Best of our wild blogs: 27 Mar 10


'Bad' biodiversity: Invasive alien species
from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Oriental Pied Hornbill in courtship mode
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Venus Drive
from Singapore Nature

Water from the sky... and we are not talking about rain
from Water Quality in Singapore


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$24m shortfall hits new building plans for Singapore's new natural history museum:

NUS project team for showcase needs to raise amount by June
Eisen Teo, Straits Times 27 Mar 10;

THERE are more than enough specimens, the expertise is there and the land has been allocated, but plans for Singapore's own natural history museum are falling short of one crucial element: Money.

The museum, to be situated in the heart of the National University of Singapore's (NUS) new University Town in about three years, is spearheaded by the NUS' department of biological sciences.

The department needs to raise at least $24 million by June this year, or it may have to look for a new site.

The Straits Times understands that since a $10 million donation from a mystery donor, which was received in January, the department has raised only an additional $1 million in public and corporate donations.

However, a minimum of $35 million is needed for a 6,000sqm to 8,000sqm building to store, study and exhibit about 500,000 specimens of mammals, birds, amphibians and other invertebrates - the oldest natural history collection of animals in Singapore.

Currently, less than 1 per cent of this collection is on display at the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research (RMBR) - a modest public gallery run by the department and housed within its premises on the NUS campus - because of a severe lack of space.

The two professors spearheading the project team of 13 - director of special projects at NUS' science faculty Leo Tan, and head of RMBR and NUS' Tropical Marine Science Institute Peter Ng - remain cautiously optimistic about coming up with the remaining cash for the project.

Professor Tan emphasised that the team is 'leaving no stone unturned' in reaching out to the public and corporations.

It will be sending out e-mail and letters to a list of past and potential contributors to persuade them to donate.

They also set up a website for donations last week at rmbr.nus.edu.sg/ buildingfund/index.html, and are mulling over the use of social networking tools like Facebook.

Prof Tan said: 'If you believe in something, pursue it, don't think of the consequences of failure.

'Do it because you know it's the right thing to do...and this museum is for our children and grandchildren, not for us.'

The proposed site in the University Town will be ideal for the museum, he added, and will be an iconic attraction for the Town.

If the June target cannot be reached, 'there will probably be another site', he said, 'but we think the people of Singapore deserve to get the museum as soon as possible'.

Since media reports highlighted the RMBR's collection last year, it has seen a sharp increase in visitors - from 400 walk-in visitors in 2008 to 6,841 last year.

Prof Tan, whose previous projects included the Science Centre and the successful bid to designate Labrador Park as a nature reserve, is adamant that his last project before he retires 'in several years' time' succeeds.

'Our collection is not just Singapore's heritage, but the heritage of South-east Asia too,' he said.

When contacted, an NUS spokesman said that the university will be providing information on its University Town at a media briefing on Monday.

More links
Plans for the new museum and how the public can donate on the Celebrating Singapore's Biodiversity blog.


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Singapore authorities on dengue alert with onset of El Nino phenomenon

Imelda Saad Channel NewsAsia 26 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE : Singapore authorities are on the alert for a rise in the number of dengue cases here with the onset of the El Nino phenomenon.

The Aedes mosquito breeds faster and the rate of infection is higher during warmer months.

The good news is that Singapore is seeing a downward trend in dengue cases. So far, the damage from the Aedes mosquitoes has been kept in check.

But the situation may change when the weather gets warmer, due to the El Nino phenomenon.

The full impact of Singapore's hottest month in February is likely to be felt in the middle of next month.

The last time there was an El Nino phenomenon in 1998, there was a worldwide resurgence in dengue. In Singapore, case numbers peaked at more than 5,000 during that year.

Another challenge is areas with emerging Types 1, 3 and 4 of dengue circulating in Singapore. These are the lesser predominant types of dengue here.

The dominant dengue type currently circulating in Singapore is Type 2.

Ironically, Singapore's success in keeping dengue cases low means that fewer people have built up immunity against the disease.

Tai Ji Choong, head operations, National Environment Agency, said: "Cases are likely to increase slightly, and of course we are approaching the warmer months of the year, so we expect (that during) these next few months, cases are likely to rise".

The good news is that Singapore's dengue prevention strategy has proven to be effective. Over the past three years, the number of cases has gone down consecutively. For example, last year, there were about 4,500 cases, about 40 per cent fewer compared to 2008.

And from January till the third week of March this year, there were about 980 dengue cases - down about 30 per cent compared to the same period last year.

This downward trend means Singapore has managed to break the cycle of dengue outbreaks.

Typically, dengue cases spike every five to six years.

The last peak was in 2004 and 2005 when there were 9,459 and 14,209 cases respectively. The next peak would be in 2011.

Based on this cycle, it is estimated that Singapore could expect to see about 49,000 dengue cases in 2011. But this is now unlikely to happen.

The NEA is hopeful that if a new type of dengue does not emerge in Singapore, cases could be capped at levels seen in 2009 and 2008.

An inter-agency task force has started its annual Intensive Source Reduction Exercise, targeting dengue hotspots and potential breeding grounds.

The NEA is also keeping its eye on areas with emerging cases of the less dominant dengue types.

It has expanded its network of GPs to take blood samples from patients.

Mr Tai said: "Now we want to prevent another serotype from getting predominant in Singapore. We are working very closely with the GPs, the hospitals and clinics to encourage them to send samples to us for blood testing, so we are able to know what are the serotypes that are circulating in Singapore, so that we can deploy resources over there to control the spread of these serotypes."

The NEA has also reminded the community to remain vigilant.

Mr Tai said: "We know that mosquitoes can breed anywhere, whether in public places or in homes. If everybody cooperates and is alert about stagnant water, I think together we can control the mosquito population and control the dengue situation in Singapore".

As with previous years, households account for the most number of breeding sites detected.

The most common places where mosquitoes are found to be breeding are domestic containers, flower pot plates and discarded receptacles. - CNA/ms

As the weather warms up, the war on dengue heats up
Alicia Wong, Today Online 27 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE - The continuing warm weather and the increasing likelihood of another dengue type overtaking the current one, has put the National Environment Agency (NEA) on alert. Highlighting these as factors for an anticipated spike in dengue cases, NEA said it has started working to increase its network of General Practitioners.

When cases of non-predominant dengue type are found during random nationwide sampling, the NEA's Environmental Health Institute will get GPs in the affected areas to submit more blood samples so it can narrow down the locations affected, and send officers to tackle the problem.

There are four dengue types: 1, 2, 3, and 4. Dengue 2 has been predominant here since 2007 and hence, most people would have immunity only to this.

Data shows the predominant dengue type changes every two to three years. After a change, the number of cases usually spikes. This was seen in 2007, when there was 8,826 cases, compared to 3,126 cases in 2006 when Dengue 1 was predominant.

Some areas found to have two or more Dengue 1, 3 or 4 cases this year include Woodlands, Veerasamy Road and Richards Avenue. NEA's environmental health department's head of operations. Mr Tai Ji Choong, said if there is no type change, the number of cases this year could hold at 2008 and 2009 levels.

There were 7,031 cases in 2008 and 4,497 last year. These figures bucked the six- to seven-year dengue cycle, where the number of cases rises until it peaks during the last year of the cycle. The current cycle which started in 2006 could theoretically have peaked in 2011 with a projected 49,200 cases.

But instead, there has been a downward trend, attributed to NEA's surveillance, enforcement and education efforts. The agency continues to urge the public to exercise vigilance to keep homes free of stagnant water.

Mr Tai also noted that the current El Nino conditions are expected to persist until end-April before gradually weakening. Singapore is also approaching the warmer months of the year, and cases are expected to rise, he said. Typically, cases start increasing from mid-April to June.

The last El Nino was in 2004 to 2005, which saw 9,459 and 14,209 dengue cases respectively. 2005 was also the peak of the dengue cycle. So far this year, there have been 978 cases as of March 20, about 30 per cent fewer than in the same period last year. Alicia Wong

Dengue alert
NEA watching for spike in cases here as less common strain surfaces
Karamjit Kaur Straits Times 27 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE is on alert for a possible spike in cases of dengue fever, especially for people coming down with a less common type of the virus.

The current warm spell, brought on by the El Nino weather phenomenon, is partly to blame, the National Environment Agency (NEA) said yesterday.

Though mosquitoes need stagnant water to breed, it is dry weather that not only accelerates breeding, but also makes the insects infective faster.

While there is no reason for alarm, the authority is on alert because there is evidence that Dengue Type 1, 3 and 4 may be becoming more rampant, said the head of operations at NEA's environmental health department, Mr Tai Ji Choong.

Random blood samples taken from those who caught the disease this year showed that cases of the less common viruses have surfaced in parts of Woodlands, as well as in Serangoon Road and Serangoon North.

In the last few years, Type 2 has been the more common dengue strain in Singapore, said Mr Tai.

But with the cycle usually changing every two to three years, experts believe another shift is imminent.

Although no one virus type is more dangerous than the other, the problem is that fewer people here are immune to Type 1, 3 and 4, said Mr Tai.

A person who has caught one dengue type has lifelong immunity to it, but not to the others.

The key to battling the potential threat is to ensure that the less dominant viruses do not spread and are quickly nipped in the bud when they occur.

The NEA is seeking the cooperation of the medical community for this.

Mr Tai said that the NEA will be working very closely with the hospitals and clinics to encourage them to send blood samples to the NEA for testing.

This will help the NEA determine what dengue type is out there.

'The more samples we receive, the more we are able to know what the situation is so that we can quickly deploy resources to control the spread,' he added.

As for the public, NEA's appeal is the same: Get rid of stagnant water.

Mr Tai said: 'If we are able to contain the situation and there is no change in the predominant dengue type, all things being equal... I think we will be able to further contain the problem this year... We hope this year will be as good as 2008 and 2009.'

Last year, a total of 4,498 people caught the disease, down from 7,031 in 2008 and 8,826 the year before that.

As at the end of last week, 978 cases have been reported so far this year, a 28.4 per cent drop over the same period last year.

By contrast, in nearby countries such as Malaysia for example, cases have been on the rise.

Singapore has done well to contain the dengue situation so far, said the NEA.

But with the warmer months approaching and El Nino expected to persist, more cases will be expected in the coming months, said Mr Tai, adding that the number typically peaks in June and July.

Apart from working with hospitals and clinics, NEA will continue to partner various government agencies, as well as town councils and industry bodies, to contain the mosquito situation.

After the last peak hit in 2004 and 2005, the agency went into full swing with a new action plan, which among other things, laid down how often each home, hawker centre or school should be checked.

Since then, regular meetings have been held with representatives of 26 government agencies and other partners to share information and keep tabs on what is happening on the ground.

Last year, more than 4.3 million inspections were carried out, compared to about 2.8 million in 2008.

The checks led to 16,977 breeding habitats detected last year, down from the 20,263 that were discovered the year before that.

It is good news but the work continues, said Mr Tai, noting: 'We know that mosquitoes can breed anywhere; whether in public places or at home. If everybody cooperates... I think together we can control the mosquito population and control dengue in Singapore.'

Clinical director of the Communicable Disease Centre Leo Yee Sin said: 'Should the outbreak (if it happens) be of the same scale as in 2004 to 2005, we are now better prepared owing to more dengue research after the earlier outbreaks leading to better understanding of disease management.'


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Ship-cleaning robots save costs and the environment

Lee Zhi Xin, Straits Times 27 Mar 10;

A ROBOT that can carry out a range of ship-cleaning processes in a productive, safe and environmentally friendly way was unveiled here yesterday.

The Envirobot, as it is called, removes paint on ship hulls and other surfaces at a speed of 70 sq m an hour - 10 times faster than traditional abrasive blasting guns.

The robot is magnetically attached to the surface so it eliminates the need for workers to position themselves on high scaffolding.

'Certain members of some shipyards tell you they get 15 to 20 letters from Members of Parliament every week because of pollution from blasting,' said Mr Winston Chua, executive director of Heatec Jietong Holdings, which helped develop the robot.

'Having a custom vacuum system for the collection and disposal of effluent from the paint removal process means air pollution is greatly reduced.'

Mr Chua added that the technology saves clean-up expenses for companies, which are the hidden costs from traditional grit blasting processes.

It is also more efficient as it allows many other processes to be carried out concurrently, which would otherwise be stopped due to the pollution.

Mr Chua said the response to the new technology has been enthusiastic and he expects the unit producing it to start contributing revenue in the second quarter of this year.

He did not disclose the cost of providing the grit blasting robot's services but said it is competitive with the market rate of $24 per sq m.

Mr Zainudin Nordin, the Mayor of Central Singapore District, said at the launch ceremony at the Pan Pacific Hotel that the technology can help in the campaign to raise productivity here.

'These blasting machines will greatly reduce our dependence on workers, with a higher quality result than achieved

with manual blasting,' said Mr Zainudin, who is also an MP for Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC.

A unit of Heatec Jietong Holdings - Heatec Chariot Envirobotics - developed the robot with a joint venture partner from America, Chariot Envirobotics.

Heatec Jietong Holdings has exclusive rights to the robots in Asia.


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SG Changi wins bid to build Changi Motorsports Hub

Patwant Singh Channel NewsAsia 26 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE : The Singapore Sports Council has declared SG Changi the winner of the race to build Singapore's first permanent racing track.

SG Changi was one of three consortiums that submitted bids for the Changi Motorsports Hub. The other two bidders were Singapore Agro Agriculture and Sports Services.

SG Changi's plan features a S$280 million facility, which can seat 20,000 spectators.

The centrepiece is a four-kilometre track, which is longer than the current 3.7-kilometre one, and is good enough to meet FIA requirements.

It will be divided in half, so that separate races can take place.

It also has a 1.2-kilometre karting track.

Away from the track are lifestyle attractions like food and beverage outlets, a beach front and a museum.

SG Changi's the design and look were deemed innovative, flexible and functional.

SG Changi topped it up with an assurance that it has secured sound financing.

The next step is to start work and get it ready on time, by the end of 2011.

Vivian Balakrishnan, Community Development, Youth and Sports Minister, said: "Although it is a significant investment, nevertheless I think it is still of a size which can be executed fairly rapidly, and I am hoping that there would be no undue delays. We will now help facilitate all their approvals for building permits and the rest of it."

The government hopes the Hub will promote and develop motor sports and groom home grown talent.

A racing academy is one way to achieve this goal.

As the work begins to get the Hub up and running, the work also goes on to deliver quality track action.

Eddie Koh, director, SG Changi, said: "There are many international races and we have been in contact with some of these companies that run races. We are looking at GT races from Japan, from Europe, maybe from Asia also."

The Grade 2 track cannot host the Formula One race - which will continue to be a street race in Singapore for now - but there are plans to bring the Moto GP, which is the F1 of motor bikes.

Like the Singapore Formula One night race, the permanent track too will host events under the stars. And there are also plans to build a 120-room hotel, once the authorities give the green light. After all, the facility is being promoted as a tourist attraction. - CNA/il/ms

Motorsports Hub awaits building green light
SG Changi plans to start construction as early as June, provided it gets approval from all relevant authorities
Nisha Ramchandani, Business Times 27 Mar 10;

CONSTRUCTION on Singapore's much anticipated Changi Motorsports Hub could flag off as early as June or July, if all goes according to plan.

The winning consortium, SG Changi, is targeting to have the $330 million mega project completed by end 2011, and the first race underway by 2012.

If SG Changi manages to get approval from all the relevant authorities, construction could kick off in three-four months, said director Thia Yoke Kian.

SG Changi, which edged out both Singapore Agro Agriculture and Sports Services to win the bid, came out tops based on the innovative design, flexibility and functionality of its proposal, financial strength of the consortium as well as the quality of racing events, the Singapore Sports Council (SSC) revealed at a press briefing yesterday.

'We can only say we would have enough funding,' confirmed SG Changi director and Singaporean lawyer Eddie Koh in response to a query on whether the group had secured sufficient financing.

The majority of the investment is said to stem from the consortium's Japanese counterparts, director and former Japan GT driver Genji Hashimoto and director Fuminori Murahashi.

SG Changi's proposed project, to be built on a 41 hectare sea-facing site near Changi Airport, will include an FIA Grade-2 3.7 kilometre racetrack designed by track specialists from Japan, a CIK Grade A 1.2 km go-kart track plus seating capacity for some 20,000 spectators.

Meanwhile, its motorsports academy will train talent from the motoring community with regard to both racing and engineering, with the long-term aim of creating ambassadors who can represent Singapore on an international platform. SG Changi has linked up with Korea-based E-Rain Racing Academy and a German consultant for the motorsports academy.

To cater to a wider audience beyond race fans, the motorsports hub was designed as a lifestyle venue, integrating F&B and retail facilities, a motorsports museum, a club house, a bonded warehouse and even a hotel.

The group's winning bid also included 'green' initiatives, such as installing solar panels on the roof of the main grandstand, which could be used to generate power.

'This exciting new project will be a great boost for motorsports in Singapore by providing a permanent base to groom motorsports talent, promote industry development, host new international events and provide more entertainment and lifestyle options for Singaporeans and tourists,' affirmed Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports.

As it currently stands, the racing calendar is expected to include international and regional events, such as the SuperGT series, Formula Nippon and the Japanese Formula 3 series. On the local front, events such as the Karting Championship, Drag Racing Championship and Drifting Championship are slated to take place.

While the Grade 2 track will not be able to host the Formula One (F1), the group is in talks to bring in MotoGP - the F1 of motorcycling - although the track first has to get the thumbs up from the Federation Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM).

For organisations such as the Traction Circle Club, the upcoming motorsports hub will mean greater convenience and potentially, cost savings.

The club, whose members are made up of motoring enthusiasts, makes regular treks to the Sepang International Circuit (SIC) for 'track days', said president Cheong Chung Kin.

SG Changi will operate the Changi Motorsports Hub for a 30-year period.


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Earth Hour? How about endangered species hour?

Christian Science Monitor 26 Mar 10;

Just as Earth Hour can pressure governments on global warming, so can consumers push politicians to protect endangered species such as bluefin tuna, several kinds of sharks, and corals -- all of which were abandoned at a UN wildlife conference.

Millions of people around the world are switching off their lights for Earth Hour Saturday night in a growing grass-roots effort to conserve energy and draw attention to global warming.

But can they also stop eating shark soup or sushi made from bluefin tuna?

That kind of consumer action may be what it takes to save certain endangered marine animals, because governments decided this week not to come to their rescue. About a half-dozen shark species, the bluefin tuna, various corals (yes, corals are animals), and the polar bear all failed to receive international protection at the meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).

(For Monitor coverage of the CITES meeting, click here.)

This United Nations wildlife group meets every few years to consider whether to restrict the international trade of threatened plant and animal life. Over 35 years, CITES has helped preserve 5,000 animal species and 28,000 plant species by limiting their harvest and sale.

At the meeting just ended, the 175 countries that gathered in Qatar, United Arab Emirates, beat back efforts to relax the trade ban on elephant ivory. And they added protections to for rhinos, various reptiles sold as pets, and wild tigers.

But conservationists were deeply disappointed by the inaction on marine life, which took up more of the CITES agenda than ever before. The threat in oceans and seas has grown. Stocks of the bluefin tuna, for instance, have fallen more than 80 percent since 1970, much of it during the last decade. The fish is a big money-maker, and can sell for $100,000 per fish.

Japan, which imports most of the tuna, led the fight against a proposed ban. Nations where livelihoods depend on fishing the tuna and on harvesting other marine species held sway over countries, including the US, that pointed to scientific evidence of drastically dwindling populations.

Commerce vs. conservation is often at the center of environmental battles, whether they involve global warming or the spotted owl.

Over the years, environmentalists have learned that arguing solely on behalf of other life forms is not enough. They’ve had to earn degrees in economics and sociology to learn to marry their causes with the human one – explaining, for instance, that humans depend on bats to pollinate or on coral reefs to support other marine life that is advantageous to mankind.

In Qatar, the concern about lost livelihoods during difficult economic times was particularly acute. But jobs that depend on harvesting endangered species will quickly disappear if those species are not protected.

Governments should provide incentives to manage endangered ecosystems, and to help people transition into other kinds of work. Instead, they’re hastening the demise of species and the jobs related to them.

As countries prepare for the next CITES meeting in Thailand in 2013, they should not forget the marine species that were turned down this time. Grass-roots pressure can do much to push governments toward a more responsible approach to marine life management. On Saturday, when people switch off the lights at 8:30 p.m. for Earth Hour, they should also consider switching off their appetites for bluefin tuna or pink and red coral jewelry. And for longer than just an hour.


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Earth Hour in Singapore

Support to save environment grows as more groups rally behind cause
Lynda Hong Channel NewsAsia 26 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE : Earth Hour is less than 24 hours away, and the support for this environmental cause has been growing over the week.

It is a normal day at Anglican High on Friday until 12.15pm. Then the lights went off, the fans stopped spinning, and the aircon died.

Lessons moved outdoors - for some respite from the stuffy classrooms. For an hour, students and teachers tried to live without electricity and hopefully, learn the value of Earth Hour.

Tey Min Li, Anglican High School student, said: "Some of us may think that this is a basic right. So if we were to study in an environment without the lights and the fans, we would feel disgruntled.

"But there are little changes we can make, like for example, we could lower the speed of the fan and we can use energy efficient lamps."

This support for Earth Hour is also growing in the heartlands. Marine Parade Town Council is making the big switch-off on Saturday.

From 7pm, 76 sets of non-essential lighting will be switched off for 12 hours. These include landmark structures, park signages, banner posts, decorative lighting and roof top structures.

The message to all 68,000 households is that it is possible to save more in electricity and water.

Seah Kian Peng, MP for Marine Parade GRC, said: "All along, we are always trying to inculcate, not just within the town council, but also to all residents, ways to cut down on electricity, ways to save water."

The campaign to show support for the environment can be observed around the world on Saturday.

Organiser World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) will be holding the main event at the Esplanade Park.

To support Earth Hour and pledge your support, go to this website.

- CNA/al

More companies observing Earth Hour this year
Esther Ng, TODAY Channel NewsAsia 26 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE: More companies are observing Earth Hour this year with a slew of activities including countdown parties, "going lift-less" and dining by candlelight. But some green groups and environmentalists said more could be done.

"It is good that more businesses are coming onboard, but these displays seem rather ritualistic and we have gone past advocacy already," said Mr Tay Lai Hock, president of environmental group Ground Up Initiative. "We need to reduce our carbon footprint and energy consumption on a daily basis."

Parties, meanwhile, generate a lot of waste or rubbish, said Ms Olivia Choong, founder of Green Drinks, a non-profit group.

According to her, lighting candles are not environmentally friendly as one burning candle generates about 16g of carbon dioxide per hour.

Still, Green Drinks did organise a film screening to commemorate Earth Hour last night.

It would be "more practical to get Singaporeans to give air-conditioning the flick as it is the biggest energy guzzler in Singapore", said self-confessed greenie Joe Lim.

Tomorrow, Concorde Hotel Singapore will switch off its lobby lights, leaving only the counter lights at its front office and entrance on. All lights at the hotel's facade will also be off.

Meanwhile, Coca-Cola Singapore is partnering Environmental Challenge Organisation (ECO) Singapore, in educating 20,000 households around the island on how to conserve energy.

Some 1,200 youth will spend the afternoon in Bedok, Siglap, Hong Kah and Pasir Ris, knocking on doors to distribute recycled paper bookmarks and share tips on energy conservation.

In a bid to incorporate more energy and climate saving initiatives into its systems, Coca-Cola changed all 319 metal halide bulbs in the warehouse and loading bay of its Tuas plant to energy saving light bulbs last year.

Not content with switching off lights for one hour, students from Nanyang Technological University's Earthlink, an environmental club, have launched a two-week campaign to get their peers to use the stairs and stop using straws for their drinks.

This is the third year that World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) is organising Earth Hour, and director Carine Seror is heartened by the response.

"When we started in 2008, we didn't have a proper campaign and we didn't know how many companies took part, but this year 400 companies have pledged on our website and I expect the number to be higher after Saturday," she said.

WWF received 450 pledges last year.

Singapore landmarks heed the call
Straits Times 27 Mar 10;

Changi Airport will be switching off its decorative lights and dimming operational lights within terminal buildings and malls.

In Sentosa, Singapore's first integrated resort, Resorts World Sentosa, will dim or switch off non-essential lights. Underwater World will also switch off roof lights, skylights, signboard lights and lamp posts in the carpark.

CBD: Iconic monuments and landmarks such as The Merlion, The Fullerton Hotel, One Fullerton and Clifford Pier will have some of their lights switched off. So will the Singapore Flyer's multi-coloured lightings on the wheel's rim. Decorative lightings on bridges and riverbanks along the Singapore River will be switched off for an hour.

At the Esplanade Park, there will be a concert held to raise awareness for Earth Hour.

Orchard Road: More than 10 shopping malls have agreed to dim or switch off their lights in support of Earth Hour. Some of these are 313@Somerset, Ion Orchard, Ngee Ann City, Plaza Singapura, Orchard Central, Tangs, The Centrepoint, The Heeren, Wheelock Place and Wisma Atria. The street lights along the shopping district will also be switched off for the hour.

Hotels: Hilton Singapore, Concorde Hotel and Shangri-La Hotel will be switching off their facade lights for this event. The former two will also be encouraging their guests to switch off the lights in their rooms.

Where will you be when the lights go out?
Singapore buildings and companies will turn off the lights between 8.30pm and 9.30pm to support Earth Hour
Abigail Kor, Business Times 27 Mar 10;

IF Suntec Singapore looks dimmer than usual between 8.30pm and 9.30pm tonight, it's because it is 'going dark to become green'.

As Earth Hour comes upon us, this iconic Singapore building will switch off all the lights that are not essential and then some. Before that, its staff will dine with the lights dimmed.

It is among the hundreds of local companies that have pledged to support Earth Hour 2010, a global initiative fronted by the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) that stresses the need to do something about climate change.

And when the lights go out, some hoteliers will add a dash of romance to spice up a good cause. Guests dining in Ritz Carlton's Summer Pavilion and Greenhouse restaurants, or having drinks at its Chihuly Lounge will enjoy a candle-lit ambience.

Similarly, Four Season's One-Ninety bistro and Rasa Sentosa's Barnacles seafront restaurant will offer candlelight dinners during Earth Hour.

'We are delighted by the increased interest and commitment from businesses this year,' said Amy Ho, managing director of WWF Singapore. Some 500 companies here are backing Earth Hour 2010, compared to 450 last year.

Suntec Singapore's staff will even turn off lights and electronic appliances at home. 'As a leader in the MICE industry, we must set the pace for global efforts within the industry so we can all work towards a committed call to finding solutions on climate change,' said Pieter Idenburg, CEO of Suntec Singapore.

HSBC Singapore is taking a similar approach - switching off lights in its offices and inviting employees to do the same wherever they are.

ComfortDelGro, which became the first local transport company to be awarded the Green Office Label, says that more than 22,000 of its staff and their families are making it a point to switch off their lights during Earth Hour. Staff have also been urged to celebrate the occasion by having a romantic candlelight dinner at home.

'We are firmly committed to the green movement, ensuring that we don't just talk the talk, we walk the walk,' said Tammy Tay, chairman of the group's green committee.

Opting for a more novel way of supporting the climate change initiative, Datacraft Asia, an IT solutions provider headquartered in Singapore, is giving out lanterns to all its employees in the Asia-Pacific.

These lanterns are a symbol of hope for WWF's Create a Lantern for Earth Hour campaign, and staff are encouraged to use them to light up their homes when they turn the lights off.

To prepare for the hour, Datacraft switched off the lights in all its offices across the globe between 12noon and 2pm yesterday.

Started as a one-city initiative in Sydney in 2007, Earth Hour has grown into a global event, with more than 4,000 cities in 88 countries taking part in 2009.

Landmarks such as New York's Empire State Building, the Roman Coliseum and San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge will be swathed in darkness as part of the initiative.


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Europe's green city: Freiburg

Straits Times 27 Mar 10;

Germany's Freiburg city is world-famous for its green energy policies, and Singapore is hoping to learn from it during the World Cities Summit here in June. Freiburg Mayor Dieter Solomon talks to Melissa Kok about how it implemented sustainable urban solutions

# Q: How successful have Freiburg's energy policies been in reducing carbon emissions?

A: Freiburg is one of the few major German cities where carbon dioxide emissions have actually been on the decrease for years. This is a direct result of our policy which promotes renewable energy such as solar power, and the expansion of the public transit system. Today, 70 per cent of all trips in the city are carried out with environmentally friendly means of transportation such as riding a bicycle instead of driving a car.

# Q: What other benefits has environmental technology brought?

A: No other branch of economy is growing as fast as the environmental economy, with new jobs and economic advantages for the entire city. More than 15,000 people in the greater Freiburg area are employed in the industry; more than 2,000 of them in the research, development and production of solar technology.

# Q: Where can we see solar panels in Freiburg?

A: They can be found on residential buildings, factories, sport stadiums, hotels, trade fair halls, schools and universities. Even the correctional facility has a solar roof. A total surface area of 15,000 sq m - the size of three football fields - is used for the collection of solar heat, to produce heating and warm water.

# Q: Is it costly?

A: Solar power generation is more expensive than other types of energy. Therefore, a national energy Act guarantees that solar energy can be fed into the main power grid at a fixed price. This feed-in tariff provides a good return for home owners with solar roofs and re-finances the investment. The price difference is passed on to all energy customers.

# Q: How did you convince people to get on board?

A: Ecological projects are always successful when they create a win-win situation for all partners involved, namely the economy, citizens, schools, research and development, industries such as building and construction, the energy supplier, and even tourism. Herein lies the most important task of urban policies: We have to create advantages for all players and support their engagement of solar energy. The city itself sets the example. Freiburg is an internationally renowned example of sustainable urban development. Every year hundreds of experts, politicians and journalists come to the city in order to learn from our experiences. This is also the reason why Freiburg has been selected to present itself as a best-practice example of sustainability to the 2010 Shanghai World Expo.

# Q: What do you hope to gain from the upcoming World Cities Summit in Singapore?

A: We would like to share our experiences with other cities, but we are also eager to learn from others. Some cities are successfully working on zero-carbon concepts such as, for example, the new administrative city in Sejong which lies to the south of Seoul. Because this city will be newly built from the ground up and in line with the most modern standards, much greater successes are possible than in a historically grown city like Freiburg.

About the city

FREIBURG, known as Europe's most prominent 'solar city', is located in south-west Germany's wine-growing area, and has a population of 220,000.

In 1986, it became one of the first German cities to tap sustainable energy to protect the climate.

It has cut back on carbon emissions by 13.5 per cent since 1992. The city's energy policy has three objectives: reducing energy consumption, implementing the use of renewable sources such as solar power instead of fossil fuels, and promoting efficient energy use.

In 2007, the city council resolved to cut greenhouse emissions by 40 per cent by the year 2030.

For this reason, Freiburg's heat insulation standards are stricter than those in other German cities.

Every private household there is supplied with electricity from regenerative sources, with solar energy and other renewables contributing 4.2 per cent of the power that Freiburg needs.

The city generates 50 per cent of its electricity from natural gas plants.

The remaining 45 per cent comes from imported electricity from renewable energy and nuclear power.


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From Pyramids to Paris, landmarks to go dark for Earth Hour

Amy Coopes Yahoo News 26 Mar 10;

SYDNEY (AFP) – World-famous landmarks including the Pyramids, the Eiffel Tower and Beijing's Forbidden City will go dark Saturday as millions turn out the lights for "Earth Hour", a rolling grassroots movement aimed at fighting climate change.

Now in its fourth year, the event looks set to be the biggest yet with thousands of cities and towns in 125 countries -- 37 more than last year -- pledging to take part in the aftermath of a failed climate summit last year.

Despite December's fractious Copenhagen summit and recent controversy over climate science, public opinion still hopes for meaningful action to avert catastrophic global warming, according to Earth Hour founder Andy Ridley.

"There appears to be some fatigue to the politics around it... But people are far more motivated this year than they were last year," he told AFP in Sydney.

Now run by the WWF, Earth Hour began in Sydney in 2007 when 2.2 million people switched off the lights in their homes, offices and businesses for 60 minutes to make a point about electricity consumption and carbon pollution.

The campaign went global the following year, and this Saturday, more than 1,200 of the world's best-known sites will kill their lights at 8:30 pm local time in what organisers describe as a "24-hour wave of hope and action".

A raft of multinational companies including Google, Coca-Cola, Hilton, McDonalds, Canon, HSBC and IKEA have endorsed Earth Hour 2010 and pledged to darken their offices worldwide in support.

Sydney's iconic Harbour Bridge and Opera House will help kick off the energy-saving marathon, with Egypt's Pyramids and Sphinx, the Trevi Fountain and Tower of Pisa in Italy and all major landmarks in Paris to take part, led by a five-minute blackout of the Eiffel Tower.

In London, Big Ben, the Houses of Parliament, St. Paul's Cathedral and the London Eye ferris wheel were among the tourist hotspots set to plunge into darkness, along with Manchester United's Old Trafford football ground.

Some 30 US states and municipalities were to mark Earth Hour with darkness falling on sites including Mount Rushmore, the Empire State Building, the Golden Gate Bridge and Seattle's Space Needle.

The lights illuminating the massive statue of Christ the Redeemer which overlooks Rio de Janeiro will be switched off while in Mexico key buildings in the capital will also take part.

In Dubai the world's tallest skyscraper, the Burj Khalifa tower, will dim its lights as will the high-priced office towers and five-star hotels strung along Hong Kong's famed harbour-front.

The Forbidden City in rapidly developing China, which was blamed by many activists for Copenhagen's failure, will go dark, along with the "Bird's Nest" Olympic stadium.

Elsewhere in Asia, where 3.3 million people have registered to take part, the world's biggest observation wheel, the Singapore Flyer, will extinguish its main lights, while official buildings will be blacked out in Seoul and Jakarta.

Scores of cities in India were expected to take part, including the massive urban centres of Delhi and Mumbai, while the country's thriving Bollywood film studios were to shut down for the hour.

Japan's heritage-listed Hiroshima Peace Memorial, one of few buildings to survive America's 1945 atomic bomb attack, will take part, while major companies including Sony, Sharp and Asahi were to switch off across Tokyo.

But in Bangkok, city authorities said they were under military orders to halt their Earth Hour campaign for security reasons, as tens of thousands of anti-government protesters planned another major rally on Saturday.

Residents of Norway's Longyearbyen, the world's northernmost town, are set to brave an influx of curious polar bears normally deterred by lights after voting -- for the first time -- that participating was worth the risk.

"Earth Hour is meant to cross geographic, economic, country boundaries," said Ridley, admitting that it was mostly a symbolic act.

"It's one hour, one day, one year. We're not saving the planet by turning the lights off for one hour."

But he added: "What you are doing is adding your voice to a global call for action."

Saturday: Lights Off Worldwide for Earth Hour
livescience.com Yahoo News 27 Mar 10;

Cities in 92 countries around the world prepare to shut off their lights for one hour tomorrow in observance of Earth Hour, an annual event geared at showing support for taking action on climate change issues.

During Earth Hour, people around the world are asked to turn off their lights for an hour at 8:30 p.m. local time on March 27. This year the event has topped its participation figure from last year, which was 88 countries.

Countries and regions involved for the first time include: the world's newest country Kosovo, the remote island nation of Madagascar, Nepal, Saudi Arabia, Mongolia, Cambodia, Czech Republic, Paraguay, Ecuador and the U.S. Commonwealth of the Northern Marina Islands in the Pacific Ocean.

Earth Hour global organizers confirm there are currently more than 1,100 cities and towns signed up to switch their lights off on Sunday evening, 100 more than last year. Among the iconic landmarks in cities taking place are the Tokyo Tower in Tokyo and Berlin's Brandenburg Gate.

"Earth Hour demonstrates the determination of the world's citizens for a better, healthier world," said Earth Hour Executive Director, Andy Ridley. "It brings together cities, communities, businesses and individuals on the journey to positive action on climate change."

Earth Hour is an initiative by the non-profit environmental group WWF. The event began in Sydney in 2007, when 2 million people switched off their lights.

In 2008, more than 50 million people around the globe participated. In 2009, hundreds of millions of people in more than 4,000 cities and towns switched off their lights for one hour.


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Worst Ice Year Kills Canadian Seals Before Hunters Can

Environment News Service 26 Mar 10;

CHARLOTTETOWN, Prince Edward Island, Canada, March 26, 2010 (ENS) - Thousands of harp seal pups are presumed dead in Canada's Gulf of St. Lawrence and starving pups are being found abandoned on the beaches of Prince Edward Island, victims of the worst ice conditions ever recorded in the region.

Environment Canada said March 16 that ice conditions in the Gulf were the lowest in the 41 years it has kept records.

Off Newfoundland, Canada's other seal hunting ground, ice has formed only off the Northern Peninsula when, by now, it has usually extended along the island's northeast coast.

Observers from the International Fund for Animal Welfare report that the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the annual birthing ground of hundreds of thousands of harp seals, is "essentially devoid of both ice and seals."

"The conditions this year are disastrous for seal pups. I've surveyed this region for nine years and have never seen anything like this," said Sheryl Fink, a senior researcher with IFAW.

"There is wide open water instead of the usual ice floes, and rather than the hundreds of thousands of seal pups that we normally encounter, only a handful of baby harp and hooded seals, animals that are normally found on ice, remain on the beaches," she said.

Other observers report that the lack of ice has left seal mothers with few places to bear their young or to feed their pups. Many people have seen the newly born pups stranded on beaches instead of being born out on the ice-covered Gulf where they have entered the world for hundreds of years.

Yet the federal government increased the quota for this year's seal hunt just a few days after federal Fisheries Minister Gail Shea told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation March 10 that poor ice conditions could cause the cancellation of this year's Gulf of St. Lawrence seal hunt. It usually begins at the end of March.

On March 15, Shea increased the total allowable catch of harp seals by 50,000, to 330,000 animals. She said the current estimate of the harp seal population is approximately 6.9 million animals, or more than triple what it was in the 1970s.

The minister's announcement was criticized by animal welfare organizations, conservationists, and sealers, in what Fink calls "a rare moment of agreement."

"Our government recognizes the importance of the sealing industry to the people and the economies of Canadian coastal communities," said Shea. "Ongoing efforts are made to ensure our management decisions include the perspective of our scientists, as well as the input of Canadians in Atlantic Canada, Quebec and the North who work and depend on the industry for their livelihood."

The one year total for the harp seal TAC includes a developmental allocation of 20,000 seals to support three value-added projects proposed by the sealing industry in Atlantic Canada, Shea said.

The Canadian Sealers Association says, "Improved handling and processing of fur and leather have occurred and a significant market breakthrough has occurred in China. Oil is rich in Omega-3 fatty acid and amino acids and the refining of oil is continuing and offers some real possibilities in the health industry."

But extremely high pup mortality is happening again this year. In 2007, 99 percent of harp seal pups born in the Southern Gulf of St Lawrence are thought to have died due to lack of ice.

"It is reckless and irresponsible for the government to allow the hunt to proceed this year, given the high pup mortality that is expected," she said.

"Under a precautionary approach, we should be protecting the few pups that might escape the devastating lack of ice this year," said Fink. "Given the almost complete lack of demand for seal skins, allowing the commercial slaughter of these survivors to proceed is simply adding insult to injury."

Scientists with IFAW are concerned that the cumulative effects of high pup mortality due to the poor ice conditions, and high numbers of pups killed during Canada's commercial seal hunt could be devastating to the species.


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Fishing countries targeted over endangered southern tuna

David Brooks Yahoo News 26 Mar 10;

WELLINGTON (AFP) – A week after a UN conference failed to ban trade in the critically endangered Atlantic bluefin tuna, environmentalists are warning of the possible extinction of its southern hemisphere cousin.

The UN Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) conference that ended Thursday voted heavily against a plan by the United States and European Union to ban trade in Atlantic bluefin tuna, the population of which has fallen by about three-quarters in the last 40 years.

But southern bluefin tuna appear in even worse trouble, and environmentalists blame Australia, Japan, New Zealand and other nations for pushing the species closer to extinction and are calling for the fishery to be closed.

Most southern bluefin, which reach up to 200 kilograms in weight, are caught in southern Australian waters, around New Zealand and off South Africa.

While prices in Tokyo's fish market about a third lower than for northern hemisphere bluefins, each southern bluefin can sell for thousands of dollars.

Japan and New Zealand voted against the CITES ban on trade in Atlantic tuna and Australia announced it would not vote in favour.

Both Australia and New Zealand argue that fishing restrictions are more effective than a trade ban.

But Greenpeace New Zealand oceans campaigner Karli Thomas said their decisions partly reflected a desire to avoid pressure to close the southern bluefin fishery.

Numbers of the southern bluefin have shrunk to less than five percent of stocks before commercial fishing began, according to the Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT), a quota-setting body comprising Australia, Indonesia, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea and Taiwan.

The industry is worth about 900 million US dollars a year, with the vast majority of fish ending up in Japan.

Annual southern bluefin catches reached 80,000 tonnes in the 1960s and the commission was set up in 1994 as numbers continued to fall following the introduction of voluntary quotas in the 1980s.

Conservationists say the fishery has reached such desperate straits that there is no alternative to closure if stocks are to rebuild.

"We've looked at the (CCSBT) scientific report that came out last year and from that it's clear that the only option that's going to bring about even a modest recovery of the stock is a zero catch," Thomas told AFP.

The commission aims to restore the fishery to 20 percent of pre-fishing levels in the next 20 years but admits that won't happen unless catches are cut drastically.

The CCSBT has agreed to reduce fishing of southern bluefin by an average of 20 percent this year and in 2011 from 11,810 tonnes to an average of 9,449 tonnes.

But that is not enough to ensure the future for southern bluefin, Greenpeace says.

"What they (the commission) prioritise time and time again is not just the interests of the fishing industry but the short-term interests of the fishing industry," said Thomas.

Australia accounts for around 4,000 tonnes of the catch, Japan for nearly 2,300 tonnes, with the bulk of the rest divided between South Korea, Taiwan, New Zealand and Indonesia.

But as part of the reduced global catch, New Zealand has been allowed to increase its quota, a move that has incensed environmentalists.

New Zealand Fisheries Ministry chief executive Wayne McNee confirmed Thursday the catch limit in New Zealand waters would rise from 420 tonnes to 532 tonnes this year.

But he said New Zealand had been a leading voice in reducing the global catch, and the rise in its own limit reflected the fact that its share was too low in the past.

Brian Jeffriess, chief executive of the Australian Southern Bluefin Tuna Industry Association, argues the gloomy predictions are wrong and that bluefin numbers are starting to rise again.

He blamed the poor state of the fishery on Japan, which had admitted overfishing its quotas up to 2006. Since then Japan has accepted a slashing of its quota and increased monitoring.

Jeffriess said aerial surveys by Australian scientists and reported catch rates by Japanese vessels had shown rising numbers of fish since 2008.

"We are very confident the fishery is on the right track for recovery," he told AFP, adding he believed fishing quotas should start rising again from 2014.


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Save the pollinators, save our luxury foods

Marcelo Aizen & Lawrence Harder, Straits Times 27 Mar 10;

IN THE past five years, as the phenomenon known as colony collapse disorder spread across the United States and Europe, causing the disappearance of whole colonies of domesticated honeybees, many people have come to fear that our food supply is in peril. The news on Wednesday that a US Department of Agriculture survey found American honeybees had died in great numbers this winter can only add to such fears.

The truth, fortunately, is not nearly so dire. But it is more complicated.

There is good news: While some areas are seeing a shortage of bees, globally the number of domesticated honeybee colonies is increasing. The bad news is that this increase can't keep up with our growing appetite for luxury foods that depend heavily on bee pollination. The domesticated honeybee isn't the only pollinator that agriculture relies on - wild bees also play a significant role, and we seem intent on destroying their habitats.

To understand the problem, we need to understand the extent of the honeybee's role in agriculture. Humans certainly benefit from the way bees - and to a lesser extent, other pollinators like flies, beetles and butterflies - help plants produce fruits and seeds. Agriculture, however, is not as dependent on pollinators as one might think. It's true that some crops like raspberries, cashews, cranberries and mangoes cannot reproduce without pollinators. But crops like sugar cane and potatoes, grown for their stems or tubers, can be propagated without pollination. And the crops that provide our staple carbohydrates - wheat, rice and corn - are either wind-pollinated or self-pollinated. These don't need bees at all.

Overall, about one-third of our worldwide agricultural production depends to some extent on bee pollination, but less than 10 per cent of the 100 most productive crop species depend entirely on it. If pollinators were to vanish, it would reduce total food production by only about 6 per cent.

This wouldn't mean the end of human existence, but if we want to continue eating foods like apples and avocados, we need to understand that bees and other pollinators can't keep up with the current growth in production of these foods.

The reason is that fruit and seed crops that are most dependent on pollinators yield relatively little food per acre, and therefore take up an inordinate, and increasing, amount of land. The fraction of agriculture dependent on pollination has increased by 300 per cent in half a century.

The paradox is that our demand for these foods endangers the wild bees that help make their cultivation possible. The expansion of farmland destroys wild bees' nesting sites and also wipes out the wildflowers that the bees depend on when food crops aren't in blossom. Researchers in Britain and the Netherlands have found that the diversity of wild bee species in most regions in those countries has declined since 1980. This decrease was mostly due to the loss of bees that require very particular habitats - bees that couldn't adapt after losing their homes and food sources to cultivation. Similarly, between 1940 and 1960, as land increasingly came under cultivation in the American Midwest, several bumblebee species disappeared from the area. It is difficult to count and keep track of wild bee populations globally, but their numbers are probably declining overall as a result of such human activity.

Even if the number of wild pollinators remained stable, it would not be sufficient to meet the increasing demand for agricultural pollination. Could domesticated bees take up the slack? By looking at data from the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations, we found that the number of managed honeybee hives increased by 45 per cent during the past five decades.

Unfortunately, this increase cannot counteract the growing demand for pollination or the shortage of wild pollinators. Domesticated bees mainly produce honey; any contribution they make to crop pollination is usually a secondary benefit. In most parts of the world, they provide pollination only locally and not necessarily where it is needed most.

Thus a vicious circle: Fewer pollinating bees reduce yield per acre - and lower yield requires cultivation of more land to produce the same amount of food.

Eventually, a growing shortage of pollinators will limit what foods farmers can produce. If we want to continue to enjoy almonds, apples and avocados, we have to cultivate fewer of them, more sustainably, and protect the wild bees that help make their production possible.

Marcelo Aizen is a researcher at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council of Argentina. Lawrence Harder is a professor of pollination ecology at the University of Calgary.


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Sabah starts independent monitoring of logging

The Star 26 Mar 10;

SANDAKAN: Sabah is embarking on an independent monitoring effort of its forest logging operations, said to be the single such exercise in the country, as part of a full implementation of sustainable forest management in the state.

The state government, through the Sabah Forestry Department, signed a deal Friday with Global Forestry Services (M) Sdn Bhd to conduct independent third party auditing and monitoring in all Natural Forest Management harvesting areas under the Reduced Impact Logging (RIL) approach.

“This statewide independent auditing is arguably the largest such undertaking in the country on logging monitoring, if not South East Asia, which Sabah is proud of," said department director Datuk Sam Mannan after the signing of the agreement.

He said the agreement fell in line neatly with the mandatory directive to all long term licensees to be certified under any credible internationally recognised certification system by 2014.

Mannan said the RIL compliance would be implemented on a progressive scale in its assessment whereby, it is planned for 90% of the compliance standard in 2010 with 100% compliance from 2011 onwards, with training and on the spot improvement continuously.

“As statewide RIL application needs close monitoring and training and many operators and workers are new to the concept, the Forestry Department is nevertheless confident that, competence at a high level, is achievable within the first year of implementation,” he added.

The agreement which covers a period of five years (2010-2014), is equally financed on a 50:50 basis by the State Government and the Yayasan Sabah Group, being the biggest forest licensee in the State, with an area approximately 1mil ha, under its management.

This agreement was an extension of the auditing and monitoring programme over Malua Forest Reserve, also under the Yayasan Sabah Group, which successfully demonstrated and proved the feasibility and viability of RIL in a tropical forest.

The Malua agreement, also concluded with Global Forestry Services (M) Sdn Bhd, covered the period 2006-2007 and all harvesting has since ceased and the area set for conservation.

Malua arguably is the largest model of full RIL Compliance in the tropics.

Building up on this success, the department has now made it mandatory for RIL to be practiced in all Natural Forest Management areas of Forest Reserves in Sabah effective 1 January 2010.

Mannan was the signatory for the State Forestry Department while Global Forestry Services (M) Sdn Bhd was represented by its director Dr Kevin Grace.


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‘Mosaic system’ proposed for Indonesia's plantations

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

Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan has asked oil palm plantation companies to adopt mosaic systems to help maintain biodiversity in plantations, and to address mounting criticism of the industry over environmental concerns.

Minister Zulkilfli sent a letter to Agriculture Minister Suswono in February asking for the development of the mosaic system, requiring companies to maintain areas of original vegetation of high conservation value.

Forestry Ministry Forest Production Director General Hadi Daryanto said the ideal percentage of plantation on plots of land was around 70 percent.

“The remaining area should be set aside for, among others, the protection of biodiversity. We want both [the forestry and agriculture] ministers to have one voice in responding to protests on environmental issues from the international community,” he told The Jakarta Post on Friday.

Zulkilfli said the mosaic pattern system, which had been adopted in industrial forest plantations, could also minimize diseases that thrive in monoculture plantations.


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Indonesian Govt Prepares to Take Control of Carbon-Stock Calculation

Fidelis E. Satriastanti Jakarta Globe 26 Mar 10;

The government wants to calculate for itself how much carbon is contained in the nation’s forests instead of relying on foreign data and methods.

“All this time, we have been depending on developed countries to count how much our carbon stock is. This is not good, because how will we learn to rely on our own resources?” said Hadi Daryanto, director general of forest production at the Ministry of Forestry.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization, carbon stock is the quantity of carbon contained in a “pool,” meaning a reservoir or system that has the capacity to accumulate or release carbon. Greenfacts.org says it is to the amount of carbon stored in the forest ecosystem, mainly in living biomass and soil, but to a lesser extent also in dead wood and litter.

Hadi said the ministry was preparing to issue a regulation detailing a carbon-counting methodology — covering measurement, reporting and verification — for the forestry sector based on research by Indonesian scientists.

The methodology would be applied to peatlands, people’s plantations ( h utan t anaman r akyat ), production forests, and other land. It would count carbon stock in vegetation above and below ground.

“One of the ways to store carbon is to plant trees, and that’s why it’s important that we control our carbon stock” from planting activities, Hadi said. “This will also help concessionaires predict how much investment they can get in the carbon market.”

He said the proposed methodology was less complicated than that of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

The regulation stipulates that concessionaires are expected to submit their reports based on the methodology, referred to as MRV, from Thursday until the end of October. Verification can be done through an independent accreditation organization.

“They will have to submit their MRVs to the ministry every year and they will be delivered to the MRV national coordinator at the Environment Ministry as forestry’s voluntary contribution on reducing emissions under the UNFCCC,” Hadi said.


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Indonesia Minister Says Nestle Has ‘Right’ to Cut Off Sinar Mas

Achmad Sukarsono, Business Week 25 Mar 10;

March 26 (Bloomberg) -- Nestle SA’s decision to stop buying from Indonesian palm-oil producer Sinar Mas Group over deforestation concerns is “perfectly normal,” the country’s environment minister said, suggesting the government doesn’t plan to protest.

“That’s their right as a consumer,” Gusti M. Hatta said in an interview in Jakarta yesterday, speaking of Nestle’s decision. “If there’s a clear violation, then I would cut them off without mercy,” he said, adding an investigation into the country’s biggest maker of palm oil is ongoing.

Nestle’s dropping of Sinar Mas sparked calls for the government to speak out on behalf of the palm-oil industry, which produces the country’s biggest agricultural export by sales. The Indonesian Palm Oil Association last week said the Vevey, Switzerland-based company’s decision was “unfair.”

“We need intervention from the government because the impact could reach other palm oil companies,” Libria Sefita Dewi, a palm oil analyst at PT Mega Capital Indonesia, said in a phone interview. “The image of Indonesian palm oil producers could become so bad that a defense is necessary.”

Nestle’s action came after a Greenpeace report said Sinar Mas illegally destroyed rainforest areas that are a key habitat for orangutans.

Unilever NA suspended deliveries from Sinar Mas in December and U.S. food provider Cargill Inc. may stop doing business with Sinar Mas if a global trade body validates the Greenpeace report, the company said yesterday on its Web site.

‘Responsible Land Clearing’

PT Sinar Mas Agro Resources and Technology, Sinar Mas’s palm-oil unit, is “committed to applying responsible land clearing and the best practice of farming management in all of our plantations,” President Director Jo Daud Dharsono said by phone on March 17.

“It’s not fair if major companies such as Nestle and Unilever dropped supplies from Indonesian producers just based on one report,” Fadhil Hasan, executive director at the Indonesian Palm Oil Association told reporters in Jakarta on March 18.

The country’s palm-oil exports may rise to 18 million tons this year from 15.5 million tons in 2009, the Indonesian Palm Oil Association said Jan. 26. Sales reached $10 billion last year, the association said.

Coal Mines

Legislation that takes effect next month will give Indonesia’s Environment Ministry power to revoke business licenses and permits without having to go through police. The ministry will first use the new law to crack down on coal producers in Borneo “because there are companies that have built mines in forested areas without approval,” Hatta said, without naming them.

“Almost half” of more than 1,500 mines appearing in Indonesian Borneo in the past decade are illegal, he said.

Larger producers such as PT Bumi Resources and PT Adaro Energy “tend to be good” in managing the environment, Hatta said. Some businesses have “misinterpreted” the government’s intent to enforce the new law, Hatta said.

“We’ll give time” to the companies to deal with their environmental issues “although we’ll strictly monitor the progress,” he said.

Rules governing the oil industry will be clarified within a year, he said, and “tolerance” will be given to mature oil fields.

The energy ministry is seeking a three-year delay on enforcing existing environmental rules. Applying them immediately could lead to a 40 percent drop in oil and gas output, energy ministry official Evita Legowo said Feb. 24.

Southeast Asia’s biggest economy expects to produce 965,000 barrels of oil per day this year, compared with 949,000 barrels a day last year, according to energy-ministry data.


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Awash in Awareness: Knowing a Product's "Water Footprint" May Help Consumers Conserve H2O

Environmentalists think food products should be labeled according to how much water is used to produce them

Alyson Kenward, Scientific American 26 Mar 10;

If you think your morning cup of joe only has 12 ounces (35 centiliters) of water in it, you're sorely mistaken—it has closer to 40 gallons (150 liters). Conservation scientists say it's time consumers become aware of the quantity and source of water that goes into growing, manufacturing and shipping food.

Concerns over greenhouse gas emissions have vaulted the term "carbon footprint" into mainstream vernacular. Now, by promoting the concept of a "water footprint" with the goal of including it on product labels, researchers are hoping to draw similar attention to how drastically we're draining our most precious resource. As the use of a footprint to gauge water use gains popularity, however, researchers are struggling to reach a consensus on how best to measure that footprint so the public understands its full impact.

As currently defined, a product's water footprint is an inventory of the total amount of water that goes into its manufacture. For that cup of coffee, for instance, most of the 40 gallons flow either into watering coffee plants or cooling the roasters during processing.

"Most people have no idea how much fresh water they're consuming," says Brad Ridoutt, a water conservation specialist from Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization. According to Ridoutt, food and energy production account for nearly 90 percent of the world's fresh water consumption.

The water footprint is designed to help consumers and businesses understand just how much water is required to make products like a cotton T-shirt or a can of corn. But according to Ridoutt, just counting gallons is not enough, because consumers also value where that water came from. Corn grown in Minnesota, for example, depends on rainwater, which is abundant and not otherwise used by people. But in Arizona corn crops depend on scarce reservoir water also used for drinking, hygiene and other consumer needs. The current definition of the water footprint doesn't address these discrepancies.

In a study published in the February issue of the journal Global Environmental Change, Ridoutt proposed a strategy that takes the original location of the water into account in evaluating the environmental impact of its use in product manufacturing.

To illustrate his ideas, Ridoutt chose two common household food items: an 18-ounce (53-centiliter) jar of Dolmio pasta sauce and a small bag of peanut M&M's. For the pasta sauce, the volume of water needed to grow the tomatoes, sugar, garlic and onions added up to 52 gallons (197 liters). For the M&M's, the total volume going into all the ingredients was a whopping 300 gallons (1,135 liters).

Comparing these conventional water footprint values would lead one to think the bag of M&M's takes a far worse toll on freshwater resources. But that isn't the complete picture, Ridoutt says.

Because tomato plants are typically grown in hot, dry climates, they are watered using irrigation systems that draw from the same locations as human drinking water. On the other hand, the cocoa and peanuts in M&M's are grown in more temperate regions, where the crops absorb rainwater directly from the ground. Taking location into account, Ridoutt says, drastically changes how you think about the water going into your food. According to his calculations, the pasta sauce is about 10 times more likely than the M&M's to contribute to water scarcity.

Ridoutt is not the only one trying to redefine the water footprint. Conservationists around the world are trying to figure out how to best include environmental impact in the footprints so they can be incorporated into food labels. The International Organization for Standardization now has a project underway to tackle this problem using methods similar to Ridoutt's.

Although many researchers support Ridoutt's work, others say we don't yet know enough about global water cycles to accurately measure environmental impact. Organizations such as the Water Footprint Network and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) still believe that simply reporting the total volume of water is currently the best and clearest way to communicate a water footprint.

"The paper Brad has written has quite a high value, but there is a long way to go," says the WWF's Ashok Chapagain, who has been studying water footprint methods for over five years. Without an agreed-on standard, reporting water footprints simply as volumes is the easiest for consumers and businesses to understand, he says.

Ridoutt, on the other hand, believes his method will turn out to be more useful for consumers, and he hopes that when footprints are applied to food products in the future, they won't be just a sum of all the water they have used. "If you want to communicate something to the public in a simple way," he says, "you have to express it in a way that gives the [environmental] impact."

This article is provided by Scienceline, a project of New York University's Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program.


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Indonesia insists on bid to chair UN climate body

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

Indonesia will announce its candidate to contest the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) top post next week, but three of four names tipped to chair the position at the international body refused to be nominated.

The deadline to submit candidate nominees to the UN office will close on March 31. Indonesian nominees will compete with nominations from Costa Rica, India and South Africa to replace Yvo de Boer.

Special assistant to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on climate change issues, Agus Purnomo, said that Indonesia would go ahead to race the climate top post with recruitment of the candidate conducted by the Foreign Ministry.

“There will be a meeting with President Yudhoyono to approve a candidate to represent Indonesia to bid for the executive secretary post at the UNFCCC,” he told The Jakarta Post on Thursday.

Purnomo is among potential candidates along with former foreign minister Hassan Wirajuda, former environment minister Rachmat Witoelar and expert to environment minister on international cooperation Liana Bratasida.

The last three candidates — Hassan, Rachmat and Liana — have refused to be nominated.

“I have talked with Environment Minister Pak Gusti Muhammad Hatta and told him I was not ready for the post,” Liana said Thursday.

She said that Minister Gusti had asked her to compete the post.

Liana was former member of the UN Clean Development Mechanism executive board that was tasked to determine whether the carbon projects were approved.

At the Bonn climate meeting last year, Liana was named the Subsidiary Body for Implementation chairwoman to discuss crucial issues including the emission cut target, financing, mitigation and technology transfer.

Rachmat, chairman of the National Council on Climate Change, said that he was not interested in the post and wanted to focus on strengthening the country’s position in global climate talks.

Rachmat was former president of the Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC during the Bali climate talks in 2007, which produced the much-hailed Bali road map.

De Boer, who announced his resignation in February, will leave the UN office in July, just months before negotiators from 190 countries will gather again to hammer out a long-delayed binding treaty on emission cut targets.

As of March, Costa Rica, India and South Africa are among countries that have announced their
interest in racing the climate-change post.

Indian environment secretary Vijay Sharma and South African tourism minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk first made the public announcement to race the post. Costa Rica planned to nominate its lead climate negotiator Christiana

Figueres, who has had a long career in the UNFCCC and has been a Costa Rica negotiating team member since 1995.


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Indonesian government climate talk success questioned

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

Activists have voiced doubts on government claims that Indonesia was one of the key players in international climate talks that managed to break deadlocks during many difficult negotiations.

They also questioned the role played by Indonesian negotiators in climate change talks, including at the Copenhagen climate conference last year.

“These are all unfounded claims that ignore the contribution of other countries. The Indonesian delegation has always seen itself as a major player in the talks with a strong role, but this is not backed up by documented records,” climate expert Daniel Murdyarso told the workshop on climate change organized by the WWF on Thursday.

“Indonesia is often not ready for the ‘war’. We bring ‘guns’, while other countries bring ‘bombs’ to the negotiations.”

He said that the billions pledged by developed nations in the Copenhagen Accord was only lip service.
“Indonesia should not be satisfied with a pledge,” he said.

Developed nations have pledged some US$30 billion from 2010 to 2012, with another $100 billion per year from 2020. The accord also stipulates the establishment of a Copenhagen Green climate fund.

“With no binding treaty issued, the future of the Kyoto Protocol and the Clean Development Mechanism [CDM] becomes unclear,” said Daniel, who is also researcher at the Bogor-based Center for International Forestry Research (Cifor).

He said that the government should allocate funds for adapting to climate change as Indonesia should not rely on external aid.

“There must be a budget for adaptation. It is not fair if the government focuses purely on funding mitigation programs,” he said.

The Copenhagen talks, which were attended by heads of state including President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, resulted in only a political statement of the accord, with no binding deal for developed nations to cut emissions.

In recent climate change talks, delegates from Brazil, India, South Africa and China (referred to as the Basic Group) have been very prominent, with Indonesia eyeing a similar footing.

WWF Indonesia climate and energy director Fitrian Ardiansyah warned that Indonesia needed to focus on its own climate talk agenda rather than acting as a mediator.

“Indonesia still promotes itself as a mediator bridging divides at climate change talks, but it has yet to formulate a clear position,” he said.

He said the country’s agenda should be discussed with all stakeholders before talks even began.
The government has vowed to slash emissions by 26 percent by 2020 using its own budget. Fitrian said the government should translate the pledged 26 percent into a national and regional level development agenda.

“It is important, for example, to set integrated spatial planning for forestry, agriculture and mineral resources sectors to meet emission cut targets,” he said.


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