Best of our wild blogs: 18 May 10


22 May (Sat) is World Biodiversity Day
from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Clam hunt at Pulau Jong
from wild shores of singapore and colourful clouds and Singapore Nature and Wonderful Creation and Psychedelic Nature

Starstruck on Sekudu
from The annotated budak

Kayaking @ Ubin
from ashira

Pied Fantail: Call and behaviour
from Bird Ecology Study Group

32 birds poisoned 32 只鸟被毒死
from Save The Pigeons (Singapore) and photos of poisoned birds.

Raffles Museum Treasures: Singapore tarantula
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

One man's mission to save Cambodia's elephants
from Mongabay.com news


Read more!

Singapore to develop Southeast Asia's first carbon label

Channel NewsAsia 18 May 10;

SINGAPORE: The Singapore Environment Council (SEC) and the Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Technology (SIMTech) have inked an agreement to launch Southeast Asia's first carbon label.

The label quantifies and declares the carbon footprint of products and services.

SEC's executive director, Howard Shaw, said the label will encourage businesses to take steps to reduce the carbon content of their products and services.

He added that it will create real opportunities for businesses to innovate, grow revenues and reduce costs, as well as to celebrate and market their achievements.

For the first time, Mr Shaw says consumers will also have the information they need to make a positive difference through the choices of the products and services they buy.

The label will be formally launched in the fourth quarter of 2010. - CNA/jy

SEC and SIMTech to develop Singapore Carbon Label; help make low-carbon Singapore a reality and boost Singapore exports competitiveness globally
A-Star Press Release 18 May 10;

The Singapore Environment Council (SEC) and the Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Technology (SIMTech), a research institute of the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) today inked an agreement to launch Singapore’s and South East Asia’s first carbon label.

This Carbon Label is a Singapore initiative to support the country’s transition to a recognised low carbon economy by measuring and communicating the carbon content of the products and services we consume and produce, raising the carbon consciousness of governments, businesses and consumers. The carbon label in quantifying and declaring the carbon content is an advancement of the Singapore Green Label.

With a formal launch planned for the fourth quarter of 2010, the Singapore Carbon Label will provide a unique set of tools to evaluate, quantify and report for the first time on the carbon footprint of products and services based on rigorous lifecycle analysis, from raw materials to production, from distribution to use.

The principal aims of the Singapore Carbon Label are to differentiate Singapore products and services and provide a new, compelling source of competitive advantage to industry and the economy. A “Singapore solution”, the label builds on international standards and best practices, including the UK’s PAS 2050 and the draft standard ISO 14067. The scheme partners will make available a stringent methodology and standards alongside ready-made tools that will deliver both immediate impacts and longer term emissions reductions for businesses. This will help local enterprises to boost the competitiveness of Singapore’s exports globally.

SEC’s Executive Director, Mr Howard Shaw said: “We’re delighted to be working with SIMTech to launch Singapore’s and South East Asia’s first carbon label. The SEC has a constant dialogue with government, businesses and the community, and it’s clear to us that the timing is now right to introduce a carbon label for Singapore and the region. The label will encourage businesses to take steps to reduce the carbon content of their products and services. It will create real opportunities for businesses to innovate, grow revenues and reduce costs, as well as to celebrate and market their achievements. Consumers, for the first time, will also have the information they need to make a positive difference through their choices of the products and services they buy.”

Dr Lim Ser Yong, Executive Director of SIMTech, commented: “Since 2007, SIMTech has developed core competence and tools on the methodology, related standards, and techniques for carbon footprint quantification. We have quantified carbon footprint for an increasing number of manufacturers in different sectors, signalling an increasing demand for a carbon label. The Singapore Carbon Label will enable manufacturers and users to know for the first time how much and why the products and services we produce, contribute directly to climate change, and we are able to take action to reduce carbon emission and waste in meaningful ways. Above all, the initiative contributes directly to make Singapore a truly low carbon economy, putting Singapore-made products and services on the map globally.”

In the collaboration, SEC and its advisors are responsible for project managing the Singapore Carbon Label through concept development, launch and ongoing operations. SIMTech is responsible for the technical development of the Singapore Carbon Label including the development of the data analysis, methodologies and tools required for quality footprint measurements and the provision of robust emissions reduction recommendations and guidelines to industry clients. Industry support comes from supporting organisations that include the International Enterprise (IE) Singapore, Singapore Business Federation (SBF), and Singapore Manufacturers’ Federation (SMa), with more organisations coming on board in the latter half of this year.


Read more!

Volunteers: The Saviours Of Turtles in Malaysia

Syarifah Hunaini Syed Ismail, Bernama 18 May 10;

KUALA TERENGGANU, May 18 (Bernama) -- It is most unfortunate that the turtle that has survived since the Jurassic era, about 145 to 208 million years ago, is now on the verge of extinction.

It is among the creatures that can live up to 100 years but nowadays its lifespan has been shortened due to natural threats and the threats caused by humankind.

The turtle eggs is relished by humans and other animals and new turtle hatchlings are easy prey for monitor lizards and birds before they can make it to the sea.

In the sea, the fishermen's nets are the main contributor for turtle fatalities. But there are some who care for the turtles and are taking the efforts to boost the turtle population.

GENERATING AWARENESS

In Malaysia, the Sea Turtle Research Unit (SEATRU) of Universiti Malaysia Terengganu (UMT) is among the agencies entrusted with the task to conduct studies and conservation activities since 1993.

Through the Turtle Volunteer programme the public, including foreigners, have the opportunity to be directly involved in conservation activities.

The unit was established by two UMT lecturers, Prof Dr Chan Eng Heng and Associate Prof Liew Hock Chark, but since both have retired it is now being headed by Dr Juanita Joseph.

Juanita, 36, from Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, who is also a lecturer with UMT's Faculty Of Maritime Studies and Marine Science noted that the turtle volunteer programme is also conducted by other conservation centres of the world.

"This programme is to create awareness and provide a chance for the public to take part in turtle conservation efforts, and to help finance the turtle conservation programme in Chagar Hutang," she told Bernama, recently.

STANDARD CONSERVATION ACTIVITIES

The activities under this programme are considered standard activities in conserving turtles all over the world, with the volunteers monitoring the turtle's nest, keeping the preying beasts at bay and analyze the hatchlings, clean up the beach and assist in research work.

The four turtle species that land in the country are the Green turtle (Chelonia mydas), Hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata), Olive Ridley (Lepidochelys olivacea) and the Leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea).

However, the Chagar Hutang beach in Pulau Redang only receives the Green and the Hawksbill turtle. Pulau Redang is one of the 10 most beautiful islands of the world and declared a turtle sanctuary in 2005.

From 1993 to 2004, SEATRU had spent RM500,000 to purchase turtle eggs from licensed sellers with the green turtle eggs costing RM120 per nest and RM150 for hawksbill.

GOOD RESPONSE

Hitherto, SEATRU has received 3,000 volunteers from Malaysia, Singapore, German, United Kingdom, France, Australia and China since the program began in 1993.

For this year, SEATRU's Turtle Volunteer Programme is from April 3 to Oct 2 with all the 30 slots offered already taken up by foreigners and locals.

"The response for this programme is very encouraging though the programme was not widely publicised. Many become keen to participate after learning of the programme from their friends or relatives who have volunteered.

"I was surprised that we received more than 200 emails an hour after online registration was opened on Feb 14 through SEATRU's website," said Juanita adding that those keen to participate had to be above 18.

Each volunteer is to be on the island for a week during each slot with each slot having eight volunteers.

NOT ALLOWED TO GET CLOSE WITH NESTING TURTLE

The volunteers, who will be assisted by research assistants, will start work at 7 pm beginning with beach patrol and when a turtle lands to lay eggs they will be observing from a comfortable distance.

"Normally, the tracks left by the turtles while getting on shore indicates their presence.

"When the turtle finds a suitable place to lay its eggs, it will start the body pitting before it starts digging the nest. The egg laying process takes between 3 and 5 hours," she said.

Volunteers can only get near the turtle after the reptile has completed laying eggs.

As the turtle is highly sensitive to light, the use of light at the beach is not allowed including the camera's flash.

PATROLS TO PREVENT ENCROACHMENT

After midnight, volunteers patrol with SEATRU staff in shifts up to 6 am.

During the day, volunteers will take turns to patrol to make sure the turtle nests are not disturbed or the eggs eaten by preys.

In the evenings, volunteers are to inspect the nests and the hatchlings or eggs that have been incubated more than 45 days to determine the hatching rate and see the reasons why the eggs have yet to hatch.

"Based on the studies conducted in year 2000, we learned that the turtle's gender is determined by the incubation temperature, with the males coming from nests under shade while the females coming from nests in the open," noted Juanita.

However, based on the observation in the sanctuary, the mother turtle that lands is the one that chooses the nest under the shade or in the open.

"At Chagar Hutang, the male and female turtles that hatch are almost in equal numbers. The hatching rate of 77 to 89 percent is also encouraging and since 1993 about 350,000 Green turtle and 7,000 Hawksbill have hatched here," she said.

A CHANCE TO SAVOUR THE BEAUTY

Other than conservation activities lined up by SEATRU, volunteers will have their own time to indulge in some interesting activities.

"There is the chance for the volunteers to savour the beauty of nature, without the disruption from telephone or Internet...there were also some who grumbled because they missed Facebook but soon they overcame their disappointment," she said.

Other than turtles, Chagar Hutang is also the home for wildlife like mousedeer, squirrel, moths and butterflies, bats and birds.

"The Chagar Hutang bay area is also known as 'Turtle Bay' that is rich in coral species and beautiful fishes. Volunteers often love to snorkel here," she said.

Volunteers also take the opportunity to climb up the 'Turtle Rock', the rock that resembles a giant turtle, which the locals believe attracts turtles to land there.

They can also test their pain endurance by allowing their legs to be 'cleaned' by the shrimps at the 'prawn spa'.

The facilities at Chagar Hutang is minimal to retain the natural environment and beauty that the volunteers will appreciate.

Apart from wildlife conservation, SEATRU also helps to clear up pollution by turning biodegradable waste to composite. The other waste will be sent to the waste collection centre in Redang Island before being shipped to the mainland.

Only limited use of soap and shampoo are allowed and the use of toilet paper is forbidden.

THE VOLUNTEER PROGRAMME

The volunteer programme imposes a fee for the wonderful experience awaiting those who are keen.

Local students have to pay RM300 while international students US$150, adult locals have to pay RM500 and other foreigners US$250.

As for next year, Juanita noted that SEATRU will open the avenue for the corporate sector to volunteer and bookings will open in June.

Further information on the volunteer programme is available at SEATRU's website at: http://www.umt.edu.my/seatru.

-- BERNAMA


Read more!

Hornbills on a wing and a prayer for survival in Belum-Temengor, Malaysia

Sean Augustin, The Star 18 May 10;

Gazetting the Belum-Temengor forest would be a feather in the cap of the authorities as it would allow plain-pouched hornbills to spread their wings, writes SEAN AUGUSTIN.

THE sight of a huge flock of plain- pouched hornbills flying past before disappearing into the Belum-Temengor forest complex is truly amazing.

It is also amazing because the forest is the only place in the world where these hornbills, or Aceros subruficollis, fly in a group.

A group of 2,365 plain-pouched hornbills was spotted in 1993.

No one knows where these birds, whose numbers are rapidly dwindling, roost in the evening as their nests have not been discovered.

This was why it was important for the authorities to gazette the forest, said Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) head of communications Andrew Sebastian


Hornbills, he said, needed nesting sites and large forests to move around and feed.

Gazetting the Royal Belum state park in 2007 did not cover the entire range of these hornbills, Sebastian added.

The Belum-Temengor forest complex is one of two sites in Malaysia where all 10 species of hornbills are found.


"Controlled logging is not good enough. It has to stop completely, otherwise we risk destroying the habitat of these birds that nest in tree cavities.

"I believe Belum-Temengor is the last known stronghold of these birds. It would also boost the eco-tourism industry as people would fork out a lot of money to spot these birds."

He said the Ulu Muda forest in Kedah had a group of plain-pouched hornbills flying in a group, although not in great numbers.

Apart from the plain-pouched hornbills, Temengor is also home to Malayan tigers, Asian elephants and Malayan tapir.

The plain-pouched hornbill is a species of hornbill in the Bucerotidae family. It is found in forests in southern Myanmar, parts of western Thailand and in northern Peninsular Malaysia.

It is threatened by loss of habitat.

Body Shop Malaysia has collected about 10,000 signatures for "The Save Temengor" campaign since it was launched last month.

The bodycare retailer, along with MNS, is aiming for 100,000 signatures by June 5.

Body Shop Malaysia managing director Datin Mina Cheah-Foong said: "It has been encouraging. The signatures we got are from real greenies.

"But we will work hard to get signatures from others."


Read more!

Saving the tapir in Malaysia

Tan Cheng Li, The Star 18 May 10;

The elusive tapir might not be as endangered as other animals but they need conservation care, too.

THE stock arrived with a bundle of joy at the Sungai Dusun Wildlife Conservation Centre in Selangor in the wee hours of April 27. The latest addition to the menagerie is a baby Malayan tapir, the sixth to be born there.

The striped baby tapir, named Waja, weighed a healthy 9kg at birth and was parented by Rompin and Boy, two of the 11 tapirs at Sungai Dusun in Ulu Bernam.

The reserve, which once housed a population of five Sumatran rhinoceros until all of them died over an 18-day span from septicaemia in late 2003, is now a wildlife rescue and breeding centre of sorts. Apart from the Malayan tapir (Tapirus indicus), the centre has a collection of false gharial, slow loris and Malayan porcupine for captive breeding with a view of reintroducing them to the forests of Sungai Dusun or other natural areas where the species have become depleted.

Since 2002, the Department of Wildlife and National Parks (Perhilitan) has collaborated with Copenhagen Zoo on a tapir conservation programme where wildlife experts study the totally protected species in Krau Wildlife Reserve and Taman Negara in Pahang, and in Sungai Dusun.

The use of camera trapping and radio telemetry have yielded new knowledge on the little-studied animal. Through radio collars, scientists have been able to track the movements of tapirs in Krau to get a better idea of their home range. The nocturnal animal has also been found to eat the leaves and fruits of over 100 species of plants.

“They are extremely alert and difficult to spot in the field. We’ve also discovered that you can identify individuals from the wrinkles on their neck, which are unique to each animal,” says programme co-ordinator Dr Carl Traeholt.

“The breeding programme in Sungai Dusun is to see how to breed tapirs and this appears to be fairly straightforward,” he says.

With the arrival of Waja, there are now 12 tapirs in Sungai Dusun – four males and eight females. The birth of Waja is the first for Rompin, aged about five to seven years old, which was trapped in October 2007 after it had ventured into a village in Rompin, Pahang. Boy, which was sent to Sungai Dusun from Singapore Zoo where he was born, has proven to be the most fertile male at the centre, having previously sired Ai and Suraya.

Traeholt says having captive-breds makes it unnecessary to capture wild tapirs to stock zoos. In fact, one-year-old Ai was sent to Perhilitan in Terengganu in March, presumably for a zoo there.

Endangered

The population of the Malayan tapir in its entire range has decreased drastically in recent years, mainly due to habitat destruction. The evergreen forest that used to cover large parts of southern Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia and Sumatra are mere fractions of its previous size, depleted by logging, expanding farms and plantations.

In Thailand, only about 200 tapirs are left. Tapirs are no longer found in northern Sumatra. Historical documents show tapir to exist in Borneo but the species has died out there.

All of which makes Peninsular Malaysia the last stronghold of the Malayan tapir. And yet, tapir numbers are dropping here, too. Perhilitan estimates that between 1,500 and 2,000 tapirs remain in our forests. Unlike other large animals such as the tiger or elephant, tapirs face less hunting pressure as it is not usually eaten or used in folk cures. But it is threatened by the loss of habitat as forests are exploited and fragmented into isolated parcels.

Tapirs are also victims of roadkills, knocked down by cars when they attempt to cross roads that bisect their forested homes. After a highway was built through the forests at Bukit Cherakah near Shah Alam in Selangor, at least seven tapirs were knocked down by motorists, according to the Malaysian Nature Society.

And although tapirs are not targeted by hunters, they get caught in snares set up for other animals like deer, wild boars and tigers. Many of the tapirs that end up in Sungai Dusun bore injuries from being caught in snares.

The number of tapirs displaced by development or rescued from ditches, wells, road sides and snares, is growing. “We are seeing more wildlife-human conflict involving tapirs. We have even trapped tapirs just beside homes,” says Mahathir Mohamad, assistant director of Perhilitan Selangor.

Back to the wild

Over at Sungai Dusun, a lifeline is being offered to the endangered species, in the form of reintroducing captive animals to the forest. On April 26, seven-year-old male tapir Mala was released into the forests of Sungai Dusun, where it will join the existing three to four wild tapirs in the protected area. Mala was born in Malacca Zoo but was transferred to Sungai Dusun for the breeding programme. Unfortunately, he never sired any babies.

The 4,330ha Sungai Dusun comprises primarily peat swamp and lowland dipterocarp forest.

The tapir release programme follows a procedure to ease the animal into the wild. First, they are kept in a 5ha fenced enclosure that adjoins the paddock. In the next phase of the reintroduction programme, the tapir goes to a 50ha enclosure.

“This site is considered wild as it has big trees and vegetation, which provide food for the tapir. We will also reduce the feeding frequency so the tapir will find food for itself. Once the animal can fend for itself, we will release it into the wild forest of Sungai Dusun,” says Perhilitan wildlife officer David Magintan.

Aside from the recent release of Mala, there have been two previous releases of captive-bred tapirs – in 2008 and 2009 at Taman Negara. The tapirs, both over two years old, were born in the 150ha enclosure in Sungai Dusun and so were fairly wild, making them good candidates for the release programme.

However, it is unknown how these captive-breds are faring. What happened was that the animals escaped from their temporary enclosure in Taman Negara – which was improperly built – and disappeared into the jungle before collar transmitters were put on them.

As a result, wildlife officers could not track their movements to see how they were surviving on their own. Although one tapir was eventually captured by camera trapping, it has not been photographed for a year. The other was spotted only once, feasting on fruits in a village.

Breeding right

As the captive breeding effort at Sungai Dusun has proven successful, Traeholt sees no necessity in continuing it; more so since the centre is already filled to capacity. “There is no point in continuing to breed the tapir as they will only be kept in captivity.”

He is also against the idea of sending more captured or displaced tapirs to Sungai Dusun. “These animals should be sent to natural forests where the original tapir population has been depleted. For this, we need to draft a protocol on the translocation of tapirs. It should spell out what is supposed to be done if there is an injured or displaced tapir, and have guidelines to assist the release of tapirs into wild, suitable habitats.”

Traeholt says releasing tapirs into the wild would be relatively easier compared to releasing bigger mammals such as tigers and elephants as they are semi-wild, having been kept in the wild enclosures at Sungai Dusun.

Captive-bred tigers, on the other hand, have never hunted and so might not be able to survive on their own. As for elephants, they are social animals and move in herds. So a newly translocated individual might not fit into the group.

But while research into the ecology of tapirs and efforts to breed and release them all offer a lifeline for the endangered species, the most crucial conservation measure is still to protect their habitat and give them space to roam.


Read more!

Coalition calls for biodiversity loss to be halted by 2020

TRAFFIC 17 May 10;

Nairobi, Kenya, 17 May 2010 - A coalition of 14 conservation organizations including TRAFFIC has called on the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) to amend its mission in light of the failure of the 2010 biodiversity targets and to set firm new measures to be implemented by 2020.

Speaking on behalf of the coalition, Muhtari Aminu-Kano of BirdLife International noted the continuing alarming rate of biodiversity loss as a consequence of a failure to address the underlying causes.

“The capacity of the planet to support an increasing human population at high levels of production and consumption is finite. The sustainability of life on earth is being severely undermined,” noted Aminu-Kano.

“We are at a crossroads. As the Global Biodiversity Outlook warned, without ‘swift, radical and creative action’ we will fast-track destruction of life on earth.”

Aminu-Kano made his comments during an intervention at SBSTTA 14 (the 14th meeting of the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice), a key preparatory meeting ahead of the full CBD meeting (CoP10), which takes place this October in Japan.

The joint statement by civil society organizations read out by Aminu-Kano called upon Parties to make a number of commitments, including to halt biodiversity loss by 2020; to address the world’s biodiversity crisis at the highest political levels; to integrate biodiversity processes into economic policy; and to prevent further habitat loss as a matter of urgency.

The proposed amendment to the CBD’s Mission was supported by Malawi, a Party to the Convention, meaning the issue will be further considered at SBSTTA 14.

“TRAFFIC stands ready to support Parties, their national focal points and authorities, civil society organizations and the private sector to achieve those goals outlined in the CBD’s forthcoming new strategic plan,” said Roland Melisch, TRAFFIC delegate to SBSTTA 14 in Nairobi.

“Particularly with regard to the sustainable use of wild living resources and subsequent trade, TRAFFIC can provide expert opinion and advise on the best standards necessary to comply with the principles of the CBD.”

The coalition of civil society and conservation organizations making the statement comprised: BirdLife International, BGCI -- Botanic Gardens Conservation International, Conservation International, EcoNexus, Ecoropa, Forest People’s Programme, Fundación Vida Silvestre Argentina, Global Invasive Species Programme, Greenpeace, Plantlife International, TRAFFIC, VAS – Green Environment Society (federation of 50 organisations in Italy), Wetlands International and WWF.

The coalition’s statement (PDF, 100 KB).


Read more!

Scientists Find Tiny Wallaby, Spiky Nosed Frog In Asia

David Fogarty, PlanetArk 18 May 10;

Scientists exploring a remote Indonesian forest say they have uncovered a collection of new species, including a Pinocchio-nosed frog, the world's smallest known wallaby and a yellow-eyed gecko.

An international group of scientists found the species in the remote Foja Mountains on the island of New Guinea in late 2008 and released the details, including pictures, on Monday ahead of the International Day for Biological Diversity on May 22.

Many of the species found during the survey are believed to be new to science, Conservation International and the National Geographic Society said, including several new mammals, a reptile, an amphibian, and a dozen insects.

The discoveries come just as scientists warn of the growing threat of accelerating loss of species as the planet warms and forests and other habitats are destroyed to feed a growing human population.

"While animals and plants are being wiped out across the globe at a pace never seen in millions of years, the discovery of these absolutely incredible forms of life is much needed positive news," said Conservation International's Bruce Beehler, a participant on the expedition.

"Places like these represent a healthy future for all of us and show that it is not too late to stop the current species extinction crisis."

The Foja Mountains are in the Indonesian province of Papua on the island of New Guinea and cover a large area of undeveloped and undisturbed rainforest.

Conservation International said the frog's Pinocchio-like protuberance on its nose pointed upwards when the male called but pointed downwards when he was less active.

The team also found a tame, woolly rat, a bent-toed gecko with yellow eyes, a new imperial pigeon and a tiny forest wallaby that is believed to be the smallest member of the kangaroo family documented in the world.

Other discoveries recorded during the survey included a new blossom bat, which feeds on rainforest nectar, and a small tree-mouse.

Scientists are becoming increasingly concerned over the rate of species loss on the planet and point out the huge benefits of forests, river systems, wetlands and oceans to human livelihoods and economies.

Recent reports show that world governments failed to meet the targets agreed to in 2002 to reduce the rate of loss of biodiversity by 2010, which was declared by the United Nations the International Year of Biodiversity.

Negotiators from around the globe meet in Japan in October to discuss new targets to stem biodiversity loss for the next 40 years.

(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

New frogs and geckos and pigeons, oh my
Randolph E. Schmid, Associated Press Yahoo News 17 May 10;

WASHINGTON – Finding a new animal species is a special moment for scientists and even better when one hops into their mountain camp and volunteers to be discovered. An international team of researchers was camping in the Foja mountains of Indonesia when herpetologist Paul Oliver spied a frog sitting on a bag of rice in the campsite.

On closer look it turned out to be a previously unknown type of long-nosed frog. The scientists dubbed it Pinocchio.

When the frog is calling, its nose points upward, but it deflates when the animal is less active.

"We were sitting around eating lunch," recalled Smithsonian ornithologist Chris Milensky. Oliver "looked down and there's this little frog on a rice sack, and he managed to grab the thing."

"Herpetologists (experts in snakes, lizards etc.) have good reflexes," Milensky observed. "He also caught a gecko, he managed to just jump and grab the thing" off a tree.

And mister long nose isn't all they found.

Overcoming torrential rain and floods, the researchers report finding the smallest kangaroo yet, a big woolly rat, a three-toned pigeon and a gargoyle-like, bent-toed gecko with yellow eyes.

The Foja Mountains are in the western side of the island of New Guinea, a part of Indonesia that has been little visited by scientists over the years.

So the environmental group Conservation International, with the support of the National Geographic Society and Smithsonian Institution, began investigating the area. The results of their 2008 expedition were announced Monday. Milensky said the expedition was incredibly difficult.

"It was extremely wet, heavy downpours every day," he said. "The camp just turned into a complete mud bog."

Kristofer M. Helgen, curator of mammals at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, said one of the most amazing animals the researchers observed was the rare golden-mantled tree kangaroo.

Most people think of kangaroos as creatures that live on the flatlands of Australia, he said, but this one has adapted to forest life.

"It can jump into a tree and scurry right up it," Helgen said. "But on the ground it hops around like any kangaroo."

While that kangaroo had been observed, rarely, before, Helgen also discovered what may be the smallest known member of the kangaroo family, a tiny wallaby that also has adapted to forest life.

New Guinea and Australia were once connected and so have similar life forms, but they have adapted differently in each place, he explained.

The researchers say another big surprise was made by ornithologist Neville Kemp who spotted a pair of new imperial pigeons that have feathers in different parts of their body that appear rusty, whitish and gray. Other finds included a dozen new insects.

The research, which also included Indonesian scientists, was part of Conservation International's Rapid Assessment Program, in which teams come together to spend three or four weeks making surveys of the biology of selected areas.

A feature on this expedition appears in the June issue of National Geographic magazine.

"While animals and plants are being wiped out across the globe at a pace never seen in millions of years, the discovery of these absolutely incredible forms of life is much needed positive news," Bruce Beehler, a senior research scientist at CI and participant on the expedition, said in a statement.

"Places like these represent a healthy future for all of us and show that it is not too late to stop the current species extinction crisis," he said.

More photos on the National Geographic website


Read more!

Factbox: Nestle, "Eco-Friendly" Palm Oil And Kit Kat

Niluksi Koswanage, PlanetArk 18 May 10;

Swiss-based Nestle, the world's biggest food group, will work with a non-profit organization to probe the firm's palm oil suppliers for evidence of rainforest and wildlife destruction.

The move is in response to growing scrutiny by green groups over palm oil which is widely used in the food and fuel sectors.

Nestle said in a statement on Monday that The Forest Trust, a charity that looks to halt illegal logging by tracing consumer products to their source, has already helped the maker of Kit Kat bars formulate guidelines for palm oil purchases.

These involve commitments to preserve carbon-rich peatlands in Indonesia and Malaysia, where much of palm oil plantation expansion takes place, as well as support local and indigenous communities.

The food giant also plans to provide technical support for palm oil suppliers that are willing to adhere to its palm eco-standards.

Here are some facts about Nestle; its place in the palm oil industry and mounting pressure from green groups:

* Greenpeace first targeted Nestle in a social media campaign in March of this year when it aired a commercial on YouTube showing a bored office worker chomping on a Kit Kat candy bar only to find the bloodied finger of an orangutan.

* Orangutans are an endangered species of primates whose habitats in Asia often get cleared to make way for oil palm estates. Palm oil is a key ingredient used in manufacturing Kit Kat bars.

* Nestle tried to shut down the commercial, citing a copyright claim on Kit Kat. Greenpeace re-posted the clip on another site and used Twitter and Facebook to highlight Nestle's move, drawing in thousands of pledges to boycott the firm.

* Within hours, Nestle announced that it had stopped buying palm oil from Indonesia's Sinar Mas -- a planter that Greenpeace says has openly destroyed rainforests to expand.

* Nestle also said it has pressured U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill and other blended palm oil suppliers to avoid buying palm oil related to rainforest destruction or risk getting delisted as a supplier.

* Indonesian oil palm farmers on the other hand have criticized Nestle for blacklisting Sinar Mar, with many saying they were ready to boycott Nestle products sold in the Southeast Asian country, local media has reported.

* Nestle annually buys 320,000 tonnes of palm oil -- roughly 0.7 percent of global production. It plans to source all of its palm oil needs from environmentally friendly sources by 2015.

* Currently 18 percent of its palm oil purchases are "green" and this is expected to hit 50 percent by the end of 2011.

(Editing by Ed Lane)


Read more!

Nestle Shows its Sweet Side to Greenpeace, Sinar Mas in Indonesian Palm Oil Fight

Faisal Maliki Baskoro Jakarta Globe 17 May 10;

Nestle sent mixed signals on Monday regarding its intentions on palm oil, garnering praise from both Greenpeace and one of the environmental group’s frequent targets, Sinar Mas Group.

Nestle, the world’s biggest food group, announced that it was committed to stop using products that contributed to the destruction of rainforests, and to that end had entered a partnership with The Forest Trust environmental group, which helps companies establish responsible supply chains.

This comes after a months-long social media campaign by Greenpeace highlighting Nestle’s purchase of crude palm oil from Sinar Mas Group, which Greenpeace accuses of destruction of rainforests and peatlands to make way for plantations. The allegations prompted Nestle to drop Sinar Mas as a supplier in March.

Pat Venditti, head of the Greenpeace International Forest Campaign, praised Nestle.

“Nestle’s move sends a clear message to Sinar Mas and to the rest of the palm oil and paper industries that rainforest destruction is not acceptable in the global marketplace. They need to clean up their act and move to implement a moratorium on rainforest destruction and full peatland protection.

“Greenpeace will closely monitor and push for the rapid implementation of Nestle’s plan,” Venditti said in a statement.

However, Bloomberg and Agence France-Presse reported on the same day that a Nestle executive at a seminar on palm oil and deforestation in Kuala Lumpur said the company might resume buying palm oil from PT Sinar Mas Agro Resources and Technology if an “independent” audit shows Greenpeace’s allegations are baseless.

Nestle executive vice president Jose Lopez was quoted by Bloomberg as saying that “if Sinar Mas, or anybody else, does a proper job on quality, on traceability, on having a transparent supply chain, of course we will buy from them .... After this whole audit is completed, we will make the right decision at that time.”

However, Lopez also said the company was concerned with criticism over deforestation.

In April, Sinar Mas Group appointed two bodies, Control Union Certification and the BSI Group, to assess Greenpeace’s claims. However, Greenpeace has questioned the neutrality of the groups, which have been approved by the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, a trade body of producers and buyers.

Bustar Maitar, of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, on Monday said The Forest Trust was a neutral organization, but questioned the impartiality of Sinar Mas’s self-appointed auditing teams.

“We suspected that Sinar Mas’s assessment might be biased and not transparent. If Nestle continues to buy from Sinar Mas it will only prove that our suspicions were true,” he said. “If Nestle decides that our evidence is baseless, we will continue to press on and won’t stop campaigning.”

He said that if Greenpeace’s evidence of deforestation was proven, then Nestle had no choice but to sever all ties with Sinar Mas.

Fajar Reksoprodjo, corporate communications director at Sinar Mas, said it appreciated Nestle’s professionalism and looked forward to doing business again after a clear and independent assessment was announced.

“Everyone should wait for the assessment report for an accurate and legitimate information,” he said, adding that the report was expected to be completed around July.

Achmad Manggabarani, director general of plantation crops at the Agriculture Ministry, said the Greenpeace campaign was controlled by foreign interests.

“Foreign countries saw palm oil as having the potential to trigger climate change, but so far there hasn’t been accurate research that proves that.”



Additional reporting by Ardian Wibisono, Arti Ekawati & Budi Otmansyah


Read more!

US must do more to fight tropical deforestation: NGOs

Yahoo News 17 May 10;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Environmental leaders pleaded Monday for greater US government commitment to helping preserve the world's endangered tropical rainforests, which are seen as key in the global fight against climate change.

"Tropical deforestation is a major contributor to global warming. It contributes about 15 percent of all greenhouse emissions according to most recent estimates," said Douglas Boucher of the Union of Concerned Scientists and chairman of the tropical forest and climate coalition, speaking to reporters.

"To give you an idea of what that means in terms of scale, that is larger that the entire emissions of the European Union," he said.

"It's also larger than the entire emissions of the global transportation sector -- every car, train, plane, boat on the planet all combined," he said.

Boucher urged US lawmakers to pass a sweeping energy bill currently being debated by Congress.

The climate and energy bill that already has passed in the House is being hotly debated in the Senate, was introduced by Senators Joseph Lieberman and John Kerry. The bill aims to protect the environment, add millions of jobs and reduce dependence on foreign oil.

But environmental groups have criticized the legislation for allowing offshore oil drilling and for what it called "billions in giveaways to corporate polluters" as well as a weak emissions reduction goal.

Boucher said fighting deforestation is also a cost-effective way to achieve a slowing of climate change.

"It's clearly an important part of any solution to the problem of global warming," he said.

"It's also a particularly affordable way to attack the problem of global warming. Several major studies show across the board that the cost of reducing emissions for tropical deforestation is considerably less that the cost of reducing from just about every other sector available."

Greg Fishbein, of the group Forest Carbon Program, said that studies show between seven and 10 billion dollars is needed to cut deforestation in half by 2020.


Read more!

Oceans' fish could disappear in 40 years: UN

Sebastian Smith Yahoo News 17 May 10;

NEW YORK (AFP) – The world faces the nightmare possibility of fishless oceans by 2050 unless fishing fleets are slashed and stocks allowed to recover, UN experts warned Monday.

"If the various estimates we have received... come true, then we are in the situation where 40 years down the line we, effectively, are out of fish," Pavan Sukhdev, head of the UN Environment Program's green economy initiative, told journalists in New York.

A Green Economy report due later this year by UNEP and outside experts argues this disaster can be avoided if subsidies to fishing fleets are slashed and fish are given protected zones -- ultimately resulting in a thriving industry.

The report, which was opened to preview Monday, also assesses how surging global demand in other key areas including energy and fresh water can be met while preventing ecological destruction around the planet.

UNEP director Achim Steiner said the world was "drawing down to the very capital" on which it relies.

However, "our institutions, our governments are perfectly capable of changing course, as we have seen with the extraordinary uptake of interest. Around, I think it is almost 30 countries now have engaged with us directly, and there are many others revising the policies on the green economy," he said.

Environmental experts are mindful of the failure this March to push through a worldwide ban on trade in bluefin tuna, one of the many species said to be headed for extinction.

Powerful lobbying from Japan and other tuna-consuming countries defeated the proposal at the CITES conference on endangered species in Doha.

But UNEP's warning Monday was that tuna only symbolizes a much vaster catastrophe, threatening economic, as well as environmental upheaval.

One billion people, mostly from poorer countries, rely on fish as their main animal protein source, according to the UN.

The Green Economy report estimates there are 35 million people fishing around the world on 20 million boats. About 170 million jobs depend directly or indirectly on the sector, bringing the total web of people financially linked to 520 million.

According to the UN, 30 percent of fish stocks have already collapsed, meaning they yield less than 10 percent of their former potential, while virtually all fisheries risk running out of commercially viable catches by 2050.

Currently only a quarter of fish stocks -- mostly the cheaper, less desirable species -- are considered to be in healthy numbers.

The main scourge, the UNEP report says, are government subsidies encouraging ever bigger fishing fleets chasing ever fewer fish, with little attempt made to allow the fish populations to recover.

The annual 27 billion dollars in government subsidies to fishing, mostly in rich countries, is "perverse," Sukhdev said, since the entire value of fish caught is only 85 billion dollars.

As a result, fishing fleet capacity is "50 to 60 percent" higher than it should be, Sukhdev said.

Creating marine preservation areas to allow female fish to grow to full size, thereby hugely increasing their fertility, is one vital solution, the report says.

Another is restructuring the fishing fleets to favor smaller boats that -- once fish stocks recover -- would be able to land bigger catches.

"What is scarce here is fish," Sukhdev said, "not the stock of fishing capacity."


Turning the Tide on Falling Fish Stocks - UNEP-Led Green Economy Charts Sustainable Investment Path
UNEP 17 May 10;

Preview Report Also Spotlights Opportunities for Transforming Water and Transport Sectors as Governments Meet for Rio+20 Preparatory Committee

New York, 17 May 2010-Investing around US$8 billion a year in rebuilding and greening the world's fisheries could raise catches to 112 million tonnes annually while triggering benefits to industry, consumers and the global economy totalling US$1.7 trillion over the next 40 years.

These are among the findings of a new, landmark report being compiled by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and economists entitled the Green Economy- part of which was previewed today in New York.

The investment, some of which can be covered by phasing down or phasing out some of the US$27 billion-worth of fishing subsides currently in place, is needed to dramatically reduce the excess capacity of the world's fishing fleets while supporting workers in alternative livelihoods.

Funding is also required to reform and re-focus fisheries management, including through policies such as tradable quotas and the establishment of Marine Protected Areas, in order to allow depleted stocks to recover and grow.

Such measures, backed up by bold and forward-looking investments, would not only generate important economic and environmental returns. They would also assist in fighting poverty by securing a primary source of protein for close to one billion people.

Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director, said today: "Fisheries across the world are being plundered, or exploited at unsustainable rates. It is a failure of management of what will prove to be monumental proportions unless addressed."

"The lives and livelihoods of over half a billion people, linked with the health of this industry, will depend on the tough but also transformational choices Governments make now and over the years to come," he added.

"The Green Economy preview report presented today offers a way of maximizing the economic, social and environmental returns from rebuilding, reforming and sustaining fisheries for current and future generations. The scenarios recognize that millions of fishers will need support in retraining and that fishing fleets must shrink. But this needs to be set against a rise in catches, an overall climb in incomes for coastal communities and companies, improvements in the health of the marine environment and ultimately hundreds of millions of people whose incomes and livelihoods are linked to fishing," he added.

The final Green Economy report, which will cover 11 sectors from agriculture and waste to cities and tourism, will be published in late 2010. Today's preview, launched during the meeting of the Preparatory Committee for the Rio+20 meeting in Brazil in 2012, covers marine fisheries, water and transport.

Fisheries-Facts and Figures

* It is estimated that there are currently 35 million fishers and more than 20 million boats actively engaged in fishing.

* Fisheries directly and indirectly support 170 million jobs and US$35 billion in incomes to fishing households annually.

* If post-fishing activities are factored in, along with an assumption that one fisher has three dependents, then about 520 million people or eight per cent of the global population are supported by fisheries.

Mismanagement, lack of enforcement and subsidies totalling over US$27 billion annually have left close to 30 per cent of fish stocks classed as "collapsed"-in other words yielding less than 10 per cent of their former potential.

* Only around 25 per cent of commercial stocks-mostly of low-priced species-are considered to be in a healthy or reasonably healthy state.

* On current trends, some researchers estimate that virtually all commercial fisheries will have collapsed by 2050 unless urgent action is taken to bring far more intelligent management to fisheries north and south.

The report estimates that of the US$27 billion-worth of subsidies, only around US$8 billion can be classed as 'good' with the rest classed as 'bad' and 'ugly' as they contribute to over-exploitation of stocks.

Fisheries-A Green Economy Strategy

Under a Green Economy response, aimed at reducing the global fishing effort to a 'maximum sustainable yield', an estimated reduction of excess capacity is required, because current capacity is 1.8 to 2.8 times what is needed.

These reductions could be achieved through careful targeting of the most ecologically damaging surplus capacity, so that of the estimated 20 million vessels and 35 million fishers deployed in this sector, the livelihoods of those that are artisanal and poor are treated equitably.

The report estimates that an investment of between US$220 to US$320 billion world-wide is required and equal to around US$8 billion a year but that this investment would:-

* Raise total income of fishing households, including those engaged in artisanal fishing, from US$35 billion to around US$44 billion a year;

* Increase annual profits for fishing enterprises from US$8 billion to US$11 billion annually;

* Increase the marine fisheries catch from about 80 million tonnes to 112 million tonnes a year worth US$119 billion annually versus the current US$85 billion.

"Discounting this flow of benefit over time at three per cent and five per cent real discount rates, gives a present value of benefit from greening the fishing sector of US$1.05 trillion and US$1.76 trillion, which is three to five times the high-end estimate of US$320 billion as the cost of greening global fisheries," says the preview report.

Water-Facts and Figures

'Global water stocks are in decline and demands on them are growing. Water scarcity is becoming a global phenomenon that will challenge the security of nations. Addressing this gap provides an opportunity for investments and for water to become a major economic sector in a Green Economy," says the preview report.

Water supply is expected to be 40 per cent less than what will be needed in terms of demand by 2030 if there are no improvements in the efficiency of water use.

It argues that attaining the Millennium Development Goals as they relate to water and sanitation would lead to global economic gains of nearly US$750 million a year as a result of less working days lost to illness among adults.

Improved access to water and sanitation would also lead to global gains of US$64 billion linked to less time spent accessing such services.

Investments are needed in not only increasing supply through low cost measures such as rainwater harvesting but also through reforms of the sector and investments in ecological infrastructure including forests and wetlands that perform important hydrological functions.

* The report cites an innovative policy and 'micro-infrastructure' development in Western Jakarta, Indonesia.

Here, a private utility called Palyja is providing water to informal homes via community-based organizations with water connection support from the NGO MercyCorps and USAID's Environmental Service Programme.

The community signs a supply contract with the water company which in turn supplies water to multiple households via a single community metre at discount prices.

"The community gets reliable access to an affordable water supply, while Palyja supplies a large number of houses with water at much lower overhead and administrative costs," says the Green Economy preview report.

Green Economy-Transport

The environmental, social and economic impacts of transport can amount to around 10 per cent of a country's GDP, according to the preview report.

* Transport currently consumes more than half of global liquid fossil fuels;

* Transport emits nearly a quarter of the world's energy related CO2 and generates more than 80 per cent of developing country cities' local air pollutants;

* More than 127 million fatal traffic accidents, mainly in developing countries, are linked with transport;

* Chronic congestion is resulting in time and productivity losses.

Unless urgent action is taken to seize a different development and investment path, these costs will grow as the global vehicle fleet climbs from around 800 million to between two and three billion by 2050.

The report cites multiple choices countries and cities can make, including investment in public and non-motorized transport; alternative fuels and a substitution of physical transportation with telecommunications technology.

The Green Economy report says the stimulus packages, triggered by the financial crisis of 2008-2009, have begun a shift towards green transport.

* Transport is one of the major recipients of this extra spending amounting to roughly 12 per cent of the just under US$3.2 trillion spent by all surveyed Governments.

* Of this, rail and public transport represent 45 per cent; low carbon vehicles, five per cent; roads 33 per cent and airports, 14 per cent-in other words 50 per cent of the global transport stimulus spending could be termed 'green'.

"Funding for non-motorized transport such as sidewalks and bicycles is explicitly mentioned in the stimulus packages of the Republic of Korea and Norway," says the preview report.

UNEP Green Economy Initiative


Read more!

Gulf Looks To Science To Turn Desert To Farmland

Amena Bakr, PlanetArk 18 May 10;

Gulf nations hope science will turn desert areas into arable land to boost food security and avoid the risks inherent in buying farmland abroad, industry insiders said Monday.

Farming in the Gulf battles against little water supply, high soil salinity and extreme heat. But many of the countries in the region have the cash to adopt expensive solutions that others could not.

Abu Dhabi has conducted a soil survey to identify areas with underground water supplies and soil quality that could be enhanced, said Faisal Taha, who headed the project by the Abu Dhabi Environment Agency.

The survey found over 200,000 hectares of land that could be used for agriculture given the right investment, Taha told Reuters on the sidelines of an industry conference in Abu Dhabi.

"We are talking about tens of millions of dirhams in investments ... but it's worth it because with this land vegetable and fodder production could be increased by up to 70 percent," said Taha.

The areas were in the western regions of Madinat Zayed, Ghayathi and the Eastern region of Al Ain, according to the study.

Abu Dhabi aims to fund a 130 million dirham study that would take two years to indentify other potential agricultural areas in the UAE's northern emirates.

"This land will not be able to guarantee 100 percent food security for the UAE, but the strategy comes at a right time when many of the international agencies are criticizing rich countries for buying land in nations that can'tfeed themselves and exporting their crops," said Taha.

Over the past year Gulf states mainly reliant on food imports have intensified efforts to buy and lease farmland in developing nations to secure food supplies.

Foreign land acquisitions, labeled land grabs by critics, have provoked opposition from many farmers in developing nations.

The United Nations has expressed concern that farmers' rights in developing nations could be compromised as rich countries buy their land.

CONVERTING OIL WEALTH TO SOIL HEALTH

Qatar and Kuwait have also been trying to increase their domestic agricultural supply through the use of selected types of fungus that enhance the growth of plant roots in arid areas, said Rajendra Pachauri, director general of the New Delhi-based Energy and Resources Institute.

"By mixing the soil with these microbes, or what we call mycorrhiza, the roots of a plant can absorb nutrients from the soil that otherwise it would not be able to do given the climate and soil conditions in the Gulf," said Pachauri.

In a matter of 18 months, the institute managed to convert 4,000 square meters in what Pachauri described as "hyper-saline waste-land" in Qatar's southern Dukhan area into a productive habitat where vegetables and grains could now grow, he said.

"We have similar projects going on in Kuwait, India, Oman and the UAE," he added. "I believe that there is nothing better than using one's own land to secure food supplies, it's just much more secure."

(Editing by William Hardy)


Read more!

Arctic Team Reports Unusual Conditions Near Pole

David Ljunggren, PlanetArk 18 May 10;

A group of British explorers just back from a 60-day trip to the North Pole said Monday they had encountered unusual conditions, including ice sheets that drifted far faster than they had expected.

The three-member team walked across the frozen Arctic Ocean to study the impact of increased carbon dioxide absorption by the sea, which could make the water more acidic and put crucial food chains under pressure.

Expedition leader Ann Daniels said the ice drifted so much that they eventually covered 500 nautical miles (576 miles) rather than the 268 nautical miles initially envisaged.

One possible reason for the rapid drift was a lack of ice, she suggested. Satellite imagery reveals rapidly melting ice sheets in the Arctic, a region which is heating up three times more quickly than the rest of the Earth.

The first day the team was dropped off the ice moved so quickly to the south that it took the trio 10 days to make it back to their starting point.

"None of us had ever experienced that amount of southerly drift on our previous expeditions, and it continued for such a long period of time. We kept expecting it to stop, we began to pray it would stop," Daniels said.

"At the end of the expedition we were losing three nautical miles a night ... it was quite a major factor," she told a news conference in Ottawa.

Many scientists link the higher Arctic temperatures to the greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming.

Martin Hartley, a member of the team, said the condition of the ice was unpleasantly bad.

"We spent a couple of days walking on ice that was three or four inches thick with no other thicker ice around, which was a big surprise to us," he told the news conference.

"On more than one occasion we came across enormous areas of very thin ice, which is quite stressful to travel on. We came across open water which we had to swim across."

At one point an ice floe the team's tent was moored on broke apart, although no one was injured.

Last month explorers at the team's ice base some 680 miles further south reported a three-minute rain shower, which they described as a freak event.

The team is due to release preliminary results this September. The C$3 million ($2.9 million) expedition is sponsored by British insurer Catlin.


Read more!

Small nations given voice on climate

The Independent 18 May 10;

The United Nations has appointed a Costa Rican diplomat as its new climate change chief after small island nations intervened to press for a choice who would represent their concerns about the risks of global warming.

Christiana Figueres, a climate change expert, has been a negotiator for her country at international emissions reduction meetings since 1995, and regularly chairs UN meetings.

Ms Figueres only emerged as secretary general Ban Ki-moon's choice after a late intervention from small island nations put her ahead of a South African minister, Marthinus van Schalkwyk.

South Africa argued against strict emission limits at the Copenhagen summit in December, after which the current UN climate chief, Yvo de Boer, said he would step down. Another major summit is due to be held in Mexico later this year.

Costa Rican named UN climate chief
Yahoo News 17 May 10;

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has named Costa Rica's Christiana Figueres to be the organization's top official on climate change, his spokesman announced Monday.

UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said the 53-year-old Costa Rican, currently San Jose's climate change negotiator, would succeed Yvo de Boer of the Netherlands as the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC).

"Ms Figueres is an international leader on strategies to address global climate change and brings to this position a passion for the issue, deep knowledge of the stakeholders, and valuable hands-on experience from the non-profit sector and the private sector," the spokesman said.

De Boer tendered his resignation after last year's Copenhagen climate change talks, which ended in widespread disappointment with only vague promises by nations to cut emissions.

Figueres is to assume her post on July 1, five months before the next round of scheduled climate change talks in the Mexican resort city of Cancun.

She has been a negotiator of the UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol since 1995 and has played a role in designing key climate change instruments, US media reports said.

Chief US climate negotiator Todd Stern welcomed Figueres' appointment, calling her "well-qualified with a deep background in UN climate change negotiations."

"The United States looks forward to working with Ms. Figueres and partners around the world to build on the progress made in Copenhagen to meet the climate change challenge," Stern said in a statement.

Environmental group Greenpeace noted that Costa Rica has set an ambitious goal of becoming carbon-neutral by 2021, "the type of attitude we need on the global stage."

"We hope she can really engage all countries in a fast-moving dialogue to get agreement on a global deal that will save the world from dangerous climate change," said Wendel Trio, Greenpeace's climate policy coordinator.

Figueres's family has a long history of work in government and international affairs. Her father Jose Figueres Ferrer was a three-time president of Costa Rica who abolished Costa Rica's military in 1948.

Her mother Karen Olsen Beck who was born in the United States to Danish immigrants, later adopted Costa Rican nationality.

Figueres's older brother, Jose Maria Figueres Olsen was elected President of Costa Rica for four years at the age of 39, the nation's youngest president in the 20th century.

Figueres completed her university studies at the prestigious Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania and at the London School of Economics and Georgetown University in Washington, DC.


Read more!