Best of our wild blogs: 4 Apr 10


NEW blog! Mad March (Macritchie!)
from Diary of a Boy wandering through Our Little Urban Eden with some tips on the Art of Wandering.

Back to Beting Bemban Besar
from wild shores of singapore and special anemones and wonder creations and singapore nature and colourful clouds.

Star Studded Cyrene! (incomplete)
from Diary of a Boy wandering through Our Little Urban Eden

Special sea stars breeding at Cyrene Reef?
from wild shores of singapore

白胸秧鸡 white-breasted waterhen@Japanese garden
from PurpleMangrove

The Oriental Pied Hornbills of Pulau Ubin, Singapore
from EcoWalkthetalk

The Indian Peacock
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Happy Birthday, Jane Goddall
from EcoWalkthetalk


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PSA profit falls for second straight year

Robin Chan, Straits Times 4 Apr 10;

Port operator PSA International saw profit fall for the second year in a row last year, as a result of a global recession that saw world trade volumes fall off a cliff and devastate the shipping industry.

Net profit slid 6.1 per cent in 2009 to $976 million from the year before. Revenue fell 12.7 per cent to $3.8 billion over the same period as the total number of containers handled by PSA across its 28 ports around the world fell for the first time in history.

The volume of containers PSA moved fell 9.9 per cent from the year before to 56.9 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs).

Its Singapore operations saw container throughput decline 13.1 per cent to 25.1 million TEUs, although it still remained the busiest container port in the world last year.

Its port operations outside of Singapore fell for the first time, with a 7.1 per cent drop to 31.8 million TEUs.

As a result, PSA implemented cost-cutting measures that saw a reduction in staff costs as well as running and repair costs.

'2009 would be remembered as one of the world's most difficult years, with the near meltdown of the financial markets resulting in a global recession and a plunge in world trade,' said Mr Fock Siew Wah, PSA International's group chairman.

'As we enter the new year, we retain a very cautious outlook and are not sanguine about a swift recovery.'

This was PSA's second consecutive yearly drop in net profit after a 46 per cent decline from 2007 to 2008 as the global recession started to hurt world trade in the second half of 2008.

The results come on the heels of global data that is showing that economic regions around the world are recovering, but at different speeds. Asia is bouncing back quicker than the United States and Europe.

Container throughput at Singapore's ports has risen for four straight months with 2.18 million boxes moved in February, since it hit a low of 1.85 million a year ago.

World trade is expected to grow 9.5 per cent this year, after suffering its biggest collapse since World War II last year, World Trade Organisation chief Pascal Lamy said last week.

But the container shipping industry expects to see difficult times ahead as freight rates struggle to rise amid a massive oversupply problem.

Shipping lines have resorted to keeping some ships idle, scrapping others and running those in operation at slower speeds.

There are also concerns that the recovery in demand has been a result of factories replenishing their stocks rather than genuine new demand from the consumer.

'The last two months of 2009 and the first two months of 2010 showed tentative signs of recovery but the road ahead will be bumpy and uncertain, and all indications point towards a slow and drawn- out recovery with different regions rebounding at different rates,' said Mr Eddie Teh, group chief executive of PSA International.

'The fear remains that a macro- economic storm will be inevitable to clear all the excess global production capacity that was created.'

2009 net profit for PSA International falls 6% on year to about S$976m
Melvin Yong Channel NewsAsia 3 Apr 10;

SINGAPORE: Port operator PSA International said its 2009 net profit fell six per cent on year to about S$976 million.

It's the second straight year of profit decline but still a vast improvement from the 46 per cent drop in profits in 2008 compared with the previous year.

The company said the drop was due to a contraction in global trade last year as a result of a worldwide economic slump.

Revenue fell 12.7 per cent to S$3.8 billion.

Last year, PSA handled 56.9 million twenty-foot equivalent units or TEUs, down 9.9 per cent from 2008, its first ever decline in containers moved.

PSA's flagship terminal in Singapore handled 13 per cent fewer containers on year in 2009 at 25.1 million TEUs.

This was still enough to help Singapore retain its position as the world's busiest container port for the fifth consecutive year.

For its terminals outside Singapore, PSA handled 31.8 million TEUs in the same period, down about seven per cent on year. - CNA/vm


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Vital family of timber trees in Peninsular Malaysia under threat

It may be last 'timber!' for some
Chai Mei Ling, New Straits Times 4 Apr 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: More than half of subspecies from a commercially vital family of timber trees in Peninsular Malaysia are under threat, with some so rare they are almost extinct.

The dipterocarpaceae family, whose members include commercial heavyweights balau, chengal, mersawa and meranti, have, for decades, been major contributors to the country's economy.

Almost 70 per cent of this group of lowland rainforest trees add to national revenue by way of valuable plywood, resin and aromatic oil trade.

Scientists have found that 55.5 per cent or 91 of the family's 164 subspecies and varieties are under threat.

Land use change since the 1960s have resulted in species like the keruing padi and balau putih becoming extremely rare, existing only in sporadic, small pockets of forests in the peninsula, said Dr Lilian Chua of the Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM).

Some species are endemic not just to the country, but only in specific districts.

The merawan kanching, for example, is found only in the Kanching forest reserve, Selangor.

"If it ceases to exist there, you won't find it in the world any more," said Chua, who is FRIM conservation and biodiversity informatic branch head.

Chua, who was speaking at the Flora of Malaysia seminar in Kepong, Selangor, recently, has, for the last five years, led a team of botanists in assessing endangered Malaysian plants.

The first compilation of their work, a Plant Red List for the dipterocarpaceae family, will be published in three months.

The list will detail threatened species, their exact location and conservation methods.

The team will go on to compile a list for every other family of vascular plants in the peninsula, where some 7,000 species are expected to be examined.

Chua said the existence of a list of threatened plants will determine the priority for conservation efforts in the country.

"We always say we don't know our resources enough to conserve, but now that we know where all these rare plants are on the ground, are we going to do anything?"

One conservation method is for protected forests to be enlarged to include habitats of these rare species.

"In-situ protection is important.

"There's no faster and more efficient way for species to be regenerated than maintaining mother trees in natural forests.

"This will also make it a good genetic resource area."

Although rare species are non-tradable, all it takes is a mix-up in identification during harvesting to fell the trees and wipe the species off the planet, which is why it is so important to seal off the area from production, said Chua.

"Dipterocarpaceae is a very charismatic family.

"No amount of money can make up for the loss of one or two species.

"Once gone, they will never come back."


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Running of zoos: New act will give Malaysian wildlife agency more bite

Sonia Ramachandran, New Straits Times 4 Apr 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: The government will soon have more say in the running of zoos.

This is because the soon-to-be-passed Wildlife Conservation Act will empower the Wildlife and Natural Parks Department to look into the management of zoos and the welfare of animals.

National Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Seri Douglas Uggah Embas said the cabinet had given its approval for the Wildlife Conservation Act to replace the Wildlife Protection Act 1972.

Among the main things in the new Wildlife Conservation Act, he said, would be the empowerment of the Wildlife and Natural Parks Department to regulate the establishment and running of zoos.

"This would include the management of the zoo as well as the way the animals are kept in zoos. We hope to table it in Parliament by June," Uggah told the New Sunday Times.

He said the Wildlife Protection Act had no provisions on the running of zoos. The new act, said Uggah, would also have increased penalties against poachers.

The New Sunday Times had recently reported that the welfare of animals at Zoo Negara had been compromised because of a lack of funds.

There have also been allegations of money mismanagement.

A lack of funds had also led to the night safari being discontinued and some enclosures not being upgraded.

Zoo Negara is managed by the Malaysian Zoological Society, a non-governmental organisation. It has over 5,137 animals from 459 species of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and fish.

Some Zoo Negara life members had asked the government not to pump money into the national zoo until there was a thorough probe into the situation at the zoo.

There were also suggestions that Zoo Negara follow the Singapore Zoo model and be turned into a government-linked company.

Uggah said a paper on Zoo Negara would be presented to the cabinet as soon as all loose ends had been tied.

When asked when that would be, Uggah said: "Very soon. The issues on whether Zoo Negara will be turned into a government-linked company and whether the government will be pumping money into the national zoo will be included in the paper."


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Chinese coal ship runs aground off Australia, leaks oil

Reuters 3 Apr 10;

(Reuters) - Australian aircraft on Sunday spotted oil leaking into waters around the Great Barrier Reef after a Chinese-registered bulk coal carrier ran aground, government officials said.

The 230-meter (754-ft) Shen Neng I was on its way to China when it ran aground on a shoal on Saturday. It had 950 metric tons of oil on board and officials said patches of oil had been spotted in the water, but no major leak.

"Early morning flights over the carrier show a small number of oil patches about two nautical miles southeast from the ship. To date there has been no major loss of oil from the ship," Queensland's state government said in a statement.

Aircraft were due to spray chemical dispersant over the area later in the day and a salvage assessment will be made.

The Great Barrier Reef is one of Australia's major tourist attractions and is considered to be highly vulnerable to damage from pollution. The ship was located 70 km (43 miles) east of Great Keppel Island, offshore from the city of Rockhampton.

The China-bound ship was carrying 65,000 metric tons of coal from the Queensland port of Gladstone. It is thought unlikely that it can be moved without salvage assistance.

Last year, an oil spill during a storm polluted large stretches of Queensland beaches and led to a protracted legal dispute between the state government and the ship's owners, Swire Shipping, about the cleanup bill.

(Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

Officials fear ship breaking apart on Barrier Reef
Yahoo News 4 Apr 10;

BRISBANE, Australia – A coal-carrying ship that ran aground and was leaking oil on Australia's Great Barrier Reef was in danger of breaking apart, officials said Sunday.

The Chinese coal carrier Shen Neng 1 ran aground late Saturday on Douglas Shoals, a favorite pristine haunt for recreational fishing east of the Great Keppel Island tourist resort. It's off the coast of Queensland state in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park off northeast Australia.

Authorities fear an oil spill will damage the world's largest coral reef, listed as a World Heritage site for its environmental value.

The ship hit the reef at full speed, 9 miles (15 kilometers) outside the shipping lane, State Premier Anna Bligh said.

A police launch was standing by to remove the 23 crew if the ship broke apart and an evacuation was necessary, she said.

Patches of oil were seen near the stricken ship early Sunday, but Maritime Safety Queensland reported no major loss from the 1,000 U.S. tons (950 metric tons) of oil on board.

"We are now very worried we might see further oil discharged from this ship," Bligh told reporters.

Maritime Safety Queensland general manager Patrick Quirk said the vessel was badly damaged on its port side.

"At one stage last night, we thought the ship was close to breaking up," he told reporters. "We are still very concerned about the ship.

"It is in danger of actually breaking a number of its main structures and breaking into a number of parts," he added.

Federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett said authorities had been working through the night to determine what risks the ship posed to the environment.

A chemical that was not expected to have a lasting environmental impact would be sprayed on the oil to disperse it, Garrett said.

"The government is very conscious of the importance of the Great Barrier Reef environment and ensuring that impacts on its ecology are effectively managed," Garrett said in a statement.

The 755 foot (230 meter) bulk vessel was carrying about 72,000 U.S. tons (65,000 metric tons) of coal to China and ran aground within hours of leaving the Queensland port of Gladstone.

Conservationists have expressed outrage that bulk carriers can travel through the reef without a marine pilot with local expertise.

"The state government has been acting like snake oil salesmen spruiking the riches to be made from exporting LNG (liquid natural gas) and more coal, however they fail to acknowledge the environmental harm that will be caused both on land and sea by these industries," Capricorn Conservation Council spokesman Ian Herbert said.

Chinese ship leaks oil near Great Barrier Reef
Yahoo News 3 Apr 10;

SYDNEY (AFP) – A Chinese coal carrier is leaking oil after running aground near Australia's Great Barrier Reef, authorities said Sunday.

The Shen Neng 1 became stuck on a shoal 70 kilometres (43 miles) east of Great Keppel Island off the Queensland coast late Saturday.

"Initial air and sea assessments of a Chinese bulk coal carrier that has run aground off central Queensland show some oil patches near the ship," the state government said in a statement Sunday.

"Early-morning flights over the carrier show a small number of oil patches about two nautical miles south-east from the ship. To date there has been no major loss of oil from the ship."

Authorities are expected to spray chemical dispersant on the spilled oil later Sunday if weather conditions are favourable.

The 230-metre carrier, which is carrying about 65,000 tonnes of coal and has 950 tonnes of oil onboard, is likely to be towed to port.

The incident follows a large oil spill from the container carrier Pacific Adventurer in March 2009, which polluted Moreton Island and Sunshine Coast beaches.


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Oil spill pollutes tributary of China's Yellow River

Yahoo News 3 Apr 10;

BEIJING (AFP) – A tributary of China's Yellow River has been polluted by an oil spill, state-run media reported Saturday, in the latest environmental accident to threaten the nation's drinking water.

About 1,000 tonnes of oil sludge has contaminated farmland and the Luohe River in northern Shaanxi province after a recycling pool at a sewage treatment plant collapsed last Sunday, the China Daily said.

More than 2,000 people have been scrambling to clean up the mess and eight containment belts have been set up downstream from the spill, the English-language newspaper said.

"At present the sludge in the river has been effectively controlled and we will make efforts to clean up the contamination in the farmland and valley," local government official Wang Hongli was quoted as saying.

AFP calls to the local environmental protection bureau went unanswered.

More than 30 years of unbridled economic growth have left most of China's lakes and rivers heavily polluted, while the nation's urban dwellers also face some of the world's worst air pollution.

More than 200 million Chinese currently do not have access to safe drinking water, according to government data.

In January, two tributaries of the Yellow River were "seriously polluted" by an oil spill after a pipeline operated by China's largest oil producer, China National Petroleum Corp., ruptured.

In that incident up to 150,000 litres of diesel spilled into the Chishui and Wei rivers.


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Conservation calls as Canada bear hunt season opens

Deborah Jones Yahoo News 3 Apr 10;

VANCOUVER, Canada (AFP) – Canadian environmentalists are calling for strict conservation measures as the controversial grizzly bear hunt begins over the Easter weekend in Canada's westernmost province.

A report by scientists at two environmental organizations said the kill rate in past seasons exceeded provincial limits and will endanger the animals considered a keystone species in the nation's ecosystems.

"The number of grizzlies being killed in British Columbia is excessive," Faisal Moola of the David Suzuki Foundation said in a statement.

"The government's own data show that humans are killing more grizzly bears than allowed, and the greatest cause of death is trophy hunting."

Figures of the existing bear population remain inexact, but the environmental report noted that even at best, it has now halved from an estimated 35,000 bears a century ago.

Part of the difficulty is that bears are solitary beasts, whose range extends over thousands of square kilometers.

Provincial figures have varied hugely, from an estimated 6,600 bears in the mid-1980s to about 16,000 cited in 2008.

The report, released Thursday, called on British Columbia to stop trophy hunting of bears in parks and other protected zones, and to protect bears from all harmful human activities by setting up zones of inter-connected habitats for the furry beasts.

"In some cases, the number of grizzlies -- which no longer exist or are at risk of extinction in parts of the world -- killed by humans was more than double the number deemed allowable by the government," the Natural Resources Defense Council said.

The report, published by the Suzuki Foundation of Vancouver and the New York-based Natural Resources Defense Council, cited opinion polls that suggest a majority of provincial residents support a ban on hunting.

It included a letter from eight biologists warning that without strong measures, "the viability of grizzly bear populations and their habitat continues to erode."

About 25 percent of the giant bears left in North America live in mountainous British Columbia, according to the report.

"Grizzlies have already been eliminated or are currently threatened in about 18 percent of the province," it said.

The species is considered threatened or endangered in the United States, and hunting is banned in the Canadian prairie provinces.

Scott Ellis, a spokesman for professional hunting guides, said about 339 grizzlies were killed in British Columbia each year.

He disputed the findings that trophy hunting threatens grizzly survival.

"There are some good points raised, and some alarm bells that are rung unnecessarily," said Ellis of the Guide Outfitters Association of British Columbia, whose members are required by law to be hired by out-of-province hunters.

"The grizzly bear hunt is probably the most intensively managed hunt on the planet," he said.

He said among those animals killed on an annual basis were 100 felled by out-of-province trophy hunters working with professional guides, 175 killed by hunters who live in the province, and 60 that are destroyed by conservation officers or police. Others were killed in vehicle or train collisions.

He argued that hunting guides -- who have relied on healthy wildlife populations since the guide industry started here in 1870 -- would demand stronger conservation measures if they thought the bears were threatened.

The provincial government said Friday it had received the report and was analyzing it. But Environment Minister Barry Penner told a local newspaper the hunt kills two percent of the grizzly population annually, below the nine percent kill rate it could withstand.

The report also blamed the bear decline on hunting, road-building and "unsustainable levels" of forestry, mining and oil and gas development, as well as on converting what had once been prime grizzly bear habitat into agricultural production, towns and cities.

Declining salmon populations, food for coastal bears, were also to blame.

Grizzly bears are the second-largest carnivores on the North American continent, after polar bears. Bigger males can range in size from 135 kilograms (300 pounds) in inland locations, to 550 kilograms (1,200 pounds) on the Pacific coast.


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Non-native mammals damaging UK countryside

Concern over non-native species
BBC News 4 Apr 10;

A number of non-native mammal species are damaging the UK countryside by eating crops and threatening wildlife, a conservation charity has warned.

A report by the People's Trust for Endangered Species identified 14 problem species including rats, American mink and muntjac deer.

The trust said some of the creatures have been in the UK for so long, they are thought of as indigenous.

It said it was important to stop the extinction of native species.

Practical action

According to the report, two of the UK's fastest declining native species - the red squirrel and the water vole - which has declined by 90% - are under threat by mammals introduced by humans in the last two centuries.

American minks prey on water voles while grey squirrels, which were introduced to the UK in the 19th century carry the deadly squirrelpox virus and outcompete the native red squirrel when it comes to hunting for food and habitats.

The trust also warned the red-necked wallaby is capable of damaging capercaillie birds on Loch Lomond island, while muntjac deer congregating in high numbers are also accused of being a threat to wildlife.

According to the British Deer Society, muntjac were brought from China to a park in Bedfordshire in the early 20th century.

They spread across the country after they escaped, or were deliberately released, from the park.

Further invasions

People's Trust chief executive Jill Nelson said: "Our campaign to conserve Britain's native mammals is rooted in finding more about each animal's behaviour in response to the various threats they face and translating that knowledge into practical conservation action."

She said the way with how the UK dealt with the problem was a "vital component in preventing their extinction".

The trust said the species can have a negative impact on UK wildlife, landscape and agriculture. This range of problems include carrying disease, breeding with species to produce hybrids and altering the landscape and damaging crops.

The report also warned that global trade and a changing climate could lead to the invasion of more alien species.

Other species to have made the list include house mice and rabbits.

But the report, researched by professor David Macdonald and doctor Dawn Burnham from the University of Oxford Wildlife Conservation Research Unit acknowledged, that while rabbits are mainly seen as a pest, they can also have a positive conservation effect in particular areas where they graze.


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Putting a Price Tag on the Melting Ice Caps

Judith D. Schwartz, Time Magazine 3 Apr 10;

Reports about the melting ice caps are distressing, but for the most part climate change remains abstract. The poor polar bear has been trotted out as the tangible face of global warming so often that we're beginning to see "polar bear fatigue."

How about bringing the effects of Arctic melt close to home, as in what it will cost? A new study does just that, and the results are alarming, not just for Arctic dwellers but for all of us. According to lead author Eban Goodstein, Ph.D., over the next 40 years Arctic ice melt will take an economic toll of between $2.4 trillion and $24 trillion. Unless we change course — and fast.

Why is the melting Arctic so expensive? "The Arctic acts as the planet's air conditioner, and that function is already breaking down," says Goodstein, an economist and Director of the Bard Center for Environmental Policy. The high price reflects anticipated losses in agriculture and real estate plus the cost of disease outbreaks and natural disasters associated with rising sea levels. The melt, he says, is already adding extra heat at an annual rate of 3 billion tons of CO2 — the equivalent of 500 coal-powered plants, or more than 40% of all U.S. fossil fuel emissions — and this is expected to more than double by the end of the century.

The "Cost of a Warming Arctic" study, funded by the Pew Environment Group, assessed trends in the Arctic's cooling mechanisms and examined the financial consequences. The research team looked at the rate at which surfaces change from white ice and snow to ocean or exposed tundra, since darker surfaces absorb, rather than reflect, solar heat. According to the report, this shift and the increased methane emissions linked with melting permafrost currently slap us with annual losses in the range of $61 billion to $371 "resulting from such changes as heat waves and flooding." But the anticipated monetary fallout described in the study, expected to run deep into the trillions over the coming decades, may actually be conservative, as it does not take into account the recently discovered large-scale methane releases from the thawing continental shelf.

Of course, grappling with something as vastly complex as climate science involves plenty of uncertainties: What threshold represents a tipping point, after which changes accelerate? What are the chances of some unforeseen catastrophic event? What measures might come into play that limit CO2 emissions and thus mitigate climate change? And how do you precisely gauge the economic impact — particularly when dealing with the future?

Turns out, this last question is a matter of great debate. Typically the province of economists wielding formulas too esoteric for most of us to follow, the Social Cost of Carbon (SCC) is currently under discussion by the EPA and other regulatory agencies. The figure they choose has huge implications for our ability to make inroads against climate change. The Social Cost of Carbon represents the estimate of damages from one more ton of CO2 added to the atmosphere. (One ton of CO2 is what the average family car emits every two-and-a-half months.) The SCC is important because a low number suggests minimal regulation is needed, whereas a high number urges more stringent action (such as efficiency requirements, carbon taxes or alternative energy incentives).

"The idea is that if we have a number, we can compare the costs and benefits of efforts to reduce CO2 in the atmosphere," says Frank Ackerman, PhD, an economist specializing in climate change at the Stockholm Environment Institute's center at Tufts University. "If, say, we value CO2 damages at $20 a ton, then $15 per ton is considered an acceptable cost to ameliorate it. If the SCC is $2, spending $15 seems out of line." The other key statistical variable is the "discount rate," which establishes how to account for future costs and benefits in today's currency. A high discount rate implies that what happens years from now should have less bearing on decisions made today. Inherent in this seemingly technical point is the question: what do we, citizens today, owe the people of tomorrow? Particularly since, once released, CO2 stays in the air for at least 100 years.

The Pew study looked at damages at different SCC and discount rates. "Using the mid-range EPA figure, the cumulative global cost between now and the middle of the century will exceed $7 trillion," says Goodstein. "This means that every working adult will have to pay half of a year's salary just to cover the damage of the breakdown of the Arctic air conditioner." The higher figure used in the survey, based on the U.K.'s 2007 Stern report, yields significantly greater damage estimates.

Frank Ackerman says that the EPA is basing its SCC calculations on models that minimize the economic risks of climate change. He notes that one model includes the assumption that for the first few decades, climate change will bring economic benefits to the world as a whole.

William D. Nordhaus, Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale University, whose DICE (Dynamic Integrated model of Climate and the Economy) is among the three considered in EPA's calculations, points to the difficulty of coming up with accurate figures while climate science is still evolving. "It's a slow process," he says, noting that while there is documentation on rising sea levels, there are little data on such factors as methane release from melting permafrost, the impacts of ocean acidification, and the timing of the potential disintegration of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. "We as social scientists can't [offer precise financial estimates] until we have reliable information from natural scientists. We will probably get better resolution over the next two decades."

Given the lack of a viable timeline for climate impacts — plus the likely hurdles of implementing a sharp reduction plan — Nordhaus, among others, has advocated a reduction in emissions that starts gradually, then increases over time. Others, such as the authors of the Arctic study, point to the environmental, and ultimately financial, burden of not lowering emissions in a timely way.

"Climate change is different from anything we've had to contend with on a policy level," says Ackerman. "The assumption in any policy discussion is that if a proposal doesn't go forward, you still have the status quo. Here the status quo is not available as a fallback, as doing nothing means a rapidly changing climate and worsening conditions all over the world. By the time you're absolutely certain of the impacts and can observe them in everyday life, it's too late." This is why, he says, paying attention to the dynamics of climate harbingers — such as the Arctic, which is warming at twice the rate of the rest of the planet — is crucial.

Rather than letting the unknowns paralyze us, Ackerman suggests looking at the potential costs of climate change differently. "You don't buy fire insurance on your house because you think it's going to burn down, but because you're not completely sure that it won't," he says. He says about 3% of per capita income is what is needed to protect against climate change: the amount people typically spend on insurance. We could think of it as collective property — or life — insurance.

But unlike the low probability of losing your house to fire, we know that the Arctic is warming. And this study offers an inkling of what it could cost us — if we don't act. "No matter how you slice it, these are big numbers," says Goodstein. "The Arctic air conditioner is breaking down in a big way. Half-measures won't work. If we can get carbon emissions down, we can retain more of this function."


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