Best of our wild blogs: 23 Apr 10


Bukit Timah Dog Attacks
from Crystal and Bryan in Singapore

Operation No Release
from The Leafmonkey Workshop and What the Fig?

Alien Gals on the Sidewalk
from Diary of a Boy wandering through Our Little Urban Eden

Dead crabs washed ashore on polluted beach
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

Global phylogeography of pantropical plants with sea-drifted seeds: Hibiscus and Rhizophora’s case from Raffles Museum News

Dredging and massive reclamation next to Labrador until Oct 10 from wild shores of singapore

Earth Day 2010: We can live life with a little bit of dirt
from Flying Fish Friends

Sooty-headed Bulbuls at Lake Toba resort, Indonesia
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Catapulting birds at a Malaysian National Service camp
from Bird Ecology Study Group


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Battle to save wild dolphins from Hong Kong park

Simon Parry and Hazel Parry Earth Times 23 Apr 10;

Meanwhile, 18 dolphins exported from the Solomon Islands in December and bound for a Singapore theme park are being looked after in the Philippines as a debate rages over whether they should be allowed into Singapore continues.

Hong Kong - In the doorway of a hotel in the Solomon Islands earlier this month, the star of an Oscar-winning documentary ambushed two theme park officials in his latest battle on behalf of the world's wild dolphin population.

Ric O'Barry - a trainer-turned-activist who featured in the 2009 film The Cove - targeted representatives from Hong Kong's Ocean Park who have been in talks about importing up to 30 bottlenose dolphins from the Solomons.

O'Barry claims the Animal Planet film crew he was working with saw Ocean Park employees cruising the coast of the Solomons' main island Guadalcanal trying to catch dolphins.

The representatives vehemently denied the allegation, saying they were only on an observation mission to track dolphins.

What is not at issue, however, is that the theme park wants to expand its dolphin stock and is in talks with the Solomons' government ministers about funding an "abundance survey" in return for an option to import dolphins.

Ocean Park's chairman Allan Zeman insisted the talks are at a "very preliminary stage" and that no dolphins would be imported until his officials are satisfied that the stock of bottlenose dolphins in the Pacific country is sustainable.

Conservationists with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) are nonetheless alarmed.

"We are opposed to the live capture of dolphins due to the massive animal welfare issues involved," said Sandy Macalister, executive director of the Hong Kong SPCA. "It is a trade that shouldn't exist in this day and age. It is extremely difficult to justify."

O'Barry, 59, who trained dolphins for the television series Flipper before becoming an activist, said the Ocean Park officials told him, "We are conservationists." He added, "Then when they saw our cameras they ran like hell."

Ocean Park chief executive Tom Mehrmann insisted his officials had not been involved in any dolphin hunts. "It was an observation boat. It had no nets. There was no capture of dolphins," he said.

"We are there to do research first and foremost," he said. "If there is a sustainable source we would look into whether we can get permits to import dolphins but it is a very long process."

The notion of taking wild dolphins to build up the breeding stocks at Ocean Park with its currently 16 dolphins, is an affront to some conservationists.

US-based pressure group the Earth Island Institute said it wouldcall for a boycott of Ocean Park and Hong Kong as a tourist destination if the import of dolphins goes ahead.

Mark Berman, director of the institute's international monitoring programme, said wild dolphins sell for around 100,000 dollars each. Describing the capture method, he said, "They are chased with nets and encircled.

"The ones they want to keep, they drag them onto a boat and manhandle them and give them blood tests. To get 30 they probably have to catch 100. It is intense harassment, an intense nightmare."

Only Mexico and the United Arab Emirates had imported wild dolphins from the Solomon Islands in recent years, Berman said. "Over 50 per cent of the dolphins shipped to Mexico are now dead," he said.

"Mexico has since banned the import of live dolphins from anywhere in the world because of that fiasco. In Dubai at least six of the 28 shipped there are dead."

Meanwhile, 18 dolphins exported from the Solomon Islands in December and bound for a Singapore theme park are being looked after in the Philippines as a debate rages over whether they should be allowed into Singapore continues.

"There is no sustainable catch of dolphins. We say it should be banned worldwide, period," Berman argued.

As far as the Solomon Islands government is concerned, activists like O'Barry and Berman are a costly and embarrassing annoyance they would prefer to see the back of.

Government advisor Dr Baddley Anita said trading a limited, sustainable number of dolphins overseas should be allowed, saying island communities already slaughtered 2,000 to 3,000 dolphins a year for food.

Whatever was agreed, activists had no place in the debate, he argued. "They are interfering with the cultural and traditional practice of dolphin harvesting and eating by the communities here," Anita said. "To us that is not acceptable."


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Room for bosses, greening experts to improve buildings

Lee Yen Nee, Straits Times 23 Apr 10;

Having green buildings such as this means a more efficient use of energy, which could reduce operational costs and carbon dioxide emissions. -- ST FILE PHOTO

SCEPTICAL bosses are preventing experts in 'greening' buildings from playing a key role in efforts to make buildings more ecologically sound, a conference heard yesterday.

Mr Tony Keane told the event that such experts - called facilities management professionals - deserve more recognition as they can help companies to operate more productively while being environment-friendly.

The president and chief executive of the International Facility Management Association (IFMA) later told The Straits Times that such professionals must also realise that they can do more.

'It's an awareness issue for the management... It's also an awareness issue for facilities management professionals that they can truly make a difference and they need to be heard,' he said.

The conference - an inaugural one on sustainable facility management - was organised by the IFMA and the Building and Construction Authority's (BCA) education arm, BCA Academy.

Mr Ng Chin San, managing director of industrial facility management at asset manager UGL Premas, said proper facilities management can add value to businesses.

For example, a more efficient use of energy could reduce operational costs and carbon dioxide emissions.

BCA chief executive John Keung said that it was important to improve energy efficiency, especially in existing buildings as most do not meet the proper standards.

To achieve the target set by the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Sustainable Development to 'green' 80 per cent of buildings here by 2030, Dr Keung suggested letting facilities management professionals lead the effort.

'A large number of old buildings will have to be retrofitted,' he added.

'It is therefore necessary for us to ensure that our professionals have the knowledge and skill sets to lead the effort... in the commissioning, operation and management of the green facilities and the associated technologies.'

With that in mind, the BCA inked a memorandum of understanding with the IFMA to collaborate on promoting and advancing the facility management profession.

Dr Keung said: 'BCA will work with IFMA to develop more programmes to train our local professionals to operate and manage the increasing number of sustainable developments efficiently and cost-effectively.'


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At 40, Earth Day Is Now Big Business

Leslie Kauffman, The New York Times 21 Apr 10;

So strong was the antibusiness sentiment for the first Earth Day in 1970 that organizers took no money from corporations and held teach-ins “to challenge corporate and government leaders.”

Forty years later, the day has turned into a premier marketing platform for selling a variety of goods and services, like office products, Greek yogurt and eco-dentistry.

For this year’s celebration, Bahama Umbrella is advertising a specially designed umbrella, with a drain so that water “can be stored, reused and recycled.” Gray Line, a New York City sightseeing company, will keep running its buses on fossil fuels, but it is promoting an “Earth Week” package of day trips to green spots like the botanical gardens and flower shopping at Chelsea Market.

F. A. O. Schwarz is taking advantage of Earth Day to showcase Peat the Penguin, an emerald-tinted plush toy that, as part of the Greenzys line, is made of soy fibers and teaches green lessons to children. The penguin, Greenzys promotional material notes, “is an ardent supporter of recycling, reusing and reducing waste.”

To many pioneers of the environmental movement, eco-consumerism, creeping for decades, is intensely frustrating and detracts from Earth Day’s original purpose.

“This ridiculous perverted marketing has cheapened the concept of what is really green,” said Denis Hayes, who was national coordinator of the first Earth Day and is returning to organize this year’s activities in Washington. “It is tragic.”

Yet the eagerness of corporations to sign up for Earth Day also reflects the environmental movement’s increased tolerance toward corporate America: Many “big greens,” as leading environmental advocacy organizations are known, now accept that they must take money from corporations or at the least become partners with them if they are to make real inroads in changing social behavior.

This year, in an updated version of a teach-in, Greenpeace will team up with technology giants like Cisco and Google to hold a Web seminar focused on how the use of new technologies like videoconferencing and “cloud” computing can reduce the nation’s carbon footprint. Daniel Kessler, a spokesman for Greenpeace, said it was necessary to “promote a counterweight to the fossil fuel industry.”

In 1970, Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York addressed a crowd of tens of thousands in Union Square on Earth Day, in an atmosphere The New York Times likened to a “secular revival meeting.”

This year, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg will be in Times Square to announce measures to reduce New York’s impact on the environment. Using the same stage, Keep America Beautiful, an antilittering nonprofit organization, will introduce “dream machines,” recycling kiosks it is introducing with PepsiCo. The machines are meant to increase the recycling rates for beverage containers, which is estimated at about 36 percent nationwide.

Of course, a fair portion of the more than 200 billion beverage containers produced in the United States each year are filled with PepsiCo products like Mountain Dew and Aquafina; such bottle trash contributes to serious pollution on beaches, oceans and inland waterways.

Still, Matthew M. McKenna, president and chief executive of Keep America Beautiful, and a former PepsiCo senior vice president, said he jumped at the opportunity to have his former employer introduce its new kiosk at the event.

“We are not being asked to encourage the purchase of Pepsi or the consumption of their products,” he said. “We are asked to deal in the field with what happens when they get thrown out.”

While the momentum for the first Earth Day came from the grass roots, many corporations say that it is often the business community that now leads the way in environmental innovation — and they want to get their customers interested. In an era when the population is more divided on the importance of environmental issues than it was four decades ago, the April event offers a rare window, they say, when customers are game to learn about the environmentally friendly changes the companies have made.

Frank Sherman, United States green officer for TD Bank, said the company hurried to get its prototype of a highly energy-efficient bank branch building in Queens ready for Earth Day because that’s when “people are paying attention.”

The original Earth Day events were attended by 20 million Americans — to this day among the largest participation in a political action in the nation’s history.

This year, while the day will be widely marked with events, including a climate rally on the Mall in Washington, the movement does not have the same support it had four decades ago.

In part, said Robert Stone, a independent documentary filmmaker whose history of the American environmental movement is being broadcast on public television this week, the movement has been a victim of its own success in clearing up tangible problems with air and water. But that is just part of the problem, he noted.

“Every Earth Day is a reflection of where we are as a culture,” he said. “If it has become commoditized, about green consumerism instead of systemic change, then it is a reflection of our society.”

Green Auction To Mark 40th Anniversary Of Earth Day
Christopher Michaud, PlanetArk 23 Apr 10;

Artists, conservationists, business leaders and film and music stars from around the globe are marking the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day with a Green Auction to benefit the environment.

Organizers of the live auction on Thursday at Christie's and a companion silent online sale and related events, known as "A Bid to Save the Earth," expect to raise millions for four nonprofit environmental groups.

Artists Jenny Holzer, Damien Hirst, Alan Sonfist have donated major works for the sale. Jeff Koons will provide a studio visit to the highest bidder and Annie Leibovitz has donated signed copies of her book.

Bidders can also vie for tennis lessons with John McEnroe, an afternoon in Central Park with Canice Bergen, dinner and the theater with actress Sigourney Weaver or a day on the set with Australian star Hugh Jackman.

Jewelry, watches and luxury green travel packages will round out the items up for grabs at Thursday's auction.

"It's an unprecedented collaboration," said Susan Cohn Rockefeller, who is co-chair of the auction with husband David Rockefeller Jr., a philanthropist and environmental activist.

With participation from quarters as far-reaching as Deutsche Bank, NBC Universal and retailers Target and Barneys, officials said the event reflected increasing understanding that business concerns are closely tied to environmental issues, and that two need not be opposing forces.

"We're building bridges with different communities," said Peter Lehner, executive director of the international environmental advocacy group Natural Resources Defense Counsel, which will benefit from the event.

He added that his group has been working closely with such nontraditional environmental allies as manufacturers and labor unions.

Doug Blonsky, president of the Central Park Conservancy, which is another beneficiary, agreed.

"There's a real business model behind environmentalism," he said.

Proceeds from the auction, which will be carried on Christie's live at www.christies.com and continues with a silent auction ending on May 6 (www.abidtosavetheearth.org), will also benefit Oceana and Conservation International.

Christie's is waiving all fees and commissions for the sale, and in nod toward being green is not printing a catalog. Native Energy is providing carbon offsets -- reduced carbon emissions to counter those associated with the event.

Charity auctions have raked in big bucks in recent years, and while the financial crisis has struck hard, experts say the art market is on the verge of a strong recovery.

Organizers say that raising awareness and stimulating even small donations to environmental concerns is a chief goal.

Those on a more modest budget can scoop up one of Barney's specially designed $40 T-shirts, a tie-in with the event.

Text happy tweeters are encouraged to text GOGREEN to phone number 20222 for a $10 donation, while both Twitter (Bid2SaveEarth) and Facebook (ABidToSaveTheEarth)are linked to the auction.


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Earth Day at 40: What Good Is It Now?

On its 40th anniversary, Earth Day is tamer but still a rallying point, experts say.
Ker Than, National Geographic News 22 Apr 10;

After 40 years, outsourced activism is replacing traditional Earth Day activities and green's gone mainstream—Earth Day even has its own Google doodle. So what's the point?

The first Earth Day in 1970 was a raucous, radical teach-in that helped spur clean-air, clean-water, and endangered species legislation in the United States.

Now, 40 years later, Earth Day is every day, as the saying goes. The thing is, it's also everyday—environmentalism has become a routine, if not universally embraced, part of U.S. culture, with green-ness as much a marketing tactic as a moral pursuit.

"I think the novelty [of Earth Day] has worn off," said Steve Cohen, the executive director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University.

"We're not burying cars or doing those kinds of dramatic gestures anymore," Cohen said. "Originally, it was seen as an expression of a radical political belief. It's hard to argue that it's radical anymore."

(See pictures of quirky Earth Day activities.)

Earth Day at 40: Tamed But Still Relevant?

Earth Day has been tamed, Cohen said, but that's not to say it isn't still relevant. Earth Day serves as a useful yearly reminder for people to consider their impact on the environment, he said.

"In our very fast paced society, [Earth Day] helps to get people to step back and think about things a little bit differently," he said.

But Earth Day is about more than just thinking, said Timmons Roberts, director of the Center for Environmental Studies at Brown University.

Earth Day provides a rallying point for people to address the unique environmental problems of their time, Roberts said.

For example, "each generation of college students reinvents [Earth Day] for the issues of their day," he said. At Brown, students these days focus largely on global wamring and reducing energy consumption, whereas in the past they might have been more likely to speak out on deforestation, chemicals that deplete the ozone layer, river pollution, or smog, he said.

Earth Day "really does bring people together and creates a community of people who care and who want to do something, even if it's just picking up trash in their neighborhood," he said. "I think we do need it."

At 40, Earth Day Still Drawing Green Greens?

Earth Day also continues to be a good introduction to environmentalism for novices, said Kathleen Rogers, president of Earth Day Network, a nonprofit group that aims to broaden the environmental movement and mobilize environmentalists worldwide.

Once upon a time, environmental advocacy was viewed by many as an elitist pursuit and the domain of high society, Rogers said.

"Before 1970 the movement was largely focused on land and species conservation," she said. That year "marks the line really clearly between the small group of people who were protecting the environment for hunting, shooting, and beauty purposes, and the rest of the world."

A shift was exactly the point of the first Earth Day, 40 years ago, Rogers said.

U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson and activist Denis Hayes, who organized the first Earth Day, deliberately focused on the effects of the environment on human health—a topic relevant to everyone.

Earth Day Spurred "Profound Cultural Shift"

Earth Day "allowed the world to find a home in environmentalism," Rogers said. "It was an entry point for hundreds of millions of people ... Everybody had a stake all of a sudden."

That change in thinking was a "profound cultural shift," added Hayes, now president and CEO of the Seattle-based Bullitt Foundation, which promotes sustainable development in the U.S. Pacific Northwest.

"Today, every American believes he or she has a fundamental right to a safe and healthy environment, and that nobody has a right to put something in that environment that adversely affects them or their children or their neighbors," Hayes said.

"For people of my era, the difference is night and day."

Easy Earth Day Activities = Government Inaction?

Earth Day going mainstream does have some downsides, however, said Brown University's Roberts.

"The first Earth Day was effective because so many people went out in the streets," Roberts said.

Forty years later, "people are asked to do much simpler things, like recycle or turn their thermostat to a certain level," he said. "They're not being asked to get out there and shake up the government and force a recognition of how things are produced and how much we consume."

Roberts draws a direct connection between today's tamer Earth Day activities and what he sees as the United States' ineffectiveness in the face of environmental problems such as global warming.

"There isn't the same level of civil pressure on the government to do anything about it. ... I think as the movement became professionalized, people were satisfied to recycle and send in their checks to somebody else to let them do the agitation," Roberts said.

"Before, people were out there doing it themselves."


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A Day for Coral Reefs in Indonesia

Hapsoro Jakarta Globe 22 Apr 10;

It is said that Indonesia is a maritime country, but most Indonesians do not know about their marine environment. The sea is only seen as a passage between islands, without realizing that beneath the vast stretches of water lies a rich biodiversity that is as rich, if not richer, than that on land.

In 1999, the government established the Ministry of Maritime Affairs, now the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, to watch over Indonesia’s various sea-related business. But it is not easy to mainstream maritime issues with people in this archipelagic country. Few people understand maritime issues, while government programs are still mostly land-oriented.

Although Indonesia initiated the international Coral Triangle Initiative and hosted the World Ocean Conference last year in Manado, knowledge about coral reefs and their preservation is still not significant enough.

On Thursday, a number of nongovernmental organizations, funding agencies, community groups and private companies invited people to use Earth Day to take another look at Indonesia’s seas — with coral reefs, as one of the most important links in the marine ecosystem, being given the main focus. This day, or as we call it: “Coral Day,” is when we can all contribute to the protection and preservation of coral reefs.

The objective of Coral Day is simple: to encourage the public to act now, without waiting for a program or institution to initiate efforts. Everyone can contribute according to his or her own strengths.

It is a sad fact that coral reefs are the most vulnerable environment to temperature increases brought on by global warming. Based on observations by Reef Check Indonesia in 2005, coral in the sea near Bali’s Ngurah Rai International Airport experienced extensive bleaching. In June 2009, along Bali’s north coast, from Pemuteran to Amed, Reef Check found coral bleaching of up to 4 percent, caused directly by an increase in the temperature of the water in the area.

Corals are living organisms that live symbiotically with networks of single-celled algae to form beautiful coral reefs. The algae produce the food for the corals, and the corals in turn give the algae a place to live. Environmental pressures, such as pollution or increases in water temperature, can cause the algae to die, which then causes the coral network to perish and eventually lose its color, thus it is called bleaching.

Preliminary evaluations by experts at last year’s Global Biodiversity Conference in Cape Town, South Africa, showed a hectare of coral reef could generate between $130,000 and $1.2 million annually. The fascinating beauty of the coral reefs is what attracts thousands of tourists every year to Bali, Wakatobi, Raja Ampat and many other dive spots across the country.

But why do average people need to worry about coral reefs that live hidden beneath the waves? Aside from preventing coastal abrasion, coral reefs are home to most of the sea creatures that we consume. As our coral reefs begin to disappear, so will our sources of food from the sea.

Before the late 1980s, Serangan, an island village not far from Kuta, attracted many tourists because of its rich coral reef and resident turtle population. The relatively untouched coral and sea grass was a paradise for innumerable species of fish. But then a large-scale reclamation project, intended to save the island from coastal abrasion, ironically ended the area’s marine utopia. The project damaged the delicate coral that supported the island’s fishermen and drastically changed the underwater landscape.

Fish catches in Serangan diminished and turtles, the star attraction of the island, left the area. In facing the man-made “disaster,” fishermen did not just accept their fate. Along with a number of nongovernmental organizations and the government, 36 people calling themselves the Karya Segara Fishermen’s Group took the initiative to restore their village. Today, it has developed into one of the most active groups working to restore coral reefs and distribute income to local fishermen by cultivating coral. Their success has also been followed by other fishermen who now see the changes it has brought, including the return of the fish in their area.

Coral Day invites the public to care, get involved and contribute. Caring doesn’t mean that everyone has to plant coral, but just know enough to care that every coral counts. If we throw away rubbish carelessly or pollute the sea, this can threaten the existence of the coral reefs. One coral may die today, but before we realize it, a whole area such as Serangan may lose its source of income.

Hapsoro is program director of Telapak, a community-based group of environmental activists.

Earth Day a Time of Reckoning for Green Activists
Fidelis E Satriastanti & Made Arya Kencana, Jakarta Globe 23 Apr 10;

To mark Earth Day on Thursday, activists in Jakarta urged the government to start taking saving the environment seriously, while those in Bali declared it Coral Day.

“Indonesia has too much to carry on its shoulders now, economic and social burdens, ecological burdens, disasters everywhere, too much debt and lots of environmental issues,” Teguh Surya, head of advocacy at the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi), said on a talk show dedicated to Earth Day.

“With the Earth Day momentum, it’s more than appropriate to mark it by seeing how far we have damaged our ecology.”

On climate change, Teguh said the government had been focusing on preventing more damage caused by global warming but ignored the need for local people to survive and adapt to global warming.

“Most areas prone to climate change are coastal areas and small islands, but our government’s policies have been focusing only on the forestry sector,” Teguh said.

Nadia Hadad, project coordinator at the Bank Information Center, said all climate change funding had focused on mitigation efforts.

“As a developing country, Indonesia needs to adapt, but this issue has never fully been taken into consideration by developed countries because it has no close connection or effect on them,” Nadia said.

Zenzi Suhadi, executive director of the Walhi branch in Bengkulu, said people there did not need more money and wanted the government to stop investment.

“These people are very frustrated now seeing how mining and palm oil plantations have stolen their income and livelihood. They just want it stopped,” said Zenzi.

The province once relied on fisheries but now mining and plantations have taken over, meaning people had not choice but to encroach on forests or even send children out to sea to catch fish.

Meanwhile, on Serangan Island off Bali, locals celebrated Earth Day by inaugurating Coral Day, which was envisioned by green groups including Telapak and Kehati (the Indonesian Biodiversity Foundation).

“We hope this movement raises people’s awareness of the importance of coral, especially in tackling climate change,” Telapak activist Ery Damayanti said.

The observance includes a coral adoption program, where tourists can pay an individual or institution to plant coral on their behalf and get a certificate and regular reports on its progress. The donations would range from Rp 180,000 to Rp 5 million ($20 to ($555).

“The money will be used for coral treatment, seed supplies and other things,” Ery said.

Serangan Island had been chosen because of its strategic place to show the world that Indonesia was taking aggressive action to save corals. 


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Indonesian Officials Accused of Ending Probe in Riau Logging Case

Camelia Pasandaran & Fidelis E Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 22 Apr 10;

A coalition of activist groups on Thursday reported 12 public officials to the presidential Judicial Mafia Eradication Task Force for suspected involvement in a major illegal logging case in Riau province.

The public officials include one governor, four district heads, two high-ranking police officials, an official from the Ministry of Forestry and four former officials from Riau’s forestry agency.

The coalition said that in December 2008, the Riau Police halted a probe into 13 companies suspected of illegal logging after being advised by “an expert” that the companies had not broken any laws.

The case had been investigated for about two years under Sutjiptadi, who was then head of the Riau Police, the activists said, but was immediately put on hold when it came to the current deputy chief of its criminal investigation division, Hadiatmoko.

Other high-ranking officials accused of involvement in the dropping of the case included Riau Governor Rusli Zaenal and the former Forestry Minister MS Kaban.

“We think the decision to stop the investigation is controversial and suspect that a ‘forestry mafia’ is involved,” said Febri Diansyah, legal coordinator at Indonesia Corruption Watch, which was part of the coalition.

He said the groups had leveled 15 charges against the public officials, including alleged abuse of power in issuing permits and paying bribes to central and local government officials.

Riau Police spokesman Zulkili said he had not yet heard about the allegations and declined to comment.

The head of the mafia eradication task force, Denny Indrayana, said it planned to re-open the illegal logging case.

“We will see whether there was indications of a judicial mafia,” he said.

Denny said many illegal logging cases, in other provinces as well as Riau, had been dropped under suspicious circumstances.

“Vast areas of our forests have been destroyed,” he said. “We need to send a clear message, a message that will make people involved in illegal logging think twice.”

Denny said the task force would comply with an order issued last week by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to investigate the country’s notoriously corrupt forestry sector.

“We will follow up the president’s directives,” he said. “The mafia task force has accepted, and will always accept, input from any party regarding illegal logging and indications of mafia involvement.”

Denny said the mafia eradication task force would work with the Forestry Ministry to investigate the illegal logging claims.

Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan recently said that up to 3.5 million hectares of land was cleared each year between 1997 and 2002.

The current rate of deforestation is about 700,000 hectares a year, mostly in Papua.

Of the 131 million hectares of forests across the country, only about a third is estimated to be original old-growth forest.

Additional reporting by Budi Otmansyah


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Malaysia Launches Campaign To Plant 26 Million Trees

Bernama 22 Apr 10;

PUTRAJAYA, April 22 (Bernama) -- In commemorating Earth Day on Thursday, Malaysia launched a nationwide campaign to plant 26 million trees by 2014.

Natural Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Douglas Uggah Embas launched the campaign, carrying the theme "Green the Earth: One Citizen, One Tree", here.

The 26 million trees represent the estimated 26 million population of the country.

Some 16,200 saplings were planted in launching the campaign, with 500 planted at a site in Precinct 5 opposite the Putrajaya International Convention Centre (PICC) here.

The other trees were planted at selected sites in Alor Star (Kedah), Kangar (Perlis), Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM) Seri Iskandar (Perak), Bachok (Kelantan), Kemaman (Terengganu), Pulau Melaka (Melaka), Seremban (Negeri Sembilan), Kulai (Johor), Temerloh (Pahang), Esplanade (Penang), Hulu Selangor (Selangor), Kota Kinabalu (Sabah) and Petra Jaya (Sarawak).

The types of tree planted included the cengal, cempaka, keruing, balau and kalumpang.

Uggah said the 26 million trees would be planted in stages and the process would be monitored by the relevant departments and agencies under the ministry.

"It is estimated that 38,470 hectares of denuded and logged forests, coastal areas and urban centres would be planted by 2014," he said when launching the campaign, also attended by Deputy Natural Resources and Environment Minister Tan Sri Joseph Kurup.

Uggah said the campaign was in line with the government's efforts to ensure that at least 50 per cent of the country had forest cover in accordance with Malaysia's commitment made at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992.

The forest cover currently was 56.4 per cent, but if agricultural areas were taken into account, the acreage would rise to 75 per cent of the total land area, he said.

Uggah said it was estimated that at the end of the campaign, in 2014, some 200,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide would have been absorbed due to the trees planted.

The figure was expected to rise if the planting continued nationwide, he added.

In KANGAR, Perlis State Secretary Datuk Mohd Zabidi Zainal represented Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Md Isa Sabu in leading the people at planting karas saplings in Sungai Batu Pahat near the state capital.

Going by the population of Perlis, more than 250,000 trees will be planted in the state by the end of the campaign period in 2014.

In reading out the menteri besar's text of speech at the event, Mohd Zabidi asked for the people's cooperation in the tree-planting campaign to make it a success.

In KINABATANGAN (Sabah), District Officer Latif Kandok led the planting of 200 saplings in the compound of the office and houses in an area known as an eco-tourism centre.

"The campaign can foster love for greenery among the people and raise awareness on efforts to conserve the environment," he said.

He called on the local community to plant more trees and refrain from engaging in open burning, levelling of hills and polluting of rivers so as to avert global warming.

In ALOR SETAR, Kedah Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Azizan Abdul Razak officiated at the launch of the tree-planting campaign and called on the people to foster interest in planting greenery in their surroundings.

He said the state government had taken steps to replant mangrove and other suitable species of tree along the Kedah coast to protect the shore from strong waves and erosion.

"Kedah has 36 permanent forest reserves spread over 342,613 hectares covering 36 per cent of the total land area in the state," he said.

In TEMERLOH, Pahang State Financial Officer Datuk Norzan Ahmad represented Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Adnan Yaakob at the launch of the campaign at the Kemasul Forest Reserve.

Some 1,000 officers and staff of various departments and 500 secondary students from Temerloh each planted a sapling at the event.

Norzan, reading out Adnan's text of speech, said 1.48 million trees would be planted in Pahang over the next five years.

-- BERNAMA

One tree for every Malaysian
New Straits Times 23 Apr 10;

PUTRAJAYA: Yesterday was Earth Day, a day to mark our appreciation for our environment.

To commemorate the event, Malaysia launched a nationwide campaign to plant 26 million trees by 2014.

Natural Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Douglas Uggah Embas launched the campaign themed "Green the Earth: One Citizen, One Tree" here.

The 26 million trees represented the 26 million Malaysian population.

Some 16,200 saplings were planted -- 500 in Precinct 5 opposite the Putrajaya International Convention Centre here and the rest at selected sites nationwide.

The sites were in Alor Star, Kangar, Universiti Teknologi Mara Seri Iskandar (Perak), Bachok (Kelantan), Kemaman (Terengganu), Malacca Island (Malacca), Seremban (Negri Sembilan), Kulai (Johor), Temerloh (Pahang), Esplanade (Penang), Hulu Selangor (Selangor), Kota Kinabalu (Sabah) and Petra Jaya (Sarawak).

The trees planted included cengal, cempaka, keruing, balau and kalumpang.

Uggah said they would be planted in stages and this would be monitored by the relevant departments and agencies under his ministry.

In his speech during the launch, he said it was estimated that 38,400ha of bare and logged forests, coastal areas and urban centres would be planted with trees by 2014.

He said the campaign was in line with the government's efforts to ensure that at least 50 per cent of the country had forest cover in accordance with Malaysia's commitment made at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992.

Uggah said the forest cover now was 56.4 per cent, adding that by the end of 2014, some 200,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide would have been absorbed by the trees that had been planted. He said the figure would increase if planting efforts continued.

In Kangar, some 250,000 trees will be planted in the state by the end of the campaign. Perlis State Secretary Datuk Mohd Zabidi Zainal, who represented the menteri besar, planted karas saplings in Sungai Batu Pahat yesterday.

In Alor Star, Kedah Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Azizan Abdul Razak launched the campaign at Taman Jubli Mas in Suka Menanti, while in Ipoh, Perak Local Government Committee chairman Datuk Dr Mah Hang Soon said some 2.8 million trees would be planted from now until 2014.

In Kota Kinabalu, Sabah Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman said the planting of trees along the coastline would continue to prevent erosion.

Sabah had swung into action and planted many trees along its coastline after the 2004 tsunami. More than 600,000 mangrove and other species of trees were planted as a buffer.


To commemorate Earth Day, Musa led members of the state cabinet, elected representatives and heads of departments to plant 100 trees at the compound of the State Legislative Assembly building here yesterday.

State Secretary Datuk Sukarti Wakiman said similar events were held in 26 districts where more than 2,600 trees were planted.


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World Bank Chief Urges Action To Save Wild Tigers

Lesley Wroughton, PlanetArk 23 Apr 10;

World Bank President Robert Zoellick called on Wednesday for joint action among countries and organizations to save the dwindling numbers of wild tigers from extinction.

There are barely 3,500 tigers left in the wild. Their declining numbers are blamed largely on poaching and the slow destruction of their natural habitat by deforestation.

"2010, the Year of the Tiger, must be the year in which we take joint action to save this majestic species," Zoellick said at a photo exhibition by the National Geographic Museum, which focuses on the plight of endangered tigers and other big cats.

Zoellick has a personal passion for the conservation of wild tigers. Visitors to his office at the World Bank headquarters in Washington are directed to a table map showing the decline of wild tigers in the world, with troubled areas shaded in red and orange.

The World Bank, whose mission is to reduce global poverty, sees its role as trying to improve conditions in developing countries, which in turn would help to preserve the tigers' habitat.

Through the "Global Tiger Initiative," an alliance of governments and more than 30 international agencies, the World Bank has been working with countries such as India and Nepal to set aside more land for tiger habitat.

In South-East Asia the bank is working with groups to address the black market for body parts from tigers, common in countries like as China.

"Part of what this is about is getting people not to see development and conservation as opposing poles but how you can try to connect them together," Zoellick told Reuters Insider Television.

"By working with the countries in the developing world, that's the best chance to save this species, which after all is in the developing world."

A World Bank report in 2008 warned that "if current trends persist, tigers are likely to be the first species of large predator to vanish in historic times."

A summit in September in Vladivostok, Russia, will try to push for conservation commitments for the world's remaining tigers.

(Editing by Chris Wilson)


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Compromise proposes Japan slash Antarctic whaling

Shaun Tandon Yahoo News 23 Apr 10;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The International Whaling Commission on Thursday unveiled a compromise proposal aimed at resolving longstanding rifts under which Japan would eventually cut its Antarctic catch by three-quarters.

The proposal, which will be voted on at a June meeting in Morocco, sets a 10-year plan that would bring Japan, Iceland and Norway back under the control of the 88-nation global whale body after years of rising tensions.

The International Whaling Commission (IWC), which led months of negotiations with the cautious support of the United States, said the package was a delicate set of balances that would save thousands of whales.

"It will be a major achievement if, despite some fundamental differences of views on whaling, our member countries can put these differences aside for a period to focus on ensuring the world has healthy whale stocks," IWC chair Cristian Maquieira said.

But many environmentalists strongly oppose the proposal, arguing that it would end a 1986 moratorium on commercial whaling in all but name and risked reviving a dwindling industry in whale meat.

"This is probably the biggest threat to the ban on commercial whaling that we've faced since it came into force," said Nicolas Entrup of the Munich-based Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society.

"This is a critical moment for the conservation movement."

Under the proposal, Japan's Antarctic catch would go down to 410 whales next season and then 205 whales in the 2015-2016 season. Japan's annual Antarctic hunt has infuriated Australia, which has threatened legal action.

Japan currently plans to kill 765-935 whales each season in the Antarctic, although its latest catch was down to 507 whales due to sustained high-seas harassment by environmentalists.

The compromise would also allow the killing of 870 minke whales a year in the Atlantic, roughly in line with current total catches by Norway and Iceland, along with Japan's continued hunt in the Pacific Ocean.

The IWC imposed a moratorium on commercial whaling in 1986. Japan employs a loophole that allows "lethal research" on the ocean giants, while Norway and Iceland defy the moratorium altogether.

The United States has helped spearhead the compromise but withheld a final judgment on the proposal, anticipating further negotiations through the June meeting in Morocco.

Monica Medina, the US commissioner to the IWC, said the bottom line for the United States was to save whales.

"The important thing here is that the IWC isn't working right now," Medina told AFP.

"Even with the moratorium in place, the number of whales being killed is increasing and if we can turn that around and decrease the number of whales being killed, that would be a good thing."

Advocates for the compromise say that IWC negotiations have been so consumed by arguments that the body has not taken action on growing threats to whales such as climate change, ship strikes and entanglement in fishing gear.

But environmentalists say that the proposal rewards Iceland, Japan and Norway for skirting the 1986 moratorium and spells out no action after the 10-year period.

Environmentalists led a rally on Washington's National Mall to urge President Barack Obama to intervene to stop the proposal.

"The United States needs to take a page out of Japan's playbook and show a similarly serious and long-term commitment to advance its policy position -- conservation," said Patrick Ramage, director of the global whale program at the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Australia has been skeptical of the proposal. In a submission to the discussion, Australia complained that whaling nations had made no serious concessions.

Japan in turn has insisted it would never give up whaling, which it considers part of its culture, despite calls on it to phase out the hunt over 10 years.

South Korea has harshly criticized the proposal as it leaves whaling in the hands of three nations. South Korea officially does not hunt whales but allows the sale of meat in whales accidentally netted -- in what environmentalists say is an easily exploitable loophole.

Whaling plan draws greens' anger
Richard Black, BBC News 22 Apr 10;

The International Whaling Commission (IWC) has published draft proposals for regulating whaling for the next decade.

Japan's Antarctic whale hunt would fall in stages to less than a quarter of its current size. But hunting would continue on the endangered fin whale.

The draft is the latest stage in a two-year process aiming to find compromise between pro- and anti-whaling camps.

It will be debated at the IWC's annual meeting in June. Some conservation groups have already condemned it.

Commercial whaling was banned globally in 1982, but Iceland, Japan and Norway continue to hunt under various exemptions, collectively targeting more than 2,000 whales each year.

"If an agreement is reached, this represents a great step forward in terms of the conservation of whales and the management of whaling," said IWC chairman Cristian Maquieira.

"For the first time since the adoption of the commercial whaling moratorium, we will have strict, enforceable limits on all whaling operations.

"As a result, several thousand less whales will be killed over the period of the agreement."

Seeking sanctuary

Key countries, including the US and Japan, have limited comments to saying they will consider the draft proposal carefully.

But some conservation and animal welfare groups have already indicated opposition.

"The fact that this proposal is even being discussed shows just how far out of touch the IWC is with modern values," said Claire Bass, manager of the Marine Mammal Programme at the World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA).

"It is entirely missing the point that blasting conscious animals with exploding harpoons is grossly inhumane."

However, others argue that the aim of completely banning whaling is unrealistic, and that a major down-scaling, combined with bringing it under international oversight, is a worthwhile compromise.

But the inclusion of fin whales and the continuation of hunting in the Southern Ocean - which has been declared a whale sanctuary - are points of concern.

"There are some positive elements here, but there are some unacceptable provisions too," said Sue Lieberman, director of international policy with the Pew Environment Group.

"This allows whaling by Japan to continue in the Southern Ocean - and the Southern Ocean Sanctuary should be set in stone."

Quota cuts

Japan currently targets about 930 minke whales and 50 fins in each Antarctic season, though in recent years it has actually caught a lot fewer owing to skirmishes with ships of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society and to a fire on the factory ship Nisshin Maru.

The draft envisages the annual Antarctic minke catch falling to 400 immediately, then to 200 in the 2015/16 season.

The fin whale quota would be set at 10 now, falling to five in 2013/4.

A demand that Japan has made regularly for several years - that it be allocated a commercial or quasi-commercial minke whale quota in the North Pacific waters around its coasts - would be granted, with 120 of the animals targeted each year.

Iceland - which last year mounted a major escalation in its fin whale hunt, catching 125 - would be allocated an annual quota of 80 fins and 80 minkes, which is considerably less than it has been demanding.

Norway's annual quota would be set at 600 minkes, and no other country would be permitted to start hunting - a clause that has aroused the ire of South Korea.

It is clear that the big players are still some way apart on key issues, including whether international trade should be permitted during the 10-year period.

Permitting it is a key demand of Iceland, which sees a potentially big export market in Japan. But conservation groups and anti-whaling nations are equally adamant that it must be stopped.

International trade in whalemeat is banned, but Iceland, Japan and Norway have registered exemptions to the UN wildlife trade convention for some whale species.

If adopted at the June IWC meeting, the "peace package" would set terms for the next 10 years, with a review after five.

Initial quotas could be amended downwards if scientific assessments indicated the necessity.

Governments would agree not to set quotas unilaterally, and to keep all hunting within the control of the IWC, effectively suspending the current measures of "scientific" whaling or hunting "under objection".

Whaling nations would have to agree to a monitoring regime involving observers on boats and a DNA register designed to keep illegal whalemeat out of the market.

Whaling by indigenous groups would not be affected.


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Once-Hidden EU Report Reveals Damage From Biodiesel

Pete Harrison, PlanetArk 22 Apr 10;

Biofuels such as biodiesel from soy beans can create up to four times more climate-warming emissions than standard diesel or petrol, according to an EU document released under freedom of information laws.

The European Union has set itself a goal of obtaining 10 percent of its road fuels from renewable sources, mostly biofuels, by the end of this decade, but it is now worrying about the unintended environmental impacts.

Four major studies are under way.

Chief among those fears is that biofuel production soaks up grain from global commodity markets, forcing up food prices and encouraging farmers to clear tropical forests in the quest for new land.

Burning forests releases vast quantities of carbon dioxide and often cancels out many of the climate benefits sought from biofuels.

Biodiesel from North American soybeans has an indirect carbon footprint of 339.9 kilograms of CO2 per gigajoule -- four times higher than standard diesel -- said the EU document, an annex that was controversially stripped from a report published in December.

Editing the report caused one of the consultancies, Fraunhofer of Germany, to disown it partly in a disclaimer.

But it has now been made public after Reuters used freedom of information laws to gain a copy.

The EU's executive European Commission said it had not doctored the report to hide the evidence, but only to allow deeper analysis before publishing.

"Given the divergence of views and the level of complexity of the issue ... it was considered better to leave the contentious analysis out of the report," the Commission said in a statement. "The analysis prepared under this study applied a methodology which by many is not considered appropriate."

SCIENTIFIC NEUTRALITY

The annex adds some weight to a growing dossier suggesting biofuels are not as green as once thought -- even the more advanced, second generation biofuels made from wood chips.

"For the third time in six weeks the (European) Commission is forced to release studies about the climate effects of biofuels," said Nusa Urbancic of T&E, a campaign group for green transport.

"And for the third time these studies show that land use is the most important factor in deciding if biofuels make sense or not," Urbancic said.

Biodiesel from European rapeseed has an indirect carbon footprint of 150.3 kg of CO2 per gigajoule, while bioethanol from European sugar beet is calculated at 100.3 kg -- both much higher than conventional diesel or gasoline at around 85 kg.

By contrast, imports of bioethanol from Latin American sugar cane and palm oil from Southeast Asia get a relatively clean bill of health from the study at 82.3 kg and 73.6 kg respectively.

But one of the scientists involved with the study cautioned that much work remained to be done before the issue was properly understood, and that no firm conclusions could be drawn about the relative merits of different biofuel sources.

"The major point is that we have to do more work, develop new sustainability criteria and we have to be very careful about the origins of biofuels," said Wolfgang Eichhammer of Fraunhofer.

"We must also find a way of excluding the inefficient biofuels," he added.

Eichhammer said he had made his stand with the disclaimer to protect the neutrality of science, and emphasized the value of ongoing Commission studies into the problem.


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Indonesia's Geothermal Potential Remains Untapped

Titania Veda, Jakarta Globe 22 Apr 10;

Garut, West Java. Beneath Darajat Mountain lies the village of Sirnasari. The bread and butter of this community of 8,500 people is jacket-making and other cottage industries. But frequent blackouts, due to infrastructure problems such as decaying or falling transmission poles, cause production delays that affect these small entrepreneurs’ profit margins.

“When there’s a blackout, we really feel it because we can’t produce at work. And then we can’t pay our electricity bills and our electricity at home gets cut off,” said Tati, a housewife whose husband makes jackets.

Energy experts mockingly refer to Indonesia’s current energy woes, complete with blackouts and shortages, as the “dark ages.” The country has been beset by power outages as infrastructure has failed to keep pace with growth. The existing generating capacity is 30,500 megawatts, a power deficit of 4,555 MW, according to data released by state-owned power company PT Perusahaan Listrik Negara in January. Analysts say the shortages have hurt industry and deterred investment.

Untapped Solution

With the government’s “fast-track” program to create a new power supply still in the works, the central government is increasingly touting geothermal power as a clean, renewable and environmentally friendly energy source. Located within the Pacific Ring of Fire, the most seismically active place on earth, Indonesia has the world’s largest geothermal energy reserves.

The fast-track program’s second phase, estimated to cost $12 billion and targeted for completion in 2014, mandates that around 4,000 MW of electricity come from geothermal power plants.

The Energy Ministry hopes to attract the needed billions from global investors at the 2010 World Geothermal Congress & Exhibition beginning on Sunday in Bali. A key geothermal event, the congress is expected to attract around 2,500 technical experts, officials and investors from 80 countries.

Geothermal energy could conceivably power the entire archipelago, but it has barely been tapped. Currently, just 1,189 MW of geothermal power are being produced in 15 plants in Java and Bali — only 4.2 percent of the country’s potential capacity. The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources says the country may have enough geothermal reserves to produce up to 27,170 MW in 265 locations including Sumatra and Sulawesi.

If that’s not enough to convince decision-makers to embrace geothermal, there are additional cash benefits. Using geothermal power instead of coal-fired power plants could enable operators to sell carbon credits because the plants are low-emitters. According to Energy Ministry data, Indonesia could earn up to $477 million by 2014 in carbon credits generated from low-emission geothermal projects alone.

It remains to be seen how long it will take before Indonesia becomes a geothermal power. The village of Sirnasari, for example, lies in a valley at the foot of Darajat Mountain, some 10 kilometers below a geothermal power plant run by a local unit of US energy giant Chevron. Regardless, it has its share of power blackouts.

According to Chevron spokesman Usman Slamet, Chevron is contracted by state electricity utility PLN to supply 259 MW of power from the Darajat plant, which lies around 2,000 meters above sea level, directly to the Java-Madura-Bali electricity grid. Electricity for Sirnasari, therefore, comes via PLN and not the mountains.

‘Poisoned Steam’

Aside from the complaints from local villagers around the district of Garut about the blackouts, the central and local government faces another problem: widespread misinformation and ignorance about geothermal energy.

“People I speak to think it’s related to Lapindo,” said Erfan Hutagaol, head of the Energy Ministry’s geothermal business effort section, referring to the mudflow disaster in East Java. “And there are those who are already using geothermal for tourism purposes, such as natural hot springs. And they’re afraid the hot springs will disappear if we develop geothermal energy.”

One a recent day in Pasirwangi, a subdistrict of Garut, a local farmer named Amat was off-loading sacks of potatoes from a truck. In the distance, beyond the potato and vegetable fields, white puffs of steam from the Chevron plant rose above the mountains.

Amat, a lifelong resident of Pasirwangi, has lived in the area before and after Chevron signed its geothermal contract in 1984. Although he lives and works only about 5 kilometers from the plant, Amat admitted that he doesn’t know what geothermal is or how it works. He said he sticks to his potato and vegetable farming, although he’s been facing problems with low crop yields. Now 40 years old, he said that life as a farmer was better prior to Chevron’s arrival.

“Farmers complain that their crops get viruses from the steam,” Amat said.

Ibang Lukmanurdin, program manager for the Pasundan Peasants Union (SPP) in Garut, added, “Numerous farmers and laborers claim the land is being polluted by the steam. We have engineers who can exploit solar energy and bio-gas... so leave the [geothermal] wealth alone.”

“There is poison in the steam. You can smell it,” said Asep, 25, a farm hand in Pasirwangi, referring to the noticeable smell of sulfur in the air.

However, Ryad Chairil, an energy analyst with the Center for Indonesian Energy and Resources Law, denied that steam originating from geothermal plants, not to mention the earth, contained harmful poisons.

“The steam is derived from the bottom of the earth. If it contained poison, then the land surrounding it would be unhealthy. If the land can grow grass or rice, it means the land is basically healthy and the steam has no effect,” he said.

As for the foul smell, Chairil said, “The smell of sulfur is like a fart. It will not affect the land.”

Hadian Hendracahya, a program staffer at the Association for the Advancement of Small Businesses in Bandung (Pupuk), who does community development work in Garut district, also rejected claims that geothermal steam is making the land barren.

“Logically, it doesn’t make sense,” he said. A rice farmer himself, Hadian said the farmers weren’t considering that their lands could be yielding less due to over-cultivation or the excessive application of harmful chemical pesticides.

Greener Option

While officials from the energy minister and energy experts concede that any resource development project will have an environmental impact, they insist that environmental damage from geothermal is minimal compared to oil, gas and coal production. They also said that geothermal projects use less land: on average, a plant producing 200 Megawatts covers 37 hectares, while an open pit coal mine requires the clearing of hundreds of hectares of land.

That said, there are still environmental concerns about geothermal energy. An estimated 42 percent of Indonesia’s potential geothermal reserves are located within protected or conservation forests, the latter of which is off limits to geothermal production according to 1999 forestry law. The law does allow geothermal plants in production forests as well as protected forests.

The Ministry of Forestry is preparing a new draft law that would allow the drilling of geothermal wells in conservation forests as it seeks to boost electricity generation.

But that may only further anger local populations if they don’t understand how geothermal production works, or think it’s destroying their local environments, Hadian said. Out of the dozen farmers and villagers in Garut’s Pasirwangi and Samarang subdistricts who spoke to the Jakarta Globe, only one understood the definition of geothermal energy and its potential benefits.

“I know that geothermal is an energy that is kept inside the earth, and if managed well, it can be used for future energy,” said Rian Herdiana, a 20-year-old villager from Sirnasari who received entrepreneurial training from Chevron as part of its community development program.

PLN, the Energy Ministry and Chevron insist that they run education campaigns for the public about geothermal energy, including school visits in Garut and open tours of the plant.

“There’s always a communication gap between everyone. The local government is the one responsible for disseminating information to the villagers,” Chairil said.

But villagers don’t seem too perturbed by their lack of understanding, mostly because their main concern is their livelihoods. In fact, the main gripe that residents of Garut’s subdistricts have about the Chevron plant is that the company hires workers from outside the area.

“There has been no progress in the area because it’s very difficult to place our local people in the company. These days, the application process is difficult and you need money to bribe people to get a job there,” Amat said.

Multinational corporations such as Chevron are often accused of discriminatory hiring practices.

However, Usman countered that between 85 and 90 percent of the 400 staff at the Chevron plant is from Garut district.

That said, geothermal projects also require skilled workers and many Pasirwangi residents such as Asep don’t go beyond primary school. He said he’s been working as a farm laborer since he was 13 years old.

“The problem is each village wants a monopoly, so it’s understandable that people will say only a small section from their village work in Darajat,” Usman said.

Meanwhile, other young villagers such as Rian are pinning their hopes on geothermal giants like Chevron to help their villages progress in other ways.

“I hope Chevron can come up with the technology so there are no more increases in the basic electricity tariff and no more electrical disturbances here,” Rian said.


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Empty skies proved that airports cause pollution, say researchers

Michael McCarthy and Phil Boucher, The Independent 22 Apr 10;

Scientists have used the no-flying period caused by the ash cloud to show for the first time that airports are themselves significant causes of pollution. Although long suspected, the fact that mass take-offs and landings are large pollution sources could never be proved before, because aircraft pollution could not be measured as separate from the pollution caused by vehicles operating near by.

But an analysis of the first three days of the unprecedented closure of UK airspace, at Heathrow and Gatwick, shows that there is a definite air pollution caused by air traffic in the vicinity of airport hubs.

Pollution near both airports dropped significantly during the first three days of the shutdown. During last Thursday, Friday and Saturday, levels of two major pollutants, NO2 (nitrogen dioxide) and NOx (the generic term for oxides of nitrogen, taken together) fell virtually to zero.

Such nitrogen pollutants can exacerbate breathing difficulties in older people and those suffering from cardiac conditions, and can react with sunlight to form an even more damaging pollutant, ozone, which causes the sort of "urban smogs" seen in Los Angeles. NOx and NO2 are particularly associated with jet aircraft, as they are produced by the high-temperature mix of aviation with fuel.

The new analysis has been produced by Ben Barratt and Gary Fuller of the Environmental Research Group at King's College, London. The group said yesterday: "This period of unprecedented closure during unexceptional weather conditions has allowed us to demonstrate that the airports have a clear measurable effect on NO2 concentrations, and that this effect disappeared entirely during the period of closure, leading to a temporary but significant fall in pollutant concentrations adjacent to the airport perimeters."

"We have always been fairly confident that there was this 'airport effect' but we have never been able to show it," Dr Barratt commented. "The closure gave us the opportunity to look at it, and there is a very strong indication that it is the case."

The researchers are also going to study the pollution effects of the fall in airport motor traffic during the shutdown. Ed Dearnley, of Environmental Protection UK, which specialises in air quality campaigning, said yesterday: "This has been an excellent opportunity to find out exactly what the environmental impact of airports really is."


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Study details at least four epic droughts in Asia

Jean-louis Santini Yahoo News 22 Apr 10;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – A study of tree rings provided Thursday the most detailed record yet of at least four epic droughts that hit Asia over the past millennium, including one that helped end China's Ming Dynasty in 1644.

Data collected over the past 15 years for the study is expected to help scientists understand how climate change can unleash large-scale weather disruptions.

Any drastic shifts to the seasonal monsoon rains in Asia, which feed nearly half the world's population by helping crops grow, could have serious socio-economic consequences, according to scientists at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

They mapped out past droughts and their relative severity by sampling the wood of thousands of ancient trees across Asia. Among them was a drought that caused tens of millions of people to starve to death in the late 1870s.

"Global climate models fail to accurately simulate the Asian monsoon, and these limitations have hampered our ability to plan for future, potentially rapid and heretofore unexpected shifts in a warming world," said lead author Edward Cook, head of Lamont's Tree Ring Lab.

Prior to the study, published in Friday's edition of Science, reliable instrumental data collected in Asia -- such as temperature, rain accumulations and winds -- only dated back to 1950.

The scientists pointed to some evidence that monsoon changes are driven at least in part by variations in sea-surface temperatures, with some speculation but no certainty that warming global temperatures could modify and possibly intensify these cycles.

The tree-ring records suggested that climate may have played an important roll in the fall of China's Ming dynasty in 1644, by providing additional evidence of a severe drought already referenced in some historical Chinese texts as the worst in five centuries at the time.

According to the study, the drought occurred at some point between 1638 and 1641, most severely in northeastern China close to Beijing. It is believed to have helped fuel rebellions by farmers that eventually contributed to the Ming dynasty's fall.

Southern China is currently experiencing its worst drought in nearly a century.

Rainfall determines the width of the annual growth rings of some tree species. The researchers' trek across Asia to find trees old enough for long-term records took them to over 300 sites, to Siberia, Indonesia, northern Australia, Pakistan and as far east as Japan.

"It's everything from lowland rainforests to high in the Himalayas," said study coauthor Kevin Anchukaitis, a Lamont tree ring scientist.

"You have a tremendous diversity of environment, climate influences and species."

University of Hawaii meteorologist Bin Wang said the tree-ring atlas is valuable to monsoon forecasters, allowing them to detect short-term and long-term patterns thanks to the detailed spatial areas and the length of the record.


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Ocean Chemistry Changing At 'Unprecedented Rate'

Deborah Zabarenko, PlanetArk 23 Apr 10;

Carbon dioxide emissions that contribute to global warming are also turning the oceans more acidic at the fastest pace in hundreds of thousands of years, the National Research Council reported Thursday.

"The chemistry of the ocean is changing at an unprecedented rate and magnitude due to anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions," the council said. "The rate of change exceeds any known to have occurred for at least the past hundreds of thousands of years."

Ocean acidification eats away at coral reefs, interferes with some fish species' ability to find their homes and can hurt commercial shellfish like mussels and oysters and keep them from forming their protective shells.

Corrosion happens when carbon dioxide is stored in the oceans and reacts with sea water to form carbonic acid. Unless carbon dioxide emissions are curbed, oceans will grow more acidic, the report said.

Oceans absorb about one-third of all human-generated carbon dioxide emissions, including those from burning fossil fuels, cement production and deforestation, the report said.

The increase in acidity is 0.1 points on the 14-point pH scale, which means this indicator has changed more since the start of the Industrial Revolution than at any time in the last 800,000 years, according to the report.

The council's report recommended setting up an observing network to monitor the oceans over the long term.

"A global network of robust and sustained chemical and biological observations will be necessary to establish a baseline and to detect and predict changes attributable to acidification," the report said.

ACID OCEANS AND 'AVATAR'

Scientists have been studying this growing phenomenon for years, but ocean acidification is generally a low priority at international and U.S. discussions of climate change.

A new compromise U.S. Senate bill targeting carbon dioxide emissions is expected to be unveiled on April 26.

Ocean acidification was center stage at a congressional hearing Thursday, the 40th anniversary of Earth Day in the United States.

"This increase in (ocean) acidity threatens to decimate entire species, including those that are at the foundation of the marine food chain," Democratic Senator Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey told a Commerce Committee panel. "If that occurs, the consequences are devastating."

Lautenberg said that in New Jersey, Atlantic coast businesses generate $50 billion a year and account for one of every six jobs in the state.

Sigourney Weaver, a star of the environmental-themed film "Avatar" and narrator of the documentary "Acid Test" about ocean acidification, testified about its dangers. She said people seem more aware of the problem now than they did six months ago.

"I think that the science is so indisputable and easy to understand and ... we've already run out of time to discuss this," Weaver said by telephone after her testimony. "Now we have to take action."

(Editing by Sandra Maler)

CO2 emissions causing ocean acidification to progress at unprecedented rate
National Academy of Sciences, EurekAlert 22 Apr 10;

WASHINGTON -- The changing chemistry of the world's oceans is a growing global problem, says the summary of a congressionally requested study by the National Research Council, which adds that unless man-made carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are substantially curbed, or atmospheric CO2 is controlled by some other means, the ocean will continue to become more acidic. The long-term consequences of ocean acidification on marine life are unknown, but many ecosystem changes are expected to result. The federal government's National Ocean Acidification Program, currently in development, is a positive move toward coordinating efforts to understand and respond to the problem, said the study committee.

The ocean absorbs approximately a third of man-made CO2 emissions, including those from fossil-fuel use, cement production, and deforestation, the summary says. The CO2 taken up by the ocean decreases the pH of the water and leads to a combination of chemical changes collectively known as ocean acidification.

Since the beginning of the industrial revolution, the average pH of ocean surface waters has decreased approximately 0.1 unit -- from about 8.2 to 8.1 -- making them more acidic. Models project an additional 0.2 to 0.3 drop by the end of the century. This rate of change exceeds any known to have occurred in hundreds of thousands of years, the report says. The ocean will become more acidic on average as surface waters continue to absorb atmospheric CO2, the committee said.

Studies on a number of marine organisms have shown that lowering seawater pH with CO2 affects biological processes, such as photosynthesis, nutrient acquisition, growth, reproduction, and individual survival depending upon the amount of acidification and the species tested, the committee found. For example, some of the strongest evidence of the potential effects of ocean acidification on marine ecosystems comes from experiments on organisms with calcium carbonate shells and skeletons. The results showed decreases in shell and skeletal growth in a range of marine organisms, including reef-building corals, commercially important mollusks such as oysters and mussels, and several types of plankton at the base of marine food webs.

The ability of various marine organisms to acclimate or adapt to ocean acidification is unknown, but existing data suggest that there will be ecological winners and losers, leading to shifts in the composition and functioning of many marine ecosystems, the committee said. Such ecosystem changes could threaten coral reefs, fisheries, protected species, and other natural resources.

Although changes in ocean chemistry caused by increasing atmospheric CO2 can be determined, not enough information exists to assess the social or economic effects of ocean acidification, much less develop plans to mitigate or adapt to them, the committee noted.

The federal government has taken initial steps to respond to the nation's long-term needs with the development of the National Ocean Acidification Program. The committee found that legislation has laid the foundation for a program that will advance our understanding and improve our response to ocean acidification.

The committee recommended six key elements of a successful National Ocean Acidification Program:

* an integrated ocean acidification observation network that includes the development of new tools, methods, and techniques to improve measurements
* research in eight broad areas to fulfill critical information gaps
* assessments to identify stakeholder concerns and a process to provide relevant information for decision support
* a data management office that would ensure data quality, access, and archiving, plus an information exchange that would provide research results, syntheses, and assessments to managers, policymakers, and the general public
* facilities to support high-quality research and training of ocean acidification researchers
* an effective 10-year strategic plan for the program that will identify key goals, set priorities, and allow for community input, in addition to a detailed implementation plan

###

The study is funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the National Science Foundation. The National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and National Research Council make up the National Academies. They are independent, nonprofit institutions that provide science, technology, and health policy advice under an 1863 congressional charter. Committee members, who serve pro bono as volunteers, are chosen by the Academies for each study based on their expertise and experience and must satisfy the Academies' conflict-of-interest standards. The resulting consensus reports undergo external peer review before completion. For more information, visit http://national-academies.org/studycommitteprocess.pdf.


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Film Fetes Small Steps To Address Climate Change

Edith Honan, PlanetArk 23 Apr 10;

If "An Inconvenient Truth," Al Gore's Oscar-winning 2006 film on global warming, left audiences depressed about the planet's future, a new film from the same executive producers is designed to lift spirits.

"Climate of Change" premieres at New York's Tribeca Film Festival Thursday -- Earth Day -- and focuses on the efforts by individuals from around the world to reduce their personal carbon footprint while fighting business interests they say threaten the environment.

"I wouldn't exactly call it a feel-good film about climate change, but the idea was not to make a film that was scary," film director Brian Hill told Reuters. "We've got people doing something, people reacting to the kind of messages in films like 'An Inconvenient Truth.'"

The film, produced in part by Participant Media, which produced the Al Gore film, features a group of schoolchildren in Patna, India, explaining how they intend to change the world by protesting the use of plastic.

It also shows a community in Papua, New Guinea, that has banned commercial logging, a group in the U.S. state of West Virginia that is fighting to end mountaintop removal by coal companies, and an organization in Togo that is teaching women to use ovens powered by the sun.

"Climate of Change," narrated by actress Tilda Swinton, argues that average people must work to reduce their own carbon emissions since some industrialized nations and large companies refuse to take significant steps.

"It would be great, and probably more useful in the long run, if governments would get involved," Hill said. "I don't think any government has really decided to tackle it in any forthright and bold manner, which is what you really need."

World leaders are due to meet in Mexico in November for the latest round of climate change talks, but observers say they are skeptical about how far the biggest carbon emitters will agree to go.

The U.S. Congress is also considering legislation to reduce emissions of so-called greenhouse gases blamed for global warming. But the likelihood of passage this year is slim.

Hill said the experience of making the film has changed his behavior: "I'm forever going around the house, turning lights out."

(Editing by Daniel Trotta)


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Betting On Climate Change

Clive Thompson, PlanetArk 23 Apr 10;

Last year, Beluga Shipping discovered that there's money in global warming.

Beluga is a German firm that specializes in "super heavy lift" transport. Its vessels are equipped with massive cranes, allowing it to load and unload massive objects, like multi-ton propeller blades for wind turbines. It is an enormously expensive business, but last summer, Beluga executives hit upon an interesting way to save money: Shipping freight over a melting Arctic.

Beluga had received contracts to send materials on a sprawling trip that would begin in Ulsan, South Korea, head north and west to the Russian port city of Archangelsk-located near the border with Finland-and wind up in Nigeria.

Normally, this route requires Beluga's ships to navigate an 11,000-mile route through the Suez Canal. But in 2008, its executives decided that global warming had eroded the Arctic's summer sea ice significantly enough that their ships could travel the Northeast Passage along the north coast of Russia.

Previously, a cargo ship could only safely navigate that route if an icebreaker went ahead, smashing a route through thick ice.

Now, a warming climate had-for six to eight weeks beginning in July-transformed much of the route into mostly open water, studded with ice floes that the Beluga ships could navigate.

So the executives got permission from the Russian government to travel along the coast, paid a transit fee of "a comparably moderate five-digit figure," and sent the ships on their way. Four moniths later, they'd finished the trip. Compared to the old Suez Canal journey, this shorter route saved an enormous pile of money: It cost $300,000 less per ship in lower fuel and bunker costs. Global warming had boosted the company's revenues by more than half a million dollars in one year alone.

When I interviewed Beluga CEO Niels Stolberg via email this spring, he said he envisions using the Northeast Passage regularly.Indeed, he's planning on another trip this summer.

He said that since the shorter passage requires generating far less C02, it's "greener"; it's also more ironic, since it was high concentrations of C02 that helped melt the route in the first place.

"I am convinced," Stolberg added, "that the Arctic will become an area of quite regular sea traffic at least during summer."

If you looked merely at the realm of politics, it would be easy to believe that the question "Is climate change really happening?" is still unresolved. In recent months, skeptics have attacked climate science with renewed vigor. Doubters seized on "Climategate "-leaked emails from bickering atmospheric scientists-to argue that the evidence in favor of warming is being cooked.

Other skeptics unearthed shoddy parts of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's main report, such as the fact that it cited non-peer-reviewed work by an activist group when it predicted that the Himalayan glaciers would melt by 2035.

And all along, conservative politicians have hissingly denounced global warming as a shady liberal scheme: Senator James Inhofe of Oklahoma famously called it "the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people."

These attacks appear to be working. A spring Gallup study found that Americans' concern over global warming peaked two years ago, and has steadily declined since.

But there's one area where doubt hasn't grown-and where, indeed, people are more and more certain that climate change is not only real, but imminent: The world of industry and commerce.

Companies, of course, exist to make money. That's often what makes them seem so rapacious. But their primal greed also plants them inevitably in the "reality-based community."

If a firm's bottom line is going to be affected by a changing climate-say, when its supply chains dry up because of drought, or its real estate gets swamped by sea-level rise-then it doesn't particularly matter whether or not the executives want to believe in climate change.

Railing at scientists for massaging tree-ring statistics won't stop the globe from warming if the globe is actually, you know, warming.

The same applies in reverse, as the folks at Beluga Shipping adroitly realized: If there are serious bucks to be made from the changing climate, then the free market is almost certainly going to jump at it.

This makes capitalism a curiously bracing mechanism for cutting through ideological haze and manufactured doubt.

Politicians or pundits can distort or cherry-pick climate science any way they want to try and gain temporary influence with the public.

But any serious industrialist who's facing "climate exposure"-as it's now called by money managers-cannot afford to engage in that sort of self-delusion. Spend a couple of hours wandering through the websites of various industrial associations-aluminum manufacturers, real-estate agents, wineries, agribusinesses, take your pick-and you'll find straightforward statements about the grim reality of climate change that wouldn't seem out of place coming from Greenpeace.

Last year Wall Street analysts issued 214 reports assessing the potential risks and opportunities that will come out of a warming world. One by McKinsey & Company argued that climate change will shake up industries with the same force that mobile phones reshaped communications.

Consider, as one colorful example, the skiing industry. Beginning 10 years ago, the Aspen Skiing Company began noticing that European ski lodges were being slowly destroyed by warmer weather.

Europe's ski resorts tend to be located on lower mountains-about 6,000-8,000 feet high, compared to American peaks up around 11,000 feet-so they're vulnerable to even extremely tiny increases in global temperature.

The 2 percent temperature rise in the 20th century was enough "to put a lot of them out of business," says Auden Schendler, executive director of sustainability for Aspen Skiing, which operates two resorts spread across four mountains.

But now Aspen's own season is getting shorter: "More balmy Novembers, more rainy Marches," Schendler says. "That's what we're seeing, and that's what the science suggests would happen. If you graph frost-free days, there are more and more in the last 30 years."

Climate-change models also predict warmer nights. Aspen Skiing has noticed that happening too, and the problem here is that nighttime is when ski lodges use their water-spraying technology to make snow-"and if you make it when it's warmer it's exponentially more expensive."

The increasing volatility of weather overall-another prediction of climate change-poses a particular danger for ski resorts, because they operate in the red most of the year, making up their deficit during the busy spring break in March. So if the weather is terrific for the entire winter but suddenly balmy during March break, that can ruin the whole fiscal year.

Schendler has also learned firsthand a point that climate scientists have been making for some time: With climate change, "warming" isn't the only-or even the most serious-challenge.

The sheer interdependence of complex ecosystems systems can grease you. For example, recent droughts in Utah have kicked up red dust clouds that settle on Aspen's snow. This makes the snow melt more quickly (because the red absorbs more heat from the sun) while also making it too gritty to ski on.

Are all of Aspen Skiing's recent weather problems caused by global warming? It's impossible to tell. But as Schendler notes, the last few years certainly mimic the precise effects that climate models predict, so it is at least a taste of what's to come.

During a recent dust storm on Aspen's slopes, Schendler's boss wandered into his office looking morose. "He said, 'Auden, if climate change is the scary thing for the future, this is the apocalypse now. What if you get this in March?"' Schendler recalls.

Now, all this tricky weather hasn't exactly destroyed Aspen Skiing; the firm could probably survive even worse stuff. The top of the mountain is so high "we can ski it in 50 years and it'll be great," Schendler notes. But it could certainly erode Aspen's profits, and Colorado would suffer: The ski industry overall is a $2 billion business for the state, employing fully 8 percent of the workforce.

So to try and preserve its profit margins, the Aspen Skiing Company has recently become a loud voice in favor of congressional action on the climate. In 2007, Schendler testified before the House Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment, calling for a cap on carbon emissions-among other things.

"Our attitude when we go to Congress is, look, we're a business!" he adds. "We didn't ask for this. We just started looking at the data and the science dispassionately and said, 'Look, we've got a problem.'"

Another industry that can't pretend climate change is a myth is insurance. Insurance firms have always carefully studied real-world data to figure out what, precisely, constitutes a risky activity. As a result, they were among the first to notice that weather was getting more violent, and more unpredictably so.

"It's just a logical consequence," says Peter Hoppe, head of the "Geo Risks Research" division of Munich Re, the multinational reinsurance firm. "Global warming affects our core business. We have seen changes already in some readings."

Worldwide, Munich Re has found that "great catastrophes"-act-of-god weather events that cause more than a billion dollars of damage-have tripled since 1950.

In 2008, even though there weren't any Katrina-level disasters, weather-related events were so severe that "catastrophic losses" to the world's economy were the third-highest in recorded history, topping $200 billion globally-including $40 billion in the United States.

Hoppe doesn't think global warming is all to blame; some of these events are likely due to natural cycles like the 30-year "North Atlantic Oscillation" that is currently warming the Atlantic. But Munich Re's policy is that anthropogenic global warming is already making things worse, and that governments ought to act quickly while they still can.

Granted, a warming globe isn't all downside for insurance firms. There are also profitable new business opportunities, as Hoppe points out.

Munich Re is now offering coverage for renewable energy products, because wind farms and solar parks need insurance against the possibility that low wind and weak sunlight will reduce their output.

"It's very important for investors to dampen and level out the volatility from season to season," Hoppe says. Munich Re has also developed a product covering solar cells that wear out before their expected 30-year lifetime.

Buying insurance against bad weather isn't entirely new. Farmers have done it for years. But back in the late '90s, before Enron imploded, it created a huge new market of selling "weather futures" to electric utilities-hedges that would pay out if, say, a mild summer hurt their sales (because people would use less air conditioning).

After Enron pancaked, weather futures stayed around-still mostly for utilities and farms-but buying them wasn't easy: You had to personally contact one of the few weather-futures traders who'd set up their own trading desks in the wake of Enron's dissolution.

But with climate-change models predicting increasingly erratic weather, a new generations of startups is heading into the field, figuring that almost any firm might want to hedge against the bad economic effects of weather-such as clothing manufacturers (who could suffer massive losses in coat sales if an unexpectedly mild winter emerges), airlines (since weather is the top cause of delays), and sporting-event promoters (when it's rainy, everyone stays away).

Weatherbill is one such startup. Founded three and a half years ago by Google expatriates, it lets anyone use its website to quickly create weather insurance for almost anything.

Type in the thing you're trying to insure-say, an Iowa county fair in the third week of July-and the Weatherbill system calculates the probability of what local weather will be like up to two years out, and down to a 100-mile-wide area. It then uses that guess to instantly price a weather future or insurance contract.

CEO Dave Friedberg told me Weatherbill had already sold contracts to the likes of the U.S. Open, and that he envisions worldwide opportunities: Global agriculture suffers billions in weather-related losses each year, for example, yet many countries don't have any institutions offering easy weather insurance. That's especially true for countries likely to be the first to experience the dire consequences of climate change, such as coastal regions of Asia or Latin America.

"If you think about Brazil, their two biggest industries are mining and agriculture," Friedberg says.

"That's billions of dollars, and there's a massive market for developing crop insurance. If we can figure out agriculture, and do it right, the opportunity is huge to go country by country." Does he believe that global warming is already noticeable? "Oh yeah," he says. In just the three years that Weatherbill has been collecting data, extreme weather events have risen 8 percent.

One of the big political questions of climate change is how far we've gone: Have we passed a tipping point of no return? Has the atmosphere already accumulated such high levels of greenhouse gases that even if we manage to cut back on emissions, we'll still wind up with a globe so much hotter that everyday life will change significantly? One emerging sector built on the assumption that we have is the "adaptation marketplace"-firms offering new products and services to help companies and cities cope with changes.

A 2009 study by Oxfam identified seven potentially lucrative adaptation areas, such as water management and disaster preparation; one firm in this field-the Minneapolis-based Pentair Inc., which makes pumps and filtration systems-has soared to $3.35 billion in annual revenues, partly due to contracts from the Army Corps of Engineers to provide massive pumps that will protect New Orleans against another Katrina.

Another firm, North Carolina's WeatherPredict, has developed a technique to retrofit roofs with aerodynamic edges, reducing the damage they sustain in hurricane winds.

Firms that produce genetically engineered crops are also predicting they'll reap profits from climate change: Monsanto, Bayer, BASF, and their sister firms have registered 55 worldwide patents for "climate ready" seeds designed to thrive in conditions of drought or other stress, according to a 2008 report by ETC Group, an environmental advocacy organization.

Will all this climate-propelled economic activity be good for the planet? Sure, it can be satisfying to see some major CEOs agree that climate change is a real and present danger. But many environmentalists predict that the flurry of new economic activity will create its own new problems.

The melting Arctic, in particular, gives many observers the willies. It's likely to see an explosion in seabed oil-and-gas exploration and tourism. (Cargo shipping, interestingly, is likely to increase at a slower rate, partly because cargo ships ferrying "just in time" products can't abide the delays that even small ice floes would cause-and nobody thinks the Arctic will be entirely ice-free for 100 years or more.)

Arctic experts-and the Navy-predict a catastrophe the first time a tourist vessel or oil tanker hits an iceberg and cracks up. "Tourist vessels aren't ice-hardened, and in the polar regions "there's no search and rescue or salvage" standing by, says Lawson Brigham, a University of Alaska professor who chaired the Arctic Marine Shipping Assessment, a four-year study of how commercial activity will progress in the warming North. "The water's near freezing. All you need is one good Titanic."

Other realms of climate-change commerce aren't much prettier when you look at them closely. In agriculture, the advent of climate-ready crops is clearly useful, maybe even crucial, for adaption. But it also concentrates ever more power in the hands of a small coterie of firms that own the patents to drought-resistant seeds, and the cost could cause serious hardship in the desperately poor countries of Asia or Africa where the seeds might be most needed.

It's also true that the number of climate visionaries in industry is still quite small. Certainly, companies with skin in the game are preparing for a warmer world.

But as the McKinsey report found, they're in the minority. The grand majority are deeply myopic, focused narrowly on goosing profits in the next quarter-who cares what'll happen ten years from now? (Read Felix Salmon on what makes most businesses so shortsighted here.)

In a sense, that makes them a mildly agnostic force. When climate change finally does impinge on their business, they'll probably take action to adapt to it. But it also means that if they can see a short-term profit from fighting against climate science and sowing doubt, they'll do that, too.

This is precisely what's still happening in the energy industry, where many firms that pay lip service to the reality of climate change also quietly funnel millions to lobbyists who fight ferociously to prevent Congress from passing laws that curtail C02 emissions.

"We all know big companies who are doing all this green stuff, and their lobbyists are trying to kill the carbon bill as quickly as they can," says Mindy Lubber, president of Boston-based CERES, an association of environment-minded investors whose members have $10 trillion under management.

It may be that the corrective force comes not from inside corporations, but from investors. Many large investors, including the California State Teachers' Retirement System-the nation's second largest public-pension fund-have begun demanding that firms examine and disclose any potential risks from global warming.

Shareholder resolutions demanding action on climate change have nearly doubled in the last two years, rising from about 55 in 2007 to 99 in 2009, Lubber notes.

In February, the Securities and Exchange Commission issued guidelines requiring that publicly traded firms better disclose their climate-change risk, including potential "physical" risks. (Join a live Grist forum on the new SEC regulations.)

"Anyone that's building out new manufacturing facilities without working out water shortages related to climate change is getting itself into trouble," Lubber adds. "Or anyone that's building on waterfront property."

Another common request from shareholder resolutions is for companies to calculate the cost of their carbon footprint. Even if electric utilities and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce are fighting against carbon-limiting legislation, investors seem to believe it is inevitable-indeed, they evidently think the government might cap carbon even in the next few years, which could dramatically increase the cost of electricity.

To make corporations true partners in tackling climate change, Lubber thinks investors need to push for basic changes in the way their companies function.

CEOs whose bonuses are based on bumping next-quarter results will make short-term decisions. Those who are paid based on reducing carbon usage will make long-term ones-investing in technology and processes that reduce greenhouse gases.

"If they're compensated for producing 86 percent more widgets, they'll do that. But if they use less fuel, they ought to be compensated for meeting their carbon-reduction goals."

In the short run, though, there's probably only one force that will get today's blithe firms to snap to attention-and that's legislation.

If Congress actually puts a price on carbon, it'll hit the world of industry with tsunamic force.

At minimum, it would probably goose the price of electricity and make emissions-heavy industries instantly less profitable. (Indeed, this is one of the things the SEC and many investor groups are urging firms to do: calculate how badly they'll be shellacked if new regulations make spewing carbon expensive.)

Not everyone will be a loser. The McKinsey study calculated that alternative-energy firms will do quite well (for obvious reasons), but so will less-predictable sectors like the construction industry, as people rush to retrofit buildings with extra insulation and energy-saving rebuilds. The farsighted firms-and the ones who work on the colder fringes of the world-can see the future clearly, because they're living it. But with the stroke of a pen, Obama can bring it a lot closer.

Whether it's a melting Arctic or a bold new law, the biggest forces shaping industry are, as it were, man-made.


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