a few weeks ago, Gardner told Reuters. It wasn't clear whether the ice plug contributed to the spill, Gardner added.

BP still faces legal problems due to Alaskan pipeline spills in 2006 and subsequent partial shutdown of Prudhoe Bay production. The company remains under a three-year probationary period under terms of a federal criminal settlement reached in late 2007.

The current leak affected a so-called three-phase flow line, which carries oil, natural gas, and water produced along with hydrocarbons. Water-bearing lines can be susceptible to corrosion or freezing, one pipeline expert said.

The spilled material is about 70 percent water, and has probably melted through the snow layer to the tundra, Gardner said. The ground is frozen, "so penetration is not likely," he said.

Seepage into waterways or the Beaufort Sea nearby is unlikely since a road acts as a barrier between the spill site and waterways, Gardner said.

Cleanup is difficult because of extreme cold, sparse daylight and pipeline safety precautions. Since the line remains partially pressurized, a 10-foot (3-meter) safety barrier has been placed near the pipeline, preventing cleanup workers from getting too close, Gardner said.

BP shares advanced 2.1 percent Tuesday on the London Stock Exchange.

(Editing by David Gregorio)


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El Nino Set To Continue Into First Quarter Of 2010: World Meteorological Organization

Stephanie Nebehay, PlanetArk 2 Dec 09;

GENEVA - An El Nino weather pattern warming the Pacific Ocean and linked to drought in South Asia is likely to continue through the first quarter of 2010, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Tuesday.

The phenomenon, which began in June and intensified in October, has "implications for many climate patterns around the world over the next several months," the WMO said.

But a second year of El Nino conditions or rapid transition to a La Nina pattern -- its counterpart in which waters cool -- are considered "unlikely," according to the United Nations agency.

An El Nino, which means "little boy" in Spanish, is driven by an abnormal warming of the eastern Pacific Ocean. It can create havoc in weather patterns across the Asia-Pacific region, unleashing droughts in some places and heavy storms in others.

"El Nino conditions are very likely to continue at least through the remainder of 2009 and into the first quarter of 2010," the WMO said.

The last severe El Nino in 1998 killed more than 2,000 people and caused billions of dollars in damages to crops, infrastructure and mines in Australia and Asia.

Across the central and eastern Equatorial Pacific, sea surface temperatures were generally about 1 degree Celsius warmer than normal during the period of June-September, it said.

Average sea surface temperatures in the second half of October rose to around 1.5 degree Celsius warmer than normal, and most forecasting models expected this level will continue for November-February, according to the WMO.

The so-called "decay" phase of the El Nino back to near-neutral conditions across the tropical Pacific is considered likely during the March-May period, it said. Climate impacts in some regions typically continue through this phase.

El Nino is not the only factor that determines regional impacts, although it is "one of the most dominant," according to WMO climate scientist Rupa Kumar Kolli.

"There are climatological relationships between an El Nino event and some regional climatic patterns, such as an El Nino event being associated with weaker monsoons," Kolli told a news briefing.

"For example, we have seen that in South Asia, we have had a very weak summer monsoon which led to drought conditions."

But no two El Nino events are alike and there are other factors that actually compound its impacts, he said.

Australia's weather bureau said last week that weather indicators suggested a drought-bringing El Nino was maturing.

Equatorial Pacific Ocean temperatures remain at their highest levels since at least the El Nino event of 2002, it said, also pointing to models suggesting the phenomenon would continue into the first quarter of 2010.

(Editing by Sue Thomas)


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CO2 Trade "Pointless" Versus China Growth-Trader

Gerard Wynn, PlanetArk 1 Dec 09;

LONDON - Trade in permits to pollute is "largely pointless" when compared with the scale of growth in greenhouse gases in China and must be scaled up, one of the carbon market's most senior traders said on Monday.

Countries and companies in the developed world can buy emissions rights by investing in carbon cuts in developing nations, under a Kyoto scheme called the clean development mechanism (CDM) meant to cut the cost of fighting climate change.

But those cuts were tiny compared with rises in the world's top emitter, said Garth Edward, head of emissions trading at Citigroup, and formerly head of trading at Shell.

"The CDM in China is largely pointless as far as reducing its emissions trajectory," he said.

China is by far the largest market in carbon offsets, having delivered cumulatively 99 million tonnes of emissions cuts under the CDM in 2007 and 2008, about 46 percent of the global total.

The country's carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels and making cement rose by 15 percent or 947 million tonnes over the same time period, U.S. data show.

Critics say that trade in carbon offsets is opaque and benefits traders at investment banks and industry lobbyists who negotiate opt-outs for polluters.

Supporters say it identifies least-cost emissions cuts and is the only scheme mobilizing private capital to fund emissions cuts in developing nations.

Climate negotiators from more than 190 countries meet next week in Copenhagen to try and agree the outline of a global pact to succeed the Kyoto Protocol in 2013.

One topic will be how to scale up the CDM -- and especially move from an individual project approach as now, toward whole sectors for example rewarding the power generation or cement industries once they pass a certain efficiency or carbon emissions standard.

"Let's move forward to proper sectoral targets rather than ad hoc activity," said Edward.

The present CDM business model had become "severely challenged," he added, as a result of greater competition among buyers of carbon offsets and falling carbon prices following recession.

(Editing by Sue Thomas)


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'Show Your Working': What 'ClimateGate' means

Mike Hulme and Jerome Ravetz, BBC Green Room 1 Dec 09;

The "ClimateGate" affair - the publication of e-mails and documents hacked or leaked from one of the world's leading climate research institutions - is being intensely debated on the web. But what does it imply for climate science? Here, Mike Hulme and Jerome Ravetz say it shows that we need a more concerted effort to explain and engage the public in understanding the processes and practices of science and scientists.

As the repercussions of ClimateGate reverberate around the virtual community of global citizens, we believe it is both important and urgent to reflect on what this moment is telling us about the practice of science in the 21st Century.

In particular, what is it telling us about the social status and perceived authority of scientific claims about climate change?

We argue that the evolving practice of science in the contemporary world must be different from the classic view of disinterested - almost robotic - humans establishing objective claims to universal truth.

Climate change policies are claimed to be grounded in scientific knowledge about physical cause and effect and about reliable projections of the future.

As opposed to other ways of knowing the world around us - through intuition, inherited belief, myth - such scientific knowledge retains its authority by widespread trust in science's reassuring norms of objectivity, universality and disinterestedness.

These perceived norms work to guarantee to the public trustworthy scientific knowledge, and allow such knowledge to claim high authority in political deliberation and argumentation; this, at least, is what historically has been argued in the case of climate change.

What distinguishes science from other forms of knowledge?

On what basis does scientific knowledge earn its high status and authority?

What are the minimum standards of scientific practice that ensure it is trustworthy?

For an open, enquiring and participative society, these are questions that have become much more important in the wake of ClimateGate.

They are also questions that scientists should continually be asking of themselves as the political and cultural worlds within which they do their work rapidly change.

Doing science in 2010 demands something rather different from scientists than did science in 1960, or even in 1985.

How science has evolved

The understanding of science as a social activity has changed quite radically in the last 50 years.

The classic virtues of scientific objectivity, universality and disinterestedness can no longer be claimed to be automatically effective as the essential properties of scientific knowledge.

Instead, warranted knowledge - knowledge that is authoritative, reliable and guaranteed on the basis of how it has been acquired - has become more sought after than the ideal of some ultimately true and objective knowledge.

Warranted knowledge places great weight on ensuring that the authenticating roles of socially-agreed norms and practices in science are adequately fulfilled - what in other fields is called quality assurance.

And science earns its status in society from strict adherence to such norms.

For climate change, this may mean the adequate operation of professional peer review, the sharing of empirical data, the open acknowledgement of errors, and openness about one's funders.

Crucially, the idea of warranted knowledge also recognises that these internal norms and practices will change over time in response to external changes in political culture, science funding and communication technologies.

In certain areas of research - and climate change is certainly one of these - the authenticating of scientific knowledge now demands two further things: an engagement with expertise outside the laboratory, and responsiveness to the natural scepticism and desire for scrutiny of an educated public.

The public may not be able to follow radiation physics, but they can follow an argument; they may not be able to describe fluid dynamics using mathematics, but they can recognise evasiveness when they see it.

Where claims of scientific knowledge provide the basis of significant public policy, demands for what has been called "extended peer review" and "the democratisation of science" become overwhelming.

Extended peer review is an idea that can take many forms.

It may mean the involvement of a wider range of professionals than just scientists.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), for example, included individuals from industry, environmental organisations and government officials as peer reviewers of early drafts of their assessments.

More radically, some have suggested that opening up expert knowledge to the scrutiny of the wider public is also warranted.

While there will always be a unique function for expert scientific reviewers to play in authenticating knowledge, this need not exclude other interested and motivated citizens from being active.

These demands for more openness in science are intensified by the embedding of the internet and Web 2.0 media as central features of many people's social exchanges.

It is no longer tenable to believe that warranted and trusted scientific knowledge can come into existence inside laboratories that are hermetically sealed from such demands.

A revolution in science

So we have a three-fold revolution in the demands that are placed on scientific knowledge claims as they apply to investigations such as climate change:

* To be warranted, knowledge must emerge from a respectful process in which science's own internal social norms and practices are adhered to
* To be validated, knowledge must also be subject to the scrutiny of an extended community of citizens who have legitimate stakes in the significance of what is being claimed
* And to be empowered for use in public deliberation and policy-making, knowledge must be fully exposed to the proliferating new communication media by which such extended peer scrutiny takes place.

The opportunity that lies at the centre of these more open practices of science is to secure the gold standard of trust.

And it is public trust in climate change science that has potentially been damaged as a result of the exposure of e-mails between researchers at the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and their peers elsewhere.

The disclosure and content of these private exchanges is only the latest in a long line of instances that point to the need for major changes in the relationship between science and the public.

By this, we mean a more concerted effort to explain and engage the public in understanding the processes and practices of science and scientists, as much as explaining the substance of their knowledge and how (un)certain it is.

How well does the public understand professional peer review, for example, or the role of a workshop, a seminar and a conference in science?

Does the public understand how scientists go about resolving differences of opinion or reaching consensus about an important question when the uncertainties are large?

We don't mean the "textbook" answers to such things; all practising scientists know that they do not simply follow a rulebook to do their science, otherwise it could be done by a robot.

Science is a deeply human activity, and we need to be more honest about what this entails. Rather than undermining science, it would actually allow the public to place their trust more appropriately in the various types of knowledge that scientists can offer.

What should be done?

At the very least, the publication of private CRU e-mail correspondence should be seen as a wake-up call for scientists - and especially for climate scientists.

The key lesson to be learnt is that not only must scientific knowledge about climate change be publicly owned - the IPCC does a fair job of this according to its own terms - but that in the new century of digital communication and an active citizenry, the very practices of scientific enquiry must also be publicly owned.

Unsettling as this may be for scientists, the combination of "post-normal science" and an internet-driven democratisation of knowledge demands a new professional and public ethos in science.

And there is no better place to start this revolution than with climate science.

After all, it is claimed, there is no more pressing global political challenge than this.

But might this episode signify something more in the unfolding story of climate change - maybe the start of a process of re-structuring scientific knowledge?

It is possible that some areas of climate science have become sclerotic, that its scientific practices have become too partisan, that its funding - whether from private or public sectors - has compromised scientists.

The tribalism that some of the e-mails reveal suggests a form of social organisation that is now all too familiar in some sections of business and government.

Public trust in science, which was damaged in the BSE scandal 13 years ago, risks being affected by this latest episode.

A Citizen's Panel on Climate Change (CPCC)?

It is also possible that the institutional innovation that has been the IPCC has now largely run its course.

Perhaps, through its structural tendency to politicise climate change science, it has helped to foster a more authoritarian and exclusive form of knowledge production - just at a time when a globalising and wired cosmopolitan culture is demanding of science something much more open and inclusive.

The IPCC was designed by the UN in the Cold War era, before the internet and before GoogleWave.

Maybe we should think about how a Citizen's Panel on Climate Change might work in today's world, as well as a less centralising series of IPCC-like expert assessments.

If there are serious ecological and social issues to be attended to because of the way the world's climates are changing - as the authors of this article believe - then scientists need to take a long hard look at how they are creating, validating and mobilising scientific knowledge about climate change.

Climate science alters the way we think about humanity and its possible futures.

It is not the case that the science is somehow now "finished" and that we now should simply get on with implementing it.

We have decades ahead when there will be interplay between evolving scientific knowledge with persisting uncertainty and ignorance, new ways of understanding our place in the world, and new ways of being in it.

A more open and a better understood science process will mean more trusted science, and will increase the chances of both "good science" and "good policy".

"Show your working" is the imperative given to scientists when preparing for publication to peers.

There, it refers to techniques.

Now, with the public as partner in the creation and implementation of scientific knowledge in the policy domain, the injunction has a new and enhanced meaning.

Mike Hulme is professor of climate change in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, and author of Why We Disagree About Climate Change

Dr Jerome Ravetz is an independent scholar affiliated to the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society (InSIS) at Oxford University

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


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Asean needs to step up its green efforts: Simon Tay

Simon Tay, Straits Times 2 Dec 09;

IT IS only days before the Copenhagen meeting on climate change begins and developments have been as changeable as, well, the weather.

Expectations of the meeting's outcome have swung from early optimism to pessimism - and may be swinging back again to guarded optimism after a recent flurry of events.

How did we get here? Where do we go next? Despite the uncertainties and variables involved, Singapore and others in region must grapple with them. New constants have emerged.

For more than a year now, European governments and many scientists have been calling for urgent action but rich and poor countries alike have continued to argue about how the responsibilities for, and costs of taking action to reverse climate change, should be assigned. The conviction grew that Copenhagen would not produce any binding commitments.

In part, this was because of the United States. While personally committed, President Barrack Obama remained hamstrung by the failure of the US Congress to act. Other concerns like health care and Afghanistan occupied Washington's attention.

However, just as Copenhagen is about to begin, the US has sent a strong signal. Not only will Mr Obama attend the conference with a high-powered US delegation, he has outlined the commitments he will back.

The US is expected to set a 17 per cent reduction in carbon emissions below the 2005 level as its first target. Further ahead, Mr Obama will urge a 30 per cent reduction below the 2005 level by 2025 and work towards a 83 per cent reduction by 2050.

This may prove to be a crucial step in achieving a global deal - if not immediately, then soon. The precise US commitment is not fixed and Congress has still to approve the necessary legislation. But compared to the eight years of denial under the previous Bush administration, what is clear now is that US will act. That is the first new constant.

The Obama administration will try to show that economic recovery and environmental protection are compatible. Over US$80 billion (S$111 billion) has been pledged to double the generation of clean renewable energy like wind and solar in the US. Energy efficiency is also being pushed on many fronts. New standards have been set for motor vehicles and household appliances, such as dishwashers and light bulbs.

The link between combating global warming and encouraging the growth of 'green' businesses is the second constant. Expect technology to receive a big boost from governments. Asians should try to latch on to these business opportunities and share technology with the US and other leading countries.

As the US moves, it will insist on others taking similar steps. The Group of 20 has discussed climate change, in addition to its focus on the economic crisis. Another step was taken at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in Singapore, when President Obama raised the issue with his Asian counterparts.

What will the US do if these Asian countries do not come along? Beyond persuasion and promoting technology, the proposed US legislation will have penalties. Uncooperative countries will face additional taxes on the goods they export to America. The Europeans have threatened similar border taxes.

The excuse is that such additional taxes will make up for the 'unfair' competitive advantages that countries that fail to commit themselves to lower emissions enjoy. But this can easily become a pretext for Europe and the US to protect their own domestic producers.

It is a proposal that threatens free trade. And yet these threats are the third new constant.

How should Asians shape their policies in response to these three new constants in climate change policy - US participation, the new green business opportunities, the threat to tax the exports of carbon polluters?

In many ways, China has shown the best way to respond. Its leaders understand China's vulnerabilities - not just the rise in sea levels but the impact of climate change on water, food and energy security.

One day after Washington announced its proposed cuts, Beijing announced its own pledge. It proposes to cut by 40-45 per cent the amount of carbon it emits per unit of national income by 2020, compared to 2005 levels. This goal aims to intensify energy use and be more efficient; it doesn't constitute an absolute limit. But it is a step forward, nevertheless, especially since China still has many poor people and needs to develop further.

Moreover, China has ramped up green technology and businesses. Given its proven ability to manufacture products that are of good quality at low prices, China is betting that it can become the world's leading green manufacturer. Sustainability is becoming central to the emerging Chinese economy.

Compared to China, Asean is behind the curve. The region needs to map out the dangers it faces from climate change, fully evaluate the costs it might suffer and consider what it can do to adapt and also contribute to a global solution.

Asean must be prepared to address climate change collectively if it is to be taken seriously as a community. At Copenhagen, Asean representatives should confer and push a common agenda. Assistance from developed economies for technology transfers and for adaptation will be needed.

One key area would be for Asean to seek assistance to develop a regional energy infrastructure. Recent studies indicate that energy demand in Asean will increase by almost 80 per cent by 2030 - and this will likely increase carbon emissions. But regional grids could be more efficient and also tap into renewables like hydro power to share across the region.

Another priority is to lock in carbon by conserving forests. Indonesia has been pushing this but sticky issues remain. Mechanisms need to be found to ensure that if funds are made available to conserve forests, the forests will indeed be conserved. If this could be done, the forest fires that have caused the haze for so many years might be alleviated.

Resources will still be needed but those that are certified to be green or climate friendly will have the edge. This provides opportunities not just for Indonesia but for all countries in Asean.

Singapore can benefit. Yes, costs may go up but Singapore has already moved beyond competing on cheap prices. It is well-placed to be a hub for green businesses and technology. Not taking action on climate change will affect its credibility as a sustainable city. Moreover, if climate change is severe, the cost of inaction will be great.

The road to Copenhagen has been difficult and uncertain. There may be more bumps ahead. The rules are changing and new constants are emerging to which Singapore and others in Asia must adapt and respond actively.

The writer is chairman of the Singapore Institute of International Affairs. Think-Tank is a weekly column rotated among eight leading figures in Singapore's tertiary and research institutions.


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