Best of our wild blogs: 27 Jan 10


URA Concept Plan 2011 - take the survey, submit your feedback
from habitatnews

Shopping centres versus sea shores: time to do the URA survey!
from wild shores of singapore

Have a say in shaping our home
from Midnight Monkey Monitor

Life Between the Tides
from The Leafmonkey Workshop

Fly by night and day
from The annotated budak

Re-introduction of a male Rhinoceros Hornbill: An update
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Personal safety when going on nature trips
from Singapore Nature

Cost of trashing our parks: $1.4m a year
from wild shores of singapore

West Coast Mangroves Is Now Half a Desert!!
from Nature Is Awesome


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Fish prices set to soar over Lunar New Year period

Maggie Chong & Cheryl Lim, Channel NewsAsia 26 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE: Fishes are traditional Chinese symbols of wealth and prosperity. But be prepared to shell out more dollars for them during this festive Lunar New Year period.

Fish mongers say prices of grouper and pomfret have more than doubled to about S$30 a kilo. However, they are quick to deny any speculations of price-fixing.

Fish mongers say the sharp hike is due to greater demand over the festive period, coupled with a smaller supply of seafood.

Some fish mongers are reporting a drop of up to 30 per cent in their fish stocks, saying rough seas are to blame.

"When there are big waves, they overwhelm the smaller fishing boats so their catch is smaller," explained Woo Chee Meng, a fish monger. "And the bigger boats avoid going out to sea altogether because of the rough waters."

- CNA/yb


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Singapore farm raises sea bass on land

Its use of recirculated seawater to cultivate fish in tanks may be the solution to algal-bloom losses
Grace Chua, Straits Times 27 Jan 10;

FISH stocks of Pasir Ris and Pulau Ubin farms were decimated late last year when they were hit by a sudden and deadly plankton bloom. But one farm here has a solution to avoid future aquatic losses.

SIF Agrotechnology Asia in Lim Chu Kang is using recirculated seawater to cultivate sea bass in tanks, from eggs to full-grown fish.

The experimental set-up, with its eight cylindrical tanks with each holding half a tonne of water, is a venture by local water-treatment company SIF Technologies.

Its chief executive Matthew Tan, 45, said: 'Sea-cage farming is a sunset industry; farming fish on land would be a quantum leap.'

The farm is the first of its kind here to raise marine fish in land-based tanks.

It uses a process called hydrocavitation, which uses water-pressure changes to create vapour bubbles. When the bubbles collapse, they break down waste in the water.

This waste collects as sludge, broken down naturally by bacteria and then used as fertiliser.

To ensure the fish are healthy, factors like the pH (a measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a solution), temperature and amount of dissolved oxygen and nitrites in the water are measured daily.

According to Mr Tan, the fish grow to table size - 30cm - in 4 1/2 months, compared to six months at a traditional fish farm.

The tank farm, which is set to harvest its first batch of about 280 sea bass this week, has several advantages over traditional sea-cage farming.

Where traditional fish farms must get their eggs or fry from countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia, tank farms do not, providing a measure of food security and controlled supply.

And because the tanks are enclosed, the fish are not vulnerable to algal-bloom outbreaks.

Such farms are also environmentally friendly, producing less waste. Stanford researchers last year found that waste from floating fish farms may stay concentrated around the farms and be carried close to shore, rather than being diluted and carried away with the current.

Land-based aquatic farms can also be run by a single person and require less manpower than traditional fish farms.

But start-up costs are high, noted Mr Tan. A larger SIF hatchery, planned to open by June in Pasir Ris and raise about a million fingerlings, will cost about $1 million in start-up and operating costs.

He suggested that support could come from a $5 million Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) fund for local agricultural research. The AVA fund was set up to help farmers produce 30 per cent of eggs, 15 per cent of fish and a tenth of leafy vegetables consumed here.

Currently, Singapore produces about 5 per cent of the fish it consumes.

Former AVA chief executive Ngiam Tong Tau said SIF Technologies' recirculation system was an additional aquaculture technology that could take root here. 'If the farm is scaled up, it will help Singapore to produce fish significantly and will help sustain the local aquaculture industry.'

Instead of viewing the farm as competition, other local fish farmers are looking to follow suit.

Mr Lee Van Voon, a Pasir Ris fish farm owner whose stocks were affected by the fish die-offs, said he had been looking into recirculation technology since last year. 'Open-sea farming here is totally uncontrollable - it's exposed to farm runoffs and oil spills from passing ships,' he said. '(Recirculation) would make farming more predictable, so we can go for different, higher-value species.'

The technological solution would boost dissolved oxygen and help ward off further plankton-bloom die-offs, said Singapore Polytechnic lecturer Kwok Chen Ko, who specialises in water-quality monitoring. But he added that naturally occurring ecological processes would be more sustainable for providing dissolved oxygen in the long term.


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NEA launches new Environment Champions scheme with Panasonic

Wang Eng Eng, Channel NewsAsia 26 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE: Students from 20 schools will soon get a first-hand look at eco-friendly manufacturing processes.

Some 3,000 tonnes of cast iron chips are recycled every year at Panasonic Refrigeration Devices Singapore and parts are re-engineered to consume less raw materials.

These are some eco ideas that will be highlighted to students during factory tours, through a collaboration with the National Environment Agency (NEA).

The scheme is a new module under the National Environment Agency's Environment Champions scheme and the first time the NEA is working with an industry partner to roll out an experiential environment education module.

The scheme will start in March 2010. Six sessions will be held yearly, with up to 80 students attending each session, and the primary and secondary students will submit proposals on environmental protection to Panasonic.

The chosen idea will be given seed funding for implementation. Panasonic has set aside S$150,000 for this programme.

Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Environment & Water Resources, Dr Amy Khor, said: "I think what it does really is to give the students hands-on experience at the factory itself and we hope that it will help them better understand environment issues especially related to the industry and in future really champion the green message." - CNA/vm

Students can try their hand at 'eco-module'
Straits Times 27 Jan 10;

SCHOOL students who care about the environment can take part in an outreach programme from Panasonic Asia Pacific in collaboration with the National Environment Agency (NEA).

The Environment Champions Industry Module (ECIM) is a half-day course which involves a tour of the NEA's gallery, presenting national strategies to help make Singapore green and a tour of Panasonic's 'Eco Ideas' Refrigeration Factory in Bedok. About 80 students will attend each session during the school holidays in March, June and September.

Students from 17 schools, including Raffles Institution and Woodgrove Secondary, took part in a trial of the module this month.

The ECIM is open to all 3,500 existing Environmental Champions - a programme established by NEA in 2004 - in primary and secondary schools and junior colleges.

Participants are eligible for a competition to come up with a project based on the three Rs - reduce, reuse and recycle. There will be 20 shortlisted proposals, divided between primary and secondary schools, and each will receive $1,000 from Panasonic to help implement the ideas.

The grand prize is a trip to Panasonic in Japan.

The guest of honour at the launch, Dr Amy Khor, Senior Parliamentary Secretary, Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources, said: 'I am certain that the module will leave a lasting impression on the young participants, and equip them with the skills and knowledge to fulfil future environmental leadership roles.'

Panasonic's Bedok factory, which was set up in 1972 and makes compressors for fridges, recycles scrap iron to be reused for new compressors. It also uses energy-saving light bulbs along with other measures to reduce CO2 emissions.


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Economic growth cannot buy the planet more time

Andrew Simms, BBC Green Room 26 Jan 10;

Global economic growth - in its current form - cannot continue if nations are serious about curbing climate change, says Andrew Simms. In this week's Green Room, he warns that the consumer society cannot "have its planet and eat it".

From birth until it reaches sexual maturity at about six weeks, a hamster doubles its weight each week.

If, instead of levelling-off in maturity, it carried on growing - continuing to double its weight each week - we would be facing a nine-billion-tonne hamster on its first birthday.

If it kept eating at the same ratio of food to bodyweight, the hamster's daily intake would be greater than the total, annual amount of maize produced worldwide.

In nature, there is a reason why things do not grow indefinitely.

Yet the entire canon of mainstream contemporary economics seems to believe that economics exists independent of the laws of biology, chemistry and physics.

It assumes, without exception, that infinite economic growth on a finite planet is both desirable and possible.

'Limits to growth'

To suggest that growth might ultimately be bounded by physical constraints, of course, is not new on the very margins of economics or in other disciplines.

For example, a group of researchers in 1972 used an early computer model to compare available natural resources with rates of human consumption. Their "world model" was published as the famous Limits to Growth report.

Back then, much less data and processing power were available. As a result, for some it acted as a wake-up call, but many others mocked it and used the report to brand the wider environmental movement as alarmist.

In 2008, a physicist called Graham Turner decided to look again at the controversial report. He compared its original projections with 30 years' worth of subsequent observed trends.

Amazingly, given the available technology and data, he concluded that they "compared favourably". The authors of Limits to Growth had been broadly right all along.

We shouldn't be surprised. At what point, and on what basis, did consumer society ever truly believe that it could have its planet and eat it?

Jared Diamond's book Collapse tells the history of societies throughout history that fell by overshooting their environmental life support systems.

He charts how wealth too often comes at the expense of liquidating natural capital and how, in environmental terms, "an impressive-looking bank account may conceal a negative cash flow".

Now, standing in the shadow of the banking crisis, we have less excuse than usual to blissfully ignore how our impressive looking growth economies hide a negative ecological cash flow.

Take just one example. A new report from our team at Nef (the New Economics Foundation) looks in detail at the relationship between economic growth and the need to avert runaway climate change.

Based on the leading models for climate change and the global economy's use of fossil fuels, the report - called Growth Isn't Possible - comes to a seemingly inescapable and self-explanatory conclusion.

It asks whether global economic growth can be maintained, while keeping a good likelihood of limiting global temperature rise to 2C (3.6F) - the agreed political objective of the European Union, and widely considered the maximum rise to which humanity can adapt without serious difficulty.

'Ecological bankruptcy'

Some nations, of course, face difficulty at much lower rises, such as small island states.

None of the models studied, including the most optimistic variations of low-carbon energy and efficiency, could square the circle of endless global economic growth with climate safety.

Over the last decade, carbon intensity has not gone down, it has generally flat-lined and, in some years, even gone up.

Professor Kevin Anderson of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at Manchester University, UK, concluded in another study that: "Economic growth in [industrialised nations] cannot be reconciled with a 2, 3 or even 4C characterisation of dangerous climate change."

There is also a growing appreciation that it has not all to do with climate change.

The latest set of accounts for humanity's ecological footprint reveal that, conservatively, it takes the Earth nearly 18 months to produce the ecological services that humanity uses in one year.

The negative cash flow is getting worse.

In a unique study, published in the science journal Nature in September 2009, a group of 29 leading international scientists identified nine processes in the biosphere for which they considered it necessary to "define planetary boundaries".

Of the nine, three boundaries had already been transgressed: climate change, interference in the nitrogen cycle, and biodiversity loss.

Assuming that humanity does not deliberately wish to destroy its own foundations, and with so much science and sophisticated monitoring available, why is this happening?

For all the promise of magic bullet technologies, continual growth drowns out energy and natural resource efficiency gains.

Even efficiency gains themselves do not necessarily reduce consumption. Counter-intuitively, greater energy efficiency tends to reduce costs and drive up overall consumption.

There is a growing awareness too that, at least where rich countries are concerned, the downside of growth comes with very little or no upside.

For most of these nations, the link between rising GDP and higher life satisfaction broke down decades ago.

Lord Adair Turner, chairman of both the UK Financial Services Authority and the UK Climate Change Committee, recently described the pursuit of endless rich country growth a "false god".

Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said GDP growth was "proving to be an extremely harmful way of measuring economic progress".

The reason is that in economic commentary, growth is always assumed to be good. But you can also have "uneconomic growth", when it is jobless, socially divisive or environmentally destructive. A parallel in nature might be growth like that in cancer.

Burden of proof

Are alternative measures of success available? Yes, many. But politicians and the business press remain uncritically spellbound by the equation "all GDP growth is good".

Here is an irony: the hard science of climate change is subjected continually to the most extraordinary degree of critical scrutiny in the media.

Given their actual number, informed sceptics are given disproportionate airtime and column inches.

But where the "dismal science" of economics is concerned, the daily reporting of its central tenet - growth is good - passes unchallenged.

The much vaunted journalistic balance is abandoned. Why? Perhaps it is because this type of economics is not science at all, but doctrine. To question doctrine makes you a heretic, and heretics get excommunicated.

The time has come to question. Now, the burden of proof lies on those who promise endless growth to demonstrate how it will be possible.

In the meantime, the pressing task for everyone else is to work out how all of us on the planet can have good lives while living within its means.

Andrew Simms is policy director of the New Economics Foundation (Nef) and co-author with Dr Victoria Johnson of Growth Isn't Possible: Why We Need a New Economic Direction, published by Nef and Schumacher College

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

World economic growth at odds with climate targets
As the UK is expected to emerge from recession, the New Economics Foundation says endless growth is pushing the planet's biosphere 'beyond its safe limits'
Kathryn Hopkins The Guardian 25 Jan 10;

Economic growth is not compatible with climate change targets for rich countries, according to a new report out today.

The New Economics Foundation (NEF) warns that global economic expansion is not possible if the world is to restrict the temperature rise to 2C – the EU's agreed political objective.

The NEF found that this would require unprecedented – and probably impossible – reductions in the carbon intensity of a growing economy. None of the models or variations it looked at could square the circle of global economic growth with climate safety.

Andrew Simms, policy director at the NEF, said: "Endless growth is pushing the planet's biosphere beyond its safe limits. The price is seen in compromised world food security, climatic upheaval, economic instability and threats to social welfare. We urgently need to change our economy to live within its environmental budget. There is no global, environmental central bank to bail us out if we become ecologically bankrupt."

As economists and politicians expect the UK to emerge from recession tomorrow after a year and a half, Roger Bootle, Deloitte's economic adviser, warns today that fiscal policy will be a greater drag on growth than elsewhere. He expects Britain's economy to grow by just 1% in 2010, compared to growth of 1.5% in the eurozone, 3% in the US and Japan and 3.5% globally.

"The constraints on the strength of the global recovery over the next couple of years look set to bite particularly hard in the UK," he says. However, he added that after a difficult period over the next couple of years, he sees no reason why the UK cannot return to being a "relative outperformer".

Meanwhile, Ernst & Young said that despite profit warnings from British companies tailing off during 2009, UK plc still faces a "bumpy ride".

Andrew Wollaston, restructuring partner at Ernst & Young, said: "Given the depth of the slump, recovery has certainly come quicker than we might have anticipated. This rapid economic recuperation, along with previously depressed earnings forecasts, is helping companies beat expectations and keep profit warnings low. Good news for UK plc, but this is not the end of the story. Rapid recovery costs and 2010 is when we start paying. Brace yourselves for a bumpy recovery."


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Managing ecosystems in a changing climate

Ecologists outline necessary actions for mitigating and adapting to a changing climate
Ecological Society of America, EurekAlert 26 Jan 10;

Global warming may impair the ability of ecosystems to perform vital services—such as providing food, clean water and carbon sequestration—says the nation's largest organization of ecological scientists. In a statement released today, the Ecological Society of America (ESA) outlines strategies that focus on restoring and maintaining natural ecosystem functions to mitigate and adapt to climate change.

"Decision-makers cannot overlook the critical services ecosystems provide," says ESA President Mary Power. "If we are going to reduce the possibility of irreversible damage to the environment under climate change, we need to take swift but measured action to protect and manage our ecosystems."

ESA recommends four approaches to limiting adverse effects of climate change through ecosystem management:

Prioritize low-alteration strategies. Many ecosystems sequester a sizable amount of carbon—simply allowing them to function naturally can significantly help mitigation efforts. Deforestation, for example, has a two-fold impact: removing agents of carbon sequestration—trees in this instance—while simultaneously releasing stored carbon. Therefore, preserving forests is a straightforward way to both reduce and offset emissions.

Critically evaluate management-intensive strategies. Management strategies that seek to increase carbon sequestration above natural levels should undergo thorough life-cycle analysis and evaluation prior to implementation. For example, increasing carbon uptake on agricultural lands—one approach to enhancing the sequestration potential of ecosystems—typically requires more fertilizer than standard processes; the tradeoff, therefore, is higher emissions and pollution associated with fertilizer production.

Acknowledge the ecological implications of geoengineering. Understand the potential risks associated with engineering the environment, called geoengineering, and the unintended negative impacts that could emerge from long-term or widespread use. For example, injecting sulfur particles into the atmosphere to reflect solar rays would have a cooling effect but could also increase acid rain and destabilize weather patterns.

Address long-term risks. Assess the far-reaching consequences of ecosystem alterations. Monitor carbon stores sequestered under given management practices and develop or apply models to forecast ecosystem responses several decades into the future.

In addition to mitigating climate change, steps should be taken to prepare ecosystems to withstand climate change impacts. Human activity has impaired the natural resilience of many ecosystems. ESA outlines four adaptation strategies to safeguard ecosystem services in the face of climate change:

Take additional steps to protect water quality and quantity. Freshwater resources are at particular risk from the interaction of climate change and intensification of human use. Rising temperatures have already lowered river flows, warmed surface waters and dried out wetlands. Sustaining freshwater resources is critical to both environmental and public health.

Enable natural species migration across human dominated landscapes. Create and maintain wildlife corridors across jurisdictions and private lands to help species relocate and adapt as habitats shift with climate change. Steps should be taken to restore the ability of native species to migrate across landscapes severely fragmented by human land use.

Improve capacity to predict extreme events. Monitoring and modeling natural disturbance and recovery processes at regional scales will help state and federal agencies understand and respond to novel rates and intensities of environmental change.

Manage collaboratively at the ecosystem level. Many natural resources and services, such as fresh water, clean air and crop pollination, are not contained within jurisdictional boundaries; resource management should reflect this and operate at the ecosystem level.

"Even conservative warming projections show that natural systems will experience unprecedented stresses, including shifting habitats and ecological processes and more frequent and severe natural disturbances, such as fires, floods and droughts," ESA says in the statement. "These unavoidable changes will require management that addresses ecological thresholds, tipping points and other sources of uncertainty."

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, global temperatures could rise 1-6 degrees C by the end of the 21st Century.

"The sooner such strategies are deployed, the more effective they will be in mitigating the extent of change and helping us to adapt to inevitable changes." ESA says in its statement.

###

The Ecological Society of America's statement is available at http://www.esa.org/pao/policyStatements/pdfDocuments/Ecosystem%20Management%20in%20a%20Changing%20Climate.pdf in a Changing Climate.pdf.

The Ecological Society of America is the world's largest professional organization of ecologists, representing 10,000 scientists in the United States and around the globe. Since its founding in 1915, ESA has promoted the responsible application of ecological principles to the solution of environmental problems through ESA reports, journals, research, and expert testimony to Congress. ESA publishes four journals and convenes an annual scientific conference. Visit the ESA website at http://www.esa.org.


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China calls for increased Tiger conservation efforts

TRAFFIC 27 Jan 10;

Beijing, China, 27 January 2010—The State Forestry Administration (SFA) of China has issued a Directive calling for increased protection of wild Tigers through natural habitat management, stronger law enforcement action against illegal trade in Tiger parts and products, stricter regulation of captive breeding regulations and enhanced public awareness campaigns.

The Directive was issued earlier this month, ahead of a key meeting currently underway in Thailand between environment ministers from 13 Asian countries where senior government representatives from Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Russia, Thailand and Vietnam are exploring ways to double the number of wild Tigers within a decade.

The SFA Directive includes a mandate to crackdown on illegal smuggling and trade in Tiger parts and products, specifically asking local forestry bureaus in China to collaborate with other law enforcement agencies to increase monitoring and undertake enforcement measures against such trade.

Poaching of Tigers across Asia coupled with habitat loss has led to a dramatic decline in global Tiger numbers in the wild—from around 100,000 animals a Century ago to approximately 3,200 today. Currently, China has only around 20 wild Amur Tigers.

Although domestic trade in Tiger parts has been illegal in China since 1993, demand for parts, such as Tiger bone for tonic wines and skins for clothing and display, still exists.

In 2008, TRAFFIC’s market surveys in Gansu and Ningxia provinces found the illicit trade in Tiger products had decreased, but had not been eliminated.

The Directive calls for promoting public awareness to reduce consumption of Tiger parts and a public rejection of illegal trade, and suggests encouraging and motivating people to report wildlife crime to the authorities. At the same time, officials who repeatedly ignore public complaints about illegal trade will be held responsible.

The Directive also calls for increased monitoring and management of Tiger captive breeding facilities through creation of a database to track all Tigers births and deaths in such facilities and the secure storage of stockpiles of Tiger bodies and parts. Those facilities without storage capabilities will have to destroy their stockpiles under the supervision of local authorities, and each operation will be required to demonstrate it has met the appropriate conditions before it will be issued with a permit to open up for public viewing.

Another measure called for includes improved protection of Tigers and their prey in the wild, achieved through a combination of research, monitoring, anti-poaching and alleviating human-tiger conflict.

The Directive was published on 4 January 2010 on the SFA website and circulated by official media outlets including Xinhua News Agency and China.org.

The Chinese Year of the Tiger, which begins on 14 February, is widely viewed as a critical one for securing the future of Asia’s flagship mammal species.

“TRAFFIC welcomes the measures proposed by the State Forestry Administration ahead of the Year of the Tiger, which is make or break time for wild Tigers,” said Professor Xu Hongfa, Head of TRAFFIC’s China team.

“2010 will determine if the Tiger’s future burns bright or continues to fade away.” 


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Fishing restrictions aid turtles' recovery in Australia

ABC News 26 Jan 10;

Queensland marine researchers say restrictions imposed on the fishing industry have triggered a landmark nesting season for Bundaberg's endangered sea turtles.

About 400 loggerhead turtles have laid eggs at Mon Repos, near Bundaberg, since November last year.

Dr Col Limpus, from the state Department of Environment and Resource Management, says more turtles are reaching the breeding age of about 30 years.

"It wasn't until 2000 that we had the fisheries regulations requiring the use of turtle exclusion devices, or TEDS, so that turtles didn't drown in the prawn trawl," Dr Limpus said.

"Now, eight years after the legislation became effective, we're seeing our population no longer declining but actually in a recovery mode."


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RM40m swiftlet farm for Sarawak coastal town

Desmond Davidson, New Straits Times 26 Jan 10;

KUCHING: The State Economic Development Corporation and Borneo Resource Synergy Sdn Bhd will jointly develop Sarawak's first swiftlet eco-park in the coastal town of Balingian in Mukah division.

Yesterday, SEDC and BRS inked a RM40 million joint- venture agreement to develop the park at a site 15km from Balingian. They are hoping to start operations by next year.

SEDC will hold 20 per cent of the equity with the remainder held by BRS.

The project would involve the construction of 40 three-storey terrace houses, measuring 20ft by 80ft, and 15 three-storey bungalow units, measuring 35ft by 63ft on an 8-ha site exclusively for the swiftlets.

"This (eco-park) will be the start of an orderly, large and systematic development of the bird's nest industry in Sarawak," SEDC chairman Datuk Talip Zulpilip, who witnessed the signing, said.

Talip, who is also the state's assistant minister of tourism and heritage, said SEDC would also be on the lookout for other partners to open more such parks in other parts of the state.

Bird's nest farming is a lucrative investment. One kilogramme of unprocessed bird's nest currently fetches between RM4,000 and RM5,000.

This lucrative return is the reason why many entrepreneurs in the state wanted to invest in bird's nest farming, Talip said.

However, many started their swiftlet farms by converting empty shoplots in urban and residential areas into birdhouses which contravened the Wildlife Protection (Edible Bird's Nest) Rules 2006.

This had resulted in a crackdown by the authorities that saw swiftlet farms in urban and residential areas either had to be moved out or shut down.

In a statement released at the signing, SEDC said it had been tasked by the government to spearhead a "well-planned, sustainable and eco-friendly swiftlet farming industry in the state".

It added that JV projects, like the one with BRS, would provide alternative venues to swiftlet farmers who were affected by the government's directive to shift their operation to approved sites.

BRS is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a peninsula-based company, Masmeyer Holdings Sdn Bhd.

Masmeyer's principal businesses are property development and investment holding.

The services of Golden Swift Resources Sdn Bhd, a swiftlet farming expert, will be sought for their technical know-how.


SEDC also disclosed that it had been given approval to turn eight lots of 27.93ha in Mukah division into a swiftlet farm.


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Dog meat could come off Chinese menus

Yahoo News 26 Jan 10;

BEIJING (AFP) – Dog and cat meat -- age-old delicacies in China -- could be off the menu in the food-loving nation under its first law against animal abuse, state press said Tuesday.

People gather to watch workers slaughter dogs at a shop selling meat from the creatures.

People who eat either animal, both of which are viewed as promoting bodily warmth, would face fines of up to 5,000 yuan (730 dollars) and up to 15 days in jail if the law is passed, the Chongqing Evening News said.

It said "organisations" involved in the practice would be fined from 10,000 to 500,000 yuan. The report gave no other details.

The law has been at the drafting stage over the past year and the report did not make clear when the legislation was expected to become law.

China's rubber-stamp legislature meets in March but draft legislation can often take years to be approved.

Cruelty to animals and the raising of cat and dog meat for dinner tables remains widespread in China, despite growing consciousness over animal welfare.

Restaurants touting "fragrant meat," a euphemism for dog, can be seen in cities throughout the country, where the fondness for dogs as pets co-exists with a taste for canine meat.

Cat meat is most popular in parts of southern China and there are regular reports of animal lovers attempting to block trucks carrying hundreds or even thousands of cats to meat markets and eventually dinner tables there.

Chinese legal experts call for ban on eating cats and dogs
Widespread and ancient practice of eating dog meat increasingly distasteful for China's growing affluent, pet-loving middle class
Jonathan Watts, guardian.co.uk 26 Jan 10;

Chinese legal experts are proposing a ban on eating dogs and cats in a contentious move to end a culinary tradition dating back thousands of years.

The recommendation will be submitted to higher authorities in April as part of a draft bill to tackle animal abuse.

In ancient times, dog meat was considered a medicinal tonic. Today, it is commonly available throughout the country, but particularly in the north where dog stew is popular for its supposed warming qualities.

In recent years, however, such traditions are increasingly criticised by an affluent, pet-loving, urban middle class. Online petitions against dog and cat consumption have attracted tens of thousands of signatures. Videos showing the maltreatment of farmed dogs have spurred protests at markets where the animals are bought and sold.

But the drafters of the new proposal want far more drastic measures, which would oblige law enforcement authorities to close down thousands of dog restaurants and butchers which supply the meat.

According to the draft, illegal sale or consumption of pets would incur a maximum penalty of 15 days in prison for individuals or a 500,000 yuan fine for businesses. Public security bureaus would be obliged to respond to hotline calls from the public about violations.

"We are proposing that all dog and cat eating should be banned because it is causing many social problems," said Chang Jiwen, a law professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences who heads the drafting team.

He said recent murders and thefts related to the dog meat trade showed that it had become a source of tension, while the economic impact of a ban would be small because an increasingly affluent population was less dependent on dog and cat meat.

The proposal reflects changing public opinion and international input. Drafters at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences have been consulting for more than a year with Britain's Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the US-based International Fund for Animal Welfare.

But the plan for a dog meat ban has stirred up fierce debate between animal welfare groups and defenders of traditional values.

"I support this proposal. Whether you judge this as a question of food security or emotions, there is absolutely no necessity in China for people to eat dogs and cats," said Zeng Li, the founder of the Lucky Cats shelter in Beijing. "We need something more than moral pressure. Beijing's dog restaurants get their meat mainly from vagrant and stolen dogs. In the suburbs, dogs are hung and slaughtered in front of buyers."

Online critics said it was hypocritical to protect only dogs and cats, and that the government should focus on human welfare before protecting animals.

"This is absurd. Why only dogs and cats? How about pigs, cows and sheep," wrote a poster going by the name Mummy on the Xhinua news agency website.

"I hope the experts went to see what laid-off workers and people in rural areas have to eat. They should pay more concern to problems that people really care about," said another contributor under the name Starfish.

Even before the pet meat ban, the draft bill had already provoked controversy. Initial plans for a comprehensive animal welfare law had to be dropped in the face of criticism that human living conditions ought to be the priority at this stage in China's development.

The focus has now been narrowed to prevention of animal abuse, which is defined as inflicting unnecessary pain and brutality. Even so, it is far from certain that the draft will be adopted by the government or the National People's Congress.


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Rare Kenya rhinos de-horned to frustrate poachers

Yahoo News 26 Jan 10;

NAIROBI (AFP) – Four extremely rare Northern White rhinos recently transferred to Kenya from a Czech zoo have been dehorned to protect them from poachers, a conservation group said Tuesday.

"With the increase of poaching in Kenya, we are simply not taking any chances," Elodie Sampere from the Ol Pejeta Conservancy, which is overseeing the animals' acclimatisation told AFP.

"Without a horn, these rhinos are of no value to poachers," she said.

The rhinos, two males and two females, are among only eight members of a very rare sub-species of white rhinos known to be alive worldwide and were transferred back to Kenya with the hope they would reproduce.

Kenyan wildlife rangers earlier this month arrested 12 men from an illicit game trade syndicate suspected of killing a 10-year-old white rhino and hacking off its horns.

The east African country, which has the world's third largest rhino population -- around 600 black and 300 white rhinos -- suffered its worst year for rhino poaching in 2009, when 12 black and six white rhinos were killed.

The illegal trade is driven by Asian and Middle Eastern demand for ivory used in traditional medicines for fevers, convulsions and as an aphrodisiac.

Sampere said that sawing off the four Northern White rhinos' horns would also allow them to grow back straight.

"All the rhinos had horns that didn?t grow upright. This is a result of them being in the zoo and not having trees to rub against," she said.

The conservationist also said that a radio-transmitter the size of a matchbox was screwed into the base of the hacked off horn to enable the tracking of the animals as they are released back into the wild.


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Indonesia launches SMS system for public to report environmental violations

Report environmental violations to 0811 932 932
Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 26 Jan 10;

The government has launched an online system allowing the public to report environmental violations via short message service (SMS).

People can send reports of violations to 0811 932 932 or lodge them online via the State Environment Ministry website: penegakanhukum.menlh.go.id.

“We invite the public to monitor the progress of their complaints. We hope it will force the government or local administrations to do something to improve the environment,” State Environment Ministry compliance deputy Illyas Asaad said in Jakarta on Tuesday .

The ministry would, for example, receive reports on declining air quality, river pollution, or companies damaging the environment, Illyas said.

Illyas promised that his office would follow up on reports within two weeks from the time they were sent.

“We will send our auditors to the field to verify reports. Of course, we will also make it a priority to follow up on bigger cases,” he said.

The office will forward the reports it receives directly to related institutions across the country, and order them to act accordingly.

Green Whistle-Blowing: Now by Text
Jakarta Globe 26 Jan 10;

Did you catch someone in the act of dumping buckets full of trash or toxic material into a river near you? Do you have a burning desire to tell off the government for doing little to halt the destruction of forests? If you want these matters heard and addressed directly by the government, just pick up your mobile phone.

The State Ministry of the Environment on Tuesday invited members of the public to text their environment-related complaints to a new hotline – 0811-932-932. The launch of the number coincides with a new Ministry Web site, penegakanhukum.menlh.go.id, dedicated to news, views, and existing regulations on the environment.

“We received so many complaints, mostly through letters, fax or e-mail, but the methods were ineffective and took a long time. It is simpler for villagers or anybody else to text, rather than find access to the Internet and type out their complaints,” said Ilyas Asaad, deputy minister for environmental compliance. He added that on average the Ministry received 190 complaints a year.

“With the new system, the Ministry is hoping that we can also monitor environmental conditions in Papua. One of the difficulties for monitoring environmental conditions is the relationship between locals and the district or subdistrict administrations,” Ilyas said.

He said administrators across the nation were still finding it a challenge to incorporate environmental issues in their local regulations.

“Ideally, all complaints should be taken into account. But because we still lack resources and the necessary funding, we need to set priorities and will, for example, go after larger companies instead of smaller ones,” Ilyas said.

Berry Nahdian Furqon, executive director of the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi), said the biggest challenge for the ministry was the steps the government would take once it received the complaints.

“The operational action counts. The relationship between the central government and regional administrations has been quite loose. The Ministry needs all the help they can receive from local administrations,” Berry said.

Furthermore, he said that green groups could use the system to address their complaints but they would still maintain their own independent methods to express their opinions.


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Indonesian government issues decree on green building designs

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 26 Jan 10;

The government has issued its first-ever decree on green building standards to promote low-carbon architecture and as part of national efforts to mitigate and adapt the severe impacts of climate change.

The decree, scheduled to be enforced this year, would still be on a voluntary basis for the country’s building owners.

“We will first target hotels, building offices and apartments in the big cities since they contribute significantly to carbon emissions,” Dadang Hilman, head of the adaptation on climate change unit at the Office of State Minister for the Environment, told The Jakarta Post on Monday.

The decree set nine standards of green building from eco-label materials, low carbon fuel, water and waste management and indoor air quality.

The decree said the materials used in the green building should have eco-label certificates and be locally sourced.

In terms of energy, the building should set facilities to conserve energy and promote alternative fuel with low carbon emissions.

Owners of green buildings should also build facilities to conserve water and harvest rain water as alternative sources to groundwater.

The decree said that well-designed buildings would help reduce the amount of waste generated by the occupants by providing composting facilities.

“The most important thing is the green buildings should be prepared for the impact of climate change, such as floods, typhoons, storms, landslides and rising sea levels,” Dadang said.

He said green certificates would be issued by independent green building certification institutes selected by his office.

These certificates would be reviewed every two years.

Dadang said the decree on green building standards was part of the government’s plan to move toward a low-carbon economy by investing more in energy efficiency and halting deforestation.

Indonesia is one of the most vulnerable countries to warmer temperatures with experts saying it would lead to more natural disasters.

Almost all the provinces have suffered natural disasters causing huge losses, which has had a negative economic impact both provincially and nationally.

Experts said the excessive combustion of fossil-based fuels was the main contributor to the global warming, which would subsequently threaten the clean water supply in the dry seasons and flood incidents in the rainy period.

Indonesia, which depends on fossil fuels as its main source of energy, has issued a series of regulation to cut the emissions for energy but its implementation remained poor.

Many countries have developed their own standards for green buildings, such as Australia, Brazil, China, Hong Kong, Germany, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and the United States.


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Sarawak needs coal-fired power plants: Awang Tengah

The Star 27 Jan 10;

KUCHING: Sarawak needs coal-fired power to complement its hydro power generation, especially in the Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy (Score), to meet high demand at energy-intensive industries, said Sarawak’s Second Minister for Planning and Resource Management Datuk Awang Tengah Ali Hassan.

In rebuking a claim by Miri-based NGO Borneo Resources Institute that the Sarawak government had classified the mining and exploitation of coal reserves under renewable energy projects, he said: “Yes, we know coal is not a renewable energy.”

“However, with a combination of resources, coal can be used as a source of power to meet demand from energy-intensive industries in the state,” he told reporters after opening Arcardia Apartments built by Lee Onn Construction Sdn Bhd here.

Borneo Resources had challenged the Sarawak government to explain how coal mining could be categorised as renewable energy and included among the projects under the Score initiative.

It was reported that there was 400 million tonnes of coal deposits at Merit Pila in Kapit Division.

Besides the state’s 1,000MW domestic demand for energy, Awang Tengah said that Sarawak needed to increase power supply to woo factories and smelting companies.

He said the RM6bil Bakun Hydroelectric Project was expected to generate 300MW this year and this would be increased to 2,400MW by 2012.

The proposed 900MW Murum dam project, currently under construction and expected to come on stream in 2013, would not generate enough electricity to meet demand from heavy industries, he said.

“When all the development comes in, especially energy intensive industries, we will require a lot of power.

“Some investors are committed, so we need to tally their needs. We are looking at Baleh, Baram and other areas like Limbang and Lawas. We have done the technical studies. When they are implemented depends on Sarawak’s needs,” he said. — Bernama


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Rich coal vein left untapped in Borneo

Roy Goh, New Straits Times 26 Jan 10;

BALIKPAPAN: This city has one of the richest coal deposits in Borneo but no one has plans to mine it.

"Scrape a little bit of earth and you can find coal," said city planner Dr Suryanto MM, adding that preserving the environment is a bigger priority than earning riches.

This has been the Indonesian government's general direction in the last several years on the issues of environmental protection as well as global warming.

Suryanto said the government had a policy to preserve 52 per cent of the city's 500 sq km land area as forest reserves.

He said this during a dialogue and fact-finding mission from Sabah led by former chief minister Datuk Harris Mohd Salleh at the city's government office here.

Harris, along with a group of entrepreneurs, journalists and representatives from the Sabah Indonesian Consulate are here to learn more about economic opportunities in Kalimantan as well as its policies to help foster better understanding and strengthen relationships.

"With the effects of global warming, I think it is pertinent for us to play our part as the green lung of the world. We need to balance development and the conservation of the environment."

Suryanto said even though there were development projects, strict limits or criteria were set before they were allowed to proceed.

"For instance, we plan to reclaim about 400ha of sea near the city centre to build a coastal road that would ease traffic in the long term. As it is now, we are using coal fired plants to generate electricity."

He said coal used at the plants were brought in from other parts of Kalimantan.

The city had also set international standards of approval for major development projects, he said.


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No EIA, no coal mining in Kalimantan: Indonesian Ministry

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 26 Jan 10;

To prevent further environmental damage, the government has said it would revoke the licenses of mining firms operating in Kalimantan that do not have environmental impact analysis documents (Amdal).

The State Environment Ministry said it would use its new authority, as stated in the 2009 Environmental Law, which gives the ministry the authority to revoke business permits.

“We have sent a fact-finding team to South Kalimantan to check whether coal mining firms have secured Amdal,” the ministry’s deputy for spatial planning, Hermien Rosita, said Monday.

“The team will also verify if mining firms have complied with the Amdal papers.”

She said the office also planned to send another team to East Kalimantan to assess the coal mining companies operating in the area.

The enforcement of Amdal will help protect ailing environmental conditions across Kalimantan, she said.

“We have long been informed of the poor environmental management of several mining firms in Kalimantan,” Hermien said.

However, she said, as the authority to issue Amdal had been designated to local administrations, the ministry’s authority to intervene had been restricted.

Article 77 of the new environmental law stipulates the environment minister can impose administrative sanctions on business owners and their activities if local administrations intentionally fail to deal with serious environmental violations.

Article 111 stipulates that officials who issue environmental permits without Amdal will be subject to a maximum three years in jail and/or a Rp 3 billion fine.

Kalimantan, the country’s richest province for coal deposits, has long been under pressure to better regulate huge and overlapping licenses awarded to companies to exploit coal.

Nine regents in South Kalimantan province for example, have granted principal permits to 229 mining companies allowing them to mine deposits of coal in 200,000 hectares of the Meratus protected forest.

East Kalimantan only has 19.8 million hectares of land, but regional chiefs have granted overlapping permits, mainly to mining and plantation firms in about 21.7 million hectares.

Activists have said that selling business permits to dig the natural resources had been a common practice to increase the local budget.

The government itself admitted that many companies had no Amdal documents before commencing operation.

The Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) said that many existing Amdal documents were made through a “copy and paste” system without discussion with local communities about the projects.

Amdal papers are basic documents to determine whether business activities are environmentally feasible in a particular area.

The documents are required for the issuance of business permits. Since the implementation of regional autonomy, local administrations have been authorized to manage natural resources in their area.

A study from the state environment minister showed that only a quarter of the country’s 460 municipal and regency administrations have set up Amdal commissions to issue the document.


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Indonesia cuts capacity of planned geothermal plants

Muklis Ali Reuters 26 Jan 10;

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia has cut the planned capacity of geothermal power plants it will start building this year by 18 percent to 3,900 megawatts (MW), an official at the mines and energy ministry said on Tuesday.

Indonesia has established two programmes to increase power generation by 10,000 MW in a bid to resolve chronic power shortages in the country.

One of these "crash programmes" originally had nearly half or 4,733 MW of its power slated to come from geothermal sources across Indonesia.

"After we examined it carefully, we can only build 3,900 MW of the geothermal projects for the second crash programme. We expect those projects to be concluded in 2014," J. Purwono, director general of electricity at the ministry, told reporters.

He said state electricity company PT Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN) is expected to build a combined total of 880 MW of geothermal power plants in the second crash programme and the rest are expected to be built by the private sector.

"PLN will build the geothermal power plants and it will buy the steam from geothermal operated by state oil firm Pertamina's unit," he said.

He also said the government may allow PLN to amend an agreement it made with Sarulla geothermal developer on electricity prices from the project.

PLN awarded a contract in 2006 to a consortium of PT Medco Energi Internasional, Ormat Technologies, and Itochu Corp to build a 330-megawatt geothermal power plant in Sarulla, North Sumatra province.

The Sarulla developer asked for an electricity price revision but the talks have stalled in recent years, holding up the project.

"The government has allowed PLN to settle the Sarulla project. But PLN has to ask state audit agency opinion first. If the audit agency say the project is okay then PLN can amend its contract and revise the price," Purwono said.

Indonesia is tapping alternative sources of energy to meet rising power demand and cut consumption of expensive crude oil as its own reserves dwindle.

It also has rising greenhouse gas emissions, but the clean energy source projects are not expected to generate carbon credits. Indonesia has pledged to cut emissions by 26 percent from business as usual levels by 2020.

The vast archipelago, with hundreds of active and extinct volcanoes, has the potential to produce an estimated 27,000 MW of electricity from geothermal sources.

However, that potential remains largely untapped because the high cost of geothermal energy makes the price of electricity generated this way expensive.

PLN has 25,000 MW of generating capacity but daily output is far less because most of its plants are old and inefficient.

(Editing by Neil Chatterjee)


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Indonesia Readies $1b ‘Green’ Fund to Spur Clean Investments, Reduce Emissions

Jakarta Globe 26 Jan 10;

A planned new national fund to drive infrastructure developments that help cut greenhouse gas emissions will be running this year with $1 billion in it, a Finance Ministry official said on Tuesday.

At global climate talks in Copenhagen last month, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced the plan to develop the Indonesia Green Investment Fund, aimed at catalyzing development that could speed economic growth, boost food and clean water production and help cut emissions blamed for global warming.

Indonesia has promised to slash its emissions by at least 26 percent from “business as usual” levels by 2020, but Yudhoyono has also vowed to boost economic growth to 7 percent or more by 2014.

Indonesia’s sovereign wealth fund, the Government Investment Unit, will put $100 million into the fund, with a further $900 million coming from foreign governments including Norway and Australia, as well as institutional investors, said Edward Gustely, a senior Ministry of Finance adviser.

“We’re in the initial stages, but the target is to have this fund operational this year,” Gustely said, adding that it would rival Brazil’s Amazon Fund in size and scope. “There’s no reason why this can’t, in the next five years, scale to $5 billion or more.”

Brazil launched its Amazon Fund in 2008 to promote sustainable development and scientific research in the world’s largest rain forest, with donations from Europe.

Indonesia last year became the first country to launch a legal framework for a UN-backed scheme called Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation, which allows polluters to earn tradeable carbon credits by paying developing nations not to chop down their trees.

The green investment fund will not offer loans or grants but rather top-off funding for projects where a bank lender is seeking an additional cash injection.

“Many technology providers and project sponsors don’t have the balance sheet to fulfill the required equity needed to secure financing,” said Gustely. “We would come in and play a catalyst role to ensure good projects with good asset quality, with good expertise and proper management, can be deployed and proceed.”

Projects like the Indonesia Green Investment Fund are a way for countries to take the initiative on climate change, Gustely said. “This is driven by creating more food, water and energy in a sustainable fashion while trying to achieve Indonesia’s growth objectives,” he said.

Fitrian Ardiansyah, climate change program director for World Wildlife Fund Indonesia, welcomed the fund but said more needed to be done to reduce Indonesia’s greenhouse gas emissions.

“The Indonesian government heavily subsidies fossil fuels, but investment in renewable energy sources is too expensive. The government must help the private sector by making investment in renewable energy sources cheaper, which will address the problem. But at the moment coal plants continue to be built, which does not help,” he said.

Reuters


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Bulgaria's 'green' energy boom sparks fears

Diana Simeonova Yahoo News 26 Jan 10;

SOFIA (AFP) – Bulgaria is undergoing a boom in the renewable energy sector that experts warn could see an influx of dodgy investment and actually end up doing more harm than good for the environment.

And the government -- the main driver behind the boom -- is taking note.

This month it imposed a half-year moratorium on new "green" energy projects in a bid to sift out those with serious financing and prevent a vital Black Sea bird migration route from being built over with wind farms.

"Too many tickets have been sold for this show," Economy and Energy Minister Traicho Traykov told an investors' forum earlier this month.

"We need to get the sector in order," he said.

The number of "green" energy projects in Bulgaria has exploded from almost nil just a few years ago to a proposed 12,000 megawatts (MW) from wind farms, solar energy parks and small hydropower stations, a government expert said.

That figure is equal to Bulgaria's current installed capacity and would be impossible to handle by the grid.

Experts agree that many of the planned projects will never actually come to fruition due to a lack of funding.

The current boom originates in a European Union-wide agreement under which Bulgaria has said 16 percent of electricity consumption will come from renewable energy sources by 2020 compared with under eight percent now.

The government has ordered the national electricity company and private utilities to connect all green-power capacity to the grid as soon as it is up and running and buy power generated in this way at fixed preferential prices.

With such attractive incentives in place, investors -- many still smarting from the burst bubble in Bulgaria's construction sector -- appear to see the renewable energy sector as a sure-fire return on their money.

Operators have already connected some 350 MW from wind turbines and solar batteries and signed preliminary contracts to connect a further 1,451 MW.

This will practically fill the whole capacity of the network, said Georgy Mikov, executive director of national electricity company NEK.

Moreover, NEK estimates show that about 2,000 MW of green sources would be sufficient for Bulgaria to meet its 16-percent green-power target by 2020.

But the renewable energy producers themselves say no less than 5,000-6,000 MW would be necessary.

The moratorium will give the government time to win approval for a national plan for the development of renewables by 2020, said energy minister Traykov.

The government is particularly keen to reduce harm to the Black Sea Via Pontica bird migration route, a prime spot for the construction of wind parks.

It also seeks to curb wind farm construction in protected nature zones and solar energy park installations on fertile farmland.

The European Commission last year launched an infringement procedure against Bulgaria for allowing wind turbines on the Via Pontica route.

The authorities also want to be able to select the more serious projects with secure financial backing from the mass of applications. One way would be to impose expiry deadlines on construction permits, experts suggested.

If operators know which areas are designated for green-power development, they will be better able to upgrade the grid in that area and connect the new capacities, officials said.

Environmental organisations are supporting the curbs, with Bulgarian group For The Nature and WWF Bulgaria saying in a statement: "We fully support the development of renewable energy but not at the expense of protected territory."


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Indonesia to hold international Muslim conference on climate change

Antara 26 Jan 10;

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Indonesia will host an international Moslem conference on climate change, which will be the first of its kind in Bogor, West Java, on March 1-2, 2010, a committee member said.

Ismid Hadad, the head of the steering committee, said in a press conference at Kehati Foundation here on Tuesday that the conference is the following agenda of the Moslem Seven Year Action Plan for Climate Change (M7YAP) declared in Istambul, Turkey, early in June 2009.

Ismid, who is also the head of the advisory board of Kehati said the conference would discuss three issues, namely climate change and actions Moslems in the world could do and the establishment of Moslem Association for Climate Change Action (MACCA) which is aimed at becoming an umbrella organization to accommodate activities and the implementation of the seven year action plan in various countries and Moslem communities in the world.

The third issue is the planned declaration of four green cities in Moslem countries or the Al Khaer City, including Bogor in Indonesia, Madina in Saudi Arabia, Salleh in Morocco and Sanaa in Yemen.

The four cities` development will be monitored for seven years by MACCA.

Ismid said the committee would invite around 150 environment experts, academics and clerics from 30 countries with Moslem population, such as the United Arab Emirates, Brunei Darussalam, Malaysia, India, Africa, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait, Egypt, Britain and Indonesia.

Fauzi Masud from the forestry ministry said the organizer would also invite several mayors from Moslem countries, such as from Madina, Salleh and Sanaa.

Fachruddin Mangunjaya from the Conservation International Indonesia said the M7YAP had a vision of consolidating funds from Moslems in the world to be contributed to climate change actions.

Among the programs to be carried out by the M7YAP are establishing waqf bodies in the year ahead to implement their climate change plans and develop green Moslem cities in the world.

The conference will be held in cooperation with several private organizations, such as Muhammadiyah, Nahdlatul Ulama, the Indonesian Council of Ulemas, the Kehati Foundation and the Conservation International Indonesia with support from the ministries of forestry, environment, religious affairs and the Bogor city administration, the National Council on Climate Change and the Earth Mate Dialogue Center based in London.


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Japan sticks to 25 percent carbon cut target

Reuters 26 Jan 10;

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan has stuck to its offer to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent by 2020 for a U.N. accord on condition major emitters agree on an ambitious climate deal, a statement from the foreign ministry showed on Tuesday.

The target, based on 1990 levels, was submitted on Tuesday to the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat under a climate accord worked out by major emitters led by China and the United States last month in Copenhagen.

The accord said rich nations should submit by January 31 targets for cuts in emissions by 2020 and for developing nations to outline actions for slowing the rise of emissions to help avert heatwaves, sandstorms, floods and rising sea levels.

"I hope that all countries will submit (a target), but ... what's important in order to cut CO2 and to stop global warming is for the United States and China, the greatest emitters, to submit this," environment minister Sakihito Ozawa was quoted by a ministry official as saying in a news conference.

Japan had hoped to play a big negotiating role at the climate talks in December with its target, so big emitters such as the United States, China and India join a new pact that goes beyond 2012, when the first phase of the Kyoto Protocol ends.

But the Copenhagen talks ended with a weak deal. The meeting failed to adopt the Copenhagen Accord to curb climate change after opposition from Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Sudan, meaning the conference merely "took note" of the plan.

China, India, Brazil and South Africa promised on Sunday to submit their own climate action plans to the United Nations by January 31.

Experts say the total cuts offered by rich countries at the talks amounted to no more than 18 percent and fall far short of the 25-40 percent U.N. scientists consider necessary to avert dangerous climate change.

(Reporting by Chisa Fujioka and Yoko Kubota; Editing by Jerry Norton)


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