Best of our wild blogs: 24 Dec 09


Singapore Green Landscape
from Green Future Solutions

Crabby Tales: No Chili Required
from The Leafmonkey Workshop

Mimicry
from Tony Wu's Underwater Photography Blog

Venus Drive
from Singapore Nature

Happy Holidays!!
from Life's Indulgences

Little bugs in the lab
from Urban Forest

Coppersmith Barbet excavating a cavity II
from Bird Ecology Study Group

A weedy tree that produces delicious fruit!
from Garden Voices

Wildfacts updates: Sightings in December and some trees
from wild shores of singapore


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"No wonder it's so much easier to just buy a computer game and stay indoors all day"

'No U-turn syndrome' taking joy out of leisure
Straits Times Forum 24 Dec 09;

I REFER to Monday's report, 'Left high and dry by waterway rules' and last Thursday's letter, 'Family's kayaking dreams drifting in red tape', by Mr Jason Toh.

My husband, an avid kayaker since his junior college days, bought a foldable kayak a few years ago after reading reports about a more 'vibrant and active' culture on our waterways.

He had hoped to use it often, but each time we tried to research about where kayaking could be done safely, we hit a brick wall.

It takes a lot of effort trying to find out what can or cannot be done. There are no real conclusive answers anywhere, and the only way is to 'pay money and rent a boat' from some organisation, otherwise you are not free to paddle. Yet, like Mr Toh says, ultimately you're still on your own.

This reminds me of Creative founder Sim Wong Hoo and his reference to the 'no U-turn syndrome' many years ago. We are still so hung up over restrictions that even something that is considered a leisurely activity is so limiting. No wonder it's so much easier to just buy a computer game and stay indoors all day.

Frances Tan (Ms)


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Singapore food prices on the rise

Arthur Sim, Business Times 24 Dec 09;

(SINGAPORE) Food prices have risen consistently over the past few months. And given erratic climatic conditions, they could become even more of a concern going forward.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.4 per cent in November from October. The increase was attributed mainly to the higher cost of housing, recreation and other items, and food.

As a result of dearer vegetables, fruits and rice and other cereals, food prices rose 0.2 per cent.

Housing costs went up 0.2 per cent on account of higher gas tariffs. The cost of 'recreation and others' increased 1.9 per cent owing to higher holiday travel costs.

Barclays economist Leong Wai Ho said food prices have been rising faster on a month-on-month basis. Pointing out that the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) warned recently that it saw inflationary risks coming from fuel and food prices, Mr Leong said: 'We expect food price pressures to intensify in December, with Thai fragrant rice jumping above US$850 a tonne.'

The average price for Thai fragrant rice this year has been around US$760 a tonne.

Mr Leong added: 'Embedded in these numbers are not just symptoms of the recovering economy and the removal of excess capacity, but also a developing food price shock. We expect these price pressures to intensify as El Nino develops over the next three months.'

A recent report by HSBC Global Research also notes that rice prices have risen more than 25 per cent in recent months on supply fears for next year, 'stoked by Philippine and Indian import demand'.

In India, food prices have gone up 20 per cent this year.

HSBC said that while food prices are broadly still 'well behaved', rising demand and higher energy costs may push up indices.

And this could have an impact on Asian economies that are still in recovery mode.

HSBC notes that 'damaging' inflation episodes can occur if energy prices and food prices rise concurrently. This is what happened in 2008, when consumers were hit by higher energy and food costs, limiting their ability to offset one with the other, and ultimately depressing consumption spending that rendered the region vulnerable to the subsequent export downturn.

The trajectory of the CPI will have other implications, most notably on monetary policy, which is likely to take centrestage in 2010.

Already in India, with the Wholesale Price Index expected to hit 8 per cent by March, HSBC has revised its estimates for the Reserve Bank of India to raise its cash reserve ratio by 200 basis points (bps), from 150. Interbank or repo rates are estimated to increase by 125 bps, from 75 bps.

In Singapore, the CPI actually fell 0.2 per cent year- on-year in November, due to the high base effect of a year ago.

Alvin Liew, economist at Standard Chartered Bank Global Research, also believes there are no 'imminent concerns' about food prices. 'You have to expect an increase in food prices as an effect of the economic recovery,' he said .

He also reckons core underlying inflation (which excludes private road transport and housing costs) remains benign, and that the central bank is likely to take a conservative approach to monetary tightening.

Barclays' Mr Leong said: 'While the monetary policy stance will be tightened from where it was, the overall policy stance will still be largely accommodative in 2010. The exchange rate will be used to lean into imported inflation, while liquidity will remain flush and fiscal policy expansionary.'


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NEA steps up enforcement against litterbugs, illegal hawkers

Imelda Saad, Channel NewsAsia 23 Dec 09;

SINGAPORE: The National Environment Agency is stepping up its efforts to nab those who flout the law.

Those participating in the Christmas and New Year parties along Orchard Road, Marina Bay and other locations in Singapore are reminded to dispose of all litter into rubbish bins.

The public is also advised against patronising illegal hawker stalls peddling food, drinks and party novelties, including foam spray.

Litterbugs could be fined up to S$1,000 and slapped with the Corrective Work Order (CWO). The CWO will require offenders to carry out cleaning in public places for up to 12 hours.

Illegal hawkers may be convicted and fined up to S$4,000 and jailed up to three months. - CNA/vm


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12 supertankers with fuel oil, crude anchored off Malaysia

Trading firms switch to floating storage
Business Times 24 Dec 09;

(SINGAPORE) At least 12 supertankers holding fuel oil and crude are anchored in south Malaysian waters, up from eight previously, as a shortage of landed tanks spurs a shift to floating storage, traders said.

More trading firms, including Swiss trader Mercuria Energy trading and Southern Petrochemical Co Ltd, an affiliate of China's Sinopec Group, are venturing into the residual fuels market to capitalise on potentially firm trade margins.

Others such as European traders Trafigura and Astra Oil are riding on the market's contango structure, where weak prompt demand encourages players to store crude supplies for future sale in expectation of a price recovery.

These traders are time-chartering very large crude carriers (VLCCs) to store fuel oil and crude due to a lack of long-term storage capacity in Singapore.

Floating storage leases also offer trading firms more flexibility.

Total commercial storage capacity in Singapore - excluding capacity held by oil majors - stands at 10.8 million cubic metres, and all existing landed tanks are currently occupied by long-term leases, industry sources said.

Attractive trading opportunities abound in both fuel oil and crude, spurring a rise in storage plays, trading sources said.

Last week, Asian fuel oil physical differentials turned positive for the first time in 11/2 months, and the front timespread has remained in backwardation for a fourth day, on expectations of tighter Western arbitrage supplies in January.

Other than the front month, the contango structure remains in place for the forward months.

As for crude, the spread between February and March WTI contracts remains in contango, but that has narrowed to 67 cents on Wednesday from US$1.57 at the start of the month.

Oil prices have more than doubled from below US$33 last December, but are still 50 per cent below the record of more than US$147 hit in July 2008.

Although freight rates have climbed in recent weeks, reflecting the recovery in the global economy, time-charter rates for VLCCs on a one-year basis remain relatively affordable.

The cost of chartering a VLCC for a year is about US$30,000 per day, up 3-7 per cent from US$28,000-29,000 per day three months ago, shipping sources said.

Three- and six-month charter rates have risen more - by as much as 25-30 per cent - due to the surge in spot market rates.

Four new tankers have joined the eight vessels anchored off Tanjong Pelepas and Pasir Gudang in south Malaysian waters, storing fuel oil and/or crude, shipping and trading sources said.

They are Sfakia, leased by Trafigura; the Titan Gemini, chartered by both Astra and Trafigura; the Titan Scorpio, leased by Glencore; and the Edinburgh, chartered by European firm Arcadia Energy\. \-- Reuters


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Iron mining pollutes several tributaries of Sungai Johor

Mine pollution ruins rivers
Sim Bak Heng, New Straits Times 23 Dec 09;

KOTA TINGGI: Mud from iron mining near the Kota Tinggi Waterfall here has polluted several tributaries of Sungai Johor, resulting in a drop in the number of campers and tourists visiting this eco-tou-rism destination.

The situation is particularly bad at Sungai Pelepah and Sungai Pele-pah Kiri in the the Gunung Panti recreational forest.

There is a campsite near Sungai Pelepah which the Johor Youth and Sports Department uses to organise outdoor activities. However, the number of camps at the site has been declining in recent months as mining has caused the river water to become murky most of the time, especially after heavy rain.

Malaysian Nature Society (Johor branch) adviser Vincent Chow said there must be a mechanism to filter the mud instead of draining it into the waterway.

Checks at the Kota Tinggi Waterfall Resort found that an embankment had been built to prevent the mud water from flowing into the vicinity of the resort.

A caterer, who only gave her name as Ani, said she might have to find a different campsite because of the lack of piped water.

"Food preparation is not much of a problem as there is one tap supplying piped water at the campsite.

"However, it is a huge problem when campers come back and wait for their turn to bathe at the pipe," she said.

A camper, who gave her name as Nurhidayah, said there was no fun in camping beside a river in which she could not swim.

She said the situation was different when she came here a year ago.


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'Bakun electricity too expensive for Sabah'

New Straits Times 23 Dec 09;

THE government decided to supply the electricity generated at the Bakun Dam to Peninsular Malaysia rather than Sabah because of cost considerations.

Deputy Energy, Green Technology and Water Minister Noriah Kasnon said constructing infrastructure in Sabah, where the terrain was challenging, was costly.

She told Senator Datuk Maijol Mahap the government's intention to supply power generated at Bakun to the peninsula was a way of reducing dependence on fossil fuels.

She told the house that 90 per cent of power stations in the peninsula depended on fossil fuels, such as diesel, which were subject to fluctuating market prices.

Noriah said the government was considering developing hydroelectric plants in Ulu Padas and Liwagu, in Sabah, to reduce electricity shortages in the state.

On another matter, the house was told the media had acted responsibly in its coverage of issues between Malaysia and Indonesia, despite some attempts to sensationalise it.

Deputy Foreign Minister A. Kohillan Pillay said the Malaysian media did not go overboard in reporting issues although their Indonesian counterparts got worked up in a frenzy.

He told Senator Abdul Rahman Bakar that the two countries had formed an eminent persons group to improve ties.


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Drop in dengue and chikungunya cases in Malaysia

The Star 24 Dec 09;

KUALA LUMPUR: A total of 813 dengue fever cases, with one death, were reported in the week from Dec 13 to 19, a drop of 12% or 106 cases compared with the previous week.

Director-General of Health Tan Sri Dr Mohd Ismail Merican said, however, that three states showed spikes in the number of cases -- Pahang (100%), Terengganu (18%) and Negri Sembilan (3%). He said the number of cases this year as at Dec 19 was 39,794, with 84 deaths, a 12% drop from 45,649, with 100 deaths, for the corresponding period last year.

The fatal case last week was that of a 26-year-old housewife from Taman Selasih, Gombak, who died a day after giving birth to her first child. The locality had experienced seven dengue outbreaks this year, he said in a statement here Wednesday.

Nine localities were out of the hot spot list last week but nine new ones were identified this week, maintaining the total this week at 19.

On chikungunya, Dr Ismail said the number of cases also registered a drop to 107 last week, from 189 the previous week.

Sarawak had the highest number, accounting for 97% of the total cases nationwide.

The total for the year up to Dec 19 was 5,340 cases from 22 localities, all in Sarawak. -- Bernama


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Indonesia: Moving toward marine based development

Sukristijono Sukardjo, Jakarta Post 24 Dec 09;

Few other nations should be more concerned about the ocean and oceanographic research than Indonesia. Being located in between two oceans, the Pacific and the Indian, the waters around 17,504 islands greatly influences the climate, economy and health of the people of this Republic.

The industrialization during late eighties brought in agriculture and financial services to reinforce an Indonesian economy entirely based up until then on forestry-cultivation and fun-filled beach-centered tourism. However, despite having a 2.7 million square kilometer Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), the ocean based economic activities contributing to the GNP of Indonesia have been unfortunately insignificant.

Considering the fact that Indonesia has one of the highest populations in the world with access to renewable and non-renewable resources, exploitation of oceanic resources will probably follow as the next phase of the nation’s industrial development. There is a great need for an integrated approach in scientific planning, formulation, implementation and overall management of ocean related activities in Indonesia.

The coastal zone is the prime frontier area to study, as it impacts the livelihood of 60 percent of Indonesians in one-way or another. Monitoring change in the 95,181 km shoreline is an important task for the concerned ministries and research institutions. A GIS-based mapping of the coastline using satellite, aerial photography and real-time ground-truthing is taken up to estimate coastal vulnerability against geological, climatological, biological, chemical and physical extremes.

There is a proposal to set-up a few time-series stations around some major islands and outer islands (e.g. Tual, Kai Kecil islands, etc.). Such marine research stations selected on strong scientific rationale would collect data on all possible oceanographic parameters at regular intervals over a stipulated period. Modeling such data would help develop strategies to effectively mitigate coastal problems.

The livelihoods of a large majority of the Indonesian people depend on fishing and the fisheries industry. Complete biomass evaluation and detailed maps of mangroves, seagrass beds, coral reef and fish stock are still insufficient, some not available.

To overcome this shortfall, efforts are now on to identify new fishing banks through bathymetric survey and satellite information. Construction of artificial reefs, mariculture and mangrove rehabilitation and/or restoration are encouraged.

Continuous monitoring of chlorophyll content, sea surface temperature and current pattern are studied to maximize the resource products. Setting up of an integrated coastal zone management framework involving impact assessment certification mechanism and an efficient hazard and crisis mitigation group are being actively considered.

A substantial part of the protein needs of Indonesia come from the sea through captured fisheries — 2,500 fish species have been identified and some of these of commercial value worldwide. A good demand for filleted and other value-added forms of fish should excite the fishing industry and home industry.

Biotechnology and sea ranching mechanism can ensure high food quality and add value to the product. Grounds for deep-water shrimp trawling and possibilities to develop technology for better fish preservation are now explored. The seafood technology arena, in particular, can create a lot of job opportunities. Extracts from marine organisms can also contribute a substantial part of the country’s drug needs.

Indonesia is insisting on well-equipped laboratories and trained human resources to capture the intellectual property rights and other commercial possibilities in the field of bio-prospecting. Indonesian marine invertebrate biotechnology products have a potential value of US$340-780 million per year, and would constitute 5 percent of the world’s total output.

As a fundamental measure, the vast EEZ and the Sunda and Sahul shelf need to be explored in detail to complete geological, chemical, biological and physical mapping. Understanding the submarine landslides, sea floor tectonics and its effect on stability of islands coastlines are of great significance.
Indonesia straddles the ring of fire, has vast continental shelves, and in consonance with Article 76 of the Unclos Convention, geological and geophysical data is necessary for demarcate extension of legal continental shelves. An intensive exploration to identify maritime resources within the EEZ for hydrocarbon potential, seamount cobalt rich crust and phosphorus, hydrothermal metal deposits of the mid-oceanic ridge and associated bioactive compounds is necessary.

Another area in which Indonesia is interested to harvest renewable energy from wind, waves, currents, tides, and from large temperature difference that exist in the water le-vels within a short distance from the shore. The Indian Ocean, stretching from east of Sumatera to south of Java going to West part of Indonesia holds great promise.

Indonesia is lucky to have the Wallace Line which runs from Lombok strait between Borneo and Sulawesi to the Sulu Sea in the Philippines, marking the boundary between the Asian and Australasian faunas of Laurasian and Gondwanan ancestry. Marine creatures (e.g. Coelacanth fish) and pelagic fish e.g. Spermonde islands, are phenomenal to science. Understanding the processes of generation of new oceanic crust at the Central Indian Ridge would be interesting to obtain fundamental information on mantle melt behavior and high-grade sulphide metal deposits.

A host of worms and colorful tubes amazingly occur at this extremely hot (>200o C) deep-sea environment. The genetic adaptations of these organisms biologically in the laboratory may prove commercially potential and academically significant. Studying various dimensions and dynamics of the Central Indian Ridge-Indian Oceans should prove rewarding e.g. the discovery of giant, deep-sea -volcano in the offshore Bengkulu. Oceans regulates climate by absorbing much of the atmospheric carbon.

Hence understanding the biogeochemical environment that controls and relates oceanic productivity and atmospheric composition can help climate prediction. Increased research on air-sea interaction processes and stimulation of ocean-atmosphere coupling would contribute substantially to enhance weather and climate prediction ability.

To this end, Indonesia is now integrated with an international campaign to understand the above delicate aspects. WOC2009 is the milestone of Indonesian contribution to ocean-climate change issues.

By deploying argo floats, data-buoys, tide gauges and sediment traps, Indonesia is poised to generate a wealth of information from her waters. It is proposed to study the Sunda and Sahul shelf and Wallace’s Line seas in detail as the oceanographic parameters of this area greatly influence the tropical climate, the two oceans: Pacific and Indian, and the resultant economy.

From social points also, Indonesian waters are expected to have a wealth of history submerged, myth and legendary. Scientific investigation to catalogue marine archaeological sites of Indonesian waters and trace maritime history through research may bring out unsung pages of culture and commerce in the past.

In order to make use of the ocean in a sustainable way, ministries and institutions in Indonesia should take much interest on the issue, said President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono at the address on the Coral Triangle Initiative Summit 2009. Dewan Kelautan Indonesia (The Indonesian Maritime Council), as a national coordination committee in ocean sciences is being set up by presidential decree for this purpose. Being a responsible contributor to global ocean research campaigns (e.g. Manado Ocean Declaration 2009), Indonesia is on the cusp of qualifying as a hub of marine research activities in the Indonesia waters, between Indian and Pacific oceans.

It is believed that only through visible, rational and responsible marine scientific activities; Indonesia can take advantage of her enormous geographical and strategic potential. If approached judiciously, oceanic activities could become a pillar of Indonesia economy in near future, following the success of Japan, Australia, South Korea, Maldives, and Mauritius that use ocean life to fuel their economy.


The writer is a Professor of Mangrove Ecology at the Center for Oceanological Research and Development, Indonesian Institute of Science (LIPI).


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Hundreds of Aceh refugees involved in forest clearing

Apriadi Gunawan, The Jakarta Post 21 Dec 09;

More than 500 refugee families from Aceh have reportedly been engaged in forest conversion activities within the Gunung Leuser National Park (TNGL) in Langkat regency, North Sumatra, for the past 10 years, an official said Monday.

TNGL center head Harijoko said currently 554 Aceh refugee families continued to clear forested areas in the national park.

He said that in an effort to stop the forest conversion, his office planned to relocate the families to Solok regency in West Sumatra.

According to Harijoko, the plan has long been announced and was part of the central government’s program, but it has not yet been realized because Solok regental administration is still encountering problems to change the zoning of the relocation site for the refugee families.

“The planned relocation area is still a forest conservation area. It has not yet been released by the Forestry Ministry as an area which can be used for the interest of the Aceh refugees,” Harijoko told The Jakarta Post.

He said his office was optimistic that the relocation issue would be resolved by early next year.


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New study highlights scale of international wildlife trade in Southeast Asia

TRAFFIC 23 Dec 09;

Oxford, UK 23 December 2009—More than 35 million animals listed in CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) were exported from Southeast Asia between 1998 and 2007, according to a study to be published later this week in the journal Biodiversity and Conservation.

The top animal groups traded were reptiles (17.4 million), seahorses (16 million), birds (1 million), mammals (0.4 million), butterflies (0.3 million) and fish (0.1 million). There were also more than 18 million pieces and 2 million kg of live corals exported.

More than 85% (30 million) of animals were wild-caught, with Malaysia, Viet Nam, Indonesia and China the major exporters of such animals (of around 300 species), and the European Union and Japan the most significant importers.

Butterflies were the only group that was not mostly sourced from the wild.

The study analyses more than 50,000 official wildlife trade records of CITES-listed species recorded by countries who are signatories to the Convention, which includes all Southeast Asian nations.

Over the 10-year period studied, trade in most groups increased or remained stable, apart from birds, which declined.

“The decline on the wild-caught bird trade may have been partially in response to the outbreak in avian influenza (H5N1) in Asia and the subsequent EU import ban on such trade” commented Vincent Nijman of the Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, and author of the report.

Population growth, increased buyer power and globalization have led to a rise in demand for exotic wildlife, and this occurred in developed, emerging and developing nations alike, says the report.

“Given there are few records of illegal or undeclared international trade, and trade in many more species is not regulated through CITES, the true number of animals being traded from the region must be far higher than this analysis suggests,” said Nijman, adding that the reliability of the trade records is only as good as the data supplied by CITES Parties.

For seahorses, butterflies and corals, over 90% of all exports originate from single countries—Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia respectively.

Single countries dominate some markets too, such as Hong Kong for the import of wild-caught seahorses and other fish, and the EU for wild-caught mammals and, prior to the ban, birds.

China, Singapore, and to a lesser degree Malaysia, are the countries that feature as importers of wild-caught wildlife, with China apparently an end destination, but Singapore (pangolins and reptile skins) and Malaysia (live birds) tending to be re-exporters.

In 2000, CITES imposed a zero quota on trade in species of Asian Pangolins, because of concerns that the number being traded internationally were leading to a decline in wild populations.

Nijman hopes his analysis of trade in the region will form the basis for assessing the levels of extraction from the wild of various animal groups, with an aim to ensure they are kept within sustainable levels.

“This study underlines how important it is for wildlife trade in the Southeast Asian region to be managed at sustainable levels to avoid negative impacts on biodiversity and ensure on-going benefits to the livelihoods of the people involved,” said Steven Broad, Executive Director of TRAFFIC

The paper, An overview of international wildlife trade from Southeast Asia by Vincent Nijman will appear in the journal Biodiversity and Conservation later this week as an advance online publication.
DateWednesday, December 23, 2009 at 9:48 | Share ArticleShare Article


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Close to 200 crocodiles captured in Australia

Yahoo News 23 Dec 09;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Almost 200 predatory saltwater crocodiles have been removed from waterways around Australia's northern city of Darwin this year for the safety of residents, an official said Wednesday.

Rangers picked up 196 of the deadly reptiles in Darwin and elsewhere in the Northern Territory, with the largest a 4.9 metre (16 foot) male, regional director of Conservation and Wildlife Brett Easton told AFP.

"Once captured they are taken to a crocodile farm where they live a long and lazy life," Easton said.

As part of its crocodile management programme, the government has been removing the "salties" from waterways near residential, recreation and swimming areas. Last year 190 were removed.

Easton said some of the animals were found close to where people live, including in stormwater drains and swimming areas.

"In the Northern Territory we all live fairly close to water and saltwater crocodiles are not unusual in our waters," he said.

He said heavy rainfall and flooding in the wet season allowed the crocodiles, believed to number 80,000 in the country's north, to move more freely and inhabit areas they would otherwise avoid.

Two people, including a young girl, were killed in crocodile attacks in the Northern Territory this year.


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Who killed cock robin? The hungry Cypriots did in annual slaughter

RSPB says songbirds fleeing the cold to Cyprus this year will be illegally killed and served up in restaurants as a local delicacy
Press Association, guardian.co.uk 23 Dec 09;

As a favourite winter bird they appear on millions of Christmas cards every year, but robins face being illegally killed in enormous numbers this Christmas, conservationists warned today.

Many of the birds escape the freezing cold to spend the winter on Cyprus, only for hundreds of thousands to be illegally killed to provide a Cypriot delicacy – ambelopoulia – for local restaurants.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and its partner organisation BirdLife Cyprus, said one of the trapping hotspots was on the British Sovereign Base Area of Dhekalia.

The RSPB said it was "unacceptable" that the illegal slaughter of the birds was taking place on an area controlled by the British authorities.

During the autumn trapping season, an estimated 700,000 birds were caught in the area monitored by BirdLife Cyprus field workers, and the organisation believes the total may exceed 1 million. Winter figures are expected to be even higher.

BirdLife Cyprus's Martin Hellicar explained: "At this time of year, robins and other birds such as song thrushes, escape harsh conditions further north in Europe and travel to the island for the winter.

"Sadly many of these birds will be travelling to their deaths, particularly in the trapping hotbeds of Famagusta, Larnaca and the British sovereign base area of Dhekelia."

Ambelopoulia, a dish of pickled or boiled songbirds, is illegal, but the law is being widely flouted by many restaurants.

Tim Stowe, the RSPB's international director, said: "The illegal killing of songbirds has no place in a modern Europe and this increasing slaughter is placing increasing pressure on bird populations, many of which are already declining for other reasons.

"We remain concerned that many threatened species are also slain and we are working with BirdLife Cyprus to bring this barbaric practice to an end."

The birds are trapped in nets or caught on limesticks, where trappers coat sticks in "lime" – a concoction made from locally-occurring fruits.

The birds become stuck to the sticks until the trapper returns to kill them, usually with a toothpick to the throat.

The legs of the birds are often stuck so firmly to the glue sticks that they need to be pulled off.

This autumn was a disastrous season for bird trapping, with net use up by over a third compared to autumn 2008. Limestick use is also on the rise.

Netting levels were particularly high in the Dhekelia sovereign British base (SBA) area, notably on the Pyla range, a British army exercise area.

Mr Stowe said: "For such a trapping free-for-all to be going on in an area supposedly controlled by the British authorities is unbelievable and unacceptable."The SBA police and British army sweep operation in this area in October was a welcome first step in tackling what is industrial-level trapping, but this decisive action needs to be repeated until this is dealt with."


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Mystery of Amazon manatee migration solved

Jody Bourton, BBC News 23 Dec 09;

The mystery of why Amazonian manatees migrate has been solved.

Only in recent years did scientists find that the secretive aquatic mammal migrates from shallow to deep water.

Now researchers can reveal that the manatees make this perilous journey to avoid being exposed to attack by predators during the low water season.

That means the species maybe at greater risk than previously thought, say scientists, as migration and low water levels make them vulnerable to hunters.

The international team of researchers from Brazil and the UK publish their findings in the Journal of Zoology.

Great escape

The elusive Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis) is a large plant-eating mammal that lives in freshwater.

Due to its peculiar shape it has been described as a cross between a seal and a hippo.

The species is only found in the Amazon River basin from the river mouth to the upper reaches of tributaries of Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, and Peru.

The researchers studied manatees that live within the Mamiraua and Amana Sustainable Development Reserves in the north west of Brazil.

To obtain their results, the researchers asked local inhabitants about the animals' movements, studied the shapes and depths of the local rivers and lakes and then used radio tracking tags to follow the movements of 10 manatees.

During the high water season, between mid May and the end of June, manatees live in quiet lakes called varzeas that form within river flood plains, the scientists found.

Here the manatees consume 8% of their body weight in aquatic plants each day.

Then during the low water season, between October and November, the animals start to migrate as the water level drops.

They journey to deeper water within long narrow lakes called rias, that are submerged river valleys.

They do this because it becomes too dangerous to remain in shallow water, the scientists say.

If the manatees do not move, they become stranded and exposed to hunters such as caimans, jaguars and humans who stalk the water margins.

Lesser of two evils

Moving to the deeper habitat is not easy, as the large mammals must pass through narrow bottlenecks in the aquatic landscape, where human hunters wait for them.

The perilous journey also has another downside; it forces the manatees to fast for several months due to a lack of aquatic plants.

"Amazonian manatees migrate to a habitat that doesn't offer easy living conditions in order to flee from a habitat that becomes inhospitable," says Dr Eduardo Moraes Arraut from the National Institute for Space Research in Sao Paulo, Brazil who undertook the latest study.

By doing so, they choose between the lesser of two evils.

"When you have two options that are not good, you choose the one that is less bad," says Dr Arraut.

Hunters respected

"I was surprised with the difficulty of the conditions the manatee lives in during the low water season," he says.

"I was also badly surprised with the fact that they are probably being killed yearly throughout the Amazon during migration."

Even though hunting manatees is illegal they are prized by local people for their meat and the status a kill bestows on the hunter.

"It is very difficult to kill one and hunters are respected people in their communities," explains Dr Arraut.

"Manatees are in greater danger than previously thought because every year they are probably migrating through narrow channels where they are exposed to hunters," he says.

Dr Arraut hopes to track manatees in other regions of the Amazon to find out if this is occurring elsewhere.


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On the move: Species face race against climate change

Yahoo News 23 Dec 09;

PARIS (AFP) – Land ecosystems will have to move hundreds of metres each year in order to cope with global warming, according to a letter published on Thursday in Nature, the British-based science journal.

On average, ecosystems will need to shift 420 metres (about a quarter of a mile) per year to cooler areas this century if the species that inhabit them are to keep within their comfort zones, scientists in the US believe.

Flat ecosystems such as mangroves, wetlands and deserts face the biggest challenge, for they will have to move the farthest in order to survive.

Mountainous habitats are a bit luckier, as just a small shift in altitude provides some cooling.

The figures are based on the "A1B" scenario for likely carbon emissions this century, as forecast by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It is considered an intermediate level of warming.

Climate change would impact slowest in tropical and subtropical coniferous forests, temperate coniferous forests, so-called montane grasslands and shrublands, say the scientists.

Deserts, mangroves, grasslands and savannas would be hit fastest.

The paper suggests a ruthless Darwinian struggle will be unleashed.

Some rugged species may be able to adapt to warmer temperatures and modification of their home. Others that can migrate elsewhere in time will also survive.

But those species that cannot adapt -- or which move only slowly, such as plants -- will have nowhere to go and could face extinction.

"Expressed as velocities, climate-change projections connect directly to survival prospects for plants and animals. These are the conditions that will set the stage, whether species move or cope in place," said co-author Chris Field, director of the Carnegie Institution?s Department of Global Ecology.

The study says that protected areas such as nature reserves are generally too small to cope with the expected habitat shifts.

Less than 10 percent of protected areas globally will maintain current climate conditions within their boundaries a century from now, it warns.

Under the A1B scenario, the best estimate of a UN's Nobel-winning panel of climate scientists foresees a temperature rise this century of 2.8 degrees Celsius (5.04 degrees Fahrenheit), in a range of 1.7-4.4 C (3.06-7.2 F).

A group of world leaders, at the Copenhagen climate summit last Friday, set the goal of limiting warming to 2 C (3.6 F), but did not explicitly say whether the benchmark was since industrial times or over the course of this century.

There has already been around 0.7 C (1.26 F) of warming since the start of the Industrial Revolution of the mid-18th century, when the burning of coal, oil and gas began the greenhouse-gas phenomenon.

Ecosystems strain to keep pace with climate
Steve Gorman, Reuters 23 Dec 09;

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Earth's various ecosystems, with all their plants and animals, will need to shift about a quarter-mile per year on average to keep pace with global climate change, scientists said in a study released on Wednesday.

How well particular species can survive rising worldwide temperatures attributed to excess levels of heat-trapping "greenhouse" gases emitted by human activity hinges on those species' ability to migrate or adapt in place.

The farther individual species -- from shrubs and trees to insects, birds and mammals -- need to move to stay within their preferred climate, the greater their chance of extinction.

The study suggests that scientists and governments should update habitat conservation strategies that have long emphasized drawing boundaries around environmentally sensitive areas and restricting development within those borders.

A more "dynamic" focus should be placed on establishing wildlife corridors and pathways linking fragmented habitats, said research co-author Healy Hamilton of the California Academy of Sciences.

"Things are on the move, faster than we anticipated," she told Reuters. "This rate of projected climate change is just about the same as a slow-motion meteorite in terms of the speed at which it's asking a species to respond."

The new research suggests that denizens of mountainous habitats will experience the slowest rates of climate change because they can track relatively large swings in temperature by moving just a short distance up or down slope.

Thus, mountainous landscapes "may effectively shelter many species into the next century," the scientists wrote in the study, which is to be published in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.

This is especially crucial for plant species, which due to their being rooted in the ground cannot migrate at nearly the pace of animals in response to habitat changes.

Climate change will be felt most swiftly by inhabitants of largely flat landscapes, such as mangroves and prairie grasslands, where the rate of warming may more than double the quarter mile per year average calculated for ecosystems generally, the study found.

Nearly a third of the habitats studied in the report face climate change rates higher than even the most optimistic plant migration estimates.

Lowland deserts are likewise subject to a higher velocity of climate change, although the trend toward protecting large swaths of desert may ease the problem there.

By contrast, much of the world's forest habitats and grasslands already have been severely fragmented by development, making mitigation of climate change in those landscapes harder and leaving their species more vulnerable.

The velocities charted in the report were based on the "intermediate" level of projected greenhouse gas emissions assumed over the next century by the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change.

(Editing by Mary Milliken and Bill Trott)


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Eco-tourists blamed for melting polar ice caps

Eco-tourists travelling to Antarctica are adding to global warming which is melting the polar ice caps, new research has found.
The Telegraph 23 Dec 09;

The South Pole has become a popular tourism destination recently with more than 40,000 sight-seers, including 7,000 from Britain, arriving in the area every year. Most travel in cruise ships to view the ice caps and wildlife such as penguins.

But it is feared the influx of "eco-tourists is causing "horrendous" pollution from ship fuel and rubbish, as well as disturbing wildlife in one of the last pristine landscapes left on Earth.

Dutch researcher Machiel Lamers, who was commissioned by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research to study the environmental impacts of increased tourism in the polar region, said it could even be making global warming worse.

"The visitors to the snow-covered landmass are endangering not just the Antarctic region by their actions, but also the rest of the world," he said.

"The 40,000 'eco-tourists' who visit the South Pole every year cause enormous greenhouse gas emissions.

"Tourism is a boom industry in Antarctica. Where, a mere 20 years or so ago, just a few hundred tourists would set off towards the South Pole, more than 40,000 inquisitive souls journeyed to the southernmost point on Earth last winter."

A two-week Antarctic cruise currently costs from about £3,500.

Mr Lamers said the benefits of Antarctic tourism had to be balanced with the environmental impacts.

"While tourism has many advantages to offer the South Pole, the increasing influx causes horrendous pollution," he said.

"The local environment is under pressure, more and larger ships are going there, tourists are perpetually looking for 'tougher, faster, more' and there's actually no-one to keep this all on the right track.

"The South Pole is managed by an international consortium of countries, but no-one is really in charge on the ground. There is no policy setting out any limits for tourism."

The International Association of Antarctic Tour Operators has imposed stringent bio-safety protocols to keep out seeds and insects and has promised to respect the environment.

However Mr Lamers said there needs to be a binding international treaty that will limit the number of tourists and landings allowed in Antarctica.

Although the Antarctic Treaty has called for limits this involves just 28 nations and needs to be strengthened.

"It is in [the tourist operators] own interests not to have too many tourists coming at the same time, no-one goes to Antarctica to find six other shiploads of tourists there," he said.

"It is time for clear rules; vague agreements are not enough any more."


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People 'fleeing for their lives' in Australian fires

Yahoo News 23 Dec 09;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Residents were "fleeing for their lives" Wednesday as savage wildfires blazed out of control in South Australia, with several homes destroyed and more under threat, officials and witnesses said.

Less than a year after 173 people lost their lives in fires in neighbouring Victoria state, officials warned that searing heat and strong winds could prove catastrophic as a large blaze burned outside the town of Port Lincoln.

"We have unconfirmed reports of losses of five to six residences. There are other residential and commercial structures under threat," a Country Fire Service spokeswoman told state radio.

One resident, named Ray, told ABC radio he expected his house to be gone after watching "flames above the roof" as he fled.

He added: "I'd just like to say to people who are out there on the roads and blocking the roads, people like me are fleeing for our lives."

The Country Fire Service said the fire was just a few kilometres (miles) from Port Lincoln and extremely dangerous, cutting electricity to thousands of homes.

A second major inferno was blazing near the town of Kingston in the state's southeast, directly threatening a number of farms, it added.

The fire service warned people in the area to take shelter in a solid structure immediately and to stay off the roads.

"You should not attempt to leave or enter this area as the roads will not be safe," it said in a warning.

Another Port Lincoln resident, identified only as Jeff, told the ABC he could see "exploding big flames" streaming from the fire, adding that "some of them look to be at least 100-foot high".

Much of the state had been declared at catastrophic risk, as temperatures soared above 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) and strong winds buffeted the region.

Catastrophic or Code Red conditions are considered on a par with those experienced ahead of the so-called Black Saturday fires in February -- Australia's worst disaster of modern times.

Residents cannot be forcibly evacuated but are strongly advised to abandon their property due to extreme risk of death or injury.

A cool change was expected to sweep through late Wednesday, bringing welcome rain for fire crews.

Meanwhile small communities in Western Australia's Pilbara region began mopping up on Wednesday after tropical Cyclone Laurence swept through, flattening buildings and uprooting trees.

The cyclone was sweeping eastward across the state but had been downgraded to a Category 1 storm -- the lowest rating -- and was expected to weaken further as it heads inland, officials said.

Meteorologists said it was expected to bring intense rainfall for drought-parched areas in central New South Wales (NSW) state, with major flooding expected.

"This event could bring the heaviest widespread rainfall to northern inland NSW for over a decade," said regional weather director Barry Hanstrum.


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Winter storm starts to spread across US Midwest

Josh Funk, Associated Press Yahoo News 24 Dec 09;

OMAHA, Neb. – Holiday travelers battled slick, icy roads and scattered flight cancellations and delays on Wednesday as a major winter storm began to spread across much of the nation's midsection — and the worst of the weather was still expected to come.

The storm was likely to intensify by Thursday, bringing heavy snow, sleet and rain to a large swath of the Plains and the Midwest. A foot or two of snow was possible in some areas by Christmas Day.

"It's an usually large storm, even for the Plains," said Scott Whitmore, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Topeka, Kan.

In northwest Kansas, snow started falling before sunrise Wednesday, after freezing rain had already iced up roads. Part of Gove County saw 8 inches of snow, though it was far lighter elsewhere, said Albert Pietrycha, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Goodland.

A stretch of Interstate 70 in western Kansas was snowpacked by mid-afternoon, although it wasn't closed — yet. The state Department of Transportation warned that travel would be almost impossible in northeast Kansas by Thursday afternoon.

"It's kind of hard to stay on the roads. You've got to go slow," said Jason Juhan, a clerk at the Love's truck stop in Goodland, Kan. "People are just trying to get through and get to where they need to as fast as they can."

Still, he saw an upside to the weather: "It's been a few years since we've actually had a white Christmas out this way."

Parts of Nebraska were coated with ice that was up to 1/4-inch thick and a number of churches were already canceling Christmas Eve services in anticipation of more ice and snow. But residents were still waiting for a blizzard.

"It isn't nearly as bad as they said it would be," said jewelry-store owner Stan Soper of Ord, a town of about 2,300 in north-central Nebraska.

Slippery roads were blamed for at least five deaths — three in accidents on Interstate 80 in Nebraska and two in a crash on Interstate 70 in Kansas.

In Chicago, more than 200 flights at O'Hare International Airport were canceled, along with about 60 flights out of Midway International Airport, the city's Aviation Department said.

Mollie Sheridan, a 30-year-old artist from Philadelphia, had planned to fly to Ohio to be with her family for Christmas. Instead she was trying to sleep on a row of seats at Midway after Southwest Airlines canceled dozens of flights, including hers. She said her father was driving five hours to Chicago to pick her up.

"I'm not that frustrated," Sheridan said. "I have a dad who loves me who's coming to get me. It hasn't spoiled my Christmas."

The storm forced the closure of the Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota. The National Weather Service in Sioux Falls warned of treacherous travel conditions from Wednesday through Friday night, calling the storm "life threatening."

In Arizona, blizzard-like conditions shutting down roads and causing a pileup involving 20 vehicles Tuesday. South of Phoenix, a dust storm set off a series of collisions that killed at least three people.

On Wednesday, winter storm warnings stretched from Colorado through the Dakotas and into Minnesota. They also were issued for parts of the Four Corners region.

A tropical jet stream pumping in moisture from the storm's south was likely to cause plenty of snow throughout the Plains and the Midwest, with the biggest accumulations expected from eastern Nebraska to the Upper Mississippi Valley. Freezing rain was possible across parts of Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois and Indiana.

Travelers scrambled to adjust their plans before the worst of the storm hit.

"I was going to wait a little longer, but when I woke up this morning I heard on the news that it was only going to get worse and worse, so I hit the road earlier than planned," said Rachel Ahrens, of Papillion, Neb., who stopped for gas Wednesday off Interstate 80 in Des Moines, Iowa, on her way to Ames, Iowa.

Jeff Cox, manager of Southtown Liquors in Albert Lea in southern Minnesota, near the Iowa border, said the store had seen a steady stream of customers amid snow and freezing rain.

"They don't want to be stuck home with nothing," Cox said.

The winter blast follow a weekend storm that dropped record snowfall and interrupted holiday shopping and travel on the East Coast. Tens of thousands of customers in West Virginia and Virginia remained without power Wednesday.

Holidays travelers and commuters alike were stranded in the Northeast on Wednesday after an electrical problem forced Amtrak to halt trains in and out of New York's Penn Station. The outage affected service as far south as Washington and as far north as Boston.

Power was restored after about three hours.

___

Associated Press writers John Hanna in Topeka, Kan., Nate Jenkins in Lincoln, Neb., Eric Olson in Omaha, Neb., Dirk Lammers in Sioux Falls, S.D., Michael J. Crumb in Des Moines, Iowa, Caryn Rousseau and Michael Tarm in Chicago, and Jeff Baenen in Minneapolis contributed to this report.


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Weather Takes Further Toll on Europe

Wall Street Journal 23 Dec 09;

Snowstorms and freezing temperatures continued across Europe, disrupting Christmas-holiday travel for thousands of people and claiming at least 80 lives.

Eurostar trains resumed running on a reduced service between London and Poland, where 29 people have frozen to death since the start of the weekend, and Ukraine, with 27 fatalities, have fared worst. But the effects are being felt from Scandinavia to Italy. A homeless organization in France said 12 people have died in the severe cold this month.

Snowfall has wrought havoc on traffic in Milan, Italy's financial capital, and elsewhere in the north of the country. Authorities in Venice warned residents of the lagoon city that they expect rising winds from the south to cause an exceptionally high tide. The tide is forecast to reach almost a meter and a half, meaning large parts of the historic city could be flooded.

Continental Europe, starting to move thousands of passengers left stranded by weekend train breakdowns in the Channel Tunnel.

Eurostar Chief Executive Richard Brown said service wouldn't be back to normal until after Christmas. He said passengers with tickets for Wednesday and Thursday could come to stations, though there was no guarantee they would be able to board trains.

Budget airline Easyjet said it had chartered a larger plane to boost capacity on flights between the airport at Luton, north of London, and Paris.

However, severe weather caused chaos at airports across Europe, with flights delayed or canceled in Italy and Germany. Britain's airports were recovering from a backlog, but travelers were warned there could be cancellations. More than 200 flights were canceled at Frankfurt airport, and about 400 stranded passengers spent a night at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport on improvised beds.

Forecasters predicted more snow and ice over the next day would affect road, rail and air travel.

Eurostar, its reputation tarnished by the chaos, said its trains suffered electrical failure caused by condensation when moving from cold air in northern France into the warmer tunnel. An independent review of the breakdown is scheduled to report by the end of next month, its British co-director said Tuesday. Christopher Garnett, who has served as chief executive of a British railway company and commercial director of Channel Tunnel operator Eurotunnel, will lead the review with Claude Gressier of France.

With temperatures dropping to minus 20 degrees centigrade, Polish police appealed for people to alert them if they see homeless or drunk people lying outdoors.

In Austria, authorities said two people froze to death as they tried to make their way home after evenings out. A homeless Polish man was found dead in the French Mediterranean port of Marseille. Four people died in road accidents as blizzards enveloped large areas of Finland, and in Germany a man froze to death next to railway tracks in Mannheim after a night of drinking.

Italy sent hundreds of soldiers into the streets of Milan to help ease traffic after heavy snowstorms and freezing temperatures forced airports to close and halted trains. The Defense Ministry said some 600 soldiers had begun to shovel snow and 200 more were being deployed.

Private forecaster WSI said most of Europe is likely to experience colder-than-normal temperatures over the next three months. Todd Crawford of WSI said a combination of El Niño, a cold north Pacific and cold midlatitude North Atlantic sea-surface temperatures pointed to a continuation of frigid weather.

"There may be a relaxation of the current cold pattern during January, followed by a return to more consistent colder weather in February and March," he said.


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Venice flooded as Italy's bad weather continues

Yahoo News 23 Dec 09;

ROME – An unusually high tide flooded most of Venice early Wednesday, forcing tourists and residents to wade through knee-high waters or take to improvised, elevated boardwalks set up in St. Mark's Square and other landmarks.

The waters came in before dawn and reached a peak of 56.6 inches (144 centimeters) above average sea level. City authorities said that put around 60 percent of Venice's streets and piazzas under water.

Wednesday's level was still far from last year's record 63 inches (160 centimeters), Venice's worst flooding in more than two decades.

The tide receded during the day but the city said that more flooding is expected in coming days.

Northern Italy has been hit by snowstorms and cold temperatures that have shut down airports, idled trains and wreaked havoc on traffic in Milan and other cities.

Venetians are largely used to the "acqua alta" (high water) phenomenon, which occurs when strong winds from the south contribute to raise the sea level in the lagoon city.

The ANSA news agency reported some shops and ground-floor apartments were damaged by Wednesday's flood.

A system of movable barriers that would rise from the sea bed to protect Venice from exceptionally high tides has been in the works for years but will not be operational before 2014.


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Pacific warming continues: Australia weather bureau

Reuters 22 Dec 09;

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Pacific Ocean temperatures remained at levels typical of a drought-bringing El Nino weather pattern, Australia's Bureau of Meteorology said on Wednesday.

The bureau said in its latest fortnightly report that central Pacific Ocean surface temperatures are now at their warmest level since the El Nino of 1997-98, exceeding temperatures observed in both the 2002-03 and 2006-07 events.

"Similarly, cloudiness and rainfall near the equator remains enhanced, while eastern Australian rainfall remains low; all typical of a mature El Nino event," the bureau said.

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

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.

The weather bureau said earlier this week that Australia could face a dry start for its summer crops as the El Nino pattern affects rainfall, raising the possibility of lower harvests of sorghum, sugar and cotton.

(Reporting by Jonathan Standing; Editing by Michael Perry)


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A message from Santa to kids on climate change

Dreaming of a green Christmas
Felix Dodds and Michael Strauss
BBC Green Room 22 Dec 09;

Environmentalists Felix Dodds and Michael Strauss use this week's Green Room to pass on a message from a seasonal contributor. They write: "Though he usually prefers to act anonymously, he has been rumoured to be active in many different countries under various personae that include Father Christmas, Pere Noel, and San Nicolas."

Dear children,

As many of you know this time of year is very busy for me. The elves are also really busy, making the Obama dolls (although they appear to be less popular than last year), the train sets, and the computer games.

But before I pack up the sleigh and set off on this year's big ride, I wanted to share with you an update on how things are going.

I wanted to share with you some worries I have, because here at the North Pole it has been a difficult year.

Dancer hurt a leg earlier this year and almost had to be replaced in this year's team.

It happened during a spring training run, when the ice - which had always been very strong here - turned out to be much thinner than we expected, and she almost fell all the way through into the Arctic Sea.

Fortunately, she was soon on the mend, but it did give us quite a scare.

But the thin-ice issue really got my attention. I had already been noticing how much the weather had been changing over the past 10 years.

Changing times

The polar bears keep pointing out to me that they've had to travel much further to find solid ice and snow. The Arctic terns and puffins have been flying away and back at unusual times of the season. And the permafrost has been turning to mush near the coastlines, which means it no longer is permanent at all.

I've had to re-route the take-off and landing patterns on all my maps, and each year that has been making delivering the presents much more difficult.

So I decided to find just what was happening. And guess what I found out?

It is this thing called climate change.

I hadn't realised how much damage that all this travelling around had been doing and how much our lifestyles had impacted on the Earth. It seems to me as I looked back that we have been dashing to disaster.

But you might say what would I know? After all I am just Father Christmas.

Well, I read these Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Reports, which I have to say they were a little boring, but all these scientists from around the world have been saying the same thing and each of the reports they produce says things are getting worse.

They tell us that people's use of oil, gas and coal has been putting thousands of extra tonnes of carbon dioxide into the air. It's causing the Sun's heat to build up in the atmosphere of the Earth. The reports say things are getting worse and worse.

Well, now it's starting to affect everything all over the world. Giant storms are flooding coasts and valleys, even big cities.

Farmers aren't getting enough rain for their crops, so they are having trouble growing enough food for people to eat in many countries. Even those hot -weather animals like elephants, tigers and lions, are struggling terribly as their natural homelands disappear.

Green Pole

I have to say it put the frighteners under me. I thought what can I do. After all, I am just one person with a lot of elves and reindeer.

Well the first thing was to find out what my carbon footprint might be. Well blimey, it was a lot!

I mean, if you are delivering to all the good girls and boys around the world, that's a lot of methane from the resulting reindeer poo. Then there is the production of all the toys and, being in the North Pole, we need a lot of heating and lighting most of the year as it is cold and very dark.

I then thought I would see what the experts had to say, so I asked them to carry out an energy assessment of our operations. They found that most of our power needs could be delivered by renewable energy.

So, this year there has been lots of building work around the grotto.

We now have wind turbines, which are powering most of the workshop and the housing. The reindeer have fun racing around it.

I bought some nifty electric cars for the elves to move around in, and a small methane collection plant for the… well, you know, with reindeer, we do get a lot of it, for the heating.

Of course, with reindeer powering the sleigh, my air travel is extensive so I still needed to deal with the methane. I found a nice offset scheme that enabled me to contribute to a forest in Brazil.

I am proud to say we may not have reduced yet all our fossil fuel uses but we are close to doing so. I always say, where there is a will there is a way.

Brazil, one of my favourite places, is hosting a new Earth Summit in 2012.

And that brings me to the plea. I watched that chap Al Gore in Copenhagen who says we have to cut our emissions if we want to stabilize our temperature at 1.5-2.0C above pre-industrialised levels.

We had better do it, or I am going to have to replace the reindeer with camels if I am going to be able to deliver presents in the future.

So I am asking all of children out there - and you adults too - to let your president or prime minister know your views. Copenhagen was a start but not enough.

I will also keep an eye on those politicians too. I think some of them will not be on my list of good boys and girls next year. I hope I am wrong on that.

Anyway, I hope you each have a peaceful and wonderful holiday this year. Let's all try to make it a very merry green Christmas.

And let's remember to enjoy what we have, and to share it together.

Father Christmas

Felix Dodds is executive director of Stakeholder Forum for a Sustainable Future, and Michael Strauss is executive director of Earth Media

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


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Indonesia Hopes To Be Role Model In Combating Climate Change: Minister

Bernama 23 Dec 09;

JAKARTA, Dec 23 (Bernama) -- Indonesia hopes that the world sees its eagerness and capability in conducting all concrete plans related to climate change before the Conference of the Parties (COP) 16 in Mexico.

In a statement, Minister for Environment Gusti Muhammad Hata said with such strategies, Indonesia hope to become the role model for developing and developed countries, Antara news agency reported.

He said that Indonesia still commits to immediately start new step to decrease emission of 26 percent from business as usual (BAU) in 2020.

"In March 2010, we will complete all concrete plans and immediately start with real action nationally with all public elements. Before the COP 16 in Mexico, the world will see Indonesia wants and could (implement the plan).

"We hope that developing countries are triggered to do the same thing, so do the developed ones by implementing principles of common but differentiated responsibilities," Antara cited Gusti as saying.

He added that even though results of COP 15 in Denmark's Copenhagen were not satisfying, Indonesia will still try to maximize them for the country's sake in efforts to save the Earth.

According to Gusti, efforts that could be done include energy conservation, standardization of vehicle efficiency, increasing public transportation and implementing environment-friendly technology for industry, among others.

Meanwhile the Chairman of the National Council for Climate Change Rachmat Witoelar told reporters that the world's hope on the COP 15 was answered by about 120 head of states in the form of political decision.

"However, the COP 15 was not without result because there are new opportunities and more benefits in term of saving the Earth," Rachmat said.

He added that even though the Copenhagen Accord (CA) was not very advanced step, countries still moved forward.

The CA is a political decision but was not a legally binding one. The decision set limitation of the global temperature increase of 2 Celsius degree above pre-industry level in 2050, implicating that developed countries should reduce green house gas emissions significantly.

The CA includes countries' commitment to provide some US$30 billion in 2010-2012 for balanced funding in adaptation and mitigation that will be channeled through international institutions.

-- BERNAMA

Reducing carbon emissions 26 pct needs Rp83.3 trillion
Antara 24 Dec 09;

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Secretary of State Minister for National Development Planning/chief secretary of the National Development Planning Agency Syahrial Loetan said reducing carbon emissions 26 percent by 2020 would need Rp83.3 trillion.
"Our plan is that to reduce carbon emissions to 26 percent needs Rp 83.3 trillion up to 2020," he said in Jakarta Wednesday.

He said that to achieve the projected carbon emission reduction, the government has seven priority sectors.

The priorities include that the energy used would reduce carbon emission by one percent. The transportation and industrial sectors will support the reduction of carbon emissions respectively by 0.3 percent and 0.01 percent.

The agricultural sector is expected to reduce the carbon emissions by 0.3 percent, forestry by 13.3 percent, waste management by 1.6 percent, and peatland management by 9.6 percent.

He said that any donor institution with a commitment to take part in reducing carbon emissions in Indonesia, the government will raise the projected emission reduction to 41 percent by 2020.

"Donors with a contribution, our Corporate Social Responsibility may be set at 41 percent," he added.

Up till now, he said, commitments to the emission reduction program have yet to be better arranged. He said many countries had expressed interest in taking part in the program in Indonesia.

"As Indonesia has been assumed at one of the world`s lungs, but since we have yet to be arranged better, such as what had been offered for the program, the measures to be submitted, how to monitor them, we will try to see that all of them are transparent and accountable," he said. (*)


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Indonesia secures climate supports through bilateral deals in Copenhagen

Erwida Maulia, The Jakarta Post 23 Dec 09;

The outcome of the Copenhagen climate change summit may be only “morally-binding”, but the Indonesian delegation hasn't come home empty-handed.

Rachmat Witoelar, alternate head of the Indonesian delegation to the summit, told a press conference here Wednesday that Indonesia had successfully secured support from a number of countries and international organizations to help it mitigate climate change.

Rachmat said the pledges of support were secured through bilateral meetings conducted on the sidelines of the summit in Copenhagen.

“[The pledges of support] are very significant; the funds are huge,” the former environment minister said, though stopped short at specifying the figure.

Norway, the US and Britain, for example, have stated their willingness to provide financial support for efforts to reduce emissions from deforestation.

Germany, meanwhile, has agreed to help Indonesia preserve its forests with technical assistance, and New Zealand will develop global partnership in climate change research in the field of agriculture.

Other countries that have inked deals with Indonesia in terms of climate change mitigation cooperation are Australia, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Italy.

Two international organizations following suit are the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).

The UNEP has agreed to develop its partnership with Indonesia on oceanic issues (blue carbon) and Technology Need Assessments follow-up, while the WMO for the preparations of an intergovernmental meeting in mid January to form the so-called High Level Task Force Team, which will formulate work concept for the Global Framework for Climate Services.

“Prof. Emil Salim has been proposed to be a member of the team,” Rachmat said, referring to another former environment minister.

Rachmat further explained, although the only outcome of the Copenhagen climate summit, which is a document called the “Copenhagen Accord”, was only “morally-binding”, not legally-binding, Indonesia is quite satisfied with the substance.

Climate Conference a Winner for Indonesia: Official
Fidelis E Satriastanti & Ulma Haryanto, Jakarta Globe 23 Dec 09;

While last week’s Copenhagen climate talks may have been considered as a lost opportunity to reach a binding agreement to slow down global warming, Indonesia stands to gain more than it bargained for, Rachmat Witoelar, executive chair of the National Council on Climate Change, said on Wednesday.

“[The conference] was not a failure and Indonesia was satisfied with the accord because it reflected our five major demands, as delivered officially by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono,” Rachmat said. He was referring to the president’s speech at the convention in which he demanded a strong commitment to reduce emissions, significant funding from developed countries and the continuation of the Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) scheme.

Rachmat said there was still time for the accord to be transformed into a legally binding agreement at next year’s climate talks, which are expected to be held in Mexico.

“The agreement, however, is morally binding and Indonesia still has the chance to play a more significant role with our middle-ground solutions,” he said.

Around 190 countries gathered in Copenhagen from Dec. 7 to 18 to engage in crucial climate talks that were supposed reach a new emissions reduction agreement from developed countries to replace cuts agreed to in the Kyoto Protocol, which is due to expire in 2012.

However, the meeting was deemed a failure by environmentalists because its outcome, the Copenhagen Accord, was not a binding document ratified by all parties. The 12-paragraph document, instead, only tells world leaders to “take note” that the world’s temperature should be kept from rising two degrees Celsius, to commit to funding vulnerable countries — up to $30 billion from 2010 to 2012 and up to $100 billion a year by 2020 — and to reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, known as REDD-Plus.

Rachmat said Indonesia was fortunate to have been able to hold several bilateral meetings with developed countries, including Norway, Britain, the United States, Germany, Australia, the Netherlands and Italy.

Norway committed to interim funding for REDD, which would be implemented as soon as possible. Britain and the United States also pledged funding to assist Indonesia in reducing emissions from the forestry sector.

The United States has said it would mobilize $3.5 billion for 2010 and 2011, which would be disbursed to three forested countries, representing three continents. Britain has raised $25 billion in funding from developed nations to reduce deforestation by 25 percent by 2015.

Raja Siregar, of Oxfam GB, said it looked like Indonesia would not get much in adaptation funding, but could receive funding for mitigation in the forestry sector.

“However, because it was not a legally binding [agreement], then it will be different from the previous assumption that we would get funding just by keeping our forests intact in order not to emit more carbon,” Raja said. “It seems now that we will have to first compete to get mitigation funding and then make a commitment on how much forest we can preserve using that funding.”

Raja said Indonesia had made a political pledge to reduce its emissions by 26 percent, most of which would come from the forestry sector. “At the moment, however, it is not clear how much funding we will get,” Raja said.

“[The funding] could be enough or not. REDD, as a [carbon trading] market, is also based on getting incentive [funding] to match the [cost] of preserving forests. But now those conditions don’t apply,” he said, adding that the funding was still well short of Oxfam’s prediction of $50 billion to $70 billion per year for adaptation alone.

“Competition between vulnerable countries to get a share of the funding will be strong,” he added.

A much stronger reaction to Yudhoyono’s Copenhagen speech came from Greenomics Indonesia, which said it was in stark contrast to the country’s forestry land use plans.

“Some 18 million hectares of forests have been earmarked for [commercial] use,” said Elfian Effendi, the executive director of Greenomics Indonesia.

“If the plan [to convert these areas] goes ahead, then the 26 percent emission reductions promise is just rhetoric … because one of the biggest emissions culprits is converting forest into non-forest areas,” Elfian said.

Rachmat, however, said the “One Man One Tree” national replanting program could be beneficial if the government could inspire enough people to get behind the project.

“[The government] plans to plant four billion trees over five years,” Rachmat said. “There were discussions about disbursing $100 billion for this effort. But this was only going to happen if there was a binding agreement in Copenhagen. When that’s affirmed, the funds will be disbursed.”


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Brown calls for new system of negotiations to deal with climate change

Brown: we must learn lessons of Copenhagen
Michael McCarthy, The Independent 22 Dec 09;

The way world leaders negotiate climate change needs to be reformed, Gordon Brown said last night in the wake of the UN's Copenhagen Climate Conference, where the failure to produce a strong agreement to tackle global warming has disappointed millions around the world.

The unbreakable deadlock that "threatened to pull down the talks" must not be allowed to happen again, the Prime Minister said in a podcast on the Downing Street website – he added that there must be reform of the international institutions in which climate change is discussed.

Mr Brown's evident frustration with the long-term UN negotiating process, which ran into the sand in the two-week meeting in the Danish capital and had to be rescued by an ad hoc agreement by heads of state, was echoed yesterday in comments from the Energy and Climate Change Secretary, Ed Miliband, and also from Oxfam.

Oxfam's climate adviser, Antonio Hill, said that the Copenhagen Accord, the pact eventually agreed last Friday night, was not only "hugely disappointing" but also "reveals how the traditional approach to international negotiations, based on brinkmanship and national self-interest, is both unfit for pursuing our common destiny and downright dangerous".

There was too much at stake for a "politics-as-usual" approach, Mr Hill said. "We must act quickly to address the shortfalls of these negotiations so that we can make up for lost time and tackle climate change with the decisiveness and urgency needed. This cannot happen again."

Mr Miliband gave his own thoughts about reforming the climate negotiating process when he addressed a special meeting in London of groups who had contributed to the Government's pre-conference efforts to raise the profile of Copenhagen, from scout groups, to business alliances, to environmental pressure groups such as the World Wide Fund for Nature and Greenpeace.

Although Mr Miliband continues to believe in the UN as the body under which global warming should be dealt with, he believes that ministers should be involved earlier in the process. In the lead-up to the Copenhagen summit, civil servant negotiators were involved in much of the discussions, but they did not have the same political clout of ministers.

The other weakness identified jointly by Mr Miliband and Mr Brown was that any one of the 192 states in the negotiating process could, in effect, thwart all the others by refusing to sanction an agreement.

At Copenhagen, this role was performed by China, which refused to agree several elements of the final Copenhagen Accord that the majority of other states had wanted kept in – such as the commitment to halve the world's emissions of greenhouse gases by 2050.

Yesterday Mr Miliband openly referred to China's obstructionist tactics – first detailed at the weekend in the Independent on Sunday – and accused the Chinese of "hijacking" the Copenhagen summit. "We did not get an agreement on 50 per cent reductions in global emissions by 2050, or on 80 per cent reductions by developed countries, as both were vetoed by China, despite the support of a coalition of developed and the vast majority of developing countries," he said.

Mr Brown was less direct in his criticisms and did not mention China by name, but last night he did say: "Never again should we let a global deal to move towards a greener future be held to ransom by only a handful of countries."

And he stressed: "I believe that in 2010 we will need to look at reforming our international institutions to meet the common challenges we face as a global community."


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India, China stronger from climate meet: Pachauri

Bappa Majumdar, Reuters 23 Dec 09;

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - The grouping of China, India, Brazil and South Africa has emerged as a significant force in Copenhagen and they could lead the way in future negotiations, the head of the U.N. climate panel said on Wednesday.

A climate change meeting ended last week in Copenhagen with a non-legally binding political agreement at the last moment between the United States and the big developing countries -- China, India, Brazil and South Africa that forms the BASIC group.

The next climate change meet is in Mexico next year, where countries hope to reach a legally binding agreement.

"What has happened politically which is very significant is the emergence of this grouping of Brazil, South Africa, India and China," Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said in New Delhi.

"Undoubtedly whatever agreement comes into existence by the time Mexico completes its conference of the parties, will necessarily have to deal with the power of this group (BASIC)."

In November, the BASIC countries forged a united front in Beijing to put pressure on developed countries in Copenhagen.

India said the BASIC countries were successful in thwarting global pressure to agree to a legally-binding emissions cut.

The meeting in Copenhagen failed to yield the outlines of a broader and tougher legally binding climate agreement to expand or replace the Kyoto Protocol, whose first phase ends in 2012.

Pachauri said the Kyoto Protocol was "sacrosanct" and provisions of the 1997 protocol should be safeguarded as the world gradually moved toward a legally binding agreement.

"Otherwise I am afraid the agreement will not be acceptable for a large number of countries," Pachauri said.

India as an important member of the BASIC group has a big role to play in safeguarding the interest of smaller island nations like Bangladesh and in Africa in future negotiations, he said.

"Indian authorities must ... not allow their words or actions to be interpreted as being only in India's national interest," Pachauri said, a day after New Delhi said it had safeguarded the nation's interest by not signing a legally binding emission cut.

India, which says it is willing to rein in its "carbon intensity" -- the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted per unit of economic output -- by between 20 and 25 percent by 2020, from 2005 levels must be serious about climate change, Pachauri said.

"If we don't bring about a shift to a more sustainable pattern of energy consumption and supply, India will face a major crisis."

(Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Sugita Katyal)

UN climate official warns of Indian energy 'crisis'
Yahoo News 23 Dec 09;

NEW DELHI (AFP) – India's reliance on coal means the country is heading for an energy crisis unless it diversifies its sources of power, the chairman of the UN's top climate change panel predicted on Wednesday.

Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the Nobel-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said India had to curb its high-polluting coal consumption in the near future or risk burning through its reserves.

"There's going to be a major constraint in supply of coal and if we don't bring about a shift to a more sustainable pattern of energy consumption and supply India is going to face a major crisis," he told reporters in New Delhi.

He added that India was projected to import 750 million tonnes of oil and 1.4 billion tonnes of coal a year by 2031 and 2032.

"We have already become major coal importers and it is a myth to believe that India has unlimited mineable quantities of coal and that we can use as much as we want," Indian-born Pachauri said.

According to the International Energy Agency, more than half of the world's energy demands by 2030 will come from India and its fellow emerging economic powerhouse China.

Already among the world's top 10 oil importers, India is expected to become the world's fourth-largest by 2025, according to US government data.

The Ministry of Coal projected India's coal imports for 2008-2009 to be around 58 million tonnes.

Coal currently provides just under 55 percent of the country's massive electricity needs, resulting in a huge carbon footprint on account of the country's 1.2 billion population.

Pachauri urged India to improve energy efficiency and make "a very rapid move" to use more renewable sources of energy.


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UN climate chief appeals for calm after Copenhagen bustup

Yahoo News 24 Dec 09;

PARIS (AFP) – The UN's pointman on climate change pleaded for calm on Wednesday after angry spats erupted over the outcome of the much-trumpeted world climate summit in Copenhagen.

Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), warned "all this finger-pointing and recrimination" could cloud negotiations next year for sealing a post-2012 pact on tackling global warming.

"We need to work together constructively, whereas countries are in the media blaming each other for what happened, the same countries that are going to have to be back at the negotiating table next year with an open willingness to work together," he told AFP in a phone interview from London.

"It's bad for the atmosphere, it's bad for the relationship among people that ultimately have a common goal to move this forward."

De Boer did not name names but chose to give the interview after Britain and China swapped verbal blows as to who was to blame for the Copenhagen outcome, while Brazil took aim at the United States.

Sweden, current president of the European Union, said the summit was a "disaster" and declared both China and the United States, the world's number one and two polluters, responsible for the disappointing result.

In frenzied backroom haggling on Friday, leaders of some two dozen countries put together a "Copenhagen Accord" that strived to save the gruelling 12-day UN marathon from collapse.

It was then put to a full meeting of the 194-nation UNFCCC, where it ran into a firestorm early Saturday from a group of Latin American countries and from the spokesman for the G77 group gathering 130 poor nations.

In the end, the conference chairman gavelled the accord through, saying the meeting "takes note" of the document -- a procedural move that enabled its provisions to become operational.

The deal set the aim of limiting warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), but did not set a year by which carbon emissions should peak, nor did it spell out the aim for 2020, the important mid-term target year.

The accord, for the first time, did encompass emissions-curbing pledges by rich and poor nations, although none of these promises are binding.

A total of 30 billion dollars was pledged from 2010-2012 to help poor countries in the firing line of climate change, and rich nations sketched a target of providing 100 billion dollars annually by 2020.

Green activists and campaign groups slammed the deal for falling far below what scientists are claiming is needed to spear the threat from climate change.

Some singled it out as a backroom deal by the big players that usurped the consensus-driven UN approach.

De Boer urged all parties not to inflate or pull down the importance of the Copenhagen Accord.

"We shouldn't pretend it is anything more or anything less than what it is -- an agreement, a sense of direction that can help us in further negotiations."

He acknowledged, though, that what happened in Copenhagen "was a very extraordinary event."

"The fact of the matter is a small group of countries put this accord together, there wasn't enough time to get buy-in from the larger meeting and have it adopted in any kind of formal sense, and that's the reality."

The lesson from Copenhagen, said De Boer, was that it might be useful for a principal group of countries to propose a deal, but time was needed to have it debated and endorsed in a process "that is inclusive, representative and transparent."

He expected the UNFCCC's bureau -- a group of top officials dealing with operational matters -- to meet early next year to see whether more meetings would be needed in 2010.

At present, the programme is to a high-level meeting in Bonn in mid-year, followed by talks in Mexico City in December 2010 where the hugely complex pact would be sealed.

China says Britain sowing discord in climate politics
Reuters 23 Dec 09;

BEIJING (Reuters) - China condemned claims ascribed to Britain's climate change minister that it had "hijacked" negotiations in Copenhagen, saying on Tuesday the accusations were an attempt to sow discord among poor countries.

Green Business | China | COP15

The sharp words from Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu were the latest baring of diplomatic bad blood after the talks in Copenhagen ended on Saturday with a broad, non-binding accord that fell short of hopes for a robust global agreement on how to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

Jiang was responding to a report in Britain's Guardian newspaper that said the Environment Minister Ed Miliband had accused China, Sudan, Bolivia and other left-wing Latin American nations of "hijacking" efforts to reach deeper agreement on how to fight global warming.

In a separate commentary for the paper, Miliband said China vetoed a widely supported proposal at the Copenhagen talks to aim to cut global greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent by 2050.

"We cannot again allow negotiations on real points of substance to be hijacked," he also wrote, but without singling out China or any other country as a "hijacker."

Chinese spokeswoman Jiang did not chide Miliband by name, but Beijing's ire was clear.

"The statements from certain British politicians are plainly a political scheme," she said in a statement issued by the official Xinhua news agency.

"Their objective is to shirk responsibilities that should be assumed toward developing countries, and to provoke discord among developing countries. This scheme will come to nothing."

The flap is unlikely to seriously disrupt negotiations seeking to turn the Copenhagen accord into a legally binding treaty. But the sour exchange has underscored the distrust between China and rich countries that could frustrate efforts to agree on that treaty by late 2010.

"Everyone is raising the banner of protecting the planet, but in reality they are protecting their own interests," Wang Yi, a climate change policy researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, told Reuters.

"The compromises (in Copenhagen) were very, very limited."

China is the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases from human activities and its biggest developing economy. Other governments have pressed it to do more to reduce its growing emissions and to submit its emissions goals to international checks as part of any new climate pact.

But China and other big developing countries have accused the rich economies of failing to offer big enough cuts to their emissions, and of not offering enough money and technological help to poor countries to cope with climate change.

Chinese experts have also said the goal of cutting global greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent by 2050 is empty rhetoric without those commitments from rich nations.

"Currently, the most difficult issue to resolve is the scale and structure of each country's emissions reductions," said Li Zhiqing, an environmental policy professor at Fudan University in Shanghai, writing in the city's Wenhui Daily newspaper.

"Clearly, there will be no breakthrough on this in the near term and we can only maintain the status quo," wrote Li.


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U.S. cracks down on lung-harming ship emissions

Reuters 23 Dec 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. environmental regulators on Tuesday finalized engine and fuel standards for U.S. flagged ships to cut emissions that cause lung diseases and save more than $100 billion in health costs.

By 2030 the strategy should cut annual emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOX) from large oil tankers, cargo ships and cruise vessels by about 1.2 million tons and particulate matter emissions, or soot, by about 143,000 tons, the Environmental Protection Agency said.

When fully implemented, the effort will reduce NOX emissions from ships by 80 percent, and particulate emissions by 85 percent, compared to current emissions.

The EPA estimates that in 2030, the standards will prevent between 12,000 and 31,000 premature deaths and 1.4 million work days lost.

Annual health benefits in 2030 should be worth between $110 billion and $270 billion, compared to compliance costs of only about $3.1 billion, the EPA said.

"Stronger standards will help make large ships cleaner and more efficient, and protect millions of Americans from harmful diesel emissions," EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said in a release.

An environmentalist agreed. "Frankly, it is hard to find a better deal in the public health world," Rich Kassel, the director of clean fuels and vehicles at the Natural Resources Defense Council said in a blog on Tuesday.

The EPA is also working with international organizations to control emissions from non-U.S. flagged ships.

The International Maritime Organization, a United Nations agency, is set to vote in March next year on the adoption of the joint U.S.-Canada buffer zone, which would result in stringent standards for large foreign-flagged and domestic ships operating within the designated area.

(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by David Gregorio)


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