Best of our wild blogs: 24 Jan 10


An Aussie Skipperoo Comes to Town
from Butterflies of Singapore

MacRitchie's Beasts
from Creatures in the Wild

Back to Buangkok
from Urban Forest

Hey You, Simpoh Air!
from Black Dillenia

Chek Jawa with the Naked Hermit Crabs
from wild shores of singapore

A trip to the forgotten Chinese Garden
from The Simplicities in Life

Field Trip to BTNR
from encounters with nature

Appearance of Dark-sided and Asian Brown Flycatchers
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Continued Photo Documentation Of The Kings
from Life's Indulgences

Night macro at Lower Pierce
from talfryn.net and Earless agamid at Venus Drive

This is not a toy!
from Manta Blog

Parasitic fly on Spotted Dove
from Bird Ecology Study Group


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URA launches public consultation exercise for Concept Plan 2011

Joanne Chan, Channel NewsAsia 23 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE : The Singapore Government is seeking public feedback on how the country should use its land over the next 40 to 50 years.

A consultation exercise for Concept Plan 2011 was launched by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) on Saturday.

Four issues will be considered during the planning process, including how to enhance the quality of life and build a sense of belonging.

The other two issues deal with an ageing population and growing the nation in a sustainable way.

What does is mean to be Singaporean and how can we provide for the needs of an ageing population are just some of the questions that will be discussed by two focus groups during the public consultation exercise.

Lee Tzu Yang, co-chair, Focus Group on Sustainability and Identity, said: "In terms of identity, it is not about hardware, it is about software. It is about how people want to live in the neighbourhood.

"Once we know how people want to live in the neighbourhood, I think that will suggest to URA the kind of hardware that needs to be put in."

And in land scarce Singapore, planners need to balance different competing needs which can affect the quality of life.

Professor Tan Chorh Chuan, co-chair, Focus Group on Quality of Life and Ageing, said: "Quality of life means different things for different groups of people, and how do we bring all this together into something which will provide an optimal mix of facilities as well as amenities for a broad section of people."

The Concept Plan is reviewed every 10 years to reflect changing trends.

Elaborating on these trends, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said: "Competition from other cities, the need for us to accommodate the changing demographics in Singapore, ageing population, and of course, the need for us to grow in a more sustainable way."

Previous Concept Plans have had a major impact on Singapore's landscape. For example, when the first Concept Plan was established in 1971, plans were drawn up for major infrastructure projects such as Changi Airport, and the first MRT lines.

URA is also seeking online feedback from the public via its website. - CNA/ms

Wanted: Your vision for Singapore in next 50 years
Tan Dawn Wei, Straits Times 24 Jan 10;

If you want a say on how Singapore should shape up in the next five decades, the opportunity has come.

And mind you, it comes knocking only once every 10 years.

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) has just launched its public consultation exercise for the review of its Concept Plan 2011.

This maps out the long-term directions for Singapore's land use and transportation game plan for the next 40 to 50 years.

Previous concept plans have given birth to major infrastructure projects like Changi Airport and the first MRT lines, which were in the 1971 plan, and the parks and waterbodies plan from the 2001 review.

Yesterday, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan launched the exercise. It includes the participation of two focus groups made up of professionals, academics and civil-society representatives.

Singapore has consistently been ranked one of the most liveable cities in Asia, but this did not come about by chance, he said.

With just 710 sq km of land, every inch of space needs to be maximised and outlined.

Mr Mah said the key objective of such a plan remains the same, which is to strive for the best quality of life for Singaporeans.

He spelt out three key trends that set the context for the Concept Plan review this time: economic, demographic and environmental.

With more cities competing for investments, businesses and talent, successful cities must have good lifestyle offerings to attract a highly talented workforce.

Singapore's population mix will also change and age rapidly too. And there is also the issue of sustainability in the face of climate change.

How to strike a balance between the different objectives in land-use planning will depend on what Singapore residents want in each stage of the country's development, Mr Mah said.

The public can give feedback on URA's website at www.ura.gov.sg/conceptplan2011/

They can also share their views through an online survey on the website from now till Feb 21.

The two focus groups - comprising about 35 members each - have also been asked to discuss four key issues identified by URA: quality of life, ageing issues, sustainability, and identity.

National Arts Council chairman Edmund Cheng and National University of Singapore president Tan Chorh Chuan will co-chair the group looking at quality of life and ageing.

Shell chairman Lee Tzu Yang and Institute of Policy Studies director Ong Keng Yong will do the same for the sustainability and identity focus group.

The group discussions will take place over four months, after which they will present recommendations, which will include the public's views from the online survey, at a public forum in the middle of this year.

The final plan will be unveiled at the end of next year.

More links
SPEECH BY MR MAH BOW TAN, MINISTER FOR NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, AT THE LAUNCH OF THE CONCEPT PLAN 2011 REVIEW PUBLIC CONSULTATION EXERCISE ON SATURDAY, 23 JANUARY 2010, AT THE URA CENTRE on the MND website

URA launches public consultation for the review of Concept Plan 2011 on the URA website


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$10m gift for natural history museum

Offer from unnamed donor boosts NUS bid to set up gallery for vast collection
Tan Dawn Wei, Straits Times 24 Jan 10;

Singapore is one major step closer to having its own natural history museum, and it will be situated in the heart of the National University of Singapore's (NUS) new University Town in about three years.

A $10 million gift has just come in from an undisclosed donor, giving a big boost to the fund-raising efforts spearheaded by NUS' department of biological sciences.

The department is the custodian of about 500,000 specimens of mammals, birds, amphibians and other invertebrates, which belong to the oldest natural history collection of animals in Singapore.

The collection started from the days of the Raffles Museum founded by Sir Stamford Raffles, and boasts some century-old artefacts and extinct animals.

A sampling of the specimens is currently displayed at the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research (RMBR), a modest public gallery run by the department and housed within its premises on the NUS campus.

The unnamed donor, who apparently read a Sunday Times report in June last year about the need for Singapore's own natural history museum, called the department shortly after the article appeared to express interest in donating money.

'It was a strange moment,' recalled Professor Peter Ng, head of RMBR and the Tropical Marine Science Institute at NUS. 'He contacted us, asked us what we needed and asked for a game plan.'

Despite their suspicions, Prof Ng and his team put together a concept plan within a month. A subsequent meeting put their minds at ease.

'It was all very professional. He was interested and made all the necessary assurances that he was representing one or a few donors who would like to make a donation, but stay off the radar screen for the moment,' said Prof Ng.

The conditions spelt out: The museum had to be accessible to maximise public education; the collection should be taken care of; and the exhibition space had to be bigger.

From an initial $1 million, the undisclosed donor later pledged $10 million.

'It's a strong motivation to raise the remaining sum. Now that we are talking to prospective sponsors, it will be easier too,' said Prof Ng.

The museum has received a groundswell of public support since media reports last year highlighted the vast, little-known collection .

That led to about 3,000 people showing up at the museum's gallery on International Museum Day in May.

In 2008, the museum had only 400 walk-in visitors the entire year.

Since then, some smaller donations have also come in.

It is estimated that setting up the museum would cost about $55 million, but Prof Ng and his team are gunning for a minimum $35 million, which will fulfil a smaller scale museum and also solve the problems of the current museum, such as space crunch and safety issues.

Built from scratch, the new museum will be at least 7,000 sq m in size, with a minimum 2,000 sq m - or 10 times the current museum's size - devoted to exhibition space.

Less than 1 per cent of the museum's entire collection, one of the largest of South-east Asian animals in the region, is on display now at NUS.

The team hopes it will be a focal point for biodiversity research and education, and that it will be accessible to other universities, national agencies and nature lovers.

'It will highlight our history, but also be a museum for South-east Asia,' said Prof Ng.

Professor Leo Tan, director of the Singapore Science Centre from 1982 to 1991, and another driving force of the new museum, hopes to reinstate the collection to its former glory.

Thrown out of the National Museum in 1970 when the Government decided to focus the exhibits on art and ethnography, the prized collection languished in poor condition for years without a permanent home.

It was only in 1998, after the botany and zoology departments at NUS merged to become the department of biological sciences, that the collection found a home in the RMBR.

'Our young people are born into a modern, built-up Singapore. They have no idea how much struggle went into making this metropolis. This museum will play a very important educational role for our young people to appreciate what they have if they know where they came from,' said Prof Tan, now director of special projects at NUS' science faculty.

Of the collection being accorded the long-overdue recognition it deserves, NUS president Tan Chorh Chuan said it was 'better late than never'.

'We feel we haven't tapped the full potential of the collection. It will be something of great interest to many young people,' he said, adding that a purpose-built museum will add to the diversity and vibrancy on campus.

The new museum is expected to attract more than 80,000 visitors and researchers from Singapore and abroad annually.

Natural history museums in New York and London draw millions of visitors each year.

The team hopes to raise the funds needed by the middle of the year, in tandem with the building plans of the new University Town.

'There's only one way ahead. Failure is not an option,' said Prof Tan.

'The last piece of the puzzle is finding the right donor or donors.'


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Changi race track: Finance hurdle ahead?

Straits Times 24 Jan 10;

The finish line is within sight - but do all three bidders have a 'full tank' of money?

As things stand, the Singapore Sports Council (SSC) will announce by March its choice of consortium to build, finance and manage a permanent race track in Changi.

But there are signs of a road hump facing one of the three bidders in the contest to run the Changi Motorsports Hub.

Sources said the group led by Singapore Agro Agriculture (SAA) has recently been tapping the financial sector for funds.

'To be doing this at such a stage of the bidding process does seem odd,' said an insider who has been following the project since it was announced in October 2007.

If the winner lacks secured funding - which must come from the private sector - it could lead to delays to the facility's completion.

This is slated for late next year.

Another mega facility - the $1.87 billion Sports Hub in Kallang - was hobbled by financing issues after the Singapore Sports Hub Consortium (SSHC) trumped bids from two other groups in January last year.

It failed to garner enough loans because of the recession but the financing issue has since been cleared up.

The Changi project, which will occupy a 41ha site, will include space for restaurants, bars and shops. It is expected to cost between $200 million and $300 million to build.

The other two bidders are Sports Services, backed by public-listed leisure and health-care products firm Haw Par Corporation, and SG Changi, fronted by Jurong Kart World.

The Sunday Times spoke to Mr Jason Wong, chief operating officer of SAA Holdings, which is also behind food-and-retail hub Turf City.

'I'm in the middle of doing this and just spoke to SSC about the matter. I can't talk about this now so don't bring it up again,' said Mr Wong last Wednesday, when asked about financing.

Haw Par executive director Chng Hwee Hong and SG Changi director Thia Yoke Kian separately said they had secured the funds.

Mr Chng said the money would come entirely from within the company.

Mr Thia's group will bank on a mix of its own funds and equity from financial institutions.

SSC spokesman Alvin Hang said that as the bids are still being evaluated, it would be inappropriate to comment on market speculation.

It is understood that SSC had put in a requirement for bidders to have funding secured before they submitted their design proposals last August.

But this was apparently removed just before the bid period closed, so as to drum up more interest during a recessionary year.

The Motorsports Hub is seen as crucial to revving up Singapore's aspirations to be an international motorsports destination. The country has already hosted two Formula 1 races.

The winning bidder for the Changi hub will have to stage several prestigious races annually, including MotoGP - motorcycling's equivalent of F1.

Meanwhile, work is expected to commence later this year on the Sports Hub, with completion slated for late 2013 or early 2014.

There has been significant interest from banks since the SSHC launched a competition to raise funds last year.

It is evaluating the proposals and aims to sign the final contract by mid-year.

Speculation over when the National Stadium will be demolished should finally be laid to rest then.

Leonard Lim


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Chase butterflies in Orchard Road

Nature lovers plan urban butterfly trail that's billed as the first of its kind in the world
Tracy Quek, Straits Times 24 Jan 10;

Can butterflies thrive among the glitzy malls and tall office buildings in Orchard Road?

Yes, says a group of nature lovers and butterfly enthusiasts who are working to create an urban butterfly trail.

Spearheaded by the Nature Society of Singapore (NSS), the 4km-long trail starts at the gates of the Botanic Gardens, continues down Orchard Road and ends in Fort Canning Park.

It is envisioned as a self-guided walking route that will lead you to 15 butterfly spots.

These include tucked-away green oases between the malls, little-known rooftop and private gardens, and public green spaces.

Visitors will get specially produced maps to help them navigate their way. Brass markers will be put up to guide people to the spots and provide information on the butterflies and plants.

The trail is being billed as the first of its kind in the world.

The first phase - from the Botanic Gardens in Napier Road to Tanglin Road - will be launched in June. The project is supported by the National Parks Board (NParks) and Singapore Environment Council.

'People think Orchard Road is a concrete jungle, but if you look carefully, you'll discover a lot of natural beauty,' said Ms Margaret Clarkson, an American who is part of the project team.

Dr Shawn Lum, NSS president and a key collaborator, said that the project will 'bring colour and life to the shopping district'.

It will highlight the rich biodiversity in the country, create something that would appeal to Singaporeans and visitors, and provide a platform for educational and conservation activities, he added.

Singapore is home to about 280 butterfly species. Not all can thrive in urban areas but there are outdoor, fun-loving species that can, said Mr Gan Cheong Weei, chairman of the Nature Society's Butterfly Interest Group.

The key is to provide them with the plants they need for food, shelter and breeding. Nature Society experts are identifying and propagating the plants that will be introduced at the hot spots over the next few months.

The experts reckon that some 50 species of butterflies will be attracted to the trail.

The project will cost about $70,000 to get off the ground, said Ms Christine Davis, an American who owns a business management consultancy firm here and is managing the project.

The team is working to secure sponsors. So far three companies have expressed interest. Schools will be invited to adopt hotspots and individuals can sponsor anything from a park bench to a brass marker.

Said Ms Davis: 'Butterflies make people happy, and in today's world, simple pleasures are really important.'

How the idea of a city nature trail came about
Straits Times 24 Jan 10;

Ms Margaret Clarkson, 51, relocated to Singapore with her investment consultant husband and five-year-old daughter from Washington, DC in August 2008.

Ms Clarkson, who has a background in cultivating corporate sponsors, government bodies and non-governmental organisations for conservation efforts, said Singapore's garden city concept inspired her to get involved in a green project.

She met Professor Tommy Koh, Ambassador-at- Large with the Foreign Ministry and patron of the Nature Society of Singapore (NSS).

He introduced her to NSS president Shawn Lum, the society's butterfly experts and Mr Howard Shaw, executive director of the Singapore Environment Council.

They told her about the island's desire to take the garden-city concept further by moving beyond aesthetics to focusing on ecology and increasing biodiversity. They cited existing butterfly gardens such as the one at Alexandra Hospital.

She thought of the Freedom Trail in Boston, Massachusetts, a 4km-long path leading visitors to 16 historic landmarks.

'Why not adapt the concept for Singapore and have a nature trail in the city centre with butterflies as the main attraction?' she said.

Ms Clarkson and her family returned to the US late last year but she has brought in Ms Christine Davis, an American expatriate running a business management consultancy in Singapore, to manage the trail.

Prof Koh said the project 'will enrich our quality of life and hopefully make Singaporeans appreciate the wonders of nature and the need for us to live in harmony with mother earth'.


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Jurong residents turn vacant plot into garden

Jamie Ee Wen Wei, Straits Times 24 Jan 10;

It's not every day that a government minister gets playful and sprays water on schoolchildren.

But this happened yesterday when Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam was at an event honouring the efforts of Corporation Walk residents who created a pocket of greenery in their estate in Taman Jurong.

Mr Tharman, who is also an MP for Jurong GRC, was watering a bonsai that he had planted in the garden when he gave a wet surprise to some pupils from Lakeside Primary School.

They squealed in delight.

Mr Tharman also took a walk around the 10-year-old estate, which now comes with a lush garden, thanks to the efforts of nine residents.

They took two months to transform a vacant plot into a miniature Chinese and Japanese garden, complete with a waterfall.

Two of the residents even flew to Guangzhou in China and spent four days sourcing for figurines of pagodas and monks to decorate the garden.

The residents have also built a barbecue pit in the garden. So far, they have organised four barbecue sessions, with about 40 people attending each time.

Businessman Tony Yau, 56, who engineered the project, said the residents spent $7,000 to build the garden.

'Every evening, we would come to the chit-chat corner and have tea or snacks. We are getting to know more neighbours and we are like one big family here.'

The group, which has registered itself with the People's Association as a gardening club, has also gone from house to house to offer help.

So far, they have worked with 30 households.

Manager Syed Ismail, 52, who received help in turning the area outside his house into a herb garden, said: 'I've been living here for 11 years but I've had only a 'hi-bye' relationship with my neighbours. After they came to help me with my garden, we got to know one another better and even went to the nursery together.'


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Philippines birdwatching site is newest ASEAN Heritage Park

The Inquirer 23 Jan 09;

A POPULAR birdwatching site, the Mt. Kitanglad Range Protected Area (MKRPA), has been declared as the 28th Association of SouthEast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Heritage Park. The park is home to Mt. Kitanglad, a dormant volcano touted as the fourth highest peak in the country. Also known as the mystical mountain, it has a thickly populated forest where some of the country’s well-known medicinal herbs grow.

The pronouncement was made at the 11th Annual Meeting of ASEAN ministers of environment where the participants reviewed the regions’ efforts on a number of issues, particularly those relating to environmental sustainability of the ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community Blueprint.

“Coming at a time when the world is celebrating the year of ecological biodiversity, this recognition pushes us to strive even harder in preserving our natural wealth, and imbibe a ‘green’ consciousness,” said Tourism Secretary Ace Durano.

The country’s protected ecotourist area is also the abode of the endangered Philippine Eagle and rare winged creatures such as the McGregor’s Cuckoo Shrike, Elegant Tit, Streak-breasted Rhabdornis and Black-and-Cinnamon Fantail.

Following the objective of the ASEAN group of nations, the ASEAN Heritage Park ‘aims to establish a regional network of national protected areas conserving critical representative ecosystems in the said region.’

According to Eduardo Jarque, Jr., Undersecretary for Tourism Planning and Promotions, “Mt. Kitanglad truly highlights the unique balance of having different cultures coexisting in an ecologically abundant area.”

The site is the ancestral domain of several tribes such as the Higaonon, Manobo, and Talaandig.

Accessible via plane or boat through the Cagayan de Oro terminal/port, the newly named ASEAN Heritage Park in Bukidnon is open to tourists, the deparment said.

Attorney Victoria Jasmin, Director for Tourism Standards, shared, “We have a 10-days/9-nights birdwatching package that includes a late afternoon camping in the area to see the rare Philippine Eagle.”

The Lower Eagle View Point and Higher Eagle View Point also offer sightings of the White-cheeked Bullfinch, Cinnamon Ibon, and Mountain White-Eye, Jasmin added.

Other adventure packages for Mt. Kitanglad include a three-day hike up its peak – a popular must-climb site of seasoned trekkers.

The MKRPA is the third ecotourist spot to become an ASEAN Heritage Park, joining two others which are Mt. Apo in Davao, the country’s highest peak and Mt. Iglit-Baco in Oriental Mindoro, the domain of the endangered Tamaraw.

The list includes 28 other destinations namely Tasek Merimbum in Brunei Darussalam, Preah Monivong National Park, and Virachey National Park in Cambodia; Leuser National Park, Kerinci Seblat National Park, and Lorentz National Park in Indonesia; Nam Ha National Biodiversity Conservation Area in Lao PDR; Kinabalu National Park, Mulu National Park, and Taman Negara National Park in Malaysia; Alaungdaw Kattapha National Park, Indawgy Lake Wildlife Santuary, Inlay Lake Wildlife Sanctuary, Khakaborazi National Park, and Meinmahla Kyun Wildlife Sanctuary in Myanmar; Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve in Singapore; Ao Phangnga – Mu Koh Surin – Mu Koh, Similan Marina National Parks, Kaengkrachan Forest Complex, Khao Yai National Park, Tarutao National Park, Ba Be National Park in Thailand; Chu Mom Ray National Park, Hoang Lien Sa Pa National Park and Kon Ka Kinh National Park in Vietnam.


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Call to preserve environs at Indonesia-Malaysia-Brunei border areas

Roy Goh, The New Straits Times 23 Jan 10;

INDONESIA, Malaysia and Brunei need to find a common ground to preserve the environment along border areas on the island of Borneo.

East Kalimantan Governor Awang Faroek Ishak said it would be pointless for any of the countries to set aside forests for conservation when their neighbours did not.

"In our case, the Mentarang Forest Reserve, located north of the province, borders Malaysia in Sabah and Sarawak.

"On our side, we preserve our forests but on the other side of the borders, the connecting areas are commercial forests.

"That would defeat the purpose of preserving the forests because it would surely have some sort of effect on the eco-system," he said, adding that the Malaysian side was near Lawas in Sarawak and Sipitang in Sabah.

"We brought it up before at government-to-government forums and I believe there are efforts under way towards finding a solution to this," said Faroek, when meeting a delegation of businessmen and journalists from Sabah, led by former Chief Minister Datuk Harris Mohd Salleh.

He said Kalimantan was also part of the "Heart of Borneo" programme initiated by the respective countries in Borneo, including Brunei, together with international organisations such as the World Wildlife Fund.

"These are avenues where we can discuss and find ways on how best to preserve our environment," he said while emphasising that on the part of East Kalimantan, his government had introduced a "zero-burning" policy for companies to set up or replant at their plantations.

Stressing that his administration took the global warming warning seriously, Faroek said the haze problem which had also affected Malaysia was not from East Kalimantan.

"We do not have peat soil here at all, which is the cause of haze almost every time," he said.


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Malaysia leads green agenda

Datuk Wira Ismail Saleh, The Star 24 Jan 10;

Our readiness to reduce carbon emissions by 40% shows our seriousness in combating climate change.

MUCH has been said about the recently concluded UN Cli­mate Change Conference.

The two week-long “carnival” in Copenhagen ended with a bare minimum agreement, falling short of the original goals. Prolonged negotiations failed over differences on “common but differentiated commitments”.

Only the United States, China, India, Brazil and Malaysia announced a non-binding statement of intent.

Almost all countries participating in the conference indicated that they would “take note” of the so-called Copenhagen Accord.

Our readiness to reduce carbon emissions from 187 million tonnes in 2005 to 74.8 million tonnes in 2020 – a 40% cut – showcases our seriousness in combating the climate change issue, which is closely associated with palm oil and timber-related issues.

This voluntary pledge will silence critics who have often adversely commented on how Malaysia has handled its commodity sector, particularly palm oil, rubber, timber, cocoa, pepper and tobacco.

Despite the criticisms, our commodity sector had recorded commendable export performance in 2008.

This sector contributed 16.94% (RM112.43bil) to total exports in the same year (RM663.51bil).

As far as green efforts are concerned, the palm oil industry has already embarked on initiatives to reduce carbon emissions. This is done through initiatives that trap biogas, which includes methane, to be used to generate electricity by fuelling steam turbines.

Methane has 21 times global warming potential compared to carbon dioxide. Its use for power generation will further reflect the environmental friendliness of the palm oil industry as well as reduce the impact towards global warming.

Methane is generated from the biological breakdown of empty fruit bunches (biomass) and other organic matters such as manure, sewage and domestic waste.

Methane and other gases emitted from this process are called biogas. Amongst all the biogases, methane is the most potent greenhouse gas which has high potential to cause global warming.

But these processes have had their challenges. The distance of the mills to the national grid has resulted in poor connectivity of electricity, where only 18 out of 417 mills are equipped with methane trapping devices.

The other stumbling block is the high cost of installing methane trapping devices and steam turbine generators, estimated at between RM4mil and RM6mil.

This explains why 96% of the mills are still without the methane trapping facilities.

A concerted effort is needed to ensure Malaysia will be able to deliver our commitment of 40% carbon reduction by 2020.

Some portions of the RM1.5bil Green Technology Fund could be channelled for the development of methane trapping activities.

This is in line with the Natural Resources and Environment Mini­stry’s plan to cut 50 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent per annum with 20% to be contributed by energy efficiency projects and renewable energy sources. Methane trapping falls under this category.

In addition, research is being undertaken to promote the use of waste in the form of biomass into possible growth areas in line with the policy on “creation of wealth from waste”.

These include the use of fibre from oil palm trunks and fronds for the production of medium density particle board and bio-composite.

The development of second generation biofuel using biomass as a feedstock holds much potential given that 30 million tonnes of palm oil biomass annually is available for utilisation.

This is also in tandem with the National Green Technology Policy launched by the Prime Minister on July 24 last year.

The policy outlines the framework for the development of environmentally friendly and sustainable forms of energy, in addition to promotion of this sector as a new growth area.

Given the security of fossil fuels globally, the switch to an alternative form of energy is inevitable.

Renewable energy is not limited to source of production. Even though initial investments in renewable energy power plants require a significant amount of capital, companies can mitigate this through multiple business model strategies which allow for growth without excessive demands on capital resources.

This is an area Malaysia must focus much of its public and private sector brains and resources on.

Intensive efforts are being pursued to ensure the midstream rubber industry achieves a green industry status through adoption of more environment-friendly processing tech­­nologies, especially in minimising waste discharge and an enhanced sludge treatment to overcome malicious odour (malodour).

The adoption of these kinds of technologies will further boost the environment-friendliness of the rubber downstream industry.

Perennial tree crops are known to function as natural “sponges” for absorbing carbon from the atmosphere.

Rubber trees being a perennial tree crop is one of the most efficient species that can function as efficiently as forest trees in carbon sequestration.

The economic potential for soil and plant carbon sequestration and trading based on the cultivation of rubber plantations is beneficial to the country when the planting of rubber trees is carried out in line with the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).

The Plantation Industries and Commodities Ministry is exploring this avenue aimed at obtaining optimum benefits for the nation, especially when Malaysia’s emission reduction potential could be further enhanced if sequestered carbon by rubber plantations is taken into account.

As a major producer of commodity products, Malaysia will continue to ensure green and sustainable practices continue to be an important pillar in its development.

The development of the commodity sector will be guided along the lines of international sustainable practices.

In the longer term, this will ensure the supply of commodity-related products for food and non-food purposes are sustainable and environmentally friendly.


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Indonesia wants UN to raise ocean issues at talks

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 23 Jan 10;

Indonesia will once again raise ocean issues at the upcoming UN conference in Bali, to press for world recognition of the role of oceans in climate change.

The Indonesian Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry said the country's delegation would push the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) to include oceans in its program of work to help protect the oceans from the impacts of rising temperatures.

"We hope UNEP will adopt the ocean as its main mandate in its program of work," senior official Hendra Yusran Siry told The Jakarta Post on Friday.

He added that once UNEP had done so, it would be easier to promote ocean issues at upcoming climate talks.

More than 120 environmental ministers are scheduled to meet at the Global Ministerial Environment Forum in Bali, organized by UNEP.

The meeting will discuss, among others, green economies, biodiversity and ecosystems. The UNEP has named 2010 its Biodiversity Year.

A draft decision on oceans, proposed by Indonesia, calls on UNEP to mainstream marine and coastal strategy into its program of work to improve the protection of maritime ecosystems.

The draft also requests UNEP and other UN agencies to support the implementation of the Manado Ocean Declaration in addressing the current state of the world's oceans.

It also asks UNEP to support the capacity of developing countries in terms of technology to sustainably manage marine and coastal ecosystems.

The draft also calls on other countries to achieve long-term marine conservation and reduce marine and coastal pollution.

Hendra said Indonesia would also call on governments and international organizations to exchange information on climate change impacts to the marine ecosystem.

Last month's Copenhagen climate summit failed to include the ocean issues at the Copenhagen accord.

The World Ocean Conference (WOC) hosted by Indonesia in Manado, North Sulawesi, last year adopted the Manado Ocean Declaration (MOD), which called for prioritizing ocean issues in negotiations at the Copenhagen talks.

The MOD calls for adaptation funds and technology transfers to help ocean countries - including Indonesia - deal with climate change.

A UNEP study unveiled at the Copenhagen conference said ocean acidification levels could increase by 100 times by 2050, which would lead to massive coral bleaching, destroying thousands of reefs that act as key feeding grounds for most of the world's fish species.

The study added that by 2100, about 70 percent of cold-water corals would be exposed to corrosive waters.

It also pointed out seas and oceans absorbed a quarter of the carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted into the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, deforestation and other human activities.

As more CO2 is pumped into the atmosphere, the oceans have absorbed greater amounts at increasingly rapid rates, it said.

This increased absorption of atmospheric CO2 has resulted in changes to the chemical balance of oceans, causing them to become more acidic.

State Environment Minister Gusti Muhammad Hatta said it had been difficult to include the issue of oceans in climate talks, mainly because of the dearth of studies on the subject.


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High-Tech Energy "Oasis" to Bloom in the Desert?

Christine Dell'Amore, National Geographic News 22 Jan 10;

A renewable-energy "oasis" slated to be built in 2010 may serve as a proving ground for new technologies designed to bring green living to the desert.

The planned research center is part of the Sahara Forest Project—but that doesn't mean it'll be built in Africa. Sahara means "desert" in Arabic, and the center is meant to be a small-scale version of massive green complexes that project managers hope to build in deserts around the globe.

Experts are now examining arid sites in Australia, the U.S., the Middle East, and Africa that could support the test facility.

"The Sahara Forest Project is a holistic approach for creation of local jobs, food, water, and energy, utilizing relatively simple solutions mimicking design and principles from nature," said Frederic Hauge, founder and president of the Norwegian environmental nonprofit the Bellona Foundation.

For instance, special greenhouses would use hot desert air and seawater make fresh water for growing crops, solar energy would be collected to generate power, and algae pools would offer a renewable and easily transportable fuel supply.

In addition, planting trees near the complex would trap atmospheric greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide while restoring any natural forest cover that has been lost to drought and timber harvesting.

"From my perspective as an environmentalist, this could be a game changer in how we produce biomass for food and energy, and how we're going to provide fresh water for the future," Hauge said. "I've never been so engaged and fascinated as I am now."

But not all experts are as enthusiastic about the project.

In terms of the reforestation plans, "trying to grow trees in the Sahara desert is not the most appropriate approach," said Patrick Gonzalez, a forest ecologist at the University of California, Berkeley's Center for Forestry. After all, even though it was literally green in the past, the Sahara was never heavily forested. (See an interactive Sahara map.)

"I can imagine that this scheme and type of technology in limited cases might work in certain areas like Dubai, where they're used to making palm-shaped islands and 160-story-tall buildings," Gonzalez said.

If the goal is restoring a desert's natural ecosystem, however, "it would be more effective, but less flashy, to work with local people on community-based natural-resource management."

From Mirage to Reality

The Bellona Foundation's Hauge counters that replanting trees—even in a desert—is an uncontroversial measure for stopping desertification and combating climate change.

In fact, tree-planting is one of the strategies that the foundation and its partners have carefully studied as part of their efforts to make the Sahara Forest Project more than a mirage.

The project's members are conducting feasibility studies in several countries, the initial results of which were presented in December 2009 at the Copenhagen climate conference.

And the testing center slated for imminent construction should provide even more data on how well the project's suite of green technologies might work in real life.

So-called seawater greenhouses, for example, are basic and cheap, making them a cornerstone of the project.

Hot desert air going into a greenhouse is first cooled and humidified by seawater. This humid air nourishes crops growing inside the greenhouse, then passes through an evaporator, where sun-heated seawater flows. When the now warm humid air meets a series of tubes containing cool seawater, fresh water condenses as droplets on the outsides of the tubes and can be collected.

The process mimics a natural process: Sun-heated seawater evaporates, cools to form clouds, and then falls as precipitation.

Only 10 to 15 percent of the humid air gets condensed into fresh water. The rest flows outside to water surrounding trees, so that the "greenhouse will create a large area around it that will be become green," according to Hauge.

The center will also test the use of concentrated solar power, which uses mirrors to focus sunlight on water pipes and boilers. The concentrated light creates superheated steam inside the pipes that can power conventional steam turbines, generating electricity.

Any power not used to run the complex can be sent to local communities.

Likewise, biomass-based fuel from the center's photobioreactors would be easy to export, Hauge said.

The ponds would cultivate algae through photosynthesis in open, shallow saltwater pools. The algae's fatty oils could then be harvested as energy-rich biofuel.

Lab-grown algae have been shown to generate up to 30 times more oil per acre than other plants used to make biofuels, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. And farming algae in pools doesn't take up valuable agricultural land, Hauge said.

Local People Key to Success

Hauge said he has gotten "fantastic response" from some governments, and he hopes to build the first full-scale facility within the next couple years.

UC Berkeley's Gonzales noted that in Africa, at least, there are already programs across the continent that are battling green issues in the desert by giving local people rights to existing natural resources.

Such programs have proven effective at sustainable-resource management and ecosystem restoration—without complex technological fixes.

The Sahara Forest Project's Hauge agrees that local community involvement is key, noting that the project would rely on local people to maintain the complexes.

"Working in developing countries, you need technology that is easy for local people" to operate, he said. "We are very aware of how this is approached from the local communities."


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Strongest Hurricanes May Triple in Frequency, Study Says

Mason Inman National Geographic News 21 Jan 10;

The U.S. Southeast, Mexico, and the Caribbean will be pounded by more very intense hurricanes in the coming decades due to global warming, a new computer model suggests.

Warmer sea surface temperatures—which fuel hurricanes—and shifting wind patterns are expected to strengthen the storms, the study says.

At the same time, rising temperatures should result in fewer weak or middling hurricanes in the western Atlantic.

The study considered what would happen if people kept emitting more greenhouse gases until about 2050 and then started cutting emissions.

"Some refer to this as a middle-of-the-road scenario" for tackling greenhouse gas emissions, said study co-author Thomas Knutson, a research meteorologist with the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

In this scenario the world became about 4.5 degrees Fahrenheit (2.5 degrees Celsius) warmer than today.

In turn, the western Atlantic Ocean—from Mexico and the Caribbean Sea up to the Carolinas—saw a doubling of category 4 and 5 storms, the most powerful kinds, by 2100. The number of these very intense hurricanes jumped from 24 per decade to 46.

Category 4 storms have sustained wind speeds of 131 to 155 miles (211 to 249 kilometers) an hour. Category 5 hurricanes have winds exceeding 155 miles (249 kilometers) an hour.

"I was quite surprised," said Morris Bender, also a NOAA research meteorologist and the lead author of the new study, to be published tomorrow in the journal Science.

"I didn't expect a doubling. I didn't expect we'd see this much response."

What's more, the most intense hurricanes—category 5 storms—tripled by 2100 in the model.

"Unprecedented Results"

The new model is perhaps the most sophisticated yet to predict how hurricanes will change as the world warms, study co-author Knutson said.

The researchers combined state-of-the-art global climate simulations with "the hurricane prediction models used by weather forecasters and the [U.S.] Navy," he said.

Combining three models into one tool, the scientists were able to simulate the entire Earth's climate, with realistic hurricanes of all categories romping across the Atlantic.

The modeling method is a first, according to Judith Curry of the Georgia Institute of Technology, who was not involved in the study. "This is an important paper," she said.

Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, in Boulder, Colorado, said there's still a lot of room for improvement in how all of today's climate simulations represent hurricanes and the oceans.

Even so, the new study does bolster an emerging consensus on how climate change will affect hurricanes, added Trenberth, who also was not involved in the research.

"The best information we have now supports the view that tropical storms will likely decrease in number," he said. "But the risk of category 4 and 5 storms could increase."


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Copenhagen 'fails forest people'

Mark Kinver, BBC News 22 Jan 10;

A multi-billion dollar deal tabled at the Copenhagen climate summit could lead to conflicts in forest-rich nations, a report has warned.

The study by the Rights and Resources Initiative said the funds could place "unprecedented pressure" on some areas.

Six nations offered $3.5bn as part of global plans to cut deforestation, which accounts for about 20% of all emissions from human activity.

Campaigners warn the scheme fails to consider the rights of forest people.

The money - tabled by Japan, Norway, Australia, France and the US and UK - was made available under the UN's Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (Redd) scheme.

However, delegates in the Danish capital failed to reach agreement on the mechanisms needed to monitor and manage the framework.

Decision time

"One of the things that the world has learned over the years is that Redd is far more difficult than many people imagined," said Andy White, co-ordinator of RRI, a US-based think-tank, and one of the report's lead authors.

"The forested areas of the world - by and large - have very high levels of poverty, low levels of respect for local rights, and a very low level of control among local people to shape and control their destiny.

"So the rather simplistic notion that money from the rich North can control or limit deforestation was unrealistic."

Redd was developed as a global concept that would provide developing countries with a financial incentive to preserve forests.

The Copenhagen conference was expected to finalise an international Redd finance mechanism for the post-2012 global climate change framework.

The RRI's report, The End of the Hitherlands, said that there would be "unparalleled" attention and investment in forests over the coming year.

It asked: "But who will drive the agenda and who will make the decisions?"

The authors said studies showed that there was the potential for "enormous profits", but this would lead to increased competition for forest resources between governments and investors on one hand, and local communities on the other.

Dr White told BBC News that the UN-Redd scheme still had "tremendous potential".

"It requires, from our perspective, that the governments who tabled the $3.5bn quickly get together and decide on the standards and mechanisms that they will set up," he suggested.

"This would send the necessary signals to the private sector, as well as forest-rich nations, about what is expected from them in order to comply with the policy.

"Sorting out the institution arrangements in developing nations in order to manage the forest market is a huge undertaking."

But the report said that the "unprecedented exposure and pressure" on forest regions was being met by a rise in local groups setting up co-operatives and representative bodies.

The authors added that it gave "nations and the world at large a tremendous opportunity to right historic wrongs, advance rural development and save forests".


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UN panel chief won't quit for Himalayan melt error

Ashok Sharma, Associated Press Yahoo News 23 Jan 10;

NEW DELHI – The head of a panel of United Nations climate scientists said Saturday he would not resign despite a recent admission that a panel report warning Himalayan glaciers could be gone by 2035 was hundreds of years off.

The claim, made in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's voluminous, Nobel-winning report, came in a paragraph with several errors. Data indicates the ice could melt by 2350. The assertion went virtually unnoticed until The Sunday Times said the projection seemed to be based on a news report.

The scientists are investigating how the forecast got into the report and apologized Thursday for the mistakes, adding that they were not intentional. But the errors have opened the door for attacks from climate change skeptics.

But Rajendra Pachauri, who heads the panel, said no action would be taken against the authors of the report and he would not resign.

"I have no intention of resigning from my position," Pachauri said on Saturday, adding the errors were unintentional and not significant in comparison to the entire report. The mistakes also do not negate the fact that worldwide, glaciers are melting faster than ever, he said.

He added that such mistakes must be avoided because effective climate change policy depends on good, credible science. He said he is now working on the fifth IPCC assessment report dealing with sea level rise and ice sheets, oceans, clouds and carbon accounting. The report is expected by 2014.

On Sunday, the environment ministers from Brazil, South Africa, India and China are scheduled to meet in the Indian capital New Delhi to discuss how they will fight global warming. The four nations, which brokered a political accord with President Barack Obama at last month's climate summit in Copenhagen, will play a key role in shaping a legally binding climate deal that the U.N. hopes will be completed by the end of 2010 in Mexico.

Pachauri said it was "a practical necessity" to postpone a Jan. 31 deadline set by the Copenhagen accord for developing countries to present their nonbinding carbon-curbing actions, and for rich nations to submit economy-wide emissions targets for 2020.

Glacier alarm 'regrettable error': UN climate head
Rupam Jain Nair Yahoo News 23 Jan 10;

NEW DELHI (AFP) – The head of the UN's climate science panel said Saturday a doomsday prediction about the fate of Himalayan glaciers was "a regrettable error" but that he would not resign over the blunder.

Addressing a press conference in New Delhi, Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the Nobel-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said the mistake arose from "established procedures not being diligently followed."

"I am not resigning from my post. There has been an error but we will ensure greater consistency in every (future) report," he said.

"I am not brushing anything under the carpet," he added.

Pachauri was referring to a forecast which featured in a benchmark 2007 report on global warming that the probability of glaciers in the Himalayas "disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high."

The IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report was a 938-page opus whose warning that climate change was on the march spurred politicians around the world to vow action.

Earlier in week, the panel apologised for "the poor application of well-established IPCC procedures."

In the latest statement on what the media have dubbed "Climategate," Pachauri said the report's general conclusions that Himalayan glaciers were retreating due to global warming were "robust, appropriate, and entirely consistent with the underlying science."

"The world is on the path of unsustainable development and we will have to change our lifestyle," he told reporters.

He said the forecast that the glaciers could disappear by 2035 may have "genuinely alarmed" some people.

But he said there had been a benefit in that it created a "heightened awareness about the real threat to Himalayan glaciers."

The IPCC co-won the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for bringing climate change to the world's attention.

The glacier error came to light after four prominent glaciologists and hydrologists wrote a letter to the prestigious US journal Science. They said the paragraph's mistakes stemmed from a report by the conservation group WWF.

WWF had picked up a news report based on an unpublished study, compounded by the accidental inversion of a date -- 2035 instead of 2350 -- in a Russian paper published in 1996.

"These errors could have been avoided had the norms of scientific publication, including peer review and concentration upon peer-reviewed work, been respected," according to the letter to Science.

Pachauri defended the panel's overall work, a position shared by other scientists, who say the core conclusions about climate change are incontrovertible.

He added he would finish the IPCC's Fifth Assessment Reports.

The reports, due out in 2013 and 2014, will focus on sea level changes, the influence of periodic climate patterns such as the monsoon season and El Nino, and forge a more precise picture of the regional effects of climate change.

"Rational people continue to repose faith in IPCC and are seeing the larger picture," Pachauri said.

India's Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said following revelation of the gaffe he felt "vindicated" after repeatedly challenging the IPCC's work on glaciers.

Ramesh has said he believes there is no "conclusive scientific evidence" linking global warming to the melting of glaciers.


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