Best of our wild blogs: 17 Mar 10


Otter overload at Sungei Buloh!
from wild shores of singapore

Purple-under-a-stone sea cucumber identified
from Urban Forest

Before you write off a plant as a weed, read this
from Water Quality in Singapore

Giant Clam Project
from Psychedelic Nature

Save the Pigeons Poster
from Save The Pigeons (Singapore)

On the search for the rhino
from Rhinomania

Fact file The dark side of the wildlife trade : bears
from Bornean Sun Bear Conservation

Grey Wagtail confronts its reflection
from Bird Ecology Study Group


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Climate change in Singapore: Society must take lead

K. Kesavapany, Straits Times 17 Mar 10;

Much of Singapore's reaction to climate change has been top-down and government-led. Citizens and civil society groups should take responsibility for the country's greener growth. Civil society should take the lead in creating awareness, and in conducting education campaigns and community events to get people involved.

WHEN the Doha Round of multilateral negotiations began to flounder, it was obvious to Singapore that it could not drift along on the long road to nowhere. What followed was a hectic phase in the city-state's economic diplomacy that saw it at the heart of efforts to launch freetrade agreements, both bilateral and multilateral.

Several countries opposed Singapore's stance, arguing that it would affect multilateral negotiations, but there was no alternative for a trade-dependent city-state. In the event, bilateral and regional trade agreements became a complement of, not a threat to, multilateralism.

The inconclusiveness of the United Nations' Copenhagen summit on climate change presents a far more formidable set of challenges to Singapore. Again, it is easy to say that the issue is far too big for a small country to do anything about. But precisely because it is a small country, Singapore is challenged to tackle the problem as best as it can, while waiting for a global solution.

Singapore policymakers understand the issues. What is important is that their understanding percolates down to the public, without whose support Singapore cannot become a more environmentally friendly country.

When it comes to rising sea levels, the stakes are particularly high for Singapore. The island's highest point is Bukit Timah Hill, which is just 165m above sea level. The Central Business District, the airport and seaports are all located along the coast and lie less than 2m above sea level. Many of the reservoirs lie adjacent to the coast, putting them at risk of water contamination from rising sea levels.

Singapore has experienced the effects of rising sea levels before. In 1974, a rare astronomical event caused the tides to rise 3.9m, more than double the usual level. Areas along the Singapore River were inundated, as well as parts of the airport and East Coast Park, which is built entirely on reclaimed land.

A 2009 WWF report showed that Singapore has experienced a significant decrease in annual rainfall over the past three decades, but with more intense rainfall during the monsoon season, leading to flooding. A three-year study of the impact of climate change on Singapore by researchers from the National University of Singapore's Tropical Marine Science Institute measured three variables linked to global warming - temperature, rising sea levels and rainfall patterns. The results were outlined in Parliament earlier this month.

The study showed that the average daily temperature here could rise by between 2.7 deg C and 4.4 deg C from the present average of 26.8 deg C by 2100. It found no discernible trend in rainfall over the next century but said that sea levels could rise by between 24cm and 65cm.

The 2007 report of the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected that the rise in sea level by 2099 could be in the range of 18cm to 59cm. However, the IPCC cautioned that this estimate should not be considered a maximum and did not include the full effects of changes in the rate of ice sheets melting in Antarctica and Greenland, where there is enough ice on land to raise the average global sea level by about 65m.

New research has shown that the rate of discharge from the ice sheets into the sea is accelerating. The latest assessment of scientists at the Australian government's Antarctic division is that the probable rise in sea level by the end of this century will probably be less than 2m but may be as much as 80cm.

In the case of Singapore, even a loss of well over half a metre - the maximum considered by the Tropical Marine Science Institute - would translate into loss of land.

What has Singapore done so far? To address rising sea levels, all new reclamation projects since 1991 have had to be built 66cm higher than the IPCC's projected highest sea level rise of 59cm.

Also, Singapore's development of drainage infrastructure over the last 30 years has reduced flood-prone areas from 3,200ha in the 1970s to 98ha today. The PUB aims to reduce it to less than 48ha by next year through the development and improvement of drainage infrastructure, such as the widening and deepening of drains and canals.

A two-year study commissioned by the National Environment Agency and other government agencies in 2007 looked into the use of more natural structures to prevent coastal erosion, such as incorporating mangroves and seagrasses into the design of dikes and seawalls to improve their environmental impact and make them look better.

Singapore recently launched plans for its first eco-business park. The park will create 20,000 green-collar jobs by 2030. It will feature cutting-edge technologies such as storm water recycling, solar power generation and buildings with the highest standard of environmental performance set amid a lush green landscape. It will also allow firms to test-bed their clean-tech products and solutions - especially those designed for the tropics - before they are commercialised for the market. The park will attract technology and knowledge transfers to Singapore.

All this is good. However, more needs to be done to assess the risks to Singapore from global warming. For example, what are the implications when it comes to water and energy consumption? What kind of technology and natural infrastructure can Singapore adopt to help cool temperatures and reduce heat stress? What are the health risks of rising temperatures and how can they be mitigated?

The task is to create greater understanding (and not just awareness) of the effects of climate change and what individuals can do - in particular, how they can change their consumption habits and lifestyles. It is important to galvanise Singaporeans to be more active in greening their lifestyle and appreciating nature.

Much of Singapore's reaction to climate change has been top-down and government-led. Citizens and civil society groups should take responsibility for the country's greener growth. Civil society should take the lead in creating awareness, and in conducting education campaigns and community events to get people involved.

Most of the programmes and initiatives set up by the National Environment Agency have to do with technology, energy-related activities and industries. The focus is more on increasing energy efficiency than on changing mindsets when it comes to consumption, production and human interactions with the natural environment. Nonetheless, price incentives and guidelines for reducing energy bills can be a useful way of persuading the public to cut waste.

The writer is director of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. Think-Tank is a weekly column rotated among eight leading figures in Singapore's tertiary and research institutions.


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Initiatives announced to help firms prepare for Energy Conservation Act

Chris Howells, Channel NewsAsia 17 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE : The National Environment Agency (NEA) will start the Energy Efficient National Partnership (EENP) next month.

It will help companies build the necessary capabilities to attain higher levels of energy efficiency.

Senior Parliamentary Secretary for the Environment and Water Resources Amy Khor told an industry forum on Tuesday that the programme is voluntary.

Dr Khor said: "We have two components, firstly the energy efficiency learning network, comprising activities like forums, conferences, learning journey, so companies can share best practices, energy efficiency ideas, technology and so on.

"The other component of the EENP is the energy efficiency recognition scheme to reward companies that have implemented excellent energy efficiency and energy management programmes."

Companies will get help with energy efficiency programmes they can implement.

The government is also preparing companies for the Energy Conservation Act that Singapore is targeting to take effect by 2013.

This includes getting companies to appoint trained energy managers who will monitor and report energy use and submit plans for efficiency improvement.

The government will also weigh in on setting minimum standards to ensure uniform energy efficiency management.

Case studies from overseas have shown that companies can reduce their energy consumption by 10 to 15 per cent through such programmes. - CNA/ms

Singapore energy efficiency schemes taking off
Joyce Hooi, Business Times 17 Mar 10;

TWO years after the Grant for Energy Efficient Technologies (GREET) scheme was unveiled, the numbers are materialising.

'As of end-2009, five companies have come onboard and are expected to collectively gain $700,000 in energy savings annually,' said Amy Khor, Senior Parliamentary Secretary for the Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources, yesterday.

For these five applications, a total of $2.4 million has been approved under the GREET scheme which will co-fund up to 50 per cent of the companies' investment costs in energy-efficient technology.

Another scheme, the Energy Efficiency Improvement Assistance Scheme (EASe), also appears to have found wings. Last year, 18 applications were approved for the scheme - which co-funds energy appraisals - within a span of seven months, bringing the total to 161 since it was launched in 2005.

Approximately $4.51 million has been approved for the EASe appraisal projects, which are estimated to produce total energy savings of $43.7 million per year for the companies involved.

The two schemes had been given prominence in recent weeks as the government pushed for greater energy efficiency from its largest consumers of energy, through the implementation of the Energy Conservation Act by 2013.

'My advice to companies is to start preparing themselves early as it would eventually be in their interest and benefit to do so,' said Dr Khor, who was the guest of honour at the Carbon Disclosure Forum yesterday.

The forum - organised by the Singapore Business Federation, Singapore Compact for CSR and Association for Sustainable & Responsible Investment in Asia (ASrIA) - sought to drum up participation in the United Kingdom-based Carbon Disclosure Project.

The project collects climate change data from 2,500 companies worldwide on a yearly basis in the form of surveys that seek information on firms' energy usage and carbon footprints.

Last year, 18 companies in Singapore were sent the survey, out of which five firms responded - CapitaLand, City Developments, OCBC, Singapore Airlines and Wilmar International.

'There's still some way to go here, but we are going to see disclosure really developing in the next two or three years,' said David St Maur Sheil, the joint executive director of ASrIA.

'At the moment, we do not have any plans for mandatory carbon disclosure but we will not rule it out,' said Dr Khor.


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SIF Technologies: Taking green idea into uncharted waters

Straits Times 17 Mar 10;

In the third of a six-part series on innovative start-ups, Lee Yen Nee talks to environmental engineering firm SIF Technologies to find out how it took a concept from lab to market with a little help from Spring Singapore's Start-up Enterprise Development Scheme (Seeds).

ENVIRONMENTAL concerns had long been high on entrepreneur Matthew Tan's list of priorities, but his efforts to market a chemical-free water treatment system six years ago was met with an icy response from sceptics.

The green movement here was still in its infancy and with chemical use dominating the water treatment industry, many were not easily convinced by Mr Tan's innovation.

'When you go out there, there is a 95 per cent chance that people are using chemicals to treat water,' he said.

'Nobody believed us. People kept asking why they would need to recycle, why they would need to install this system to reduce chemical waste.'

But he was unfazed - and so confident in his system he offered a money-back guarantee to anyone who installed it.

'The strategy worked. No one returned a system,' said Mr Tan, 45, who at the time was running a one-man show at SIF Technologies, the company founded by his scientist friend, Dr Paul Seneviratne.

Dr Seneviratne, 47, had developed the water treatment system called DPA, named after the dispersion algorithm.

It uses a form of technology called hydrocavitation to increase dissolved oxygen in water by breaking down its molecular clustering. When water is oxygenated, the nutrifying bacteria, or good bacteria, can break down waste in the water, allowing it to be treated and reused.

DPA is 'green' as it treats water without using chemicals and does not require electricity to function. Industry sectors such as agriculture, oil and gas, pharmaceuticals as well as hospitality have embraced this system.

For a couple of years, Dr Seneviratne had tried to market the innovation but he lacked a proper business structure and found it difficult to break into the market.

He then approached Mr Tan, a 17-year veteran of sales and marketing, to join the company. Mr Tan wasted no time in putting together a business plan and applied for funds from Spring Singapore's Start-up Enterprise Development Scheme (Seeds).

At the end of 2004, which was about one year after Mr Tan joined the company, they received good news when Seeds approved a $300,000 funding that proved crucial as it helped SIF Technologies to get going.

'It gave us the kick-start,' said Mr Tan, now chief executive of SIF. His next step was to patent Dr Seneviratne's innovation and bring in two full-time engineers. The firm now employs six people. Dr Seneviratne is the chairman of SIF.

Things started to turn around after the Seeds funding, but Mr Tan knew that a common hurdle new innovations face is the lack of evidence to support what might appear to be extravagant claims.

He set about documenting laboratory reports and trial results from pilot studies and sought third-party scientists to verify the findings. The process helped SIF differentiate itself from its competitors, said Mr Tan, who hopes to license and franchise the technology worldwide.

He also kept testimonials from satisfied customers. This sort of feedback is helpful not only in keeping track of progress but in identifying new business ventures as well. That new venture turned out to be aquaculture, which had not figured in Mr Tan's initial business plan.

One of his customers, who runs a fish farm, noted that fish bred in water treated by DPA grew faster and produced better-quality meat than those raised in untreated water.

Mr Tan believes aquaculture has huge potential for growth, particularly as food stocks in the oceans are being depleted, so 'land-based farming is going to be the biggest thing'.

The DPA system, which costs about $15,000, enables farms to be self-sustainable by recycling water, so farmers need not worry about scarcity and wastage.

Besides commercial clients, SIF attracts individuals who install the DPA system for personal use. Mr Tan cited one who used the system for his koi pond and after six weeks found that the bacteria count had reduced significantly.

Over the last few years, DPA has recycled an estimated 500 million litres of water. That translates into a cost saving of several hundred thousand dollars in water bills.

The company's track record has helped to bring in several investors, including angel investor Francis Chua, who was attracted by the various areas in which the system can be applied.

SIF recently signed several major contracts here, including one to supply DPA in Singapore's first eco-precinct, Treelodge@Punggol.

Mr Tan has highlighted the possibility that SIF could be acquired by a listed environmental engineering company, perhaps within nine to 12 months. He believes this would enable the firm to take 'quantum leaps' and 'play the big boys' game'.


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Python parts and pangolins seized in raids in Malaysia

The Star 17 Mar 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: The Department of Wildlife and National Parks Department (Perhilitan) has confiscated over 26,000 pieces of python gall bladders, 35,000 pieces of python skins, and three pangolins in two operations in Kedah and Perak.

In the first raid at a business premises in Kulim last week, the officers found the python bile and dried pieces of python skin in sacks and zinc boxes.

“This is the biggest seizure of python bile we have ever had,” Perhilitan law and enforcement division director Saharudin Anan told a press conference at the department’s headquarters here yesterday.

“We are investigating how the owner of the shop, a man in his 40s, obtained these parts,” he said.

The python bile is believed to be sold between RM500 and RM800 per kg while the python skins is said to be worth between RM50 and RM80 per piece.

In the second raid, the Wildlife Crime Unit (WCU) officers found the three pangolins and a piece of pangolin scale at a home in Teluk Intan.

“The items were found in a storeroom and bedroom of the house,” said Saharudin.

Two men in their 40s who are in-laws and a 19-year-old woman were taken to the Teluk Intan magistrate’s court to be charged under the Wildlife Protection Act 1972 on March 26.

Eleven WCU officers, led by National Wildlife Department’s legal and enforcement department deputy director Celescoriano Razond, conducted the raids.


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Race to Save Tigers Not Yet Lost: Indonesia Official

Fidelis E Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 16 Mar 10;

A senior forestry official on Tuesday dismissed as premature an announcement by the UN’s wildlife trade body that efforts to save the world’s tiger populations were a failure.

“Indonesia is the only country that has managed to release tigers back into the wild, so it is too early to make statements like that,” said Darori, director general of forest protection and nature conservation at the Ministry of Forestry, citing two tigers released into the wild in Lampung last month and plans to soon release two more.

Willem Wijnstekers, secretary general of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, said on Monday that 35 years of efforts to save tigers in the wild had “failed miserably” and that the big cat was closer than ever to extinction.

“If we use tiger numbers as a performance indicator, then we must admit that we have failed miserably and that we are continuing to fail,” Wijnstekers said in Doha, Qatar, where delegates from nearly 150 nations are gathered to vote on proposals to restrict or ban trade in endangered animals and plants.

Less than a century ago, more than 100,000 tigers roamed the world’s jungles and forests. Today, less than 3,200 remain in the wild with up to 93 percent of their habitats being lost to farming and settlement.

Several tiger species, including the Sumatran tiger, are now teetering on the brink of extinction. The Balinese and Javan tigers were driven to extinction in the 1930s and 1980s, respectively.

“2010 is the Chinese Year of the Tiger and the International Year of Biodiversity,” Wijnstekers said. “This must be the year in which we reverse the trend. If we don’t, it will be to our everlasting shame.”

But Darori said that with the government’s current rehabilitation programs, he was confident Indonesia would be able to reverse the decline of the Sumatran tiger population in the wild, although he conceded it would not be easy.

“They are just big cats and cats are normally easy to breed,” he said, “but it’s expensive to feed them if they’re kept at a zoo.

“But for those in the wild, it’s a bit challenging for us because their habitats are being destroyed, not to mention the high rate of illegal poaching.”

However, Hadi S Alikodra, a wildlife expert at the Bogor Institute of Agriculture (IPB) in West Java, said the future did not look good for the Sumatran tiger.

“If you look at the numbers, then I’m very pessimistic because Sumatra’s forests — their habitat — are continuing to be destroyed at a rapid pace,” he said.

Hadi said the Sumatran tiger population had decreased by more than 10 percent every year since the 1990s, dropping steadily to reach just 300 left today.

Additional reporting from AFP


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Poultry mauled by tigers in South Aceh

The Jakarta Post 16 Mar 10;

Two tigers are believed to have mauled chickens and ducks in Ujung Tanah village, Samadua, South Aceh, a local official said Tuesday.

“The tigers have frightened local residents over the last few days as their chickens were mauled and their footprints were detected around residential areas,” said S. Junaidi, Samadua district head, in south Aceh’s capital Tapaktuan.

Junaidi said he had immediately notified the Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA) about the tigers.

“A quick response is needed before the animals cause any further damage,” he told Antara state news agency.

Junaidi hoped the related agencies would soon send experts to transport the animals back to their natural habitat.

Abdullah, 52, one of the local residents, said he spotted the tigers' footprints 20 meters away from his house in Sawang Bunga village.

“The footprints at the back of my house allegedly belonged to two tigers. One footprint belonged to an adult tiger and the other to a younger tiger, possibly its cub,” Abdullah added.


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Myanmar a gateway for wildlife trade to China: report

Yahoo News 16 Mar 10;

DOHA (AFP) – Demand in China is stoking a black market in neighbouring Myanmar in tiger-bone wine, leopard skins, bear bile and other products made from endangered species, a report released on Tuesday said.

"China's border areas have long been considered a hotbed for illegal trade, with remote locations often making surveillance difficult in sparsely populated areas," Xu Hongfa, top China investigator for environmental group TRAFFIC, said in the report.

Enforcement efforts within China appear to have curtailed the open sale of many animal parts and products taken from species banned under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), he said.

Market surveys in 18 Western Chinese cities in 2008 found only two sites where tiger and snow leopard skins were on sale, far less than in previous years, said Xu.

But transactions may have simply moved underground and onto the Internet, and Myanmar has emerged as a fast-growing supply node.

"There is clearly ongoing demand for leopard and tiger products, but the trade appears to be becoming less visible year-on-year," Xu said.

"The current trade is more covert, organised and insidious, making it harder to detect and crack down on."

TRAFFIC said that in December 2008, its investigators checked three markets on the Chinese side of the border in Yunnan Province, and one in Mongla, a town in Special Region 4 of Myanmar's Eastern Shan state.

Markets on the Chinese side were legal, but one and a half kilometres (a mile) across the border they found a grim range of wildlife products sold by Chinese merchants.

These included a clouded leopard skin, pieces of elephant skin, batches of bear bile extracted from live animals, a dead silver pheasant, a monitor lizard and a bear paw, which is considered a delicacy in Chinese cuisine.

Nearby, another shop specialised in "tiger-bone wine" costing 88 dollars (64 euros) for a small bottle.

The shop owner said buyers were mostly Chinese tourists, and customers could order the supposedly health-boosting tonic by phone for delivery to Daluo, a river-port town in China.

Like China, Myanmar also had national laws forbidding trade in endangered species.

"But enforcement is non-existent in Special Region 4 as it is an autonomous state... controlled by the National Democratic Alliance Army," a rebel group, said Xu Ling, the China programme officer for TRAFFIC, who did the survey.

The 175-member CITES, meeting in Qatar's capital Doha until March 25, will review measures to boost enforcement of wildlife bans already in place, as well as proposals to halt or limit commerce in species not yet covered by the Convention.


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Despite ban, African ivory flows to Asia

Anne Chaon Yahoo News 16 Mar 10;

DOHA (AFP) – A booming black market in African ivory linked to Asian crime syndicates may scupper efforts by Zambia and Tanzania to hold a one-off sale of tusks, experts and delegates at a UN wildlife trade meeting say.

At its last gathering in 2007, the UN-backed Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) voted for a nine-year moratorium on exports of African ivory.

The ban went into effect in 2008, after South Africa, Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe carried out a one-time sale to Japan and China of stockpiled ivory.

But Zambia and Tanzania are now asking the 175-nation body, meeting in the Qatari capital Doha until March 25, for permission to unload their own ivory stocks, also taken legally from animals that died naturally or were culled.

The two countries require a two-thirds majority for their bids to be approved.

A coalition of 23 elephant-range nations not only opposes the measure, but wants to extend the ban on ivory sales to 20 years.

"The 2007 moratorium was meant to ensure there would be no markets (for ivory) in neighbouring countries. At first, it created panic among the poachers," said Cosma Wilungula Balongelwa, a delegate from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

But they regrouped and now operate with military force and tactics, he told AFP.

"They fire on herds with rocket launchers. In Salonga Park -- at 36,000 square kilometres (14,000 square miles) the largest in Africa -- our 140 rangers are completely overwhelmed."

In less than two months, hundreds of elephants in the DRC have been slaughtered by commando-style poachers, he said.

"These are not amateurs. A local network would never be able to handle this volume of contraband."

The upsurge in poaching has caused experts to question the wisdom of allowing exceptional sales of state-held ivory.

In 2007, CITES enforcement officials argued that the moratorium combined with the one-off sale, which raised 15.4 million dollars earmarked for conservation, would depress the price of illegal ivory and thus discourage poaching.

Instead, the tally of elephants killed by poachers has soared, especially in central Africa.

In Kenya, the number has jumped from 47 in 2007, to 145 in 2008, to 234 last years.

And in Chad, one of the northern-most elephant-range nations, the number of tuskers in the wild has plummeted from 3,885 in 2005 to 617 at the end of 2009, according to government figures.

In all these countries, trafficking has taken on military dimensions, said Celine Sissler-Bienvenu, an expert on illegal ivory trade at the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).

"In December, 80 poachers entered the Central African Republic from Sudan and killed 36 elephants. Then they moved into the DRC and Cameroon. They had heavy arms and were divided into three units -- shooters, cutters and transporters," she said.

Powerful acids melted the elephants' flesh so that tusks could be extracted quickly.

Evidence also points to the "increasing role of Asian-run crime syndicates in moving large volumes of ivory from Africa to Asia," said Tom Milliken, who monitors illegal trade in east and southern Africa for green group TRAFFIC.

"At home, China claims to have a tightly controlled regime for trading in ivory, and imposes the death penalty for large-scale infringements. Chinese nationals living in Africa seem oblivious to this," he said.

Several African delegates, asking not to be named, also blamed mafia-like networks linked to buyers in China.

A study published in Science last week recommended that the Zambian and Tanzanian proposals be voted down until the impact of ivory sales is better understood.

"The immediate fear is that ... allowing one-off sales in any African nation will stimulate the market for illegal ivory everywhere, particularly in those countries where law enforcement is inadequate," said one of the co-authors, Rene Beyers, a researcher at the University of British Colombia.

Zambia holds 21 tonnes and Tanzania 89 tonnes of legally taken ivory stocks.

But DNA analysis of contraband seized in Asia has indicated both countries are also among the most significant source of illegal ivory, according to the paper.

New analysis points to ivory enforcement failures in parts of Africa, Asia
WWF 17 Mar 10;

Doha, Qatar – Urgent law enforcement action by governments in Central and West Africa and South-east Asia is crucial to addressing the illicit ivory trade, according to a new analysis of elephant trade data.

Detailed regional summaries of the data held in the Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS), the world’s largest database on ivory seizures, highlight the failure of law enforcement in key elephant range States facing an increasing threat from organised crime and the presence of unregulated markets.

The re-analysis comes as 175 governments meet in Qatar for the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), where they will consider ivory trade issues.

"It's clearer than ever that governance shortfalls and weak enforcement allow illicit ivory trade to go unchecked in West and Central Africa and in South-East Asia, where large domestic ivory markets openly sell ivory illegally," said Tom Milliken of TRAFFIC, who undertook the ETIS analysis.

"What's needed is urgent action by government enforcement agencies in these regions and strong collaboration with counterparts in Asia where many of the current seizures are being made."

“If there was adequate political will, a commitment to law enforcement would shut down the illegal markets and check corruption. That isn’t happening.” Milliken said.

ETIS is compiled by TRAFFIC on behalf of CITES, and comprises more than 15,400 ivory seizure cases compiled over the last 21 years.

The re-analysis of the data was made by region rather than by country, and was carried out to align the data with MIKE (Monitoring the Illegal Killing of Elephants), another of the CITES tools used to monitor poaching, which also shows that the Central African region is losing the most elephants.

"Until this strengthened law enforcement happens, ivory will continue to leak out of Africa” said Elisabeth McLellan, Species Manager, WWF International.

"We're not talking small-time smugglers here, we're talking hardened, organized criminal gangs," McLellan said.


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Internet trade driving rare salamander to extinction

Plight of Kaiser's spotted newt highlights new threat to wildlife
Michael McCarthy and Kevin Rawlinson, The Independent 17 Mar 10;

A rare salamander is being driven to the brink of extinction in the wild because of internet trading, conservationists say.

The little-known Kaiser's spotted newt, found only in Iran, is thought to be the first creature to face the threat of extinction from e-commerce – a growing threat to endangered wildlife which authorities are struggling to address. Because Neurergus kaiseri is very attractively coloured, and also rare, amphibian enthusiasts are willing to pay as much as £200 for one. Dealers can often only find people willing to pay such a price by advertising on the internet.

An investigation into the sale of Kaiser's spotted newts by the wildlife trade monitoring agency Traffic found 10 websites claiming to stock the species, including a Ukrainian company which said it had sold more than 200 wild-caught specimens in a year.

The demand has been such that the wild population, found only in four streams of Iran's Zagros Mountains, was reduced by 80 per cent between 2001 and 2005 alone, and is now classed as critically endangered. It is estimated that fewer than 1,000 mature individuals remain.

Conservationists want all international trade in wild-caught Kaiser's spotted newts made illegal. A proposal to ban such trade has been put forward by Iran at the conference of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites), in Doha in the Arabian gulf.

"The internet itself isn't the threat, but it's another way to market the product," said Ernie Cooper, of Traffic Canada. "The Kaiser's spotted newt, for example, is expensive and most people are not willing to pay $300 for a salamander. But through the power of the internet, tapping into global market, you can find buyers."

Kaiser's spotted newts were being advertised for sale on numerous websites yesterday, but the animals did not appear to be wild-caught. Babies were being offered for £40 each for delivery anywhere in Europe, with North American sellers asking for around twice that price including free next-day shipping. Some sellers claimed their salamanders had been captive-bred in 2008.

Illegal wildlife trade is gaining ground on the internet, according to Cites. Officials say that while wildlife law enforcement has made gains in policing physical markets for wildlife, the online world – with its "virtual" markets that have yet to be properly regulated – presents a set of new challenges.

Over the next few days, the 175 Cites member states meeting in Doha, including Britain, will consider whether to take a more proactive approach to regulating the online trade in endangered species. This is likely to include the creation of an international database, scientific research to gauge the correlation between wildlife loss and online trade, and closer collaboration with Interpol, the international law enforcement agency.


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Shark conservation proposal defeated at UN meeting

Michael Casey, Associated Press 17 Mar 10;

DOHA, Qatar — China, Japan and Russia helped defeat a U.S.-endorsed proposal at a U.N. wildlife trade meeting Tuesday that would have boosted conservation efforts for sharks, expressing concern it would hurt poor nations and should be the responsibility of regional fisheries bodies.

The opposition to the shark proposal came hours after the marine conservation group Oceana came out with a report showing that demand for shark fin soup in Asia is driving many species of these big fish to the brink of extinction.

The nonbinding measure, which called for increased transparency in the shark trade and more research into the threat posed to sharks by illegal fishing, had been expected to gain approval by a committee of the 175-nation Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, or CITES.

But the United States, the European Union and other supporters were unable to muster the two-thirds majority needed after China, Russia, Japan and several developing countries argued that shark populations aren't suffering.

The decision could be a bad omen for a two-week meeting that will include much more controversial marine proposals, including banning the export of Atlantic bluefin tuna, which is popular with sushi lovers, and tightening the trade on eight shark species.

"What we saw today is those parties that disagree with listing commercially fished species on CITES making a stand," said Glenn Sant, the global marine program leader for the conservation group TRAFFIC. "I do worry that instead of looking at the logic and facts of what some of this material contains, they will simply vote on the grounds that they don't want to see any movement on conserving marine species."

Many of the arguments used by China, Japan, Russia and several North African countries to oppose the measure were expected to be recycled by delegates later this week when proposals to tightening regulations on the shark trade are considered.

China and Russia argued that shark populations aren't suffering. Japan insisted that current measures in place are more than adequate. Developing countries like Libya and Morocco complained that any effort to protect sharks would damage the economies of poor fishing nations and burden them with expensive enforcement requirements.

The Chinese delegation said there was no scientific evidence that the shark's survival is threatened and CITES was not the right forum to handle the issue. The Chinese would prefer to leave regulation to existing tools like the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization and regional bodies which conservationists argue have failed to crackdown on illegal fishing and even uphold their own modest quotas.

Oceana, a Washington, D.C.-based group, found that as many as 73 million sharks are killed each year, primarily for their fins, with much of the trade going to China.

Shark fin soup has long played central part in traditional Chinese culture, often being served at weddings and banquets. Demand for the soup has surged as increasing numbers of Chinese middle class family become wealthier.

Also Tuesday, the CITES Secretariat recommended that delegates support a proposal allowing Zambia to conduct a one-off sale of ivory while rejecting a similar request by Tanzania.

The recommendation could go a long way toward shaping the final vote, which was expected as early as Monday. Zambia wants to sell 48,000 pounds (21,700 kilograms) of ivory while Tanzania is asking to sell almost 200,000 pounds (90,000 kilograms) of ivory.

Tom De Meulenaer, the elephant expert for CITES, said the Secretariat endorsed a conclusion by a panel of experts that Zambia had conservation measures in place while Tanzania allows poaching in several parts of the country and remained a transit point for illegal raw ivory shipments.

The findings against Tanzania could bolster the arguments of Congo, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Mali, Rwanda and Sierra Leone, which have proposed a halt to the limited international trade in African elephant ivory currently permitted and a 20-year moratorium on any proposals to relax international trade controls on African elephants.


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Thrill-Seeking Holidaymakers Are Putting Dolphins at Risk

ScienceDaily 16 Mar 10;

Tourists wanting to watch and swim with dolphins are now being urged to keep their distance in a bid to protect both the animals and the local communities whose livelihoods depend on them.

A study of bottlenose dolphins living off the coast of Zanzibar has found that the many tourist boats operating in the area are harassing the animals, preventing them from resting, feeding and nurturing their young.

The research, led by Dr Per Berggren of Newcastle University, also highlights swimming with dolphins -- in particular where tourists swim in very close and try to touch the dolphins- as being incredibly stressful for the animals.

Printed March 16 in the academic journal Endangered Species Research, the authors say regulation of the dolphin tourism industry is "urgently needed" to minimize the potential long-term negative impact on the animals.

Dr Berggren, who joined Newcastle from Stockholm University earlier this month, explained: "The current situation in Zanzibar is unsustainable. The local community is dependent on tourism -- and therefore the dolphins -- but unless the activity is regulated the animals will leave.

"Our study found that whenever the tourist boats were present the dolphins were very unsettled and spent less time feeding, socialising or resting. This has a negative impact, not only on individual animals, but on the population as a whole and long term it could be devastating.

"The problem is that any change needs to be tourist-driven. Many visitors will pay drivers extra in tips to steer their boats in close, herding the dolphins so they can dive right in amongst them. Our message is, keep your distance and put the dolphins first."

Dolphin-watching was introduced off the South coast of Zanzibar in 1992. Today it is one of the few places in the world where tourism has completely replaced the traditional dolphin hunt -- an activity which threatened the local population of around 150 bottlenose dolphins.

"Abolishing the hunts was a major breakthrough and dolphin watching offered a humane, sustainable alternative," says Dr Berggren.

"Unfortunately, without regulation, dolphin tourism brings with it its own challenges."

Watching the dolphins over a period of 40 days, the research team found that in the presence of the tourist boats, the time the dolphins spent resting dropped from 38 per cent of the time to 10 per cent while the time they spent foraging and socialising dropped from 19 and 10 per cent to just 10 and 4 per cent, respectively.

Meanwhile, travelling behaviour more than doubled in proportion, from 33 to 77 per cent, becoming by far the most dominant activity state during interactions with tourist boats.

"Overall, the dolphins are using more energy than they are taking in because they aren't resting or feeding as much but are swimming more as they try to avoid the tourist boats," explains Dr Berggren, based in the School of Marine Science and Technology at Newcastle University.

"Zanzibar is a wonderful place, the dolphins are incredibly interesting and between July and October there are also breeding humpbacks in the area. I would recommend that anyone go there for a holiday and support the local community but act responsibly and ask operators to follow existing guidelines."


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Technology helps Liberia turn the page on 'blood timber'

Zoom Dosso Yahoo News 16 Mar 10;

MONROVIA (AFP) – Liberia's rainforests, once ravaged for blood timber sold to fund one of Africa's bloodiest civil wars, are being primed as a lucrative and legal industry using cutting-edge tracking technology.

One by one an electronic tag -- similar to bar codes used on consumer products -- is attached to trees in the thick woodlands covering 45 percent of the West African nation, a painstaking process that will allow consumers to trace the end-product right back to the stump.

While the use of "blood diamonds" to fund wars in the region is better known, it was timber that propped up armed factions, notably those of former president Charles Taylor, during 14 years of Liberian conflict that left over 250,000 dead.

Before a United Nations ban on timber exports in 2003, the timber industry brought in a quarter of Liberia's gross domestic product (GDP), and its revival is key to boosting government coffers in one of the world's poorest countries.

In 2006, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf enacted a new forestry law to protect the tropical forests which contain more than 59 species of trees --- and the UN ban was lifted.

The continent's first female president cancelled all previous concessions and put Swiss monitoring company SGS in charge of managing the forests using intelligent tracking software from the Britain-based firm Helveta.

"Liberia is the first country in the world where we have reached this level of the tracking system," said SGS operations manager for Liberia, Thomas de Francqueville, comparing the process to that in supermarkets.

"We start the checking in the forest by making sure that only trees to be cut are cut, we follow the logs on the field, and we check the logs at the port until they are put in the ship."

A report by the International Tropical Timber Organisation in 2005 showed that prior to the industry collapse, the sector generated up to 20 million dollars (14.6 million euros) a year in government revenue and 100 million dollars in exports.

As the country, left in tatters by its successive civil wars, builds its economy and infrastructure from scratch, the forests could prove extremely valuable -- if they are properly managed.

Illegal logging has wreaked havoc on wildlife and communities, while properly managing resources could provide sustainable income and keep the forests in good shape.

"Those trees in a protected area cannot be extracted and so all of these are for conservation -- so it's obvious that the forest will always be replenished, because it's not all trees that are cut," said Eric Gayleh, SGS field officer team supervisor.

Moses Wogbeh, managing director of the Liberian Forestry Development Authority FDA, said parliament had introduced a re-forestation policy and companies given licenses to operate were "very carefully" chosen.

The government will have earned 12 million dollars since it started re-issuing licenses in the beginning of 2009 by the end of March, De Francqueville said.

The first seven containers were exported in November, another six are currently ready for export and the first large-scale shipment is expected some time this month, according to SGS.

The industry is expected to eventually employ some 50,000 people in one of the world's poorest countries, where per capita GDP is estimated at 190 dollars.

However illegal felling continues, for sale on the local market, for charcoal production or to clear land for agriculture, and many of the so-called pit sawers -- the term for small-scale generally illegal loggers -- are former fighters whom authorities hope to bring over to their side.

"The chainsaw will eventually fade away gradually. If some of them remain it will be a smaller scale where we will be able to manage them and control them ... but we are not taking them out of business," said Wogbeh.

Key to the logging deals is ensuring that local communities benefit.

So far, "we have licensed seven foreign management contracts, ranging from 50,000 to 400,000 hectares (123,500 to 988,400 acres)," Wogbeh told AFP.

"In the forest management contract there are provisions spelling out that the companies have to build schools, roads, hospitals in areas where they are operating," he said.

Another provision requires the company to sign a social agreement that entitles the community to 30 percent of the land rental and 1.5 dollars per cubic meter (35 cubic feet) of timber harvested, Wogbeh said.


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Habitat loss wiping out Europe's butterflies

Yahoo News 16 Mar 10;

DOHA (AFP) – The destruction of natural habitats in Europe is wiping out butterfly, beetle and dragonfly species across the region, the updated European "Red List" of endangered species showed Tuesday.

"When a Red List like this raises the alarm, the implications for our own future are clear. This is a worrying decline," said EU Environment Commissioner Janez Potocnik.

Scientists examining Europe's 435 butterfly species found that the populations of one in three species are falling and nine percent are already threatened with extinction.

"Most butterflies at risk are confined to southern Europe," said Annabelle Cuttelod, coordinator of the European Red List at the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

"Their main threat is habitat loss, most often caused by changes in agricultural practices, either through intensification or abandonment, or to climate change, forest fires and the expansion of tourism."

Likewise, logging has led to a decline in the populations of some beetles species that are depend on decaying wood. Known as saproxylic beetles, they play an important role in ecosystems by recycling nutrients.

Some 11 percent or 46 species of them are at risk of being lost from the region, while seven percent are threatened with extinction worldwide.

"The main long-term threats to saproxylic beetles are habitat loss due to logging and the decline in the number of mature trees," said the IUCN.

For dragonflies, it is the depletion of freshwater resources that is causing these species to drop in numbers.

Five percent of dragonfly species are threatened with global extinction, while some 11 percent are considered to be near threatened within Europe.

"Increasingly hot and dry summers combined with intensified water extraction for drinking and irrigation are causing the dragonflies' wetland habitats to dry up," said the IUCN.

The list including some 6,000 European species is part of the IUCN's overall Red List, which is the most respected inventory of biodiversity covering more than 47,000 of the world's species.


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UN chides Russia on wildlife failures from the 2014 Winter Olympics

Yahoo News 16 Mar 10;

MOSCOW (AFP) – The United Nations on Tuesday criticised Russia for taking too long to implement decisions to protect the environment from the impact of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

The alpine and nordic events in the 2014 Games - Russia's biggest sporting event since the collapse of the Soviet Union - are to be held in a region of outstanding natural diversity in the mountains above Sochi.

Russian environmentalists have long complained the extensive building works risk harming the environment and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) said it dispatched a mission to Sochi in response to their protests.

"The implementation of decisions taken at the political level relating to the mitigation and compensation of impacts of Olympic and tourism projects are taking too long," the mission's report said.

It said that these included enlarging the existing Sochi national park, strengthening of the level of protection of the most sensitive areas and the setting up of new areas to protect habitats for birds and animals.

Meanwhile, assessments of the building projects "did not take into account the cumulative... effects on the ecosystems of the Sochi region and its population," the report said.

The report nonetheless praised the organisers for being open to discussions on the issue.

It also noted that while ecologists felt they were being ignored, "those contracted to develop projects also feel that some NGOs were only interested in stalling the entire Olympic project."

The Russian branch of WWF expressed satisfaction with the report, saying UNEP had agreed with NGOs and underlined "the necessity of rapidly setting up monitoring of the impact of the construction on the environment."

WWF has already accused the government of inflicting "huge damage" on nature in its rush to build infrastructure for the 2014 Games and threatened to cease cooperation with the authorities for the event.

Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak, the government's pointman for the Games, had at the weekend launched a scathing attack on Russian environmentalists who had been criticising the Olympics.

Russian NGOs were adopting "an unconstructive position and many are simply trying to obstruct the Olympic project", Russian media quoted him as saying.

Sochi pulled off a stunning victory to win the right to host the Games at the International Olympic Committee vote in 2007, helped by Russian strongman Vladimir Putin pleading its case in English.

But officials have a major challenge in ensuring the Games are ready on time, with much of the infrastructure in the Black Sea port city and the mountains above needing to be built from scratch.

Kozak said almost all the facilities were on schedule, with only the luge and bobsleigh sliding track lagging behind.


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Major report reveals the environmental and social impact of the 'livestock revolution'

Stanford University, EurekAlert 16 Mar 10;

A major report by an international research team explores the impact of the global livestock industry on the environment, the economy and human health.

Global meat production has tripled in the past three decades and could double its present level by 2050, according to a new report on the livestock industry by an international team of scientists and policy experts. The impact of this "livestock revolution" is likely to have significant consequences for human health, the environment and the global economy, the authors conclude.

"The livestock industry is massive and growing," said Harold A. Mooney, co-editor of the two-volume report, Livestock in a Changing Landscape (Island Press). Mooney is a professor of biology and senior fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment.

"This is the first time that we've looked at the social, economic, health and environmental impacts of livestock in an integrated way and presented solutions for reducing the detrimental effects of the industry and enhancing its positive attributes," he said.

Among the key findings in the report are:

* More than 1.7 billion animals are used in livestock production worldwide and occupy more than one-fourth of the Earth's land.

* Production of animal feed consumes about one-third of total arable land.

* Livestock production accounts for approximately 40 percent of the global agricultural gross domestic product.

* The livestock sector, including feed production and transport, is responsible for about 18 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions worldwide.

Impacts on humanity

Although about 1 billion poor people worldwide derive at least some part of their livelihood from domesticated animals, the rapid growth of commercialized industrial livestock has reduced employment opportunities for many, according to the report. In developing countries, such as India and China, large-scale industrial production has displaced many small, rural producers, who are under additional pressure from health authorities to meet the food safety standards that a globalized marketplace requires.

Beef, poultry, pork and other meat products provide one-third of humanity's protein intake, but the impact on nutrition across the globe is highly variable, according to the report. "Too much animal-based protein is not good for human diets, while too little is a problem for those on a protein-starved diet, as happens in many developing countries," Mooney noted.

While overconsumption of animal-source foods – particularly meat, milk and eggs – has been linked to heart disease and other chronic conditions, these foods remain a vital source of protein and nutrient nutrition throughout the developing world, the report said. The authors cited a recent study of Kenyan children that found a positive association between meat intake and physical growth, cognitive function and school performance.

Human health also is affected by pathogens and harmful substances transmitted by livestock, the authors said. Emerging diseases, such as highly pathogenic avian influenza, are closely linked to changes in the livestock production but are more difficult to trace and combat in the newly globalized marketplace, they said.

Environmental impacts

The livestock sector is a major environmental polluter, the authors said, noting that much of the world's pastureland has been degraded by grazing or feed production, and that many forests have been clear-cut to make way for additional farmland. Feed production also requires intensive use of water, fertilizer, pesticides and fossil fuels, added co-editor Henning Steinfeld of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

Animal waste is another serious concern. "Because only a third of the nutrients fed to animals are absorbed, animal waste is a leading factor in the pollution of land and water resources, as observed in case studies in China, India, the United States and Denmark," the authors wrote. Total phosphorous excretions are estimated to be seven to nine times greater than that of humans, with detrimental effects on the environment.

The beef, pork and poultry industries also emit large amounts of carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases, Steinfeld said, adding that climate-change issues related to livestock remain largely unaddressed. "Without a change in current practices, the intensive increases in projected livestock production systems will double the current environmental burden and will contribute to large-scale ecosystem degradation unless appropriate measures are taken," he said.

Solutions

The report concludes with a review of various options for introducing more environmentally and socially sustainable practices to animal production systems.

"We want to protect those on the margins who are dependent on a handful of livestock for their livelihood," Mooney said. "On the other side, we want people engaged in the livestock industry to look closely at the report and determine what improvements they can make."

One solution is for countries to adopt policies that provide incentives for better management practices that focus on land conservation and more efficient water and fertilizer use, he said.

But calculating the true cost of meat production is a daunting task, Mooney added. Consider the piece of ham on your breakfast plate, and where it came from before landing on your grocery shelf. First, take into account the amount of land used to rear the pig. Then factor in all the land, water and fertilizer used to grow the grain to feed the pig and the associated pollution that results.

Finally, consider that while the ham may have come from Denmark, where there are twice as many pigs as people, the grain to feed the animal was likely grown in Brazil, where rainforests are constantly being cleared to grow more soybeans, a major source of pig feed.

"So much of the problem comes down to the individual consumer," said co-editor Fritz Schneider of the Swiss College of Agriculture (SHL). "People aren't going to stop eating meat, but I am always hopeful that as people learn more, they do change their behavior. If they are informed that they do have choices to help build a more sustainable and equitable world, they can make better choices."

###

Livestock in a Changing Landscape is a collaboration of the FAO, SHL, Woods Institute for the Environment, International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), Scientific Committee for Problems of the Environment (SCOPE), Agricultural Research Center for International Development (CIRAD), and Livestock, Environment and Development Initiative (LEAD).

Other editors of the report are Laurie E. Neville (Stanford University), Pierre Gerber (FAO), Jeroen Dijkman (FAO), Shirley Tarawali (ILRI) and Cees de Haan (World Bank). Initial funding for the project was provided by a 2004 Environmental Venture Projects grant from the Woods Institute.

Cassandra Brooks of the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford University contributed to this article.


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Can Smiley Faces (and a 14-Step Program to Stop Overconsumption) Save the Global Climate?

When rational appeals fall short, environmentalists enlist social and economic incentives—and even neuroscience—to get the public in on national efforts to combat climate change

David Biello, Scientific American 16 Mar 10;

Energy efficiency seems to make rational economic sense—the less energy used, the more money saved. Yet, in the real world it's actually competition with neighbors rather than cost savings that can drive people to turn down their thermostats, install insulation or simply switch off the lights when they leave a room. Such is the lesson of a host of efforts, ranging from a group called OPOWER's comparative use utility billing to switching from miles per gallon to rate vehicle efficiency to gallons per mile.

Now a new collaborative study from the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and the Garrison Institute's Climate, Mind and Behavior Project reveals that such simple actions—from taking one fewer flight per year to wasting less food—can add up. The environmental group estimates that if all Americans adopted 14 such steps over the next decade the country would avoid one billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions by 2020—or the equivalent of the entire annual greenhouse gas emissions of Germany.

"Much of this is eliminating waste—and most waste costs you money," says NRDC's executive director Peter Lehner. "If all Americans did take a fairly modest range of actions, most of which actually save you money, we can make a big difference."

The recommendations, in addition to flying less and wasting 25 percent less food, include: carpooling or telecommuting once a week (75 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) saved by 2020, if adopted by all Americans); maintaining your car or truck, such as keeping tires properly inflated (45 million metric tons of CO2e); cutting the time spent idling in a vehicle in half (40 million metric tons of CO2e); better insulation at home (85 million metric tons of CO2e); programmable thermostats set higher (80 million metric tons of CO2e); reducing electricity demand from appliances that are "off," so-called phantom demand (70 million metric tons CO2e); using hot water more efficiently, such as washing clothes in colder water (65 million metric tons of CO2e); buying EnergyStar appliances when old ones wear out (55 million metric tons CO2e); replacing incandescent lightbulbs with compact fluorescents (30 million metric tons CO2e); eating chicken instead of beef two days a week (105 million metric tons of CO2e); increased recycling of paper, plastics and metals (105 million metric tons of CO2e); "responsible" consumption, such as buying less bottled water (60 million metric tons CO2e).

"We make bad decisions all the time," says Sabine Marx, associate director at the Center for Research on Environmental Decisions at Columbia University, thanks to incomplete information or other barriers to action, like high up-front costs for things like insulation. Overcoming those "doesn't mean we have to manipulate people's minds," Marx says, but rather make good decisions easier.

For example, rates of organ donation vary widely within Europe, from 100 percent in France and Poland to 17 percent in the U.K. and just 4 percent in Denmark. The difference cannot be ascribed to different cultural views about organ donation but rather whether the country in question has a policy that is opt-in (check this box if you want to donate your organs) or opt-out (check this box if you do not want to donate your organs). "We think we're rational," says economist John Gowdy of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y. "But really it's the person who designs the question on the back of a driver's license who made the choice for us."

NRDC, the Garrison Institute and others hope to bring this kind of choice editing to the world of personal behavior. Part of this is a result of ongoing frustration with broader policy measures, particularly at the national level, when it comes to confronting climate change. "If Congress does enact something, it will be completely inadequate to the task," says Gus Speth, former dean of Yale University's School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. It would be a "first step," however, Lehner notes. The primary benefit of personal action is that it can start immediately, he adds.

But Lehner admits that his organization has no idea how to convince people to undertake these 14 steps in the next decade on their own. And there is significant danger that any energy efficiency undertaking ends up ultimately increasing energy use. "The rebound effect is quite clear," Speth notes. "You buy an EnergyStar refrigerator, but you buy two of them. We have to bring overconsumption into this. How do we get out of this consumerist trap we've been in?"

Economists Hunt Allcott of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Sendhil Mullainathan of Harvard University offer one answer in the March 4 Science: more funding for research into the "behavioral factors that influence energy consumption."

For example, programs like OPOWER's that compare electricity use among neighbors have been shown to reduce electricity use by 2 percent at a cost of 25 cents per kilowatt-hour. "If scaled nationwide," the economists wrote, "a program like this could reduce U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from electric power by 0.5 percent while actually saving $165 per metric ton of reductions." And all from a simple bar chart—paired with a smiley face for energy-efficient behavior—on an electric bill.


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Richard Branson Aims To Rock The Boat For Green Shipping

Greener World Media, PlanetArk 17 Mar 10;

Look around you -- the furniture in your office or house, the electronics, the clothes you are wearing, mostly likely some of your dinner -- chances are these things moved by boat. About 85 percent of worldwide cargo travels by ship, and so it's no surprise that shipping is a major contributor to climate change.

According to Richard Branson's new NGO, which is called the Carbon War Room, the global shipping fleet is the equivalent on the sixth most polluting country in the world:

Annual CO2e emissions currently exceed one million tons and are projected to grow to 18 percent of all manmade CO2e emissions by 2050. Yet existing technology presents an opportunity for up to 75 percent gains in efficiency, with required investments repaid in just a few years.

Fixing shipping will take bold ideas -- see the ship at left, which is equipped with a kite from a company called SkySails -- and it will take simple ones, like slowing ships down a little, adopting the equivalent of a 55 mph limit on the open seas. (See this New York Times story, which is literally about a slow boat to China.) And it will require bringing shipping companies, customers, regulators and others to work together to attack the problem.

Opportunities like these interest the Carbon War Room, which says its focus is to harness the power of business to bring about market-driven solutions to climate change.

"We believe that climate change is the greatest challenge facing humankind," says Jigar Shah, the CEO of the Carbon War Room. "And we need a war room-like effort to combat it."

I spoke recently with Jigar at the NGO's new offices in downtown Washington. We'd met a couple of years ago, when he was running SunEdison, a solar industry startup, backed by Goldman Sachs, that was among the first to sell solar energy as a service (buy electricity, not PV panels), a business model that appealed to big customers including Wal-Mart. Jigar, who is 35, left SunEdison at the end of 2008 and became the top exec of Carbon War Room last June.

Branson, who runs Virgin Group (airlines, music, telecom, green energy etc.), started Carbon War Room with Craig Cogut, the founder of private-equity firm Pegasus Capital, and Boudewijn Poelmann, the co-founder a chairman of the Dutch Postcode Lottery, a private lottery that raises money for good causes. (The Dutch lottery gave $1.3 million last year to the Rocky Mountain Institute.)

They say:

Our approach is to identify the barriers that are preventing market-based scale up of climate change solutions and thereby perpetuating the status quo. In addition to technology and policy gaps, these barriers include principal-agent problems, information gaps, and lack of common standards or metrics.

The Carbon War Room is also looking at building efficiency and seeking 10 cities to join in what Branson, speaking in Vancouver last month, called the Green Capital -- Global Challenge. It all sounds a little amorphous and vague, but the group -- which has only eight full-time staffers -- is working with others to drive change.

Its shipping campaign, for example, includes representatives from Sustainable Shipping, an online news and information portal, and the well-respected NGO Oceana, as well as Jonathon Porritt, a prominent UK environmentalist and author. They're also working with RightShip, an Australian firm the has long vetted ships for safety and now offers environmental ratings as well.

"In shipping, there's been an information gap," Shah explains. "Companies that hired shipping services had no idea which were efficient and which were not."

That's a problem because typically customers -- big companies like Rio Tinto, Cargill or Wal-Mart that ship vast amounts of stuff around -- pay fuel costs, according to Shah. So the owners of the ships have little incentive to invest their capital to improve efficiency.

Transparency is one way to stimulate change. Customers need to know which ships are most efficient. "We now have 160 companies that are using the data that we helped put together, and the impact has been huge," Shah says.

Carbon War Room researchers have also identified more than 40 energy-saving technologies that they are sharing with the industry. Among them: low-friction paint that allows ships to glide through the water, more aerodynamic propeller designs and, of course, kites. SkySails, which is based in Germany, says a ship's fuel costs can be cut by 10 to 35 percent by using wind power; its kites have been deployed by fishing trawlers as well as cargo ships.

"We're working on technologies that currently save people money," Shah says. "It's far more straightforward and easier than trying to get governments to agree to binding targets in Copenhagen."


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Reducing international consumption crucial to cut Indonesia's emissions: Rainforest Action Network

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 15 Mar 10;

San Francisco-based NGO, the Rainforest Action Network (RAN) runs hard-hitting campaigns both in rich and developing nations to slow climate change and help protect the planet. RAN pushes rich nations among others to cut consumption on cheap forest products made in developing countries like Indonesia to reduce emissions. The Jakarta Post’s Adianto P. Simamora talked to RAN’s forest campaigner director Lafcadio Cortesi on the sidelines of his visit to Indonesia. Here are the excerpts:

Question: Could you tell about your visit to Indonesia?

Answer: I am meeting with a number of local NGOs and indigenous forest communities who work in alliance with the RAN to see what we can do to protect the remaining forest biodiversity, which is still amazing in Indonesia, and slow climate change.

We discuss ways to educate people on how to support the development of low carbon pathways. I also talked with a number of officials from government as well as business people from timber companies.

We hope to get them on board with our mission to try to slow global warming, promote alternative kinds of development to the the current method of extracting resources to produce cheap commodities like pulp and papers and oil palm, which were exported to the global market.

We think this type of development model has to be changed to ensure sustainability in economic development. Indonesia and all the world’s countries should create a low carbon economy and acknowledge community rights.

We are talking with investors and buyers of forest products, such as pulp and paper and palm oil, as well as coal energy products. In the United States, our focus is to stop the use of coal by promoting alternative energy resources.

In Indonesia, we talk to forest commodity producers asking them to put in safeguards for the carbon emissions, protecting the environment and ensure community rights because they are the best steward to protect the forests.

What about your campaign to reduce international demand for forest products?

Over the last six months, we have been working with the luxury goods and fashion sector, many of whom use paper bags produced in China and Indonesia. We talked with producers, such as Gucci and Levi’s, that buy paper from Indonesia.

We ask them to look at into the condition of deforestation before buying the products. They then make a commitment that they wouldn’t buy products before major reforms in Indonesia in (protecting the forest).

The companies have responded positively when we show them pictures and tell them about the impacts of purchasing cheap forest products. They are committed to not being involved in forest destruction.

In Indonesia, carbon is offset through cheap forest commodities. We don’t want rich nations like America and Europe to buy cheap carbon from Indonesia. The rich nations should change their lifestyle to combat the climate change.

We think forest destruction in Indonesia and Brazil is due to high demand from international markets for the cheap forest commodities like palm oil and paper.

We are trying to help Indonesia to support President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to meet its commitment to reduce emissions by 26 percent and by 41 percent by 2020, by addressing the demand side.

If we look at emissions in Indonesia, 80 percent are from deforestation and 50 percent are from the peatland. Report by Bappenas says though 50 percent of emissions were from peat land, only less than 1 percent of Indonesia’s GDP were generated through those activities.

So we think the real opportunity is to prevent expansion on peat land so Indonesia can meet its commitment on emission cuts.

I have talked with NGOs, local people and officials about the many private companies interested in expanding business in the forested land where they can also get the first cut and make profit from it.

Until now, there are lots of licenses issued on natural forest and peat. That old model of the development was needed to be changed.

Seeing the real facts in Indonesia, do you believe targets on emission cuts could be met?
I think it is feasible for Indonesia to reach such targets. However, companies should also bear responsibility. It needs courage from the government, political will and leadership from the President down to the governors until the village heads to meet the target.

It is challenging, and international supports, including NGOs and international companies like Gucci or Unilever, would help.

The companies have said that they would not work with companies in Indonesia if there were no changes in how business was conducted.

What has been the progress on reducing of emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) issue in Indonesia?

Q: Brazil has moved very quickly in setting up the avoided deforestation fund and there has been a good amount of the investments coming to the country from the governments of Norway, European countries and the United States.

In Indonesia, ministers are still very slow in figuring out transparency, accountability and equitable mechanisms for managing funds being invested to prevent deforestation. There is also struggling among ministers, on who has control and the right to make decisions.

RAN thinks the main responsiblility for climate change lies with rich nations, particularly the United States. The REDD is important, particularly for countries like Indonesia where deforestation is the leading driver of the emission, but it should not be the key.


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Study highlights forest protected areas as a critical strategy for slowing climate change

World Wildlife Fund, EurekAlert 16 Mar 10;

WASHINGTON, DC, March 16, 2010 – A new study involving scientists from 13 different organizations, universities and research institutions states that forest protection offers one of the most effective, practical, and immediate strategies to combat climate change.

The study, "Indigenous Lands, Protected Areas, and Slowing Climate Change," was published in PLoS Biology, a peer-reviewed scientific journal, and makes specific recommendations for incorporating protected areas into overall strategies to reduce emissions of greenhouse gasses from deforestation and degradation (nicknamed REDD).

"Deforestation leads to about 15 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions, more than all the cars, trucks, trains, ships, and planes on earth. If we fail to reduce it, we'll fail to stabilize our climate," said Taylor Ricketts, director of World Wildlife Fund's science program and lead author of the study.

"Our paper emphasizes that creating and strengthening indigenous lands and other protected areas can offer an effective means to cut emissions while garnering numerous additional benefits for local people and wildlife."

The authors highlight analyses showing that since 2002, deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has been 7 to 11 times lower inside of indigenous lands and other protected areas than elsewhere. Simulation models suggest that protected areas established between 2003 and 2007 could prevent an estimated area of 100,000 square miles of deforestation through 2050. That is roughly the size of the state of Colorado, representing enough carbon to equal 1/3 of the world's annual CO2 emissions. Within these efforts, location matters; protected areas in regions that face deforestation pressures would be most effective at truly reducing emissions.

"This study reinforces the wisdom behind global investments in protected areas," says Gustavo A.B. da Fonseca, co-author of the study and Team Leader Natural Resources of the Global Environment Facility (GEF). "In addition to protecting globally important species and ecosystems, the 2,302 protected areas supported by the GEF alone span over 634 million hectares and together store an impressive 30 billion tons of CO2"

International policies for compensating forest nations for REDD are under active negotiation. To access the resulting funds, developing countries will need to develop programs and institutions to reduce forest emissions. "Protected areas represent a valuable component of national REDD programs since they already contain the necessary institutions and infrastructure to handle funds, strengthen protection and generate results," said Claudio Maretti, Conservation Director, WWF Brazil. "Establishing protected areas usually clarifies land tenure and the associated carbon rights, which has been a sticking point in some negotiations."

In addition, the study estimates that the cost of creating and better managing protected areas is lower than many other options to reduce emissions from deforestation. Completing and managing a network of protected areas in the developing world might require $4 billion USD annually, which is roughly 1/10 of the capital that could be mobilized by international REDD policies.

According to the study, forest nations can strengthen the role of protected areas in their REDD strategies by:

* Identifying where Indigenous Lands and Protected Areas would most effectively reduce deforestation rates and associated emissions;
* Establishing national monitoring to measure deforestation rates and quantify carbon emissions reductions;
* Establishing insurance mechanisms for illegal logging or forest fires;
* Providing indigenous groups and local communities the information and capacities they need to participate;
* Distributing payments transparently to reward those responsible for reducing emissions.

###

Note to Editors

The publication "Indigenous Lands, Protected Areas, and Slowing Climate Change" is available at http://www.worldwildlife.org/science/2010pubs/WWFBinaryitem15590.pdf

A MAP showing carbon stocks and potential emissions of selected forest protected areas in the Brazilian Amazon is available at http://www.worldwildlife.org/science/2010pubs/WWFImgFullitem15589.jpg

Potential emissions are estimated by simulating future deforestation through 2050, with and without forest protected areas present. The difference (depicted by orange bars) represents the reductions of CO2 emissions contributed by each forest protected area.

ABOUT WORLD WILDLIFE FUND

WWF is the world's leading conservation organization, working in 100 countries for nearly half a century. With the support of almost 5 million members worldwide, WWF is dedicated to delivering science-based solutions to preserve the diversity and abundance of life on Earth, halt the degradation of the environment and combat climate change. Visit www.worldwildlife.org to learn more.


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Indonesia's Nuclear Plan Faces Fallout From NGO

Ismira Lutfia, Jakarta Globe 16 Mar 10;

An environmental group on Tuesday condemned lawmakers’ decision this week to approve plans to build nuclear power plants in Indonesia.

Hikmat Soeriatanuwijaya, a campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said it was too early for the country to go down the nuclear path.

“It is not the time yet” for Indonesia to turn to nuclear power to anticipate the energy crisis as fossil fuels are depleted, he told the Jakarta Globe on Tuesday. “We can try to seek other solutions because Indonesia is rich with renewable energy.”

The House of Representatives on Monday gave a green light to the government’s plan to build nuclear plants. The decision came after a weekend visit to the National Atomic Energy Agency (Batan) in Serpong, Tangerang.

Teuku Riefky Harsya, chairman of House Commission VII overseeing energy, technology and the environment, said the nation could no longer rely on non-renewable energy such as gas and coal to generate electricity.

Batan chief Hudi Hastowo told the Globe that the country would carefully weigh safety measures in building nuclear power plants because it is a party to the 1994 Vienna Convention on Nuclear Safety, which was established following the Chernobyl tragedy in 1986.

“There’s a binding regulation that we must take nuclear reactor safety measures very seriously,” Hudi said, adding that the regulations stipulate that nuclear incidents must be promptly reported to the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency so that it can take precautionary measures.

“IAEA would be very strict in issuing permits for a country to build a nuclear power plant,” said Hudi. He added that an IAEA inspector in November unofficially endorsed Indonesia as having the capacity to build a nuclear power plant.

Hudi said that Batan would not operate nuclear plants but would serve as a supporting partner that would provide technical advice. “We now have to convince all stakeholders to support the plan,” he said, adding that building a nuclear plant was a long-term project that may take at least 10 years.

“What Batan can do is only promoting, familiarizing the public and drafting policy on nuclear energy. We need political and budget support from the government,” said Adi Wardojo, the deputy head of nuclear development at Batan. He said the agency had conducted a feasibility study on the construction of nuclear plants, taking into account safety, public interests and the environment. Indonesia has uranium reserves in Kalimantan capable of producing 1,000 megawatts of electricity for 150 years, he said.

But Greenpeace’s Hikmat said the government should first explore geothermal energy. Indonesia’s untapped geothermal energy accounted for 40 percent of the world’s total, he said.

“We could also try renewable resources such as solar, wind power or micro-hydro first,” he said.


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Urban CO2 domes increase deaths, poke hole in cap-and-trade proposal

Stanford University, EurekAlert 16 Mar 10;

Everyone knows that carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas driving climate change, is a global problem. Now a Stanford study has shown it is also a local problem, hurting city dwellers' health much more than rural residents', because of the carbon dioxide "domes" that develop over urban areas.

That finding, said researcher Mark Z. Jacobson, exposes a serious oversight in current cap-and-trade proposals for reducing emissions of heat-trapping gases, which make no distinction based on a pollutant's point of origin. The finding also provides the first scientific basis for controlling local carbon dioxide emissions based on their local health impacts.

"Not all carbon dioxide emissions are equal," said Jacobson, professor of civil and environmental engineering. "As in real estate, location matters."

His results also support the case that California presented to the Environmental Protection Agency in March, 2009, asking that the state be allowed to establish its own CO2 emission standards for vehicles.

Jacobson, director of the Atmosphere/Energy Program at Stanford, testified on behalf of California's waiver application in March, 2009. The waiver had previously been denied, but was reconsidered and granted subsequently. The waiver is currently being challenged in court by industry interests seeking to overturn it.

Jacobson found that domes of increased carbon dioxide concentrations – discovered to form above cities more than a decade ago – cause local temperature increases that in turn increase the amounts of local air pollutants, raising concentrations of health-damaging ground-level ozone, as well as particles in urban air.

In modeling the health impacts for the contiguous 48 states, for California and for the Los Angeles area, he determined an increase in the death rate from air pollution for all three regions compared to what the rate would be if no local carbon dioxide were being emitted.

The results of Jacobson's study are presented in a paper published online by Environmental Science and Technology.

The cap-and-trade proposal passed by the U.S. House of Representatives in June 2009 puts a limit on the amount of greenhouse gases that each type of utility, manufacturer or other emitter is allowed to produce. It also puts a price tag on each ton of emissions, which emitters will have to pay to the federal government.

If the bill passes the Senate intact, it will allow emitters to freely trade or sell their allowances among themselves, regardless of where the pollution is emitted.

With that logic, the proposal prices a ton of CO2 emitted in the middle of the sparsely populated Great Plains, for example, the same as a ton emitted in Los Angeles, where the population is dense and the air quality already poor.

"The cap-and-trade proposal assumes there is no difference in the impact of carbon dioxide, regardless of where it originates," Jacobson said. "This study contradicts that assumption."

"It doesn't mean you can never do something like cap and trade," he added. "It just means that you need to consider where the CO2 emissions are occurring."

Jacobson's study is the first to look at the health impacts of carbon dioxide domes over cities and his results are relevant to future air pollution regulations. Current regulations do not address the local impacts of local carbon dioxide emissions. For example, no regulation considers the local air pollution effects of CO2 that would be emitted by a new natural gas power plant. But those effects should be considered, he said.

"There has been no control of carbon dioxide because it has always been thought that CO2 is a global problem, that it is only its global impacts that might feed back to air pollution," Jacobson said.

In addition to the changes he observed in local air pollutants, Jacobson found that there was increased stability of the air column over a city, which slowed the dispersal of pollutants, further adding to the increased pollutant concentrations.

Jacobson estimated an increase in premature mortality of 50 to 100 deaths per year in California and 300 to 1,000 for the contiguous 48 states.

"This study establishes a basis for controlling CO2 based on local health impacts," he said.

Current estimates of the annual air pollution-related death toll in the U.S. is 50-100,000.


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'Arrogance' undid climate talks

Richard Black, BBC News 16 Mar 10;

The "disappointing" outcome of December's climate summit was largely down to "arrogance" on the part of rich countries, according to Lord Stern.

The economist told BBC News that the US and EU nations had not understood well enough the concerns of poorer nations.

But, he said, the summit had led to a number of countries outlining what they were prepared to do to curb emissions.

Seventy-three countries have now signed up to the non-binding Copenhagen Accord, the summit's outcome document.

The weak nature of the document led many to condemn the summit as a failure; but Lord Stern said that view was mistaken.

"The fact of Copenhagen and the setting of the deadline two years previously at Bali did concentrate minds, and it did lead... to quite specific plans from countries that hadn't set them out before," he said.



"So this process has itself been a key part of countries stating what their intentions on emissions reductions are - countries that had not stated them before, including China and the US.

"So that was a product of the UNFCCC (UN climate convention) process that we should respect."

The former World Bank chief economist and author of the influential 2006 review into the economics of climate change was speaking to BBC News following a lecture at the London School of Economics (LSE), where he now chairs the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment.

During the lecture, he compared the atmosphere at the Copenhagen summit to student politics in the 1960s - "chaotic, wearing, tiring, disappointing" - and said it was one in which countries had little room for real negotiating.

However, he said, it was vital to stick with the UN process, whatever its frustrations.

Twin tracks

Having failed to agree a treaty to supplant or supplement the Kyoto Protocol, and having failed to set a timetable for agreeing such a treaty, opinions are inevitably split on how countries seeking stronger curbs on greenhouse gas emissions should move forward.



Speaking in Brussels, Gro Harlem Brundtland - the UN's special envoy on climate change - suggested there would now be a twin-track approach, with some of the important discussions taking place outside the UNFCCC umbrella.

She also acknowledged that the talks had proved much more problematical than some governments - particularly in the EU - had anticipated.

"They got the message that it was much more complicated than [they had believed], and that they have to work with Brazil and China and others, not only in the broad framework of UN negotiations but also more directly and pragmatically," she said.

"The reality is different from half a year ago."

Lord Stern agreed that what he described as the "disappointing" outcome of the Copenhagen talks was largely down to rich nations' failure to understand developing world positions and concerns.

"[There was] less arrogance than in previous years - we have, I think, moved beyond the G8 world to the G20 world where more countries are involved - but [there was] still arrogance and it could have been much better handled by the rich countries," he said.

The EU limited its room for manoeuvre, he said, because too many of the leading political figures wanted to demonstrate that they were leading.

Brass from pockets

The most concrete part of the Copenhagen Accord is an agreement that richer countries should raise funds to help poorer nations adapt to climate impacts and "green" their economies.

Lord Stern is a member of the group set up by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to advise on how to raise $100bn (£66bn) per year by 2020 using various "innovative mechanisms" that could include taxes on international aviation and banking transactions.

But the immediate objective, he suggested, was to enact the short-term promise of providing $30bn over the period 2010-12 from the public purses of western nations.

If that money did not start to move fairly quickly, he said, that would further erode trust among developing countries.

Speaking in Brussels during a meeting with EU leaders, Mexico's environment secretary Juan Rafael Elvira endorsed the point.

"The developing world needs to see clear signals to have something in their hands at Cancun," he said.

The Mexican coastal city will host this year's UNFCCC summit.

"The developing countries want to see this money unblocked; the island nations especially are waiting for this funding," said Mr Elvira.

How and where these funds are to be disbursed has yet to be decided.


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Climate Change: It's still real and it's still a problem

Lord Chris Smith, BBC Green Room 16 Mar 10;

Climate-related controversies and the outcome of the Copenhagen summit widely regarded as a failure have left a sense of hopelessness in climate policy, says Lord Chris Smith. In this week's Green Room, he stresses the soundness of the fundamental climate science and the need to continue pushing for meaningful climate deals.

The myth fostered by some parts of the media in recent months - that somehow the scientific evidence for climate change is deeply flawed - needs to be laid to rest, and soon.

Sloppily expressed e-mail exchanges involving researchers from the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit (CRU), and a blithe assumption that the Himalayan glaciers may melt by 2035, were both irresponsible and damaging.

But we cannot allow a few errors to undermine the overwhelming strength of evidence that has been painstakingly accumulated, peer-reviewed, tested and tested again.

That evidence shows overwhelmingly that our emissions of greenhouse gases are having a serious impact on the Earth's atmosphere, and that - as a result - climate change is happening and will accelerate.

The damage that has been done by the glee with which sceptics have seized on one or two scientific mistakes and attempted to use them to undermine the whole consensus about the evidence for climate change cannot be underestimated.

Not if but when

In recent years, the public here in the UK, and across much of Europe, had come to accept the reality and the urgency of climate change.

There were still debates about what precisely to do to counter it, but at least the fundamental recognition was there.

I think that is probably less true now than it was four months ago - and that is a tragedy.

We need to take the argument back to the sceptics, and make the powerful, convincing and necessary case about climate change much clearer to everyone.

There may still be a degree of uncertainty, and we need continuously to test the scientific evidence with rigour.

But the uncertainties are not primarily about whether or not climate change is happening, but about how fast the change will come and how bad it will be.

The evidence of change is indeed there.

The glaciers of the Alps and the Himalayas are retreating. Weather patterns around the world are becoming more erratic and more extreme.

The most intensive rainfall ever experienced in one location over a 24-hour period in England fell on Cumbria last November, and caused the tragic consequences of the severe flooding that we saw in Cockermouth, Keswick and Workington.

We cannot say for certain that these things - or indeed the intense heat recently experienced in Australia, or the droughts in Kenya - were caused by climate change.

But we can see with our own eyes that climatic, weather and temperature trends are changing, and we know that these hitherto exceptional events are likely to become more frequent over coming years.

Here in England and Wales, the Environment Agency works at the very point where people's lives intersect with environmental change.

We help people prevent and cope with flooding, environmental degradation, water depletion, and pollution.

In our day-to-day work, we can see small things that are happening all around us.

Damselflies and dragonflies are being found much further north than before, as they move with the warming climate.

The rare vendace fish is disappearing from its former stronghold in the Lake District, and is having to be re-introduced into the colder waters of Scotland.

Our yearly water testing over 20 years has shown an average rise in temperature in our rivers of 0.6C (1.1F). These are small signals, but like the canary in the mine, they foretell greater danger in the future.

'Disappointing outcome'

If we can hold the average global air temperature increase to 2C (3.6F) since pre-industrial times, we have a chance of surviving more or less intact.

But if it ends up being 4C or more, the impacts on population, water resources, sea levels, agriculture, weather patterns, biodiversity, and the quality of human life across the world, will be severe.

That is why the international discussions on climate change at Copenhagen were so important, and why the outcome was so disappointing.

We always knew that we would not emerge from Copenhagen with a full signed-and-sealed treaty with firm commitments for specific emissions reductions from everyone around the world.

But I did hope that we might emerge with rather more than we did, with at least a set of in-principle commitments and some target dates and a map charting where we were heading.

Instead, we have the Copenhagen Accord, drawn up by the US, China, India, Brazil and South Africa, with some aspirations and agreements, and an earnest of intent to build on this during the coming year.

Build on it we must. The worst response to Copenhagen would be to throw up our hands in horror and say nothing was achieved and therefore we should give up on the search for international commitments and agreement.

We need to continue the drive for an international treaty, and do so with renewed urgency.

There are some useful fundamentals in the Copenhagen Accord - the acknowledgment of a 2C limit on the global average temperature increase; the principle of north-south flows of aid and support in order to ensure that the developing world can grow more sustainably than those of us who have largely caused the problem up to now; and commitments to help combat deforestation.

We should now work as hard as we can to build these up into more specific commitments over the coming months.

Lord Chris Smith is chairman of the UK's Environment Agency

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


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