Best of our wild blogs: 12 Jan 10


Ghosts as an indicator of life on our shores
from wild shores of singapore

Appreciating These Winter Migrants
from Life's Indulgences

Passiflora suberosa and Tawny Coster @Temasek Junior College from Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature

Malayan Night Heron stalking earthworms
from Bird Ecology Study Group

spitting mudskipper @ chek jawa
from sgbeachbum

Scarlet-backed Flowerpeckers and mistletoes
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Daiqin’s web-decorating spider research featured in Discovery News last Christmas from The Biodiversity crew @ NUS

Dugong blimp cam survey at Sungai Pulai
from wild shores of singapore

Green Sea Slug Is Part Animal, Part Plant
from Wired: Wired Science


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Singapore pares emission cut plans after Copenhagen

Reuters 11 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Singapore said on Monday it will go ahead with existing plans to reduce greenhouse gas emissions but further pledged reductions will depend on a successful agreement in global climate talks.

Environment Minister Yaacob Ibrahim told parliament Singapore would start implementing energy efficiency measures announced last year that would cut emissions by 7-11 percent on business as usual levels by 2020.

This would be below a 16 percent cut that Singapore pledged just ahead of U.N. climate talks in Copenhagen last month, which aimed to agree on a global pact but instead ended with a non-binding accord far short of its original goals.

"When a global agreement on climate change is reached we will implement the additional measures to achieve the full 16 percent reduction below business as usual in 2020," he said.

Environmentalists said they hoped countries would not lower voluntary targets to cut back emissions given the absence of a global accord, which negotiators are still aiming to reach in another round of talks scheduled for November 2010 in Mexico.

"We find it disappointing that countries are going to step back and lower their ambition," WWF project coordinator Diane McFadzien told Reuters.

"I haven't seen evidence of it becoming a trend yet, but I hope it will not become a trend."

Wealthy city-state Singapore, with one of the world's best living standards in terms of GDP per capita, has come under fire from environmentalists who point to its energy-intensive economy and high per-capita emissions.

Singapore aims to spur economic growth by increasing its population and attracting further manufacturing investment, which will make cutting absolute emissions difficult, a problem faced by many developing nations unwilling to sign up to legally binding cuts.

As part of the Copenhagen accord, developing nations need to put their voluntary national pledges on a global list by the end of January.

(Reporting by Nopporn Wong-Anan; Editing by Neil Chatterjee)

Government working towards reducing carbon emissions by 16%
Hoe Yeen Nie, Channel NewsAsia 11 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE: The Minister for Environment and Water Resources said Monday the government is still working towards reducing carbon emissions by 16 per cent.

After the Copenhagen climate talks failed to produce a legally binding agreement, leaders said Singapore would go ahead to cut emissions by between seven and 11 per cent below Business-As-Usual levels by 2020.

Speaking in Parliament on Monday, Yaacob Ibrahim said the full 16 per cent target will be implemented when a global agreement is reached.

However, there are no plans to raise that target.

The minister added that while the country has limited access to alternative energy sources, the government is working with industries to be more energy efficient.

"These figures that we've come up with are actually quite credible, based on the conditions in which we are subjected to," said Dr Yaacob. "We will continue to invest and learn and as we improve.

"If we can do more, we will certainly do so. But we cannot forget that whatever we do, it must not be at the expense of economic growth, because if we do not have the growth, we will not have the resources to do what we want to do."

In mid-December, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said Singapore would cut emissions by between seven to 11 per cent below Business-As-Usual levels, which was originally planned as part of its Sustainable Singapore Blueprint, announced in April last year.

The plan calls for S$1 billion to be invested over five years to promote clean technologies and reduce energy consumption.

- CNA/yb

Singapore to go ahead with carbon emission cuts
Jessica Cheam Straits Times 12 Jan 10;

THE failure to reach a deal on climate change at Copenhagen last month will not stop Singapore from implementing steps to reduce its carbon emissions, said Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, the Minister for the Environment and Water Resources, yesterday.

These measures, announced under the Sustainable Singapore Blueprint launched last April, will reduce about

7 per cent to 11 per cent of Singapore's emissions below business-as-usual (BAU) levels by 2020.

When a legally binding climate change deal is finally reached, Singapore will implement additional measures to achieve the full 16 per cent reduction below BAU by 2020, as it previously pledged to do, Dr Yaacob told Parliament.

He was responding to a query by Nominated MP (NMP) Paulin Straughan on Copenhagen's implications for Asean and Singapore.

Dr Yaacob noted that although the political deal struck - called the Copenhagen Accord - was not perfect, 'it provides a step in the direction of arriving at a global legally binding framework agreement to address climate change'.

He said it was 'premature to assess the implications of the outcome...as there was no significant...broad consensus on the key substantive issues'.

Still, climate change is a key issue for many Asean countries as 'we are collectively and individually vulnerable to the adverse impact of global warming', he added.

Dr Yaacob also addressed queries by Associate Professor Straughan and Madam Ho Geok Choo (West Coast GRC) on the threat rising sea levels might pose.

He said that based on current data, Singapore is okay but studies are under way to better understand its impact over the longer term.

This study is being subjected to international peer review to ensure that there is enough robustness and when completed, it will be announced, he said.

When asked about a timeframe for this threat occurring, Dr Yaacob said that 'frankly, nobody knows. The time line is very, very long'.

But Singapore is doing what it can to improve its resource efficiency and reduce its carbon footprint.

In response to a request by NMP Mildred Tan, Dr Yaacob highlighted that $1 billion has been set aside over five years to implement initiatives under the sustainable blueprint.

And since last April, various incentive schemes and other investments in sustainable development have been announced.

These include $100 million to improve the energy efficiency of existing buildings, $43 million to implement cycling infrastructure in some HDB towns, and $31 million to test-bed solar technology.

A further $680 million has been allocated to build new capabilities in clean-energy and water technologies - sectors that could create an economic value-add of $3.4 billion and generate the employment of 18,000 by 2015, he noted.

The blueprint will evolve as targets are fine-tuned to take into account factors such as improvements in technology, changes in cost and public response, added Dr Yaacob.

'Singapore can be greener'
Esther Ng, Today Online 12 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE - Is reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 16 per cent by 2020 from our "business-as-usual" (BAU) levels - given the threat of rising sea levels brought on by global warming - all that Singapore can do?

Nominated Member of Parliament (NMP) Paulin Straughan believes more can be done.

Singapore pledged that target in Copenhagen last month, but yesterday in Parliament, Dr Straughan shared how observers told her that was easily achievable.

She asked Minister for Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim whether the country should aim for a higher target.

While agreeing that the target was "doable", Dr Yaacob said Singapore did not have a lot of alternative energy sources and that green targets had to be calibrated to economic growth. "At the end of the day, whatever we do must ... not be at the expense of economic growth, because if we don't have the growth, we won't have the resources to do the things we want to do," he said.

The 16 per cent is on top of targets mentioned in the Sustainable Singapore Blueprint last April, which is a 7 to 11 per cent reduction of emissions below BAU levels.

BAU refers to projected emission levels without any mitigating measures, including those already announced this year.

Meanwhile, the Government will continue to invest in clean energy.

MP for West Coast GRC Ho Geok Cho asked which industries were heavy polluters of greenhouse gases and what should be done about the emissions.

Dr Yaacob said these would be petrochemical companies, but he assured Parliament that various agencies had been working with the industry very closely, ensuring that it not only preserved jobs but "switched over to more efficient technologies".


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Singapore land plans cater to growing population

Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 12 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE'S system of land use planning ensures that the infrastructure and amenities are adequate to meet the needs of a growing population, said the Senior Minister of State for National Development, Ms Grace Fu, yesterday.

She told Parliament that enough land is provided for supporting facilities and infrastructure such as parks.

'Additional infrastructure is set aside when we release (land) parcels... In our planning system, we've taken into consideration the planned residential area.

'So when new parcels of land are being released, that will ensure that there's sufficient infrastructure, including roads, as well as recreational needs (that) are already provided for in the area. That goes for new estates as well as mature estates,' she said.

Ms Fu was responding to questions by MPs Jessica Tan (East Coast GRC) and Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim (Marine Parade GRC) on whether existing infrastructure can meet growing population needs and whether reviews are being conducted to assess the impact of this growth.

The questions come amid growing concern that a larger population, boosted mainly by immigrants, will strain facilities and infrastructure.

Ms Fu said that as part of the Concept Plan 2011 Review, which the ministry began last July, the public will be consulted for feedback on how to optimise land use.

The Concept Plan 2011 is a major review of Singapore's long-term land use strategies to cater to the changing needs of a growing economy and population.

Ms Fu said the Government will also create an additional 900ha of parkland and triple park connectors by 2020. Major improvements will be made to the transport network.

'We will plan for higher density housing and commercial uses around these transport nodes to provide greater connectivity to our population,' she said.

Still, she noted that there will be cases where 'short-term demand may not be easily met'.

'It's very hard to predict demand accurately, especially when you look at supply of commercial as well as residential buildings, there's always a lead time involved. So we will do our best to try to reduce the volatility in the market,' she said.

'But it is not possible to predict demand accurately because we can never foresee conditions that may affect Singapore, such as the dip in demand in the last 18 months. So that's really what we plan to do in our planning horizon.'

On a query by Dr Muhammad about bringing forward the rejuvenation of heartland housing estates, Ms Fu said this was something 'that we have been doing all the time'. For example, lift upgrading is a focus as many elderly residents have been asking for lift access.

'But we have been undertaking home improvement programmes as well as neighbourhood renewal programmes. That's to continuously remake, rejuvenate our housing estates to make them more suitable for our current population,' she added.


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Environment deserves as much serious attention as the economy

Straits Times 12 Jan 10;

WHEN I read the papers on Sunday morning, the same three recurring themes that captured the public's imagination throughout last year clearly dominated the headlines again in the first week of this year.

Jobs data and the recession, rising property prices (fuelled by a good dose of full-page advertisements touting the latest launches) and more natural disasters. One can deduce why so much attention is paid to the first two - the first is fear, the second is greed with perhaps some fear that one will be left out of the spoils. The third requires a little more effort to understand.

Yes, the stories of extreme weather, airport closures, train delays and flash floods caught my attention. Like the rest of the world, I pay attention for obvious reasons - ignoring them could mean great inconvenience and cost or even danger, affecting business and holiday travel plans. Cancellations and delays in transport and trade have an economic cost to both lives and businesses. Sadly, unlike with the recession or property prices, most of us do little more than try to work around the problem. Perhaps it is because we all feel there is little we can do. Perhaps we have short memories and forget about the rain when the sun shines again.

What I find curious and disturbing is the fact that when job creation slows and job losses increase, societies and businesses find ways, often ingenious, to spur the former and reverse the latter. When property prices spiral out of control, governments and industry are quick to introduce measures to cool the overheating.

However, we sorely neglect the leading indicators for a better planet, whose deterioration will lead to unbearable economic costs, among others. One does not have to look far for warning signs of overheating and imminent collapse.

Millions of lives in Indonesia, the Philippines, India and Vietnam are disrupted every year with alarming frequency and increasing regularity due to tidal disasters. China and Korea are experiencing the coldest winter in decades. Entire cities in America and Europe have been crippled by unprecedented snowfall.

How much more impetus do we need before we go beyond media awareness to concrete and concerted action?

Apart from making headlines, little more is usually reported about causes and measures to prevent future occurrences. We would do well to go beyond daily weather forecasts to environmental reporting. The media has done a good job raising awareness of environmental challenges with extensive coverage, but it needs to do more by highlighting the root causes of these increasingly worrying outcomes, be it freak weather or the trail of destruction it leaves in its wake. More details on how it happened, why it happened, and most important, why it will happen again, are an effective way.

An environmental index that tracks the health of our endangered planet is long overdue. The environment will never receive the attention it warrants until governments, societies and businesses value it in measurable economic terms. Until that happens, the world will remain ignorant, apathetic and uninterested in the rapid depletion of our biggest economic asset - Mother Earth and her natural resources.

Jack Lim


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The leaders of tomorrow would kill all insects and ban all exams

Esther Ng Today Online 12 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE - If they had their way - and the job of the Prime Minister - there would be more theme parks and peanut butter factories. But all insects would be killed.

These are among the first things children would do if they were given the top job here. Other priorities include saving our coral reefs, ensuring everyone has a job and banning all exams.

The question of what they would do if they became PM was part of an annual survey of children living here, conducted in November and December by staffing services company Adecco Singapore.

Aged between seven and 14, 50 kids were asked five questions, and for the second year running, the same answer emerged on what the "coolest" job is: Being a lawyer.

Becoming a doctor, a teacher or joining the police force were the other popular selections, while being a Formula 1 driver was among the creative choices.

One respondent hoped to earn $10 a month as a dancer, another wanted to be a food critic to receive "free food", while one child said being a Deep Space Researcher was the best job, since "space has no boundaries".

Given a choice between money and family, 93 per cent - five percentage points more than last year - said it was more important to spend time with loved ones than to make big bucks.

"Children in Singapore sometimes get criticised for being too materialistic, although we're pleased to say that our survey has shown otherwise," said Adecco South East Asia regional director Lynne Ng.


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Some 350 animal cruelty reports a year, but ...

Today Online 12 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE - The Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) gets about 350 cases of feedback a year of alleged animal cruelty.

Of these, it has successfully prosecuted two cases and fined five other offenders in the last three years, noted National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan.

All feedback is investigated, and the AVA will prosecute an offender where there is enough evidence and witnesses are willing to testify in court, said Mr Mah in a written answer to MP Dr Lam Pin Min, who asked for statistics on pet abandonment and animal cruelty.

Where pets are allegedly abandoned, the AVA will also prosecute or fine offenders for allowing the dogs to stray if there is evidence, said Mr Mah.

Over the years, the AVA has conducted school talks and a public education on responsible pet ownership and required newly licensed dogs to be microchipped.

Under the Animals and Birds Act, animal abandonment carries a maximum $10,000 fine or jail of up to 12 months or both.


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32 more islands to be made marine parks

New Straits Times 11 Jan 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: Thirty-two more islands and their waters in Peninsular Malaysia are to be gazetted as marine parks soon to augment the 42 similar marine parks in the whole country.

Department of Marine Parks director-general Abdul Jamal Mydin said today these islands were selected based on their biodiversity and ecosystem, the marine life and corals in their waters as well as their tourist draw.

He spoke to reporters after briefing Deputy Natural Resources and Environment Minister Tan Sri Joseph Kurup and the media here as part of efforts to forge a strategic relationship between the department and the media to raise public awareness on conservation of marine biodiversity.

Abdul Jamal said a marine park was a designated area for a distance of two nautical miles from the lowest sea level of an island and was established to protect and conserve various marine life and their habitat.

The existence of marine parks had attracted more than 500,000 domestic and foreign tourists annually since their establishment in 2000, he said.

He also said that the department would step up patrols and enforcement with the cooperation of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) to protect marine life from destruction.

Abdul Jamal said the department would set up more "Rakan Park" (Friends of the Park) to keep a lookout for illegal activities and environmental problems in the marine parks.

Last year, 70 arrests were made for illegal fishing in the marine parks and destroying the corals, of which 21 cases were in Pahang.

Meanwhile, Kurup said the ministry would step up efforts to attract more tourists to islands gazetted as marine parks, with the collaboration of the Tourism Ministry. -- BERNAMA


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Philippines vital for survival of migratory birds

Groups counts 18,000 waterfowl in Balanga City
Anna Valmero, Inquirer 11 Jan 10:

BATAAN, Philippines—Almost an hour before sunrise here, 20 volunteers armed with their spotting scopes, binoculars, cameras and other equipment visited Sunday the three wetland sites in Balanga City to count the number of wintering or migratory birds that flock the area for breeding or a quick stopover.

The event dubbed the Asian waterbird census, is held every second and third week of January and forms part of the global census for wintering shorebirds visiting the wetlands and coastal sites across the Americas, Africa and Asia.

“As early as 5 a.m. we head to the identified sites where the migratory birds are roosting. We count and record their numbers per species and comparing this data over those culled in previous years, we analyze if there is an increasing or decreasing trends in bird populations and make recommendations to address the threats to survival such as habitat loss, food scarcity and diseases,” said census volunteer Mike Lu, president of nonprofit birding group Wild Bird Club of the Philippines (WBCP).

WBCP and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) are the lead agencies holding the waterbird census in over 50 coastal sites in the country.

Specifically, the data collected from the sites form part of the global waterbird monitoring program called the International Waterbird Census, which is being coordinated by conservation group Wetlands International.

The collected data is used to raise awareness on waterbird conservation issues and to monitor the status of wetlands along flyways or the migratory path followed by wintering birds between September and April, said Lu.

The Philippines is a common pathway for birds using that pass by the Asian flyway or the general route of migratory birds in East Asia that span the coastal areas from New Zealand and Australia in the south and Eurasian mainland in the north, said ornithologist Arne Jensen, who is also one of the 12 founders of WBCP.

The presence of migrating birds in the country’s wetlands and forests signal that the environment is “healthy” to support both wildlife and human needs, Jensen added.

On Sunday, the group counted 18,679 waterbirds in the sites of Sibacan and Puerto Rivas beachfront communities and Tortugas wetland park in Balanga City—which is up by 3,000 from the bird count last year, said Lu.

Although there was no unusual bird sighting, Lu said the group and the local government was glad because the count surpassed last year’s bird count of 15,521 by over 3,000. This year, the team recorded 2,042 black-winged stilts, 903 Asian golden plovers, 3,992 Kentish plovers and 4515 whiskered terns.

Jensen, who headed the team of bird census volunteers said while the numbers does not reflect the exact number of birds in the area, it gives a “representative estimate” of a “sizable bird population” in the area that might be around 20,000.

“In numbers, we had about 18,000 birds today (Sunday) from the three sites. Based on my old notes since my first visit here in 2004, the bird population appears to be stable or around that number. This is a positive sign because most bird populations in wetlands are decreasing,” said Jensen, who has been recording waterbird populations along the Manila Bay coast line, which extends up to Balanga City.

This “stable population” of waterbirds in Balanga City can be attributed to several factors, including the support from community and local government leaders, who prohibit hunting and implement ordinances on how to utilize the wetlands without having too much negative impact on the environment and wildlife, said Jensen.

Lu added “The people of Balanga City were able to maintain old-growth mangroves facing the sea along with their fishponds. In most parts of the country, once there are fishponds all the mangroves are cut and gone to give more space for fish pens and finally, the wildlife supported by this is threatened or worse, disappears.”

“Coastal and freshwater wetlands, mudflats and mangrove areas provide stopover and shelter for migratory birds so that accounts for the steady population. If they (mangroves) are gone, then there would be less birds and that is a clear indication that the environment and its resources are below optimum level to sustain life,” added Jensen.

Jensen said the success of wetland conservation in Balanga City must be replicated in other communities along the Manila Bay coastline, of which 95 percent of the original 120-hectare of mangroves, mudflats, marshes and forests have been destroyed to pave way for reclamation projects and fishponds.

“Manila Bay is the largest coastal wetland in the country and can be dubbed the most important as it holds a sizeable bird population, both resident and migratory that pass by the country to rest as they continue their flight up in the Eurasian continent or down in Australia,” said Jensen.

He added the site also shelters threatened species such as the endemic Philippine duck and the green-legged Chinese egret that is critically endangered so conservation efforts while maintaining reasonable livelihood projects must be priority for communities and leaders.

Aside from Balanga City, other sites with recorded high bird counts include Candaba marsh in Pampanga, Paoay Lake in Ilocos Norte and Olango Island in Cebu.


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Court sentences tiger killer to 46 months in jail

Yahoo News 11 Jan 10;

Jambi (ANTARA News) - The district court in Jambi sentenced Samsudin alias Udin Bolu to 46 months in jail on Monday for killing a tiger in the zoo.

Presiding judge Marbun read the verdict which was two months shorter than the prosecutor`s demand.

Samsudin was also fined Rp1 million or had to stay two months if he failed to pay it.
The council of judges ruled that the defendant had been proven legitimately jointly committing a crime of keeping, transporting and trading rare and protected dead animals against Law Number 5 of 1990 on Biological Natural Resources Conservation and its Ecosystem.

The prosecutors considered as incriminating was that the defendant`s act ran against
the government`s program of biological resource preservation and had caused a loss on the state particularly the people of Jambi while the defendant had also committed the crime seven times.

The defendant who was not accompanied by a lawyer accepted the verdict and would not appeal.

Prosecutor Erma Herawati meanwhile said she would still consider whether she would accept or appeal the ruling.(*)


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Illegal trading in endangered species still rife in Indonesia

Antara 11 Jan 10;

Malang, E Java (ANTARA News) - Although trading in endangered species is illegal and perpetrators face heavy santions if caught, it is still happening openly in many places in Indonesia, a wildlife protection activist said.

ProFauna Indonesia Director Rosek Nursahid said here Monday protected endangered species trading was a violation of Law No. 5 of 1990 on the Conservation of Biological Resources and Ecosystems.

"Perpetrators of protected animal trading can be sentenced to up to five years imprisonment and a fine of Rp 100 million , he said.

Yet, the illegal practice still occurs in the open in many places in Indonesia, he added.

According to Nursahid, most of the endangered species traded illegally were captured from their natural habitats and this was increasing the threat of their becoming extinct as the practice was also contributing to the reduction of the areas and the quality of those habitats.

Therefore, Rosek said , it was time to look at illegal wildlife trading as a national issue. "This will ensure the more effective and coordinated enforcement of the law on wildlife protection," he said.

ProFauna Indonesia had previously reported that in 2009 it had rescued or prevented the smuggling of protected animals or parts of them such as scaled anteaters, tiger body parts and primates.

Marine biota such as sea horses, and other types of other marine biota were smuggled to China, Hong Kong and Europe. Other rare animals much sought by illegal traders were turtles and various types of parrot and cockatoo.

According to a survey conducted by ProFauna Indonesia in 70 locations during 2009, a total of 183 endangered species were illegaly traded and smuggled out of the country causing a total loss estimated at Rp10 billion to the state.(*)


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Five illegal loggers nabbed in Ujung Kulon forest

Antara 11 Jan 10;

Pandeglang (ANTARA News) - Five illegal loggers were nabbed in the Ujung Kulon`s Gunung Honje forest in Pandeglang district, Banten Province, on Sunday night by a joint state police, Ujung Kulon National Park forest rangers and civil security team.

The national park management`s spokesman Agus Priambudi, said here on Monday the five illegal loggers identified by their initials as Akm, Asm, Ddn, Ant, and Arm were nabbed while felling trees in the Gunung Honje forest at 11 pm on Sunday night.

He said the joint security team also seized two truckloads of logs which had been cut by the illegal loggers.

"The five nabbed illegal loggers are still being investigated by Ujung Kulon National Park investigators and the police," Agus Priambudi said, adding the Gunung Honje forest was part of the park which was being preserved as as the habitat of the Java Rhinoceros and some of the world`s lungs.

Ujung Kulon which is rich in wildlife and forests, noted for its charm and diversity, is the home of the highly endangered Java Rhinoceros and bestowed with the status of World Heritage (natural) site.

It posses an exceptional profile of Indonesia`s wilderness from forested mountain ranges to coral seas.

What makes it even more remarkable is that the park remains a pristine haven of nature on Java, one of the most densely populated islands on earth.

The 120,551-hectare park is divided into 78,214 ha of land and 44,337 ha of surrounding reefs and sea.

It can roughly be separated into three areas, the triangular shaped Ujung Kulon Peninsula, the Gunung Honje Range to the east of the Peninsula`s Isthmus and the Island of Panaitan to the north west.

Ujung Kulon`s tropical maritime climate, somewhat cooler than inland areas of Java, produces an annual rainfall of approximately 3250 mm.

The park holds well over 700 species of plant life of which at least 57 of them are classified as rare in Java Island and perhaps the world.

Ujung Kulon National Park has a vast array wildlife, quite a member of which are endangered or rare. Some of animals are so unafraid that freely wander in and around the tourist lodges, others are sighted almost every days, many are heard rather than seen and same core rarely seen. (*)


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Indonesia: Tree planting good but protecting remaining forests better

Fardah, Antara 11 Jan 10;

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Indonesian government has been busy launching tree planting programs over the past few years, while environmental NGOs such as Greenpeace and WALHI have been actively promoting a logging moratorium in Indonesia`s remaining forests.

Indonesia has the third largest tropical rain forest area in the world after Brazil and Congo. The country`s forests are habitats to various flora and fauna species including rare ones such as orangutans, komodo dragons and Sumatran tigers.

However, the country`s forest area have been shrinking rapidly due to rampant logging activities and forest fires which sometimes were started on purpose by farmers clearing areas for plantations.

A number of domestic as well as international NGOs such as WALHI (Indonesian Environmental Forum) and Greenpeace have repeatedly urged the Indonesian government to declare a logging moratorium in order to save the remaining forests - habitats to rare flora and fauna -, as well as to mitigate the impacts of climate change.

Environment Minister Gusti Muhammad Hatta said in Banjarmasin last Friday (Nov. 27, 2009), the rate of forest destruction in Indonesia had reached 1.1 million hectares a year.
The government, however, has prepared a strategy especially since 2007 to deal with the impact of climate change by planting trees in massive numbers.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono when observing Indonesia`s Planting Day and National Planting Month in West Java, last Dec. 8, 2009, asked the nation to plant 4 billion trees by 2020 and 9.2 billion trees by 2050.

"If we can achieve half of the target, the trees can absorb 46 billion carbon by 2050. The figure is indeed pessimistic, but if we could plant more trees, much more CO2 could be captured, and this will become our contribution to the world," the president said.

Since the Yudhoyono administration has launched nation-wide tree planting movements in 2007, more than 280 million trees have been planted.

Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan on the occasion said the One Man, One Tree (OMOT) program alone had so far managed to plant a total of 158 million trees of its target of 230 million.

The forestry ministry had set a target of rehabilitating 500,000 hectares of forest areas annually starting in 2010.

At the G20 summit in Pittsburgh, last September, Yudhoyono pledged to cut emissions by 26 percent by 2020 using the state budget and by 41 percent if developed nations gave the financial support to do so.

Indonesia`s chief climate change negotiator, Rachmat Witoelar, announced for the first time Indonesia would cut 700 megatons of greenhouse gas emissions or equal to 700 million metric tons of carbon dioxide or CO2 by 2020.

"We estimate our emissions will reach 2,600 megatons by 2020 at this rate. We need to commit to a 700 megaton cut to protect the planet," Witoelar, a former environment minister, told a press briefing at the Bella Center during the Dec. 7-18 Copenhagen talks.

Some environmental NGOs have hailed the government`s greenhouse gas emission cut commitment, but they believe that a logging moratorium policy is necessary to support the commitment.

"Indonesia is climate change`s `ground zero`. Stopping forest destruction here and around the globe is not only one of the quickest and most cost-effective ways to combat climate change but is essential in order to avert runway climate change in our lifetime," Bustar Maitar, a Greenpeace Southeast Asia spokesman, said recently.

Currently, around 50 percent of the world`s total carbon reserves are in Indonesia`s forests and peatlands. Of Indonesia`s over two million hectares of peatlands, around 50 percent was damaged due to deforestation and forest conversion into plantation areas.

Greenpeace Southeast Asia established a Climate Defenders Camp in Kampar Peninsula`s forest in Riau Islands Province, Indonesia`s Sumatra Island, last November 2009.

Kampar Peninsula is one of the world`s largest carbon sinks. If the Kampar forests are destroyed by pulp and paper industries, that would be clearly contrary to President Yudhoyono`s commitment, Hidayati of Greenpeace Southeast, said.

Responding to the Greenpeace`s non-violent direct action in Riau, new Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan in Jakarta on November 19, ordered APRIL (RAPP) to halt its forest clearing activity on the carbon-rich peatlands of the Kampar Peninsula, pending review of their permits.

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

Shocking news about the country`s forestry industry came from a report last November from Human Rights Watch (HRW) which pointed out that the corruption in Indonesia`s lucrative forestry industry was costing the country US$2 billion annually.

HRW`s 75-page report, "Wild Money: The Human Rights Consequences of Illegal Logging and Corruption in Indonesia`s Forestry Sector," found that more than half of all Indonesian timber from 2003 through 2006 was logged illegally, with no taxes paid.

Using industry methods, including detailed comparisons between Indonesia`s timber consumption and legal wood supply, the report concluded that in 2006 the total loss to Indonesia`s national purse was $2 billion.

"Widespread corruption in the forest industry is the dirty secret no one wants to talk about," said Joe Saunders, deputy program director at Human Rights Watch.

Reported exports from its lucrative timber industry were worth $6.6 billion in 2007, second only to Brazil and more than all African and Central American nations combined.

Ironically, the forestry revenues brought no benefit to the people`s welfare, but to corruptors. Given the fact, a call for logging moratorium is indeed very relevant.

"We are optimistic that the Indonesian government can start greenhouse cutting gas emission by imposing a moratorium on all logging activity in 2010," Bustar Maitar, a Greenpeace Southeast Asia spokesman, said in Jakarta on Monday (Jan. 11).

A decision to declare a logging moratorium in order to reduce gas emissions could only be made by the government, he said, adding an effective way to cut emissions was by halting deforestation.

Declaring a logging moratorium and stopping the issuance of permits to convert forests in peatland areas would not cost the government much , he said.

Therefore, funding for climate change mitigation provided by the international world to Indonesia could be allocated for people`s empowerment programs, he said.(*)


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Indonesian Forestry Plan Undermines Carbon Cuts: Greenomics

Fidelis E Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 11 Jan 10;

Despite the government’s pledge to reduce the country’s greenhouse gas emissions by 26 percent by 2020, the Ministry of Forestry’s proposed forestry program over the next 10 years will instead likely increase emissions by up to 850 million tons, Greenomics Indonesia has reported.

In a statement on Monday, the nongovernmental organization said that about 3.4 million hectares of the country’s forests were at risk of being converted into mining and development areas.

From 2004 to 2009, private companies were awarded 1.2 million hectares of forest concessions set for development starting this year. According to Greenomics, the conversion of those forests would result in the release of the equivalent of 300 million tons of carbon dioxide.

An additional 2.2 million hectares of forests, it continued, could be set aside as concessions to be awarded over the next 10 years based on the ministry’s proposed Forestry Program for Climate Change. If these forests are developed, Greenomics says an additional 550 million tons of emissions would be released before the end of the decade.

“These [forest allocations] were included in the Ministry of Forestry’s plan for dealing with climate change, which is absolutely contrary to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s speech,” said Elfian Effendi, executive director of Greenomics, referring to the president’s talk at the Group of 20 meeting in Pittsburgh in September committing the country to 26 percent emissions cuts by 2020.

The ministry’s plan outlines its proposed program for the forestry sector over the next 10 years, including how the sector can help contribute to achieving the 26 percent emissions reduction target.

The country, according to the ministry, emitted 1,416 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2005, 820 million tons of which was from deforestation.

The ministry has said nearly half of the 26 percent reduction would come from the forestry sector through peatland management and reforestation.

But Elfian said the planned 2.2 million-hectare forest concession expansion plan, for non-gas and oil mining, such as gold, coal, tin and iron, would have a negative impact on achieving the target. Adding that to the 1.2 million hectares of previous mining concessions, he said the resulting 850 million tons of emissions would undermine reforestation efforts.

Elfian said Yudhoyono’s emissions pledge should be adhered to by all ministers and governors because the international community would be monitoring it.

“It was also strongly stated by President Yudhoyono in his speech [at the Copenhagen climate talks in December] that there was no reason not to be transparent with the emissions targets,” he said. “This also means that the government should be transparent in making public its expansion plans for mining and non-mining activities and how much carbon that could release.”

Wandojo Siswanto, head of the ministry’s climate change working group, acknowledged the Greenomics study, saying that the Forestry Program for Climate Change plan was still a proposal and had not yet been approved.

“We are still verifying the possible emissions with the Agency for Forestry Planning,” he told the Jakarta Globe.


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PT Timah to apply "block system" in mining area

Antara 11 Jan 10;

Pangkalpinang (ANTARA News) - PT Timah Tbk in Bangka Belitung (Babel) province is to apply the "block system" in its tin mining area in 2010 to increase efficiency in mining and protect the environment, a spokesman said.

"The block system will be applied on on-shore mines by creating a canal around our 20-50 hectare mining area for greater efficiency in our mining operations and protect the environment," the company`s director, Wahid Usman, said here Monday.

The block system would also make it easier to determine the volume of production and delineate PT Timah`s mining areas and prevent theft, he said.

"The block system is part of our strategy to increase tin production in 2010," he said.

Encircled by a canal as part of the block system, the mining areas would also be easier to watch over because supervisors could then focus on certain points in the field.

"The block system will also allow us to dispose of mining waste and facilitate reclamation or restoration of land damaged by mining activity," he said.

PT Timah was determined to become a world-class mining company and a leader in the global tin market, he said.

"Right now, the tin price is determined by traders. We produce the tin but others determine the price and this is clearly not to our benefit. This condition can not be avoided because it is part of the market mechanism," he said.

But to address the problem , PT Timah was preparing several effective measures to maximize its capability to turn out finished products such as soldering tin.

"To increase tin production which has declined lately, we will maximize production of such goods as soldering tin or `chemical tin` " , he said.

The company had started to optimize the production of soldering tin but its production capacity was still relatively small, namely only 2,000 tons per year, he said.(*)


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World Must Step Up Efforts On Saving Species: Merkel

Madeline Chambers, PlanetArk 12 Jan 10;

BERLIN - German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged industrialized and emerging countries to invest more in protecting wildlife and said the U.N. should create a body to refine scientific arguments for saving animal and plant species.

Researchers say preserving nature is crucial to the fight against climate change and warn that human activity is speeding up extinctions. They also argue that peoples' livelihoods depend on natural assets worth trillions of dollars.

Extinction rates run at 1,000 times their natural pace due to human activity, research shows. Three species vanish per hour, according to U.N. figures.

"The question of preserving biological diversity is on the same scale as climate protection," Merkel said Monday at an event to launch the United Nations' Year of Biodiversity.

"We need a sea change. Here, now, immediately -- not some time in the future," she said. "This year has to be used to relaunch this effort." Germany is chair of the U.N. Convention on Biodiversity and hands over to Japan later in the year.

Merkel said countries should invest more money in protecting species and create a network of wildlife protection areas.

NEW BODY

She also suggested setting up a new body to deal with the science of biodiversity, similar to the U.N.'s panel of climate scientists, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

(IPCC).

"It would be sensible to have an interface between the politics and the science to integrate knowledge, like the IPCC does with climate change," she said, adding such a body could help drive forward the political work.

Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the U.N. Environment Program, agreed, saying the time had come to do something comparable to the IPCC on the subject of biodiversity.

Up to a fifth of plant and animal species risk extinction, according to experts, and nations have missed a goal set by the Convention on Biodiversity (CBD) in 2002 to significantly slow the loss of biodiversity by 2010.

Ahmed Djoghlaf, CBD Executive Secretary, said it was essential to set new targets this year.

"We have established a target and missed it... we have to learn the lesson to ensure that in 2020, we will not say 'we have missed the target'."

"The strategy must be not only about setting a target but about implementation, monitoring and evaluation and integrating targets into national plans," said Djoghlaf.

Action urged on nature 'crisis'
Richard Black, BBC News 11 Jan 10;

The UN has launched the International Year of Biodiversity, warning that the ongoing loss of species around the world is affecting human well-being.

Eight years ago, governments pledged to reduce the rate of biodiversity loss by 2010, but the pledge will not be met.

The expansion of human cities, farming and infrastructure is the main reason.

Speaking at the launch in Berlin, German premier Angela Merkel urged the establishment of a new panel to collate scientific findings on the issue.

Achim Steiner, executive director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), urged governments and their leaders to renew their commitment to curbing biodiversity loss even though the 2010 goal will be missed.

"The urgency of the situation demands that as a global community we not only reverse the rate of loss, but that we stop the loss altogether and begin restoring the ecological infrastructure that has been damaged and degraded over the previous century or so," he said.

The UN says that as natural systems such as forests and wetlands disappear, humanity loses the services they currently provide for free.

These include purification of air and water, protection from extreme weather events, and the provision of materials for shelter and fire.

With species extinctions running at about 1,000 times the "natural" or "background" rate, some biologists contend that we are in the middle of the Earth's sixth great extinction - the previous five stemming from natural events such as asteroid impacts.

Cash log

The UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) was agreed at the Rio Earth Summit of 1992, alongside the climate change convention.

But it acquired its key global pledge during the Johannesburg summit of 2002, when governments agreed to achieve a "significant reduction" in the rate of biological diversity loss by 2010.

Conservation organisations acknowledge that despite some regional successes, the target is not going to be met; some analyses suggest that nature loss is accelerating rather than decelerating.

"We are facing an extinction crisis," said Jane Smart, director of the biodiversity conservation group with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

"The loss of this beautiful and complex natural diversity that underpins all life on the planet is a serious threat to humankind now and in the future."

Mrs Merkel backed the idea of forming a scientific panel to collate and assess research on biodiversity loss, as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assesses evidence on climatic indicators.

"The question of preserving biological diversity is on the same scale as climate protection," she said.

"It would be sensible to have an interface between the politics and the science to integrate knowledge."

A large on-going UN-sponsored study into the economics of biodiversity suggests that deforestation alone costs the global economy $2-5 trillion each year.

The UN hopes some kind of legally-binding treaty to curb biodiversity loss can be agreed at the CBD summit, held in Japan in October.

One element is due to be a long-awaited protocol under which the genetic resources of financially-poor but biodiversity-rich nations can be exploited in a way that brings benefits to all.

However, given the lack of appetite for legally-binding environmental agreements that key countries displayed at last month's climate summit in Copenhagen, it is unclear just what kind of deal might materialise on biodiversity.

Political football

The UN has been pursuing new ways of raising public awareness on the issue, including a collaboration with the Cameroon football team taking part in the African Nations Cup finals.

Many environment organisations will be running special programmes and mounting events during the year.

"The big opportunity during the International Year of Biodiversity is for governments to do for biodiversity what they failed to do for climate change in Copenhagen," said Simon Stuart, a senior science advisor to Conservation International and chair of IUCN's Species Survival Commission.

"They have the chance to make a major difference; and key to this will be halting species extinctions, the most irreversible aspect of biodiversity loss."

WWF is highlighting 10 species it considers especially threatened, ranging from commercially significant ones such as bluefin tuna to the Pacific walrus and the monarch butterfly.

In the UK, the national IYB partnership - hosted from the Natural History Museum (NHM) - is asking every citizen to "do one thing for biodiversity" in 2010.

Human expansion leading to 'extinction crisis', UN warns
The Telegraph 11 Jan 10;

Human expansion is wiping out species at about 1,000 times the "natural" or "background" rate and something must be done to slow the decline, according to the United Nations.

The UN will launch the International Year of Biodiversity today, warning that the on-going loss of species around the globe will seriously affect the future of humans too.

Dignitaries including UN chief Ban Ki-moon and German premier Angela Merkel will speak at the launch in Berlin.

Mr Ban will say that human expansion is wiping out species at about 1,000 times the "natural" or "background" rate, and that "business as usual is not an option", the BBC reports.

The expansion of human cities, farming and infrastructure is the main reason behind the drop in biodiversity.

The Secretary-General is expected to argue that world leaders must find effective ways of protecting forests, watersheds, coral reefs and other ecosystems.

The UN will say that as natural systems such as forests and wetlands disappear, humanity loses the services they currently provide for free, such as the purification of air and water, protection from extreme weather events and the provision of materials for shelter and fire.

The rate of species loss leads some biologists to say that we are in the middle of the Earth's sixth great extinction, the previous five stemming from natural events as asteroid impacts.

In the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), governments agreed to achieve a "significant reduction" in the rate of biological diversity by 2010.

But despite some regional successes, the target is not going to be met; some analyses suggest that nature loss is accelerating rather than decelerating.

"We are facing an extinction crisis," Jane Smart, director of the biodiversity conservation group with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), told the BBC.

"The loss of this beautiful and complex natural diversity that underpins all life on the planet is a serious threat to humankind now and in the future."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon officially launch the International Year of Biodiversity
UNEP 12 Jan 10;

Montreal, 12 January 2010 – Launching the International Year of Biodiversity in Berlin yesterday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged the world to take the necessary steps to protect the biological diversity of the Earth.

"The conservation of biological diversity has the same dimension as climate protection. We need a trend reversal - not at some point in the future, but immediately", said German Federal Chancellor Merkel, speaking on behalf of the current Presidency of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention, in addressing more than 400 participants from the diplomatic corps, government, civil society, international organizations, scientists, business, and media at the celebration held in the Museum of Natural History in Berlin, Germany.

The United Nations General Assembly proclaimed 2010 the International Year of Biodiversity to coincide with the deadline adopted by Governments in 2002 to achieve a significant reduction in the rate of loss of the diversity of species and ecosystems of the planet. According to scientists, the rate of loss due to human activities is as much as 1,000 times higher than the background rate.

During the year, people will celebrate the diversity of life on the planet, and its contribution to human well-being, while working to take the steps needed to combat its loss. At the ceremony in Berlin, political leaders urged the issue of biodiversity protection to be elevated to a level with other issues such as climate change and economic development.

"Worldwide, political decision-makers are increasingly recognizing that biodiversity protection is immensely important for human well-being, global economic development and combating poverty. The time has now come to ensure that these insights are followed by deeds", Federal Environment Minister Norbert Röttgen stated.

These sentiments were echoed by Abdul Rahman Fadhl AlIryani, the Environment Minister of Yemen, the current President of the Group of 77 and China, representing 132 countries, who said that, "Preserving the rich biodiversity of Yemen and the Arabian Peninsula, in all of its beauty is a priority for us and should be a priority for all."

Ahmed Djoghlaf, Executive Secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the body responsible for organizing the United Nations International Year, underlined the importance of biodiversity as a global issue, stating that: "Climate change is indeed a problem, and biological diversity is part of the solution and is therefore a full component of the multilateral political ecology. This is what the International Year of Biodiversity is all about; this is why we are here today in Berlin."

In a video message to participants, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon stressed that "Business as usual is not an option," and that new targets and a new vision is needed.

The urgency of the task at hand was echoed by Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme. "The urgency of the situation demands that as a global community we not only reverse the rate of loss, but that we stop the loss altogether and begin restoring the ecological infrastructure that has been damaged and degraded over the previous century or so."

During the year, scientists will report on the status and trends of biodiversity loss. The third CBD assessment report, the Global Biodiversity Outlook, will be published in May, providing the latest data on status and trends, as well as policy recommendations on the best ways for Governments to press forward with the post-2010 biodiversity targets.

These recommendations will contribute to the global discussions of a new strategic plan for combating biodiversity loss, and a new set of targets to be adopted by the global community at the Nagoya Biodiversity Summit in Japan in October.

"The International Year of Biodiversity is a critical year because we can all share a common idea that we need to reverse biodiversity loss and restore biodiversity. This will lead us to concrete actions," said Issei Tajima, Senior Vice-Minister of the Environment for Japan, the incoming President of the tenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention to be held in Aichi-Nagoya, Japan, from 18-29 October

2010. "In such a remarkable year, Japan will host the tenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity. I express our determination to make that meeting a success."

The launch of the year, under the slogan "Biodiversity is Life, Biodiversity is Our Life," is just the first in a series of global events and celebrations that include the observance of the International Day for Biological Diversity on 22 May under the theme Biodiversity for Development and Poverty Alleviation, a special high-level meeting of the General Assembly of the United Nations on biodiversity in September, and others.

"It becomes crystal clear that the problems of our planet are highly interlinked - without combating climate change we will fail to stop the loss of biodiversity, without protecting ecosystems with their carbon storing capacity it will be extremely difficult to meet climate change targets. And without both of them we will fail in our efforts to fight hunger in the world," said Jochen Flasbarth, President of the German Federal Environment Agency.

Brazil, Thailand, India, and other countries also held launching events in the first week of January. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) is organizing a high-level event for the year on 21-22 January in Paris, with the participation of Heads of State and Government and a scientific conference to follow. A Facebook page to celebrate the year, recently created, has gathered thousands of fans who are expressing their hopes for the year.

Boosting Biodiversity Can Boost Global Economy
UNEP 11 Jan 10;

2010 is Litmus Test of International Community's Resolve to Conserve and Enhance Planet's Natural Assets

UN's International Year of Biodiversity Kicks Off in Berlin

Berlin/Nairobi, 11 January 2010 - A new and more intelligent pact between humanity and the Earth's economically-important life-support systems is urgently needed in 2010, the head of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said today.

Speaking at the launch of the UN's International Year of Biodiversity in Berlin today, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP's Executive Director Achim Steiner said that an unprecedented scientific, economic, political and public awareness effort was needed to reverse-and to stop- the loss of the planet's natural assets.

These losses include its biodiversity such as animal and plant species and the planet's ecosystems and their multi-trillion dollar services arising from forests and freshwater to soils and coral reefs.

"The words biodiversity and ecosystems might seem abstract and remote to many people. But there is nothing abstract about their role in economies and in the lives of billions of people," said Mr. Steiner at the meeting hosted by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"Take coral reefs for example. The range of benefits generated by these ecosystems and the biodiversity underpinning them are all too often invisible and mainly undervalued by those in charge of national economies and international development support," he added.

The latest estimates by The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) study, which UNEP hosts, indicates that coral reefs generate annually up to US$189,000 per hectare in terms of coastal defenses and other areas of 'natural hazard management'.

"In terms of diving and other tourism revenues, the annual services generated equate to perhaps US$1 million; genetic materials and bio-prospecting, up to US$57,000 per hectare annually and fisheries, up to US$3,800 per hectare per year," explained Mr. Steiner.

Meanwhile, it is estimated, for example, that one fifth of coral reefs are already seriously degraded or under imminent risk of collapse as a result of unsustainable human activities such as coastal developments, over-fishing, destructive fishing practices and pollution.

Climate change and ocean acidification, linked with the build-up of carbon dioxide, could eventually see 50 per cent and perhaps up to 100 per cent loss of coral reefs worldwide.

"If you factor the true value of coral reefs into economic planning, it is likely that far more rational and sustainable choices would be made in terms of development, emissions and pollution control and resource management. It is a similar story in respect to all of the planet's nature-based assets from forests and freshwaters to mountains and soils," said Mr. Steiner.

He added that 2010 was meant to be the year when the world reversed the rate of loss of biodiversity, but this had not happened.

"I would urge heads of state here in Berlin and beyond to renew their commitment and set their sights broad and high. The urgency of the situation demands that as a global community we not only reverse the rate of loss, but that we stop the loss altogether and begin restoring the ecological infrastructure that has been damaged and degraded over the previous century or so," stressed Mr. Steiner.

He added that the International Year of Biodiversity would prove a success only if several litmus tests are met.

Science

There is an urgent need to bridge the gap between science and policy-makers in governments around the world.

In February, environment ministers attending UNEP's Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum will decide whether or not to establish an Intergovernmental Panel or Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).

"There is an urgent need to take forward the science, in part to sharpen our understanding of the natural world and unravel its complexities. For example, we still do not know how many species are needed within a given ecosystem to maintain its health and its economically-important services," said Mr. Steiner.

"There is also an urgent need to ensure that the wealth of science we already have is used by governments to maximum effect and genuine and sustained action on the ground," he added.

The proposed IPBES is aimed at addressing these issues. Mr. Steiner pointed out that governments should consider supporting the proposed new panel or give guidance on an alternative body or mechanism. He added the status quo was not an option if biodiversity loss is to be truly addressed.

Public Awareness

Mobilizing public support across countries, cities, companies and communities would be among the keys to a successful year.

"De-mystifying terms such as biodiversity and ecosystems and communicating complex concepts and sometimes obscure scientific terms, will also be vital to get people on board," said UNEP's Executive Director.

"Linking livelihoods, the combating of poverty and the relationship between biodiversity and natural systems with the health of economies needs to set the tone. Equally the link between not only the threat from climate change but the role of living organisms and systems in buffering humanity against the worst impacts of global warming are messages that need to be heard loud and clear," he added.

* For example, an estimated 5 gigatonnes or 15 percent of worldwide carbon dioxide emissions - the principal greenhouse gas - are absorbed or 'sequestrated' by forests every year, making them the "mitigation engine" of the natural world.

* Forests also capture and store rainwater, releasing it into river systems while also recycling a great deal of the nutrients upon which agriculture depends.

* Marine ecosystems, including mangroves, salt marshes and sea-grasses are not only coastal defenses and fish nurseries. It is estimated that they are absorbing and locking away greenhouse gases equal to half the world's transport emissions.

Economics

Bringing the economics of biodiversity and healthy ecosystems into mainstream economics and national accounts would be a major achievement.

TEEB, which builds on some 20 years of work, will publish its final report in advance of the 10th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya, Japan, in October this year.

However, its work so far has shed new light on how much the global economy is losing as a result of its failure to sustainably manage its natural capital.

# The TEEB Interim Report estimated that annual losses as a result of deforestation and forest degradation alone may equate to losses of US$2 trillion to over US$4.5 trillion alone.

The study is also underlining the huge economic returns from investing in nature.

# It is estimated that for an annual investment of US$45 billion into protected areas alone, the delivery of ecosystem services worth some US$5 trillion a year could be secured.

The study underlines that many countries are already factoring natural capital into some areas of economic and social life with important returns, but that this needs rapid and sustained scaling-up.

# In Venezuela, investment in the national protected area system is preventing sedimentation that otherwise could reduce farm earnings by around US$3.5 million a year

# Planting and protecting nearly 12,000 hectares of mangroves in Vietnam costs just over US$1 million but saved annual expenditures on dyke maintenance of well over US$7 million

# One in 40 jobs in Europe are now linked with the environment and ecosystem services ranging from clean tech 'eco-industries' to organic agriculture, sustainable forestry and eco-tourism.

"Among the positive outcomes of the recent UN climate convention meeting in Copenhagen was an agreement that Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) can join the existing options for combating climate change. In other words, paying developing nations to conserve rather forests systems so that the carbon remains locked in nature rather than emitted to the atmosphere," said Mr. Steiner.

Other possibilities, ones that meet the climate but also the biodiversity challenge, could follow and should be taken forward in 2010.

These include carbon payments for farmers and landowners who manage agriculture and land in ways that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance living systems and the role of marine ecosystems in climate including adaptation but also their importance in terms of biodiversity.

Alien Invasive Species

Part of the challenge that echoes the economic question includes addressing alien invasive species.

These are species that, as a result of international trade including shipping or deliberate introductions, can flourish unchecked in their new homes sometimes thousands of kilometers from where they are naturally found.

# By some estimates alien invasive species may be costing the global economy US$1.4 trillion or more while representing a further challenge to the poverty-related UN Millennium Development Goals.

# In sub-Saharan Africa, the invasive witchweed is responsible for annual maize losses amounting to US$7 billion: overall losses to aliens may amount to over US$12 billion in respect to Africa's eight principle crops.

"Improved international cooperation through the UNEP-linked Convention on Biological Diversity is needed and stepped up support for the Global Invasive Species Programme," said UNEP's Executive Director.

"It is also important to boost the capacity of the responsible national customs and quarantine agencies, especially in developing countries and to accelerate controls on the movement of aliens via the UN's International Maritime Organization," he added.

Access and Benefit Sharing

Successfully negotiating an international regime on access and benefit sharing of genetic resources at the CBD meeting in Japan would also be a landmark for 2010.

Currently, and in the absence of such a regime, many developing countries harbouring the richest source of genetic material are declining companies from developing countries and scientists access to these resources.

An international regime could foster cooperation and unlock the genetic resources available in the developing world for the development of new pharmaceuticals, new crop strains and materials for all nations.

In turn it could trigger financial flows from North to South and improve the economics of conserving biodiversity and ecosystems.

"Constructive negotiations are underway since the last meeting of the CBD in Bonn in 2008 and there is optimism that an international regime could be concluded to the benefit of developed and developing economies, to the benefit of biodiversity and ecosystems," said Mr. Steiner.

Improved International Environment Governance

The international response to biodiversity loss and sustainable management of nature-based resources has been the establishment of several key bio-related treaties.

These include the CBD and its Cartagena Protocol on living modified organisms; the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species; the Convention on Migratory Species; the Ramsar Convention covering wetlands and the Africa Eurasia Waterbird Agreement.

Greater cooperation between the relevant treaties and agreements should be fostered in 2010 in order to accelerate the international response.


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Malaysia and China to tap Borneo resources

Kevin Brown in Singapore and Jamil Anderlini in Beijing
Financial Times 11 Jan 10;

China and Malaysia on Monday signed a deal to build large projects in a controversial development corridor in resource-rich Borneo, one of the world’s last great wilderness areas.

Najib Razak, the Malaysian prime minister, said the agreement could result in projects worth $11bn (€7.6bn, £6.9bn) in the Sarawak corridor of renewable energy, which runs along the northern coast of the island his nation shares with Indonesia and Brunei.

Mr Najib said the deal was signed in Kuala Lumpur by China State Grid Corporation, the country’s leading power transmission and distribution company, and 1Malaysia Development, an agency the prime minister set up to promote economic development and attract foreign direct investment.

Neither side gave details of the projects, beyond the State Grid saying the talks involved an aluminium plant, or the amount of funding from Beijing.

“We are still negotiating with the Malaysian side for these projects but currently we are not authorised to release any news. We may make some announcements later,” said Mr Yan, deputy director of the international department.

The Sarawak development corridor plan also includes proposals for at least four dams, substantial coal mining and a number of plants producing chemicals, aluminium, steel and glass.

According to the state government, the 320km corridor covers 70,709 sq km, including 1.46bn tonnes of coal reserves, just under 41,000bn cu ft of natural gas, and the potential to generate up to 28,000MW of hydro-electric power.

The state says the development will transform Sarawak’s economy by allowing it to produce competitively priced energy and encouraging investment in energy intensive industries that will trigger further industrial development.

However, development on this scale is also likely to require the relocation of some of the 608,000 people who live in the area, generating international concern about the future of indigenous people.

Meena Raman of Friends of the Earth in Malaysia said there would be concerns about the scale of the investment, especially since environmental protection laws were weaker in Malaysian Borneo than in mainland Malaysia.

“If there is going to be [an aluminium] smelter there will be massive environmental impact, and we don’t need more dams when we already have Bakun, which has more than enough energy to supply the whole of Borneo,” Ms Raman said. The 207m-high Bakun dam is designed to generate 2,400MW from a reservoir about the size of Singapore when it opens this year or next.


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Big Spider Discovered in Disappearing Sand Dunes

livescience.com Yahoo News 11 Jan 10;

With a lanky legspan of up to nearly a half foot, a newly discovered spider species is the largest among its family of arachnids in the Middle East.

Photo from: Yael Olek, University of Haifa

The spider, now dubbed Cerbalus aravensis, was discovered in the dunes of the Sands of Samar in the southern Arava region in Israel by a team of biologists from the University of Haifa-Oranim. The scientists say C. aravensis is nocturnal and mostly active during the hottest months of the year.

It constructs underground dens that are sealed off with a lifting door made of sand particles that are glued together to camouflage the living quarters. The spider's legspan is estimated to be about 5.5 inches (14 cm).

But its home is disappearing. The Sands of Samar are the last remaining sand dune in Israeli territory in the southern Arava region. In the past, the sands stretched across some 2.7 square miles (7 square km), but due to the rezoning of areas for agriculture and sand quarries, the sands have been reduced to about 1 square mile (3 square km).

According to Uri Shanas, the Israel Land Administration plans to renew mining projects in the Sands of Samar in the near future, which will endanger the existence of the newly discovered spider.

"The new discovery shows how much we still have to investigate, and that there are likely to be many more species that are unknown to us," Shanas said. "If we do not preserve the few habitats that remain for these species, they will become extinct before we can even discover them."


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Arctic terns' flying feat: same as three trips to the Moon

Alister Doyle, Reuters 11 Jan 10;

OSLO (Reuters) - Arctic terns can fly more than 80,000 km (49,700 miles) a year, beating past estimates of the seabirds' record migrations and equivalent to three round trips to the Moon over a lifetime, a study showed Monday.

Tiny tracking devices attached to 11 of the small white birds breeding in Greenland or Iceland showed they flew a far more meandering route than expected on their annual trips to the Antarctic and back, an international team of scientists said.

Already widely reckoned to have the longest migration of any creature, the birds flew an average of 70,900 km in a year, with one clocking up 81,600 km. That was double the 40,000 km often estimated in the past.

And over a tern's lifetime of up to 34 years, the migrations add up to about 2.4 million km -- equivalent to three return trips to the Moon or a dizzying 60 times around the Earth.

"This is a mind-boggling achievement for a bird of just over 100 grams," said Carsten Egevang of the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources and lead author of the study with experts in Denmark, the United States, Britain and Iceland.

"Tracking of Arctic terns...reveals longest animal migration," the scientists wrote in the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Other birds, such as albatrosses or sooty shearwaters, also have massive migrations.

Terns breed around the Arctic, from Iceland to Alaska, and exploit rich summertime fisheries for shrimp-like krill, other plankton and small fish in both polar regions. They escape freezing dark polar winters with their marathon flights.

Egevang told Reuters that one surprise was that the Greenland and Iceland terns paused for a month or so to stock up on food in the Atlantic on their way south in August. Some birds then flew south past Africa, others close to South America.

On the way back north in April and May, the birds took a long "S"-shaped route up the Atlantic, apparently to use prevailing winds to save energy. Flights from Antarctica to Greenland took about 40 days, an average of 520 km a day.

Small "geolocator" devices, weighing 1.4 grams and attached to the tern's leg, recorded the birds' position daily. The data were then downloaded after the birds were caught on return to their Arctic breeding sites.

The British Antarctic Survey, which developed the geolocators, said they could help track ever smaller birds and help identify "biological hotspots" -- such as the region of the Atlantic north of the Azores where the tern paused to feed.

(Editing by Dominic Evans)

Record Migration: Small Birds Travel 50,000 Miles
livescience.com Yahoo News 11 Jan 10;

Some birds make long treks south during wintertime, but the Artic tern bests them all, flying on average 44,000 miles (70,900 km) on its annual migration from pole to pole, according to a new study.

The shortest journey recorded for the tern was 36,900 miles (59,500 km) and the longest 50,700 miles (81,600 km).

The study confirms what has been supposed for decades - the Arctic tern has the longest annual migration of any animal in the world. When added up over a lifetime, the total journey for the bird is the equivalent of three trips to the moon and back.

The researchers used a tiny instrument, called a geolocator, for tracking Artic tern migration. The device regularly records light intensity, which can be used to generate two geographical positions per day.

While geolocators have helped scientists follow the journeys of larger animals, including geese, albatross, penguins and seals, they have only recently been made small enough to attach to light-weight birds, such has the tern. The researchers fitted geolocators weighing about 1.4 g each to the legs of 60 terns.

The study showed that the Artic tern travels an average of around 44,000 miles roundtrip from Greenland to the Weddell Sea, on the shores of Antarctica, and back to the breeding grounds in Greenland - nearly twice the distance generally cited for tern's annual migration, the researchers say.

It turns out that the birds did not immediately travel south, but spent almost a month at sea in the middle of the North Atlantic Ocean. The researchers believe the birds use this lengthy stop-over as a chance to "fuel-up" with food before continuing on to less fruitful waters farther south.

After this pause, the birds continued their long journey south down the coast of northwest Africa. However, around the Cape Verde Islands - islands off the west coast of Africa, close to Senegal - the birds' behavior surprised the research team again. About half of the birds continued down the coast of Africa, while the other half crossed the Atlantic Ocean to follow a parallel route south down the east coast of South America.

All of the birds spent the northern winter months in Antarctic waters.

Interestingly, on their return journey the birds did not choose the shortest route back to their breeding grounds in Greenland. Instead, they traced out a gigantic 'S' pattern northward through the Atlantic Ocean - a detour of several thousand km compared to a straight line north to their breeding colonies. This indirect route allows the terns to take advantage of the global wind system and to reduce the amount of energy it needs to use on its return journey, said Iain Stenhouse, a co-author of the research paper, published Jan. 11 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"This study on seabird migration has given us an incredibly detailed insight into how long-distance migrants behave at times of the year when it's normally impossible for us to follow them," said Carsten Egevang of the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, lead author of the paper.

The study was conducted by scientists from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in collaboration with researchers from Greenland, Denmark, the United States and Iceland.

Arctic tern's epic journey mapped
Jonathan Amos, BBC News 11 Jan 02;

The Arctic tern's extraordinary pole-to-pole migration has been detailed by an international team of scientists.

The researchers fitted the birds with tiny tracking devices to see precisely which routes the animals took on their 70,000km (43,000 miles) round trip.

The study reveals they fly down either the African or Brazilian coasts but then return in an "S"-shaped path up the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.

The long-distance adventure is described in the US journal PNAS.

"From ringing, we knew where the Arctic tern travelled," said Carsten Egevang of the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources.

"The new thing is that we've now been able to track the bird during a full year of migration, all the way from the breeding grounds to the wintering grounds and back again."

The avian world is known for its great migrations.

Albatrosses, godwits, and sooty shearwaters all undertake epic journeys. But none can quite match the Arctic tern's colossal trip.

Starting in August and September, this small bird - which weighs little more than 100g (3.5oz) - will head away from Greenland with the intention of getting to the Weddell Sea, on the shores of Antarctica.

It will spend about four or five months in the deep south before heading back to the far north, arriving home in May or June.

A team from Greenland, Denmark, the US, the UK and Iceland attached small (1.4g/0.05oz) "geolocators" to the animals to find out exactly where they went on this polar round trip.

The devices record light intensity. This gives an estimate of the local day length, and the times of sunrise and sunset; and from this information it is possible to work out a geographical position of the birds.

The geolocators were provided by the British Antarctic Survey (BAS).

"The use of these devices on seabirds is not only revolutionising our understanding of migration patterns, but the resulting data on distribution also help address the requirement to identify important biological hotspots," said Richard Phillips from BAS, a co-author of the PNAS paper.

The first surprise is that the terns do not make straight for the Antarctic when they leave the Arctic, but make a lengthy stop-over in the middle of the North Atlantic, about 1,000km (620 miles) north of the Azores.

Here, they feed on zooplankton and fish to fuel themselves for the long journey ahead.

"We were able to compare biological productivity in the ocean from satellite imagery and we could see a high productive area that the birds will spend time in," said Mr Egevang.

"Even more importantly, it's the last high productive area before they enter tropical waters where we know productivity is low."

The birds then head south along the coast of western Europe and western Africa before making a choice, either to continue hugging Africa or sweep across the Atlantic from the Cape Verde Islands to continue the journey along the Brazilian coast.

About half the birds that were tracked decided to take the South American path. It is not clear why, but the researchers believe wind might make either route seem favourable to the terns.

After spending their northern winter months in Antarctic waters, the terns then fly back towards the Arctic.

But rather than retracing their southward flight paths, the birds follow a gigantic "S" pattern up the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.

"This is completely new knowledge," Mr Egevang told BBC News.

"They make a detour of several thousand km but once we start comparing the route to the prevailing wind system, it makes perfect sense - moving in a counter-clockwise direction in the Southern Hemisphere, and clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere.

"It's just more energy-efficient for them to do that even though they are travelling several thousand more km than if they flew in a straight line."


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Global Trade Fuels Invasive Species

livescience.com Yahoo News 11 Jan 10;

The expansion of world trade has long been blamed for the rise of invasive species and the environmental havoc such hitchhikers have dealt to delicate ecosystems. Now new evidence may bolster the case for new policies to combat the problem.

A new study found a significant decline in the number of bird species introduced into Eastern Europe during the Cold War, a time when much of the trade and travel between the region and its western counterparts ceased.

"Traditionally, we don't hear much about birds as an invasive species, but they can be," said Susan Shirley, a study team member and research associate in the College of Forestry at Oregon State University.

Although birds tend to stay in their native habitats, Shirley points out that they sometimes establish populations in a new location if they are somehow brought there.

For instance, an Asian species known as the common myna that's found in North America, the Middle East, South Africa, Israel, Europe, Australia, New Zealand is considered a crop pest and has been included on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's list of the 100 worst invasive species. Another species called the collard dove is a strong adapter to new environments and has spread all over Europe. Of even greater concern, Shirley said, are several species of wild-caught pet birds that have escaped and may be in the process of establishing populations in Europe.

The study, published in the journal Biological Conservation, found that prior to the Cold War, Western Europe had 36 non-European introduced species and Eastern Europe had 11. When international tension and restricted trade ended, the number of bird species introduced into Western Europe increased to 54.

The researchers suggest that clear policies need to be established to prevent further inflow of exotic species into previously isolated regions, and warn that the problems illustrated by this phenomenon in Europe may play out in similar ways all over the world as trade expands.

"Global trade is a real concern for invasive species, and the lessons we can learn from the Cold War offer a warning flag to developing countries that are now expanding in an international economy," Shirley said.


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Global Hunting Industry Reflects Economy

Ed Stoddard, PlanetArk 12 Jan 10;

DALLAS - If you can spare the $40,000 or more needed to go to Africa to shoot an elephant, then chances are you are in a recession-proof income bracket.

If you enjoy you hunting and fishing but have a tighter budget, or have not been immune to the tough economic times, then you may be scaling back on some of your regular trips.

That is the picture that emerged from the annual convention of the Dallas Safari Club during the weekend, which featured more than 1,000 exhibitors from around the world.

It is not your run-of-the-mill convention, with big guns on display as well as a menagerie of stuffed animal trophies including massive brown bears, rhinos and elephant heads. Some of the exhibitors were clad in camouflage or bright hunter's orange.

"The Big 5 stuff is selling," said Darren Baker of Coenraad Vermaak Safaris, referring to the fabled "Big 5" game mammals of Africa: elephant, rhino, buffalo, lion and leopard.

"But the cheaper hunts for plains game antelope are not doing as well," said Baker, whose South African-based operation takes clients on hunting safaris to places like Botswana, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.

He said the average price for an elephant hunt was about $40,000 but they can cost much more.

Joe Klutsch, whose Katmai Guide Service offers hunting and angling excursions to Alaska, noted a similar trend.

"The high-end stuff is holding up and doing fine," he said, referring to moose or brown bear hunts. The latter he said can cost up to $25,000. But he said demand for cheaper hunts and sport fishing services were down.

He also said that because of the economic uncertainty, clients were far more reluctant than they have been in the past to sign up for trips one or two years down the line.

"People are writing checks for 2010 but unlike in the past people are not booking two years out. People are tentative because they don't know what the economy is going to do, they are uncertain," he said.

The economics of travel is also making some sportsmen who used to venture further afield stick closer to home.

Danny McGuire, who is in the restaurant business, was checking the displays but said he and many of his friends were scaling back on overseas trips in favor of hunting and fishing opportunities nearby.

"I'm still hunting and fishing but won't go to Argentina for a bird hunt now, I'll go to south Texas ... everyone here is looking for a deal," he said as he browsed the stalls.

One sector that seems to be benefiting from this state of affairs in Texas is the exotic game industry, which a 2007 study by Texas AgriLife Extension Service, which is linked to Texas A&M University, estimated to be worth $1.3 billion.

The study also found it to be the fastest growing sector of the state's farming industry.

The industry essentially revolves around the farming of exotic game such as kudu antelope from Africa which are then hunted on ranch properties.

"I think the exotic game industry is benefiting in Texas because of reduced international travel," said Robert Gegenheimer, who has an exotic hunting operation near Dallas.

Other outfitters said they found that local Texans were passing on pheasant hunts in places like Kansas and South Dakota -- which are seen as prime places for the sport -- in favor of similar hunts in Texas.


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Sustainable Consumption: An Idea Whose Time Has Come?

Greener World Media, PlanetArk 12 Jan 10;

With climate negotiations reaching an inconclusive end in Copenhagen, the action swings back from national governments and the intergovernmental process to you and me.

For many years, the idea of sustainable consumption has been embraced by NGOs and others, but widely shunned by business.

This is changing fast. Not only that, the signs of growing interest are coming from unlikely locations.

In Bentonville, Ark., last summer, new Wal-Mart CEO Mike Duke called on his company to "develop the tools to help enable sustainable consumption." Who would have guessed that the chief executive of the world's largest retailer, which sells US$400 billion of goods each year, would say that?

Recently in Dubai (just before the recent bond crisis struck the Emirate), under the auspices of the World Economic Forum, I chaired a Global Agenda Council on this subject. A dozen experts from business, academia and NGOs from the United States, the U.K., Brazil, Germany and elsewhere were asked to deliver recommendations on how to shift to more sustainable consumption patterns. We developed three priority recommendations: Mobilize and inspire consumers, explore new business models, and create innovative public policy. The topic will be on the agenda again at the WEF's annual meeting in Davos this month.

Why has this issue come out of the shadows now? After all, the UN has been working on this issue for almost a decade, through the Marrakech Process, which aims to develop guidelines for production and consumption.

The answer may well lie in the pre-recession events of 2008. Before the financial crisis hit late last year, we experienced a mash-up of food/fuel/water-security problems. All the graphs and charts that predicted a disconnect between the supply and demand of basic commodities came to life in the form of shortages and price shocks in the months before Lehman Brothers collapsed. This meant higher prices for companies, and higher prices for consumers, who saw their food and energy bills rise.

And while the recession has brought a temporary pause to all this, the long-term trends suggest that the question of whether existing business models can-literally-be sustained is squarely on the table. To address the coming consumption crunch, new products, services and production processes are needed.

The keys to progress rest in the same formula I discussed in my recent e-blast about climate change: Innovation, efficiency, mobilization and collaboration.

The need to develop new consumption patterns is the mother of all innovation challenges. The race to dematerialize is on. Some of this will come from the digital revolution, as newspapers can now be delivered wirelessly to e-readers instead of plopping dead trees on the doorstep. But some of the innovation will come from redesigning business models. Electronics retail leader Best Buy is looking to enter the transportation business. Through its emerging business unit, the company is experimenting with electronic transportation devices like "e-bikes," building a mobility business to capitalize on its expertise selling and servicing very different kinds of consumer devices. One well-known beverage maker is looking at selling packets of soluble powder to avoid the need to ship water and containers around the globe.
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Efficiency holds additional promise. That is why the zero-waste movement is gaining steam, with the New York Times proclaiming in November that it has moved from the fringes to the mainstream. Companies including Nestlé, Wal-Mart, and Honda are taking aim at garbage by revamping production and distribution processes. Cities across the United States, which maintains the crown as the world's biggest per capita garbage producer, have set targets of zero waste by 2020.

The holy grail, however, may come in mobilizing-and inspiring-consumers. This is the only way to develop markets that de-emphasize natural resource use, which in turn will create rewards for companies that make the shift. SAP, Siemens, and Coca-Cola are the founding partners of www.Hopenhagen.org, an effort to build a global consensus for strong action on climate change at the recently closed summit. Coca-Cola, in addition to experimenting with plant-based bottles, has invested in RecycleBank, a start-up that rewards consumers for recycling products.

Collaboration is the only way to get this done. New business models will mean new partnerships. Google and GE have gotten immense attention for their initial efforts to create smart energy grids. Shai Agassi's Better Place, a potentially disruptive force in private transportation, is partnering with auto incumbents Renault and Nissan, as well as the governments of Israel and Denmark, to build the needed infrastructure for an electric vehicle network. Ford and AT&T are working together on low-emission vehicles. These unlikely partners are looking across established industry lines to innovate.

Strangely enough for an idea that hinges on less consumption, progress may rest on marketing. After all, "sustainable consumption" is one of those "eat your spinach" phrases that hardly inspire people, and that's a problem.

In fact, this is an idea that can be very exciting-maybe even sexy. After all, it may be that a resource crunch is the spark that catalyzes innovative ways to meet human needs-for all 7 billion of us. And that's a lot more exciting than a plate of spinach.


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