Best of our wild blogs: 1 Feb 10


Elusive spirits
from The annotated budak

Celebrating a Parasite a Day
from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Common Kingfisher and the fish that got away
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Tagged Myna feeding nectar
from Urban Forest

It’s not final till the final minute
from Black Dillenia

Beginner's luck really works wonders
from The Simplicities in Life

1st Hunting-Seeking - Knobblies Galore!
from The Simplicities in Life

Monkeys getting more daring at Forest Walk
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

Starling and bulbul feeding on Macaranga sp.
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Monday Morgue: 1st February 2010
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales


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Shark's fins may actually be harmful

Letter from Lee Shyh Yao, Today Online 29 Jan 10;

During the Chinese New Year season, Chinese restaurants heavily promote their shark's fin menu.

As many might know, Asian fleets would go out to sea and fin the sharks alive, then throw them back into the ocean to bleed to death. The dying sharks could sit on the sea bed for days, sometimes up to several weeks before they finally die.

Long-lining, a fishing method often used to capture sharks, uses hundreds to thousands of baited hooks attached to each fishing line going up to 50 miles into the sea. This results in unwanted "by-catches", often entangling and killing other marine creatures including dolphins, seals, whales, turtles, and other fishes.

For every 10 pounds of fish killed, approximately 100 pounds of marine life are thrown away. In addition, edible fins only make up approximately 2 per cent of a shark's total weight. We are taking the life of one shark, possibly endangered, plus all others that were killed "by accident", for the sake of this.

Incredulous wastage of marine life aside, we are neglecting the fact that several species of sharks are endangered. Yet there's no proper governance in place and we are free to trade their fins. Additionally, sharks being apex predators of the ocean, have the power to collapse the entire ocean's ecosystem with their decline. This is unlike the decline of any other species in the ocean which could cause devastating impacts, but chances of their collapsing the entire ecosystem is not as high as that of sharks'.

Reports by the US Food & Drug Administration also show that the mercury levels in sharks is one of the highest among marine fishes, at 0.988 PPM (mercury concentration). This means that sharks have mercury concentration that is 70 times higher than that of salmon, sardines, or oysters (Ref: http://www.fda.gov/Food/FoodSafety/Product-SpecificInformation/Seafood/FoodbornePathogensContaminants/Methylmercury/ucm115644.htm ). Pregnant women and young children are strongly advised against consuming shark.

While lots of Singaporeans would lament that eating shark's fin is a tradition that's hard to change, I'd say, its time to start thinking and weighing the pros and cons. Let's also not forget that headhunting was a tradition too. So was cannibalism.

Shark's fins should be banned. Stop ordering shark's fins, and stop consuming them, even if it's been paid for by someone else. If you are still not persuaded not to eat shark's fins, eat, but hopefully with much guilt.


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Are volunteer's motives important?

Straits Times 1 Feb 10;

A 2008 survey showed that 23 per cent of youths aged 15 to 24 were volunteers, the highest percentage among all age groups. But are they volunteering for the right reasons, or because they feel obliged? And is that better than not volunteering at all? YouthInk writers respond.

Don't just do it as a one-off

MANY of my peers choose the easy route of one-off volunteer activities. But if one really wants to make a significant difference, I suggest they take up the challenge of organising their own long-term volunteer project. I believe this is the true test of one's passion to serve society.

Three years ago, being young and ambitious and determined to define what community service meant to me, I decided to develop an original community service project. I wanted to organise camps and workshops for under-privileged children.

Even though my first proposal was rejected outright by a voluntary welfare organisation, I was undaunted.

I revised my proposal, and after a month, approached the Chinese Development Assistance Council (CDAC). Its manager welcomed me warmly, listened patiently and gave me advice.

Over the next 11/2 years, I realised that community service shouldn't be for the hours clocked, but rather the sense of achievement and knowledge that one has made a difference to someone's life.

I made close friends with my team members and the children, and to my delight, my juniors volunteered to take over the helm and continue liaising with CDAC after I left junior college.

I certainly look forward to incorporating community service into my daily life.

Nicholas Lim, 20, will read business at Nanyang Technological University this year.

Volunteer out of passion

WHEN I was in secondary school and junior college, community involvement formed a significant portion of our CCA records.

The practical student's only motivation was to chalk up the minimum required hours, while others chalked up 80 hours so as to get an A. Call me cynical, but I am pretty sure these are the reasons many youths volunteer.

Now that I am out of the system, I volunteer only if I am convinced it is for a worthy cause, and better yet if I can combine it with my passion, which is dance.

Working as a part-time dance instructor, I conducted a class for a group of intellectually disabled students from Minds Towner Gardens School. It was a learning experience for me as much as it was for them.

Some of my friends have also volunteered with Redeafination, a hip-hop dance group for the hearing impaired.

I have seen these hearing-impaired dancers and am truly impressed by their grit and courage. Their disability is no hindrance to them in pursuing their craft and they have deeply inspired me.

Chew Zhi Wen, 22, is a second-year law student at the National University of Singapore (NUS).

Commit for a longer term

HAVING more volunteers may not be an advantage if they leave after only a short while, as it requires resources to manage and groom each one.

After four years with Aiesec, an organisation that trains youth leaders to embark on international exchanges and run their own community service projects, I have regularly seen two-thirds of new members leave after only a year.

Thankfully, about 70 of the 200- strong Singapore chapter of Aiesec stay to contribute for two years or more.

They take up leadership roles, transfer their experience to new members as mentors, improve on existing functions, and ensure that new long-term initiatives are implemented.

For the good of the organisation, volunteers should commit for a longer period of time and introduce more sustainable initiatives. This will increase the impact of their efforts as the organisation benefits from having a larger pool of experienced volunteers.

Kenny Tan, 24, is a final-year economics student at Singapore Management University (SMU).

Touching lives

IN JUNIOR college, I didn't put much thought into selecting where I volunteered because I felt pressured to complete the mandatory six-hour requirement for community involvement.

I took the easy way out and volunteered with the National Library Board. Looking back, my choice was meaningless as I felt obliged to do it; there was no burning zeal that compelled me to do more than clock in the required hours.

I realised what I truly wanted was to directly touch the lives of others, such as those from old folk's homes and orphanages.

So I volunteered at a family service centre. I was asked to clean up the centre, which had not been maintained for some time.

Although I did not contribute much, it was definitely worth it because I knew that I had performed a vital task.

Conclusion: Only altruistic motives should govern one's desire to volunteer.

Muhammad Farouq Osman, 21, is a first-year sociology major at NUS.

The end justifies the means

SMU undergraduates must fulfil a quota of Community Involvement Programme (CIP) hours. Masses of students go for overseas CIP or engage in some large-scale CIP during the holidays.

I believe most do so because putting in the CIP hours is one graduation criterion, hence there are many student-initiated projects. This is painfully evident when, in a bid to get participants, some projects guarantee that participation will allow students to get their CIP hours over and done with.

But I don't think the source of motivation matters, as society still benefits. Beneficiaries would be worse off if they relied only on a small group of altruistic individuals. It is better to receive some sort of help than no help at all.

Furthermore, the projects that students come up with do meet their objectives of raising funds and awareness, or providing general assistance to the beneficiaries.

Owen Yeo, 21, is a first-year social sciences student at SMU.


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On a mission for nature: Pavan Sukhdev

Banker takes unpaid leave to champion green cause
Ravi Velloor, Straits Times 1 Feb 10;

DAVOS: Do I need another condominium in Singapore to be truly contented?

That is the question Mr Pavan Sukhdev asked himself two years ago when he was chief operating officer for emerging markets worldwide at Deutsche Bank.

In May 2008, Mr Sukhdev, who ran one of the most profitable arms of Deutsche Bank from London, gave up his million-dollar bonuses to take unpaid leave and follow his passion for the protection of nature.

He now leads a global study on green economics, supported by the European Union and the United Nations Environmental Programme. UNEP's Green Economy Initiative includes the The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity study, the Green Economy Report and the Green Jobs Report.

'No more pushing money markets for me, it is all about natural capital now,' says the 49-year-old banker, who owns a 3,800 sq ft apartment in Singapore's Arcadia Road, as well as sumptuous homes in London and New Delhi.

He also owns a rainforest 130km west of Cairns. That was a result of the guilt pangs he felt on account of his carbon footprint from the ceaseless travelling he did while based in Singapore some years ago as head of Asia-Pacific money markets.

'The only way I could give back to nature was by buying up land and growing a rainforest,' he told The Straits Times on the sidelines of the annual World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos.

'India had too many local hassles so I picked a 16.2ha site in Australia.'

People like Mr Sukhdev are weighing in on the climate change issue and influencing a rising body of thought that growth cannot be measured purely in terms of expansion of gross domestic product but must account for the use of natural resources as well. Appropriately, this year's WEF meeting was labelled Green Davos.

On Saturday, the International Monetary Fund used the venue to announce a multi-billion dollar green fund for financing the shift to a low-carbon world as it rebuilds from the economic crisis.

The fund, financed through additional Special Drawing Rights, could climb to as much as US$100 billion (S$140 billion) in a few years.

In December, the global summit on climate change in Copenhagen failed to find agreement on extending the Kyoto Protocol from 2013. There is no reason to expect that the next ministerial meeting in Cancun, Mexico, will produce more concrete results.

The economic crisis curbed energy usage and greenhouse emissions, but also affected investments in alternative energy. Nevertheless, many top executives of global companies expressed determination at Davos to invest in low carbon technologies. Such sentiments came laced with wariness that rival companies - or countries - may be harbouring 'free-rider' hopes of cashing in on the loss of competitiveness of companies that spend heavily to keep their products green.

Despite the failure of the Copenhagen talks, one thing that was evident the past week was that there is no question that the issue of green economics and green business has gathered momentum.

'I am moving so fast,' says Mr Sukhdev, who turned vegetarian some months ago after reading that nearly a third of the land on earth is used to grow livestock for meat.

'The beauty is, people are listening and life has taken on an entirely new meaning.'


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Project to develop former Changi hospital into spa resort shelved

Imelda Saad, Channel NewsAsia 31 Jan 10;

SINGAPORE: A S$20m makeover to convert the former Changi General Hospital into a luxurious spa resort has been shelved.

Separately, plans to develop a former military camp for commercial use have also stalled.

Changi Point is located in an idyllic part of eastern Singapore, a perfect getaway for stressed urbanites.

Tapping on the potential of the area, land authorities have earmarked several state buildings for commercial use.

These include the 70-year-old former Changi General Hospital. Tender for this site was awarded to Premium Pacific, a subsidiary of Bestway Properties, for a proposed spa and resort development.

The project was to have been completed by the first half of 2008. But today, the building stands vacant.

The Singapore Land Authority (SLA) said the site was returned to the state on January 11 this year upon expiry of the initial three-year term lease.

When contacted, the developer declined to comment on reasons for the project falling through.

Property analysts said the reasons could include developers not being able to meet conditions tied to the preservation of a historical site.

Nicholas Mak, real estate lecturer at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, said: "Sometimes it could be (because the developer could not meet the required) modifications to the building.

"Sometimes it could be... for example, if the building was originally earmarked for hospitality, the developer may find that they may not be able to find a tenant for hospitality use, but they may find one perhaps for commercial use which may not be in the authorities' original plan."

Nearby, a former military camp at Hendon Road had been put up for hotel use. The project has also stalled. The SLA said the bidders had "failed to meet the tender requirements".

Responding to queries from MediaCorp, the SLA and the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) said the pace of development is market driven. It added the stalled projects will not affect the overall vision to develop Changi Point into a leisure destination.

Analysts also cited Changi's rustic charm as a draw. Mr Mak said: "The plan to transform Changi into a recreation area is a more medium- to long-term plan and it is important to find the right kind of uses or tenants or developers in that area than to rush through the process and end up having a wrong mix for that area."

Both SLA and URA said they are working together to put up the sites for suitable uses in the near future. They also pointed to other projects at Changi that have taken off. These include converting the single-storey Art-Deco style house, built in 1934, into a seafood restaurant.

Meanwhile, a project to develop the site at a former commando headquarters at Fairy Point Hill into a hotel is ongoing. The first phase of that development is expected to be completed by the end of this year.

- CNA/ir

Building plans in the east go awry
Imelda Saad Today Online 1 Feb 10;

SINGAPORE - The area is located in an idyllic part of Singapore, and tapping on its potential, the authorities had earmarked several state buildings for commercial use.

But two projects in Changi have yet to take off in an ideal way.

The first, a $20-million makeover to convert the former Changi General Hospital into a luxurious spa resort has been shelved, while plans to develop a former military camp at Hendon Road for hotel use have also stalled.

The tender for the 70-year-old former Changi General Hospital had been awarded to Premium Pacific, a subsidiary of Bestway Properties, for a proposed spa and resort development.

This was to have been completed by the first half of 2008.

The Singapore Land Authority (SLA) said the site was returned to the state on Jan 11 upon expiry of the initial three-year term lease.

When contacted, the developer declined to comment on reasons for the project falling through.

Mr Nicholas Mak, real estate lecturer at Ngee Ann Polytechnic said sometimes, reasons could include developers not being able to meet conditions tied to the preservation of a historical site, such as the modifications to the building.

Or, "if the building was originally earmarked for hospitality, the developer may find that they may not be able to find a tenant for hospitality use but they may find one perhaps for commercial use, which may not be in the authorities' original plan", said Mr Mak.

On the Hendon Road hotel project, the SLA said the bidders had "failed to meet the tender requirements".

Responding to queries from MediaCorp, the SLA and the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) said the pace of development is market driven, but added the stalled projects will not affect the overall vision to develop Changi Point into a leisure destination.

Mr Mak said: "The plan to transform Changi into a recreation area is a more medium- to long-term plan and it is important to find the right kind of uses or tenants or developers in that area than to rush through the process and end up having a wrong mix for that area."

Both SLA and URA said they are working together to put up the sites for suitable uses in the near future. They also pointed to other projects at Changi that have taken off.

These include converting the single-storey Art-Deco style house, built in 1934, into a seafood restaurant, and the ongoing development of the former commando headquarters at Fairy Point Hill into a hotel.


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Tests on for Underground Science City

Soil, rock analysis part of ongoing feasibility studies
Ronnie Lim, Business Times 1 Feb 10;

DEVELOPMENT of the planned Underground Science City (USC) at Kent Ridge is gaining momentum, with JTC Corporation now embarking on a thorough soil and rock investigation of the site.

This follows its award of a tender in December to a Swiss-Singapore consortium to get detailed designs and cost estimates for the project which spans a 20-hectare geological formation below Science Parks 1, 2 and 3 as well as Kent Ridge Park.

The consortium of Amberg Engineering and Jurong Consultants has a 13-month timeline to complete that study, with the results expected in January next year, a JTC spokeswoman said.

Amberg specialises in underground construction like road and railway tunnels and has built caverns for the Swiss Army and Swiss Air Force while Jurong Consultants is part of the Jurong International Group.

Jurong International said on its website that the study will "look into the potential of underground caverns for research laboratories and data centres. It will reassess the maximum build size for the cavern complex as well as other environmental and demographic factors".

The JTC spokewoman said that the latest soil and rock study - a tender for which was called on Friday - is part of ongoing feasibility studies for the project. "It is still at conceptual stage at this point," she added.

The soil and rock investigation is expected to take about four months.

The appointed consultant-contractor will undertake detailed studies like rock core drillings to obtain data down to approximately 150 metres, and to investigate the quality and properties of bedrock at the site.

The consultant will also need to have specialists such as an engineering geologist or geotechnical engineer, an experienced drilling specialist and a geophysicist for the study.

Additionally, the JTC tender also specified that the contractor should have a geologist who has good knowledge and 10 years̢۪ experience in local geology in Singapore or similar soil/rock formations like the Jurong Formation.

With land getting scarce, the USC is one of several underground projects which Singapore is now pursuing.


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Failed Efforts in Protecting Biodiversity

Tom Zeller Jr., The New York Times 31 Jan 10;

NEW YORK — The year 2010 is, among other things, the International Year of Biodiversity.

If you did not know that — and if you are not quite sure what biodiversity even means — you are almost certainly not alone.

In a survey conducted by Gallup in 2007, 64 percent of European Union citizens either had never heard of the word (34 percent) or had heard of it but had no idea what it meant (30 percent).

For the record, the word — a conflation of “biological diversity” — is variously defined, but I will borrow from the Center for International Environmental Law, a nonprofit organization with offices in the United States and Switzerland.

“Biodiversity is the variability of all living organisms,” the center said, “of the genes of all these organisms and of the terrestrial, aquatic and marine ecosystems of which they are part.”

And then there is this: “4 out of 10 children can’t tell the difference between a wasp and a bee,” The Daily Mail reported last autumn on the release of survey results that examined general knowledge of nature among British children ages 5 to 10. The survey also found that 60 percent of British children could not distinguish between a frog and a toad, and 25 percent could not identify a beaver.

That developed societies are losing touch with the natural world is not exactly news: A 2002 British study, for example, found that the average 8-year-old could more readily identify Pikachu, Metapod and Wigglytuff — characters from Pokemon, the Japanese trading-card game — than native species in their communities, including otters, beetles and oak trees.

Nor, obviously, are such findings confined to Europe. Last year, for example, the U.S. Forest Service, citing numbers from the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, reported that American children spent, on average, 50 percent less time outdoors than they did 20 years ago.

According to Ahmed Djoghlaf, the executive secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity — an international treaty adopted in 1992 under the auspices of the United Nations Environment Program — the growing disconnect between modern society and the wider biosphere has implications far beyond endangered polar bears.

“We are losing biodiversity at an unprecedented rate,” he said.

The convention — officially adopted by 193 countries, excluding, most notably, the United States — notes that “at least 40 percent of the world’s economy and 80 percent of the needs of the poor are derived from biological resources.”

As well, “the richer the diversity of life, the greater the opportunity for medical discoveries, economic development, and adaptive responses to such new challenges as climate change,” it says.

Eight years ago, parties to the accord committed to achieving by 2010 a “significant reduction of the current rate of biodiversity loss at the global, regional and national level.”

The International Year of Biodiversity arises from that goal, and a meeting is planned in Nagoya, Japan, in October to assess international progress toward it.

So far, Mr. Djoghlaf said, his office has received 110 national reports on biodiversity loss. “There is not a single one, from the U.K. to Haiti,” he said, “in which they achieved their targets.”

Meanwhile, the wildly complex interactions and interdependencies between climate and planetary life are revealing increasingly dire stakes, as global warming leads to the shriveling of biologically diverse — and carbon dioxide-absorbing — forests and wetlands, which in turn contributes to yet more warming.

Pointing to an oft-repeated formula, Mr. Djoghlaf said that each increase of one degree Celsius (1.8 Fahrenheit) in average global surface temperature resulted in the loss of about 10 percent of all known animal and plant species.

If that is true, Mr. Djoghlaf said, then the climate accord reached in Copenhagen in December, in which world leaders agreed — in principle — to try to limit human-driven warming to no more than 2 degrees Celsius, is a sorry affair.

“Our leaders have decided to kill 20 percent of all known species on the planet,” he said.

Mr. Djoghlaf — still an enthusiastic and optimistic defender of the convention’s mission — suggested that the problem with the 2010 goal of achieving a “significant reduction” in biodiversity loss was that there was no real prescription on how to achieve it. “It was a political target with no baseline,” he said.

This year, the parties to the convention aim to change that by developing more specific and tailor-made national goals. And as my colleague James Kanter noted recently in the Green Inc. blog, E.U. regulators have already asserted that the continued loss of biodiversity could have far-reaching consequences for the functioning of the planet.

“We will step up our efforts and put in place a new policy and strategy for the post-2010 period,” said Stavros Dimas, the E.U. environment commissioner. “We need a new vision and target for biodiversity considering the on-going loss of species and signaling the importance we attach to this issue.”

Efforts are also under way to get the United States to finally ratify the convention, which was signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993 and has since gathered dust in the Senate. Last summer, a coalition of international environmental groups sent a letter to the U.S. secretary of state, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and two members of the Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, John F. Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Richard G. Lugar, Republican of Illinois, urging them to support the ratification of the 17-year-old convention.

It seems unlikely that will happen. Mr. Djoghlaf said that in his most recent conversations with U.S. State Department officials, they said their attentions were focused on U.S. accession to two other international treaties that were languishing in the Senate: the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea and the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants.

At least 30 treaties are similarly backlogged.

I asked Ray Anderson, the founder and chairman of Interface, a carpeting company, and the author of the book “Confessions of a Radical Industrialist: Profits, People, Purpose — Doing Business by Respecting the Earth,” where industry fit into the effort to curb biodiversity loss.

“There’s a web of life and we’re part of it,” he said by telephone. “We’re not above it and we’re not outside of it.

“What we do to the web of life we do to ourselves, and it’s foolish to think that we can keep taking and taking and taking without giving back to all the other creatures we share this planet with,” he added.

“I think there’s going to be a lot of pain before human kind really figures this out — particularly the industry end of things. It’s really a question of whether homo sapiens is going to be smart enough to save itself, and I don’t know the answer to that. I just don’t know,” he said.


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Tigers and other farmyard animals

Patrick Jackson
BBC News 29 Jan 10;

For every one wild tiger alive in the world today, there may be three "farmed" tigers in China.

They have been bred for their hides but also their bones, which are used to infuse some wines prized in South East Asia. Some in the region believe that the consumption of certain parts of a tiger's carcass can give strength and virility.

China banned the trade in tiger bones and products in 1993 but that has not stopped the practice, which is currently on the agenda of an international tiger conservation conference in Thailand.

According to the World Bank, which leads the Global Tiger Initiative (GTI), the trade is being spurred by privately run tiger farms in Asian countries. It has called for these farms to be shut down.

Tigers on the farms are kept in cages and are also allowed to chase cows or chickens for the amusement of the paying public.

"Our position is that tiger farms as an animal practice are cruel," said the World Bank's Keshav Varma, GTI's programme director, as he attended the conference in Hua Hin.

"They fan the potential use of tiger parts," he told the Associated Press news agency.

In order to get an idea of what goes on in these farms, which are often presented as parks for tourists, BBC World Service spoke to Judy Mills of Conservation International, who has visited some of them.

'Speed-breeding'

The world's entire surviving wild tiger population is somewhere between 3,600 and 3,200, conservationists believe.

In China, there are now close to 10,000 tigers on farms, says Ms Mills, while other estimates suggest the number may be around 5,000.

"These are speed-breeding factory farms," Conservation International's tiger specialist says.

According to her research, farm tigresses produce cubs at about three times or more their natural rate, bearing up to three litters a year. Cubs are often taken away from their mothers before they are properly weaned.

These cubs, she says, are usually made to suckle from other animals, such as pigs or dogs - their "wet nurse surrogates" - so that the tigresses can produce more young.

"The part [of the farm] which people rarely see is basically a winery in which the skeletons of grown tigers are cleaned and put into vats of wine," says Ms Mills.

The bones are steeped for years, she explains, and the length of the infusion determines the value of the wine.

Conservation International says it is very difficult to clarify the legal status of these farms in China.

"When I first visited a tiger farm in 1990, it was part of a fur farm raising racoon, dogs, mink and other fur-bearing animals for commercial use," says Ms Mills. "The owner of the farm was showing me the log of orders for tiger bones and skins and other parts and products from tigers.

"Then in 1993, because of international pressure, China banned its commercial trade in tiger bone and tiger bone products but, at the same time, these tiger farms were allowed to expand.

"It's something the conservation community has been trying to address with the Chinese government ever since."

Late last year, the Chinese State Forestry Administration promised to monitor tiger breeders more closely, and crack down on the illegal trade in tiger parts and products.

The fear must be, however, that with the Chinese Year of the Tiger due to fall on 14 February, demand for such items will be as strong as ever.


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Saving Asian tigers by next Tiger Year

Asian nations vow to double number of these big cats in the wild in 12 years
Nirmal Ghosh, Straits Times 1 Feb 10;

MINISTERS and officials from 13 Asian countries ended a meeting last week in Hua Hin with a pledge to double the number of tigers in the wild by 2022, the next Year of the Tiger.

The meeting, hosted by Thailand, included experts from non-governmental organisations like the World Wide Fund for Nature. The declaration in reality carries little official weight, but can be built upon at a 'tiger summit' in Vladivostok in September, which will be chaired by Russian Premier Vladimir Putin and World Bank president Robert Zoellick.

For thousands of years across Asia, the deep call of the tiger in trackless tropical jungles has inspired fear and fascination, art and literature, folklore and legend.

But the vast jungles are now fragments, many of them oddly silent.

The call of the tiger is no longer heard in the apparently pristine forests of Khao Yai National Park - a World Heritage Site a couple of hours from Bangkok.

India has roughly one-third of the remaining wild tigers. But in recent years tigers have completely disappeared from two tiger reserves in India. Last Friday, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh described the situation as 'alarming'.

Estimates put the number of tigers in the wild across the 13 countries at 3,000 to 3,600 - down from 5,000 to 7,000 in the last Year of the Tiger, which fell in 1998.

Many are in small populations in remnant patches of habitat, constantly under threat and short of prey. Poachers kill not only the tigers for the bones, organs and skin, but also their source of food for meat.

Small populations are also genetically vulnerable. If a population loses its male tigers, it is doomed.

There are only a few areas left which, if protected and ideally also restored, could support more tigers. These include Thailand's 17,870 sq km western forest complex, overlapping with Myanmar's Tenasserim region.

Another is northern India's Terai Arc landscape, which is shared with Nepal. But both have habitat breaks which need to be restored to link sub-populations.

Studies in India and Thailand, suggest it is possible to double the population of tigers in more viable landscapes.

The challenge is to turn this theoretical possibility into reality.

In some areas, broken habitat links will have to be restored and local people resettled. This can succeed only with proper public consultation and attractive resettlement deals.

Locals must not be abruptly severed from their natural resource base. Local support is essential if the tiger is to be saved.

And the most basic requirement remains to protect the tigers.

On the demand side, China's role is critical. Most tigers are killed for the Chinese market, even though traditional Chinese medicine now mostly rejects tiger parts - which have been proven no different from those of dogs, pigs and goats.

But many fear that the Year of the Tiger will spur demand and see more wild tigers killed. China, backed by owners of tiger farms with 5,000 of the big cats in stock alive or dead in deep freezes, has been trying to get the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species to agree to opening up the market in China for the farmed tigers.

The farms claim that opening up the trade will flood the market with tiger parts, lowering prices and removing the incentive for the poaching of wild tigers.

But it costs well over US$1,000 (S$1,400) to rear a tiger in captivity, and less than US$25 to have one killed in the wild, with a bullet or a simple snare made of cable or wire. Consumers also prefer wild tigers to farmed cats, creating a black market that beefs up the profit from taking a tiger from the wild.

Better enforcement is vital, both in China and in tiger habitats.

Not everything went smoothly at Hua Hin. From the 13 tiger range countries there were only four full ministers present; others were deputy ministers or senior officials. A World Bank statement saying China's tiger farms should be shut down reportedly irritated some Chinese delegates.

In a video message at Hua Hin, Mr Zoellick pledged the World Bank's support.

But India was cold to the World Bank, sending a junior official.

The World Bank saving tigers is a hard sell in India, where its track record shows wildlife habitat has always been 'acceptable collateral damage', says Mumbai-based conservationist Bittu Sahgal, who is also the editor of Sanctuary magazine.

At one discussion in Hua Hin a delegate asked the World Bank whether, and why, loans still came with conditions. 'The World Bank had no answer,' said a source who was at the discussion.

Hua Hin produced a ray of hope, including commitments from Thailand to step up protection.

Separately last Friday, India's Maharashtra state said it would release 10 billion rupees (S$300 million) to relocate families from tiger habitats. 'We have taken (the plight of the tiger) very seriously,' said minister Ramesh.

This Year of the Tiger, the fate of the wild tiger hangs by a thread.

Whether the tiger's call in the wild will still be heard 12 years from now, or if today's children will grow up to see the great cats just in cages, can be decided only if there is quick, strong action by range state governments.


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Conflict with humans reduces population of Sumatran tiger

Andi Abdussalam, Antara 31 Jan 10;

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Rare animal conservationists believe that the population of rarest animal species such as tigers and elephants in Sumatra has been declining due in part to conflicts between human beings.

The population of the Sumatran tiger (panthera tigris Sumatrae), for example, has been reduced to between 500 and 600 from about 1,000 three decades ago. This figure was based on a survey and a report discussed in a regional meeting of the "Our Tigers` Forum" in Jambi recently.

In its previous survey, the forum which groups 57 conservationist organizations from various regions throughout Indonesia, recorded that in 1978 the number of tigers in Sumatra was about 1,000. But in line with the expansion of plantation and development, the number of tigers in Sumatra dropped to 800 in 1992 and to about 600 at present.

According to coordinator of the Forum, Horiyo T Wibisono, the population of Sumatran tigers has been decreasing for a number of reasons, among others, the increasing acreage in the conversion of their habitats into plantations, poaching and conflicts between tigers and the locals.

Based on the Forum`s records, within the period of 1978 and 1999 alone, there were at least 146 cases of human-animal conflicts and in the 1998 - 2002 period, a total of 38 tigers were killed in the forests.

In the meantime, the number of people killed in the conflicts with tigers in the 2002 - 2004 period reached 40 cases.

From 2005 to 2007, the Forum also recorded 50 cases of tiger-human conflicts. But the survey was carried out only in three provinces of Aceh, Rau and Lampung.

"We have not yet conducted a survey in Jambi province and other regions," Horiyo said after addressing a regional workshop on Sumatran tigers in Jambi last month.

However, according to a record kept by Jambi`s Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA), Sumatran tigers killed a total of eight people in the province in 2009.

"Eight people were killed and three others injured in tiger attacks in 2009. One person survived such an experience with a tiger and three others were wounded by bears," the head of Jambi`s BKSDA, Agung Widodo, said.

The agency has also recorded six conflicts between humans and wild animals (tigers and bears) that happened in a number of Jambi`s districts in 2009. The first human-animal conflict recorded by Jambi`s BKSDA in 2009 was between three people and a bear in Lubuk village, Tanjung Jabung district. The three humans survived but were wounded.

The first case of a tiger attack in which the victim died happened in Pematang Raman village, Muarojambi district, and the second in Puding village, Muraojambi district. In the second case, two people were killed, and one person survived.

Two people also fell prey to tigers in a protected peatland forest in Sungai Gelam Pancoran subdistrict, Muaorijami district. Later, another human was killed by a tiger in the Pal 10 area of Sungai Gelam subdistrict, Muarojambi district and the last tiger attack happened in Muara Mendak village, Bayung Lincir district in which two people died.
In the meantime the number of human-animal conflicts in Aceh province has also increased over the past three years.

Aceh Province has recorded a total of 99 cases of human-animal conflicts from 2007 to 2009 which have caused some of the rare animals to perish.

"Due to the human-wildlife conflicts, the number of animals in Aceh has decreased, as wild animals such as elephants were hunted by people," Yakob Ishadamy, head of the Aceh Green Secretariat, said on Saturday.

There were 33 cases of human-animal conflicts in 2007, 46 cases in 2008 and 30 cases in 2009, he said. People used to take a short-cut by hunting the wild animals, such as elephants and tigers.

In 1996, there were 600-700 elephants in Aceh Province, and the number was estimated to decrease to 350-450 elephants in 2007. The population of elephants in Aceh had depleted by almost 40 percent during 1996-2006. From 2007 to September 2008, 39 elephants were captured or killed, he said.

On Sumatra Island as a whole, the population of elephants was estimated to reach between 2,400 and 2,800 heads in 2007. Some of the elephants lived in small blocks of forests which could not support the survival of elephants in a long term, he said.

The decreasing acreage of forests as habitats for tigers and elephants is also a main factor that helps reduce the number of these rare animals.

In Riau province, the damage of the "Suku Talang Mamak" customary forest area in Indragiri Hulu district that threatens the existence of tigers, is a case in point. The Suku Talang Mamak forest is part of the rare species` cruising tracks in protected "Bukit Tiga Puluh" National Park (TNBT).

"Damage to the customary forest will affect the existence of tigers in the area because the forest is one of the supporting forest areas for the TNBT," Spokesman of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) for Riau Syamsidar said recently.

Of the 1,800 hectares, about 1,700 hectares have been damaged and slashed for plantations. Preserving animal species` habitat is vitally importance for preserving tigers` and elephats` population.

For this purpose, the WWF will launch a yearlong campaign this year to stop the disappearance of tigers across Asia and double the number of wild tigers by 2022.

Globally, there might be only as few as 3,200 tigers left in the wild around the world.
The Year of Tiger will be launched globally on February 14, 2010, marking the beginning of the Year of Tiger based on the Chinese calendar. (*)


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Tigers Taking To Their Old Lives in Jungles Of Sumatra

Ismira Lutfia, Jakarta Globe 1 Feb 10;

More than a week after two Sumatran tigers were released back into the jungle, they are reported to be roaming within a four-kilometer radius from their release point in Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park in West Lampung.

Conservationist Tony Sumampau, who heads the tiger-rescue center at the park’s Tambling Wildlife Nature Conservation, told the Jakarta Globe on Sunday that the global positioning systems attached to their collars showed that both tigers — named Panti and Buyung — have traveled about two kilometers and are roaming between Sleman Lake and the coastal area close to the conservation base camp.

“They must have found that the area is abundant with deer, one of their favored prey,” Tony said, adding that conservation staff had found a deer carcass believed to have been eaten by one of the tigers.

“The tigers, however, are not roaming the jungle together, but they are within about a kilometer of each other,” Tony said.

When being released on Jan. 22, Panti was reluctant to leave her cage, which was opened by Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan. It was a few minutes before she stuck her head out, and then slowly emerged.

As if aware she was the spectacle of the day, Panti did not run straight into the jungle, but stood, roared, took a look around and then lingered around Buyung’s cage, which had not yet been opened. Then she suddenly turned and ran, disappearing in the bushes.

Unlike Panti, Buyung leaped straight out when his cage was opened and took off into the jungle on Panti’s trail.

Buyung and Panti, whose name is a shortened version of her species’ Latin name, Panthera tigris, have come a long way since they were captured by villagers in South Aceh in 2008.

They were then kept in cages for some time at the Aceh nature conservancy center before businessman Tommy Winata agreed to finance their costly rehabilitation process.

Buyung and Panti spent about 18 months in the two-hectare rescue center with two other tigers, honing their instincts and undergoing monthly check-ups before they were declared fit enough to survive in the jungle once again.

“Panti had a tumor in her mouth but that has been fixed now,” Tony said, adding that Buyung had been underweight for his size and age.

The two other tigers, Salma and Ucok, are not yet ready for a return to the jungle.

Salma is believed to be a man-eater so “she needs further rehabilitation so she doesn’t return to those ways,” Tony said, while Ucok, a male, has had a broken claw.

Kurnia Rauf, the head of the national park, told the Jakarta Globe that the protected jungle should be able to accommodate more tigers, saying an estimated 45 Sumatran tigers were living there now.

“[The park] fits the classification of having the right prey density per kilometer square to support a larger tiger population,” Kurnia said.

Other tigers living in the park must have sensed that they were about to have company. According to Taman Safari Indonesia staff, a tiger was seen at midnight near Buyung and Panti’s cages. The sighting of the tiger was supported by fresh prints the next morning on the beach about a kilometer from the cages.

The paw prints could have been from Agam or Pangeran, two tigers released from the rescue center in July 2008.

The day before their release, Panti and Buyung were sedated by a team of vets so two 7,000 euro ($9,706) GPS collars could be placed around their necks, allowing them to be tracked through the jungle for 200 days. They were then transported in cages by truck to the release point, about seven kilometers from the rescue center.

The GPS will also help the conservationists know whether the tigers interfere with the traditional human settlement at the Pangekahan enclave within the national park, where about 157 families live as they have for many generations.

“If they see a tiger entering their village, they’ve been asked to notify the forest officials,” Zulkifli said.


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Waterbirds in mangrove forests of Jakarta under threat

The Jakarta Post 1 Feb 10;

The number of species and the populations of waterbirds in Muara Angke natural conservation area, North Jakarta, have decreased because of water pollution and human encroachment into the area, an environmental organization says.

During its annual survey on Saturday, volunteers of Jakarta Green Monster (JGM) found 206 waterbirds, down from 333 last year, with only 18 species identified, down from last year’s 23.

JGM reported that the missing species were the Little Cormorant (Phalacrocorax sulcirostris), Great-billed Heron (Ardea sumatrana), White-browed Crake (Porzanna cinerea), Purple Swamphen (Porphyrio porphyrio) and Black-naped Tern (Sterna sumatrana).

However, a very rare species, the Oriental Darter (Anhinga melanogaster) and two endangered non waterbird species, Sunda Coucal (Centropus nigrorufus) and Black-winged Starling (Acridotheres melanopterus), were spotted on Saturday.

JGM has been studying the Waterbirds in the area each year since 2006, in recognition of World Wetland Day on Feb. 2, which marks the anniversary of the signing of the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance in 1971.

JGM volunteer Ady Kristianto said water pollution and human encroachment were the main causes of the decline in bird numbers. The darkened water in the area had been heavily polluted because of an accumulation of plastics and styrofoam from the Angke River, he said.

Liquid waste from nearby housing complexes and makeshift houses was also dumped there.

“Water pollution has slowed the growth of mangrove trees, which provide shelter to the birds, and has also caused a decline of fish stocks, the main food source for waterbirds. Some species are unable to adapt and had flown away to less polluted areas,” he said.

Human encroachment had disrupted the habitat, Ady said.

“As you can see there are hundreds of fishermen who inhabit the makeshift houses opposite the wetlands, and their numbers increase from year to year.”

Many fishermen were seen sailing past the wetlands area with motor boats on Saturday, causing the waterbirds to fly away.

Residents and squatters in the area had attempted to capture the birds, ranger Arifin said, adding that he often found and removed bird traps.

“They want to capture the birds for pets or to sell them.”

However, so far no one had been punished for such crimes, Arifin said.

Suyanto, an officer from the Jakarta Marine and Fishery Agency, said it was difficult to control the damage.

“It is hard to keep this area in an ideal condition. For example, you may say the water in here
should be clean and that the surrounding residents must not dump their waste here, but, so many people continue to do so. How can we stop them?” (mrs)


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Wild elephants trample huts in villages

Antara 31 Jan 10;

Tapaktuan, S Aceh (ANTARA News) - A herd of three wild Sumatran elephants (Elephas maximus sumatranus) damaged tens of peasant huts at Simpang village, Bakongan sub-district, South Aceh District.

Besides trampling on dozens of the huts, the endangered giant animals that entered the villages in the past couple of weeks also damaged crops such as bananas, palms and areca nuts.

Simpang village head Hamdan said that the loss caused by the elephants was estimated at tens of millions.

"Apart from the wooden huts, the big animals also destroyed four hectares public palm plantations," Hamdan said.

The villagers are afraid to go outdoors at night, and only a few brave men tried to drive the elephants away, he said.

Efforts by the traditional and normal way of chasing them away like using firework had not been very successful, and even caused the big animals angrier.

Meanwhile, East Trumon village head H Lahmuddin said that the villagers in Naca, Jambo Dalem, Kapa Sesak and several other villages began to worry about a similar elephant attack.

"Usually after destroying a plantation in Simpang village, East Bakongan, the elephants moved to the East Trumon district," said Lahmuddin.

Both Simpang villagers and sub-district head expect the relevant agencies and institutions to cope with animal attack.

"It`s been almost ten years of our regions had been disturbed by the wild animals, and nobody seem to care. We hope the government will set up a wild management post so that people can do their normal daily activities," said he added.(*)


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Indonesian Forests Trashed By Mining Not Easily Healed, Activists Say

Fidelis E. Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 31 Jan 10;

Even if the seemingly unchecked mining that is destroying the forests of Kalimantan were stopped today, it would still take another 30 years to fully rehabilitate the affected areas, the Mining Advocacy Network says .

Siti Maimunah, national coordinator of the network, also known as Jatam, said recovering the soil of the mined areas was not only a matter of planting trees but also required a sustained effort to clean up toxic chemicals.

“We are not just talking about a physical rehabilitation, but the need for the recovery to consider the social and economic wellbeing of the local people,” Siti said.

Mining activities in Kalimantan have been in the spotlight for a week now following a report that almost 200 mining concessionaires are operating in conservation areas, leaving massive environmental destruction in their wake.

In East Kalimantan alone there are 1,212 coal mining operations, permits for which were issued by local administrations as authorized under the Regional Autonomy Law, with an additional 32 permits issued by the central government. In neighboring South Kalimantan, there are around 400 mining operations.

The reports have also forced Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan in to reviewing the mining permits of companies operating in conservation areas.

The mining authorizations given to mining companies by the ministry contain a clause that requires them to rehabilitate the areas they work in. But those issued by local government often do not contain this requirement and this appears to be the case in the 200 mines currently active in conservation areas.

Siti said that a crucial step in the rehabilitation process was for the government to stop issuing mining authorizations, or KPs, to companies before a complete environmental assessment could be carried out.

“The system is becoming chaotic because the rehabilitation plan should be in one package with the authorizations and the companies should guarantee that they will be able to rehabilitate [the areas] as soon as possible,” she said. “Instead, the rehabilitation budget is an afterthought based on the amount of coal that can be dug out. So, there is never any serious focus on rehabilitation in the first place.”

Ari Sudianto, a deputy for environmental impact assessment at the Environment Ministry, said that as important as it was to start talking about rehabilitation, it was doubly so to fix the issuance of future mining authorizations.

“Apart from technical issues, the top priority right now concerning mining activities in Kalimantan is how to tidy up the mining authorizations,” Ari said. “Many companies cannot cover the rehabilitation costs because their [financial performances] are below par.”

Ari said these small companies often don’t use geologists.

“They tend to just dig based on their intuition and if they don’t find minerals, they just move on.”


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Indonesian Activists Blast National Study Team for Months of Inaction on Timor Sea Oil Spill

Eras Poke & Fidelis E. Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 31 Jan 10;

Kupang. Months after thousands of barrels of crude oil spilled into the Timor Sea, Indonesia has yet to file a formal complaint or request compensation with the Australian government.

On Sunday, a local activist blasted the national team set up three months ago to handle the oil spill, saying it was dragging its feet and was not serious in carrying out its duties, as it hadn’t even visited the site.

Ferdi Tanoni, the chairman of West Timor Concern Foundation (YPTB), said his organization had already sent a letter to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono asking for clarification over a statement by Minister of Transportation Freddy Numberi, in which he said the national team did not have the specific technology needed to confirm that the Timor Sea was polluted by the spill.

“Does it really make any sense that this vast country does not have the experts or even the technology [to confirm the oil spill]? Apart from that, we have never seen the national team go to Kupang [the capital city of East Nusa Tenggara] to check it out for themselves,” Ferdi said.

A leak from an oil well operated by PTTEP Australasia is estimated to have sent about 500 million liters of oil into the sea over a 10-week period from Aug. 21, polluting more than a third of Indonesia’s section of the Timor Sea, according to a study by YPTB released early in December.

The YPTB tests, conducted by a laboratory affiliated with the chemistry department at the University of Indonesia, showed that 38.15 percent of Indonesian territory in the Timor Sea was now polluted by crude oil.

Based on a survey conducted by YPTB, fish catch had dropped by at least 50 percent, even 70 percent in a number of locations, before plummeting to 80 percent by the end of December.

Environment Minister Gusti Muhammad Hatta has also said the government was ready to seek compensation from Australia.

“We have finished calculating our material loss due to the Timor Sea’s contamination and will ask the Australian government for compensation soon,” the minister said on Dec. 30.

However, the State Ministry for the Environment said last week that it was still waiting for laboratory results to confirm that oil found in Timor’s waters came from the Montara oilfield.

“While waiting for the lab tests, we have recommended the use of satellite imaging devices belonging to the Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry for further action. This is to prove that the oil spill did originate from Australia,” Masnellyarti Hilman, deputy for environmental damage control at the Environment Ministry, said on Thursday.

Masnellyarti said her ministry was providing data and research support to back up Indonesia’s claim but any legal action would be handled by the Foreign Ministry, since the issue involved three countries — Indonesia, East Timor and Australia.

“They only asked for our help around early January, so, that’s why it’s not finished,” she said.

Sato Bisri, director of the Coast Guard unit at the Transportation Ministry, said the unit was still awaiting official results from the laboratory as well.

“We can’t actually just claim that there was contamination or pollution without any laboratory findings,” Sato said.

Additional reporting from Antara


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Japan's whalers are at sea again, harvesting meat that few will eat

By April, another 900 whales will have died for little profit. So what drives the Japanese to go on defying world opinion?
David McNeill, The Independent 31 Jan 10;

In an annual ritual as seemingly unstoppable as the tides, Japan's whaling fleet is again ploughing the Southern Ocean hunting and killing whales. Bitterly criticised, harried by eco-warriors on Sea Shepherd's ships and tracked by the world's media, the fleet may be slowed but it won't be stopped. On its return to port in April, the refrigerated holds are likely to be stuffed with the meat from 850 minkes and 50 fin whales. Next year, 50 endangered humpbacks could be added to the list.

Japan has so far been largely inoculated from debate on the annual cull, but that may be about to change. Next month sees the first public hearing in the trial of Greenpeace activists Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki, accused of trespass and theft in their attempt to expose the embezzlement of whale meat by crew members on board the fleet, who sold it for personal gain. Activists believe the so-called Tokyo Two case could put the entire whaling programme in Japan on trial.

Japan's stubbornness on whaling is one of the mysteries of world diplomacy. Why does the country turn angry and unyielding when it comes to whaling? Why does it continue to snub one of the environmental movement's few lasting triumphs: the 1986 moratorium on commercial hunts?

Oddly, very little is known about the dynamics of whaling in Japan, probably because foreign media do such an awful job of reporting it. Without an explanation, Japan's taste for "whale blood" (as The Independent once put it) seems irrational and barbaric, fuelling racist stereotypes that the Japanese do not deserve.

Clearly, it is not because Japan's citizens love whale meat. A 2006 Greenpeace survey concluded that 95 per cent of Japanese had "never or very rarely eaten" it. Outside of a handful of local ports, fresh whale is as rare as, say, veal, in the UK. Pro-whalers respond that it is so only because foreign pressure has made the meat so expensive to harvest. But even after the 1986 international whaling moratorium and the start of Japan's "scientific" whaling, 70 tons of whale meat was left unsold from a catch of 1,873 tons after the fleet returned to port in spring 2001 – a fraction of the 230,000 metric tons consumed in the peak whaling year of 1962. Although some middle-aged citizens remain fond of it, most youngsters would rather eat almost anything else. The mass consumption of whale meat, and the industry that supports it, was essentially forced on Japan by a lack of alter-native resources half a century ago.

So, boring as it sounds, Tokyo's relentless drive to reverse the whaling ban is essentially political, and understanding why means casting our minds back to how the ban came into being. The Japanese Fisheries Agency (JFA), which controls the nation's whaling policy, feels that it was bamboozled and blackmailed into abandoning commercial hunts by the US-led West.

One date, in particular, is for ever burned into the JFA's collective consciousness. On 30 June 1979, anti-whaling protester Richard Jones, who later became an Australian senator, dumped red paint over Japanese delegates at the International Whaling Commission's (IWC) conference in London. Caught up in the growing environmental movement, the bureaucrats professed no idea why they were being blamed for the destruction of whale stocks, when historically the US and Europe had hunted far more whales.

In the 1980s, as a bitter trade war raged between Japan and the West, Washington came under pressure to limit access to its coastal waters, which yielded nearly a million tonnes of fish per year to Japanese boats. In a deal struck in the middle of the decade, Japan agreed to withdraw its objections to the IWC whaling moratorium in return for a US pledge to keep this access open. But months after Japan formally agreed to the ban in July 1986, its US fishing quota was halved. Two years later, it had fallen to zero and an angry JFA responded by kick-starting the now infamous practice of "scientific whaling".

The JFA knows it has zero chance of winning a two-thirds majority to overturn the IWC ban. It also knows there is no chance of reviving the commercial industry, which is kept alive on government life-support. What the agency can do is fight for the symbolic right to whale sustainably, and occasionally skewer Western hyp-ocrisy, which it does quite well. Why do American hunters kill five million "beautiful, Bambi-eyed deer" annually, wondered Japan's top whaling diplomat Joji Morishita at a January press conference. "I've no problem with that, as long as it is sustainable."

For some Japanese politicians, the appeal of the pro-whaling campaign is quite clear: Japan can let off steam in the foreign political arena.

Fixing what is basically a case of wounded national pride should be straightforward, but after two decades the pro- and anti-whaling camps are deeply dug in and have little reason to compromise. Western politicians lose nothing domestically by not budging an inch on Japanese whaling. Their Tokyo counterparts can condemn Western "cultural imperialism" and bask in the reputation as defenders of Japan's right to the "sea commons".

So what to do? One solution has been around for at least two decades: allow Japan the right to hunt more whales around its own exclusive fishing waters in exchange for scaling down or pulling out of the high seas. This essentially is the so-called "compromise package" that has been discussed for the past two years behind the scenes at the IWC. The details are forbidding. How many whales would Japan catch? How would the hunts be monitored? Would such a deal not be simply rewarding Japan for a decade of brinkmanship, during which it gradually scaled up its Antarctic hunts to the current 1,000 whales a year?

But one reason Norway, which hunts almost as many whales as Japan, gets far less attention, is because it doesn't send its trawlers outside its own waters. Some Japanese diplomats have taken note, and are growing tired of the battering Japan takes every time its fleet leaves port. If Tokyo can be persuaded to abandon its Southern Ocean cull, limit or stop expeditions to the North Pacific and submit to monitoring of its coastal catch, shouldn't this initiative be given a chance?

As Sato Tetsu, professor of ecology and environmental sciences at Nagano University, says. "It is not really a problem of reviving the whaling industry now; it is a problem of national pride, or at least government and bureaucratic pride. They basically need a symbolic victory."


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UK battery-recycling law in force

Emily Beament, Press Association
The Independent 1 Feb 10;

Shoppers will be able to recycle old batteries in thousands of shops across the country from today.

Under a European directive, every shop selling more than a pack of batteries a day will be forced to accept old batteries for recycling and most are expected to set up in-store collection points.

The change will bring Britain into line with many EU states. Tesco, Asda, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, Robert Dyas, Dixons, Currys and PC World are among those offering recycling. Britons use 600 million batteries a year; just 3 per cent are recycled.

The Batteries Directive applies to all portable batteries - from those in electrical goods such as torches and radios to rechargeable batteries in mobile phones and digital music players.

An estimated 30,000 tonnes of portable batteries go on to the market in the UK each year, of which 97 per cent end up in landfill when they are finished with.

Under the new regulations, collection and recycling of batteries must rise from the current level of just 3 per cent to 10 per cent by the end of the year, 25 per cent by 2012 and 45 per cent by 2016, with manufacturers responsible for the targets being met.

The directive aims to cut the amount of batteries going to landfill, where they can leak harmful chemicals into the soil, and to save carbon emissions by reducing the need for using new materials. It comes into force in the UK today.

But battery maker Varta warned a lack of awareness among consumers and retailers - who will have to provide collection points for customers to return old batteries if they sell more than a small amount - could make the goals impossible to meet.

The British Retail Consortium said the required facilities in stores are in place but added that there is a need for wider action, including more recycling collections from homes.

Vince Armitage, divisional vice president at Varta Consumer Batteries UK, said the company has concerns about how the directive is going to work in practice.

"The directive places the responsibility of meeting its stringent collection and recycling targets on the manufacturer, but it relies on the co-operation of consumers and retailers to make it work.

"However, a lack of promotion means that awareness of the directive among these key groups is low.

"This gives us great concern that, as a nation, we are setting ourselves up to fail before we even begin."

Collection and recycling will cost manufacturers around £1,000 a tonne, making the price tag of meeting the 10% goal £3 million, Varta estimates.

The company believes meeting the targets will become increasingly difficult as the "low-hanging fruit" of cheaper and easier options are used up.

British Retail Consortium head of environment Bob Gordon said retailers are ready with the collection facilities for old batteries, but that will not be enough on its own. It will then be up to manufacturers to collect and deal with the batteries.

He said informing customers should not just be left to shops, and called for a "comprehensive and continuing" information campaign on recycling batteries.

He added: "Shops can't be the only route for collection. We need an infrastructure to develop which includes workplaces, schools, community centres and kerbside collection.

"All the evidence shows home collections of recyclables are easiest for customers and produce the best results. Developing these mustn't be ignored.

"We need more local authorities to take used batteries from homes and a more consistent recycling regime for all materials."

But Environment Secretary Hilary Benn said: "This new legislation will make it easier for consumers to do the right thing whilst ensuring retailers fulfil their part of the bargain.

"Old batteries can cause harm to the environment when they are not recycled.

"The new approach to disposal of batteries will help to reduce the number of batteries that now end up in landfill."

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs estimates that recycling batteries will save 12,000 tonnes of CO2 by 2016.


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Copenhagen Accord seen failing 2C goal

Alister Doyle, Reuters 29 Jan 10;

OSLO (Reuters) - Major nations' plans for fighting climate change under the "Copenhagen Accord" are insufficient to limit average temperature rises to the projected 2 degrees Celsius, a leading expert said on Friday.

The accord, brokered at a summit last month by top emitters led by China and the United States, sets a Jan. 31 deadline for countries to say how far they will curb greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 to help keep temperature rises below 2 degrees.

"From what we see right now, it's far away from 2 degrees," Niklas Hoehne, director of energy and climate policy at climate consultancy Ecofys, told Reuters.

Hoehne said that a projection made in mid-December by Ecofys and partners that world temperatures would rise by 3.5 degrees Celsius was becoming ever more realistic.

Industrialised emitters led by the United States, European Union members, Japan and Australia have all merely reaffirmed emissions goals set before Copenhagen ahead of the Jan. 31 deadline. Developing nations such as China and India have also given no sign of greater ambition.

A problem is that pressure for tougher targets has eased, Hoehne said. "That is the major disappointment after Copenhagen, the pressure to be in line with 2C is not there any more," he said. "What is left is public pressure to do more."

"3.5 degrees of warming has got more likely," he said.

$100 BILLION

The Copenhagen Accord's goal of limiting warming to below 2C above pre-industrial levels is accompanied by goals of giving $10 billion a year to help developing nations cope with climate change from 2010-12, rising to $100 billion a year from 2020.

The WWF environmental group said in a statement that the Sunday deadline was an opportunity for countries to show they were serious about fighting global warming even though Copenhagen disappointed many by failing to agree a U.N. treaty.

For the developed nations "we fear that there is still a gross mismatch between their goal of keeping the world out of climate danger and the steps they are prepared to take," WWF's Kim Carstensen said.

Two degees Celsius is widely viewed by scientists as the threshhold for dangerous change such as more desertification, floods, species extinctions and rising sea levels. Temperatures have already risen 0.7 degrees Celsius in the past century.

A 2007 scenario by the U.N.'s panel of climate scientists, in which Hoehne was a lead author, indicated that developed nations would have to cut emissions by between 25 and 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 to limit global warming to 2 degrees.

Promises made up to the Copenhagen summit totalled cuts of 11-19 percent below 1990, the Climate Action Tracker estimates. Washington on Thursday reaffirmed a goal of cutting by 17 percent below 2005 levels, equivalent to 4 percent below 1990.

(Editing by Ralph Boulton)


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Copenhagen climate deal gets low-key endorsement

Alister Doyle, Reuters 31 Jan 10;

OSLO (Reuters) - Nations accounting for most of the world's greenhouse gas emissions have restated their promises to fight climate change, meeting a Sunday deadline in a low-key endorsement of December's "Copenhagen Accord."

Experts say their promised curbs on greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 are too small so far to meet the accord's key goal of limiting global warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times.

The U.N. Climate Change Secretariat plans to publish a list of submissions on Monday. That may put pressure on all capitals to keep their promises.

Countries accounting for at least two-thirds of emissions -- led by China, the United States and the European Union -- have all written in. Smaller emitters, from the Philippines to Mali, have also sent promises or asked to be associated with the deal.

The Secretariat says the January 31 deadline is flexible.

"Most of the industrialized countries' (promises) are in the 'inadequate' category," said Niklas Hoehne, director of energy and climate policy at climate consultancy Ecofys, which assesses how far national commitments will help limit climate change.

"The U.S. is not enough, the European Union is not enough. For the major developed countries it's still far behind what is expected, except for Japan and Norway," he said.

Some developing nations, such as Brazil or Mexico, were making relatively greater efforts, he said.

FLOODS, DROUGHTS AND WILDFIRES

The accord's goal of limiting warming to below 2 C -- meant to help limit floods, droughts, wildfires and rising seas -- is twinned with promises of $28 billion in aid for developing nations from 2010-12, rising to $100 billion a year from 2020.

Ecofys reckons that the promised curbs will set the world toward a 3.5 degrees Celsius rise in temperatures, not 2.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP said that on current projections the world would exceed an estimated "carbon emissions budget" for the first half of this century by 2034, 16 years ahead of schedule.

The European Union plans to cut emissions by 20 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and 30 percent if others make deep cuts. The United States plans a cut of 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, or 4 percent below 1990 levels.

"Carbon prices look set to remain relatively low until economic growth picks up or until a more ambitious target is adopted," Richard Gledhill, a climate expert at PricewaterhouseCoopers, said of the EU goal.

"This will continue to delay major capital investment in low carbon technology," he said in a statement.

The Copenhagen Accord, reached after a summit on December 18 in Denmark, was not adopted as a U.N. plan for shifting from fossil fuels after opposition by a handful of developing nations such as Venezuela and Sudan.

One possible complication is that some countries, including China and India, have written to the United Nations giving 2020 targets but without explicitly backing the Copenhagen Accord. The U.N. has asked all to take sides by January 31.

An Indian document sent to the U.N. Secretariat does not mention the accord, for instance, but says it is giving details of plans to 2020 "in view of the current debate under way in the international climate negotiations."

(Editing by Andrew Roche)

India Reiterates Carbon Goals For Climate Accord
Krittivas Mukherjee, PlanetArk 1 Feb 10;

NEW DELHI - India has reiterated a goal of slowing the rise of its carbon emissions by 2020 as part of pledges due by Sunday under a "Copenhagen Accord" to fight climate change, an official statement said.

Many other nations have also reiterated existing goals for slowing global warming before a Sunday deadline for making commitments under the "Copenhagen Accord," which sets an overriding goal of limiting a rise in world temperatures to less than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 F).

The statement said India will "endeavor" to reduce its carbon emission intensity by 20 to 25 percent by 2020 in comparison to the 2005 level.

Carbon emissions intensity refers to the amount of carbon dioxide emitted for each unit of gross domestic product.

The statement said India's actions will be legally non-binding and its carbon intensity cut target will not include emission from the agriculture sector.

Last week, China reiterated a voluntary domestic target to lower its carbon emissions intensity by 40 to 45 percent by 2020 from 2005 level while also stepping up the use of renewable energy and planting more trees.

The non-binding accord was described by many as a failure because it fell far short of the Copenhagen conference's original goal of a more ambitious commitment to prevent more heat waves, droughts and crop failures.

So the more top emitters such as China and India there are committing numbers to the accord, the better its chances of survival.

China, India, South Africa and Brazil met in the Indian capital on January 24 and expressed support for the "Copenhagen Accord," while urging donors to keep promises of aid.

(Editing by David Fox)

India reaffirms opposition to binding carbon cuts
Yahoo News 31 Jan 10;

NEW DELHI (AFP) – India reaffirmed to the United Nations that it would reject any attempt to impose legally binding climate change goals, but pledged to reduce emissions intensity.

In an endorsement of December's much-criticised Copenhagen Accord, the environment ministry in New Delhi said it had submitted plans to reduce emissions intensity by 20 to 25 percent by 2020 compared to 2005 levels.

India's proposal, first made in parliament in December ahead of the Copenhagen summit, came before a UN deadline on January 31 for nations to re-state their climate change policies.

In a statement late Saturday, India said its UN submission "clarified that its domestic mitigation actions will be entirely voluntary in nature and will not have a legally binding character."

The cut in emissions intensity means that each dollar of gross domestic product (GDP) in India -- a rapidly developing economy -- must generate 20 to 25 percent fewer emissions by 2020 compared to 2005.

India is part of a coalition including Brazil, China and South Africa which lobbied successfully at the Copenhagen meeting against any binding emissions caps.

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh hailed the accord and said the country had emerged from the negotiations a winner.

But environmentalists condemned the failure to agree on any measures that would force countries to reduce emissions.

India -- one of the world's top-five carbon emitters in terms of volume -- has insisted that rich countries, which are responsible historically for global warming, should bear the burden of mitigating the future problem.

Only a handful of nations, including the United States, have submitted their papers ahead of the deadline to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Canada matches US carbon emissions target
Yahoo News 31 Jan 10;

OTTAWA (AFP) – Canada has aligned itself with the United States in setting a 2020 carbon emissions target of 17 percent below 2005 levels, Environment Minister Jim Prentice said Sunday.

The target for reducing greenhouse gas emissions under last month's Copenhagen Accord was submitted to the United Nations on Saturday, two days after the United States announced its objective.

The summit had asked nations to report by January 31 whether they would associate themselves with the accord and join efforts to draft a successor to the Kyoto Protocol, whose legal obligations run out at the end of 2012.

"This is in keeping with our commitment, as I indicated in the days leading up to Copenhagen and afterwards, to align our policies with those of our continental partner," Prentice told a press conference.

"We'll deal specifically with the oil sands, we'll deal specifically with all sources of emissions," he said.

"We know we can achieve that target, we're prepared to stand behind it and other countries will now have to do the same."

Environmentalists panned the plan, saying it would lead to a 2.5 percent increase in Canada's CO2 emissions from 1990 levels, in contrast to Ottawa's previous plan announced in 2006 to cut emissions by three percent.

"The new target will lead to an increase in greenhouse gas emissions rather than reduce them," Greenpeace said in a statement. "This new target is thus even worse than the one previously adopted by Canada."

"Furthermore, Greenpeace has no reason to believe that the target, as mediocre as it is, will be met by Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government, which reneged on its Kyoto Protocol obligations and allowed Canadian greenhouse gas emissions to rise."

Prentice said Canada wants a comprehensive and binding international treaty that builds on the framework agreement reached in Copenhagen and "that applies to all carbon emitters, including China and the United States."

In the meantime, he said Canada and the United States would harmonize their strategies and roll out piecemeal emissions cuts.

"In terms of motor vehicles, starting in 2011, we will have continental tailpipe emissions standards that will deal with carbon emissions for passenger vehicles," Prentice said.

"We're also moving forward on harmonization with air transport emissions, marine emissions, as well as those from heavy vehicles, all on a concerted continental basis."

The United States, long the industrial world's main holdout from climate change agreements, said Thursday it would cut carbon emissions blamed for global warming "in the range of 17 percent" by 2020 compared with 2005 levels.

The European Union meanwhile has pledged to cut emissions 20 percent from 1990 levels by 2020 and agreed to raise its target to 30 percent if other large emitters pledge similar CO2 cuts.


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Big emitters supporting Copenhagen Accord

Reuters 31 Jan 10;

(Reuters) - Big greenhouse gas emitters have restated their promises to fight climate change, meeting a Sunday deadline in a low-key endorsement of December's "Copenhagen Accord.

Following are plans announced since the Copenhagen summit. Each country's percentage of world emissions is given in brackets, based on U.S. Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center data of emissions from fossil fuels and cement production:

CHINA (22 percent), INDIA (6), SOUTH AFRICA (1), BRAZIL (1) -- Known as the BASIC group. India's Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said in a January 28 letter to Denmark's government that BASIC ministers "underscored their support to the Copenhagen Accord" at a January 24 meeting. The five also challenged donors to deliver on promises of aid.

-- China reiterated in a January 28 letter that it would endeavor to cut the amount of carbon produced per unit of economic output by 40 to 45 percent below projected growth levels by 2020 from 2005. This "carbon intensity" goal would let emissions keep rising, but more slowly than economic growth.

-- India said on January 31 it would endeavor to reduce its carbon emission intensity by 20 to 25 percent by 2020 in comparison to the 2005 level.

-- South Africa offered on December 6 to slow the growth of its emissions by 34 percent below projected levels by 2020, conditional on a broad international deal and aid.

-- Brazil reaffirmed on December 28 a goal announced before Copenhagen of reducing emissions by between 36 and 39 percent below projected levels by 2020. At the most ambitious end of the range, it said emissions would fall by 20 percent from 2005 levels, back to 1994 levels.

UNITED STATES (18) - U.S. climate envoy Todd Stern said on January 28 the country would aim to cut emissions by about 17 percent by 2020, from 2005 levels, confirming a goal set by the White House late last year. The target -- 4 percent below 1990 levels -- may be harder to achieve after the Democrats lost a key Senate seat.

EUROPEAN UNION (15) - Reiterated on January 27 an offer of a unilateral goal of a 20 percent emissions cut by 2020, from 1990 levels, and 30 percent if other nations deepened their reductions.

JAPAN (4) - Japan's foreign ministry said on January 26 it was reiterating an offer to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 -- on condition other emitters led by China and the United States agreed an ambitious deal.

AUSTRALIA (1) - Australia reaffirmed its goal of a 5 to 25 percent emissions cut below 2000 levels, corresponding to 3-23 percent under 1990, the government said on January 27 [ID:nSGE60Q08A]. A decision to move beyond a unilateral 5 percent would not happen until the "level of global ambition becomes sufficiently clear."

Other emitters:

SOUTH KOREA - Reiterated a plan to slow greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent below business-as-usual levels by 2020.

NORWAY - Reiterated on January 28 a unilateral promise to cut emissions by 30 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and by 40 percent if other nations set tougher goals.

SINGAPORE - Restated plans to cut emissions by 7-11 percent below business-as-usual levels by 2020 on January 11. It would expand the offer to a 16 percent cut "when a global agreement on climate change is reached.

MALI - Said on January 22 it wanted to be associated with the deal.

CUBA - Wrote to U.N. Secretariat expressing opposition to the accord.

The U.S. Climate Action Network also published letters from BANGLADESH, THE PHILIPPINES, SAMOA, THE MARSHALL ISLANDS and MACEDONIA expressing support for the accord.

(Compiled by Alister Doyle in Oslo. Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner in Washington and Krittivas Mukherjee in New Delhi)


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IMF plans 100 billion fund to help poor mitigate climate impact

Yahoo News 31 Jan 10;

DAVOS, Switzerland (AFP) – The International Monetary Fund is planning a 100 billion dollar fund to help countries mitigate the effects of climate change, the agency's head said.

"The new growth model will be low carbon," Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the IMF, told political and business leaders meeting at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos this weekend.

Efforts to deal with climate change could not be blocked "just because we cannot meet the financing needs," he said.

Developing countries do not have the funds for these adaptation measures, and developed countries' ability to pay is also limited as they are now weighed down by debt after funds were used to deal with the financial crisis.

It was therefore necessary to "think out of the box" on the issue of funding, the IMF chief said.

"We'll have to find innovative ways to finance it," Strauss-Khan said on Saturday.

"We're going to provide some ideas, built around a Green Fund devoted to finance 100 billion dollars (72 billion euros) a year which is the figure currently accepted for addressing the problem based on the capitalisation coming from central banks, backed by special drawing rights issued by the fund," he said.

Special drawing rights are an international reserve asset created by the IMF in 1969 as a supplement to member states' official reserves. They can be exchanged for common currencies.

The IMF said on its website that it would issue a paper detailing ideas on how the fund would be financed.

The United Nations has said that governments should invest in the green sector as they try to create new jobs in the wake of the economic crisis, as it would also help move towards a greener society.

Azim Premji, who chairs India's Wipro corporation noted that the issues of tackling climate change and reducing poverty could be addressed together.

"To me, if you combine these two challenges, they present an opportunity. The key is to look at the very fundamental fact that the developing world has still to build most of its energy infrastructure (and) physical infrastructure, and to buy most of its consumer goods," he said in remarks published on the WEF's website.

"This very simple fact -- that the developing world does not have these things -- is the great opportunity for tackling climate change and ecological sustainability."

Jamie Drummond, Executive Director of campaign group ONE which was co-founded by U2 singer Bono, said the IMF's move for a green fund was a "significant and positive development which, if approved in its most positive form, could seriously help catalyse the financing of a transition to low-carbon economic growth in developing countries."

However, the advocacy group said that large sums of financing are still needed on top of the IMF fund to help poor countries deal with the effects of climate change immediately.

"As the fund would give concessional loans this does not replace the need for significant additional grant financing to help the poorest countries adapt right now to the impacts of climate change," said the group.

The IMF's plans must be "urgently analysed ... and then the solutions must be urgently implemented," it said.

In an 11th-hour deal, the Copenhagen Accord emerged out of the UN's global summit on climate change in December.

The accord calls for limiting warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), the threshold set by many climate scientists.

It also commits rich countries to paying out around 30 billion dollars in total over the next three years, and 100 billion dollars annually by 2020, to help poor nations fight climate change and cope with its consequences.

Countries are being asked to indicate by Sunday if they will endorse the deal.


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Pentagon to rank global warming as destabilising force

US defence review says military planners should factor climate change into long-term strategy
Suzanne Goldenberg, guardian.co.uk 31 Jan 10;

The Pentagon will for the first time rank global warming as a destabilising force, adding fuel to conflict and putting US troops at risk around the world, in a major strategy review to be presented to Congress tomorrow. The quadrennial defence review, prepared by the Pentagon to update Congress on its security vision, will direct military planners to keep track of the latest climate science, and to factor global warming into their long term strategic planning.

"While climate change alone does not cause conflict, it may act as an accelerant of instability or conflict, placing a burden on civilian institutions and militaries around the world," said a draft of the review seen by the Guardian.

Heatwaves and freak storms could put increasing demand on the US military to respond to humanitarian crises or natural disaster. But troops could feel the effects of climate change even more directly, the draft says.

More than 30 US bases are threatened by rising sea levels. It ordered the Pentagon to review the risks posed to installations, and to combat troops by a potential increase in severe heatwaves and fires.

The review's release coincides with a sharpening focus in the American defence establishment about global warming – even though polls last week showed the public increasingly less concerned.

The CIA late last year established a centre to collect intelligence on climate change. Earlier this month, CIA officials sent emails to environmental experts in Washington seeking their views on climate change impacts around the world, and how the agency could keep tabs on what actions countries were taking to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The CIA has also restarted a programme – scrapped by George Bush – that allowed scientists and spies to share satellite images of glaciers and Arctic sea ice.

That suggests climate change is here to stay as a topic of concern for the Pentagon.

The Pentagon, in acknowledging the threat of global warming, will now have to factor climate change into war game exercises and long-term security assessments of badly affected regions such as the Arctic, sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia.

Military planners will have to factor climate change into war game exercises and long-term security assessments of badly affected regions such as the Arctic, sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia.

"The leadership of the Pentagon has very strongly indicated that they do consider climate change to be a national security issue," said Christine Parthemore, an analyst at the Centre for a New American Security, who has been studying the Pentagon's evolving views on climate change. "They are considering climate change on a par with the political and economic factors as the key drivers that are shaping the world."

Awareness of climate change and its impact on threat levels and military capability had been slowly percolating through the ranks since 2008 when then Senators Hillary Clinton and John Warner pushed the Pentagon to look specifically at the impact of global warming in its next long-term review.

But the navy was already alive to the potential threat, with melting sea ice in the Arctic opening up a new security province. The changing chemistry of the oceans, because of global warming, is also playing havoc with submarine sonar, a report last year from the CNAS warned.

US soldiers and marines, meanwhile, were getting a hard lesson in the dangers of energy insecurity on the battlefield, where attacks on supply convoys in Afghanistan and Iraq inflicted heavy casualties.

"Our dependence on fuel adds significant cost and puts US soldiers and contractors at risk," said Dorothy Robyn, deputy undersecretary of defence for the environment. "Energy can be a matter of life and death and we have seen dramatically in Iraq and Afghanistan the cost of heavy reliance on fossil fuels."

She told a conference call on Friday the Pentagon would seek to cut greenhouse gas emissions from non-combat operations by 34% from 2008 levels by 2020, in line with similar cuts by the rest of the federal government.

In addition to the threat of global warming, she said the Pentagon was concerned that US military bases in America were vulnerable because of their reliance on the electric grid to cyber attack and overload in case of a natural disaster.

The US air force, in response, has built up America's biggest solar battery array in Nevada, and is testing jet fighter engines on biofuels. The Marine Corps may soon start drilling its own wells to eliminate the need to truck in bottled water in response to recommendations from a taskforce on reducing energy use in a war zone.

But not all defence department officials have got on board, and Parthemore said she believes it could take some time to truly change the military mindset.

Parthemore writes of an exchange on a department of defence list-serv in December 2008 about whether global warming exists. It ends with one official writing: "This is increasingly shrill and pedantic. Moreover, it's becoming boring."


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