Best of our wild blogs: 23 May 10


International Biodiversity Day!
from Psychedelic Nature

Cyrene Reef at Orchard Road!
from Cyrene Reef Exposed!

Nature Keeper - a biodiversity programme for our primary school students from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

World Biodiversity Day at Chek Jawa with the Naked Hermit Crabs
from wild shores of singapore

Upper Peirce Reservoir Park
from Singapore Nature

Life History of the Short Banded Sailor
from Butterflies of Singapore

Secret Garden - Tarantula and Scorpion kids
from Macro Photography in Singapore

Hunters and gatherers
from The annotated budak

Interesting sights at Kranji Bund
from isn't it a wonder, how life came to be

Trash Island - Terumbu Semakau
from Psychedelic Nature and wonderful creations

Raffles Museum Treasures: King cobra
from Lazy Lizard's Tales


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Singapore marks International Day for Biological Diversity

Satish Cheney Channel NewsAsia 22 May 10;

SINGAPORE : Singapore joins other countries in marking the International Day for Biological Diversity on Saturday.

It is an occasion designated by the United Nations to enhance global understanding of biodiversity issues.

To celebrate the event, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan launched the 'BiodiverCity' photography exhibition at the Mandarin Gallery.

The exhibition features interesting plants and animals found within Singapore through the camera lens.

More than 700 participants submitted about 2,200 entries for the 'BiodiverCity' photography competition.

Next month, the exhibition will be moved to the World Cities Summit venue at the Suntec Singapore International Convention and Exhibition Centre, before travelling to different parks all over Singapore. - CNA /ls

From Straits Times 23 May 10


Launch of 'BiodiverCity' Photo Exhibition - First major showcase of Singapore's rich flora and fauna along Orchard Road
NParks media release 22 May 10;

22 May 2010, Singapore - From today until 20 June, shoppers in Orchard Road can look forward to be enchanted by an unusual display of photographs showcasing the city's rich biodiversity. Located outside Mandarin Gallery and covering over 360 square metres in area, it is the one of the largest nature photo exhibition organised in downtown Orchard. Singapore is often known as a dynamic bustling city-state for commerce and trade. Through this photo exhibition and through the lenses of nature photograhers, NParks hopes to show that Singapore is also a haven for biodiversity.

Minister for National Development, Mr Mah Bow Tan officiated the launch of the exhibition today, which is also International Day for Biological Diversity. The photo exhibition - themed 'BiodiverCity' to celebrate the rich variety of animals and plants found in our Garden City - features a collection of 55 print photographs and a slide show of another 100 photographs. They were selected from 2,200 entries from public and students who submitted them for a competition organised by the National Parks Board (NParks) and The Photographic Society of Singapore in January 2010.

At the launch, Mr Mah said, "The high quality of the entries testifies to the perseverance of these photographers, and their passion for nature and the biodiversity in Singapore. Such photographs are also a testimony to our rich biodiversity. Flora and fauna have been able to flourish in Singapore as a result of our careful planning and painstaking efforts to balance biodiversity protection with economic development."

The slide show will be featured in a specially constructed darkroom, where public can view mammals, insects, marine life and birds amidst nature sounds, right in the heart of Singapore's busiest shopping street. Members of the public can also view the photos on NParks' website at www.nparks.gov.sg/IYB2010 and to vote for their favourite picture online.

The exhibition is on display from 7.00am to 10.00pm daily for four weeks, till 20 June 2010. It will subsequently rove to the World Cities Summit at the Suntec Singapore International Convention & Exhibition Centre (28 June to 1 July) as well as to parks in Singapore.

Submissions show a wide variety of Singapore's biodiversity

Launched on 8 January 2010[1], the photo competition attracted a total of 2,200 entries from 725 participants. Of this, 341 people participated in the open category and 384 in the student category, where budding photographers as young as seven years old, submitted photos of interesting animals, plants and natural landscapes in Singapore.

Mr Steven Tor bagged the top prize with his shot of a jumping otter reaching out to catch a crab at Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. He won $6,000 cash and a four-day-three-night stay at Banyan Tree Vabbinfaru in the Maldives, as well as an opportunity to participate in one of Banyan Tree�s many Marine Lab initiatives such as coral reef projects and surveys, shark and stingray research and the well-known Turtle Head Start effort. The top prize for the student category went to 20-year-old Pan Ken Nie from Lasalle College of the Arts for his winning picture of a Long-tailed Shrike. He won $3,000 in cash. Ten other winners received the Merit Prizes for their impressive entries. (Please see Annex A for more information on the photo competition, winners and other prizes).

Mr David P C Tay, President of The Photographic Society of Singapore, said, "Response has exceeded our expectation. Quality of the images is good and there is no shortage of variety in subject matter. It reflects the popularity of nature photography among Singaporean photographers. I hope that the Competition can continue on a regular basis, and the prize-winning and selected entries be compiled and published to increase the awareness of Singapore's biodiversity."

Corporate partners' support for the photo exhibition

The photo exhibition is made possible with the contributions of main partners, Banyan Tree Holdings and PICO Art, as well as supporting partners, Mandarin Gallery, Sharp Electronics and the Singapore Tourism Board.

In line with the theme of conservation, the photo exhibition is designed and installed by PICO Art using environmental friendly materials. Portions of the carpentry work were re-used from past events, such as the International Furniture Fair and Singapore Air Show.

Ms Jean Chia, Managing Director, Pico Art International Pte Ltd, said, "PICO has always been relentless in implementing the '3R' principles, Reduce, Reuse and Recycle, which we have wholly embraced on a company-wide level. In our bid to support this year's International Year of Biodiversity, we are happy to be partnering National Parks Board and The Photographic Society of Singapore on this meaningful event."

On Banyan Tree's long-standing partnership with NParks, Ms Claire Chiang, Chairperson, Banyan Tree Global Foundation said, "As part of our intrinsic belief that businesses must create value for communities while creating value for shareholders, Banyan Tree is delighted to lend our support to NParks in promoting and celebrating biodiversity in Singapore. We hope this will help to not only raise awareness for the conservation of Singapore's rich natural heritage, but also to inspire others to do the same so that our natural environment will be preserved for the education and enjoyment of future generations."

In celebration of International Year of Biodiversity 2010

The photo exhibition is another key event in celebration of the International Year of Biodiversity. In 2006, the United Nations declared 2010 as the International Year of Biodiversity to raise global awareness on the vital role of biodiversity in sustaining life on Earth.

NParks has lined up a series of activities throughout the year to raise public awareness of the rich biodiversity in Singapore. Key events held so far include the launch of Forest of Giants[2] on Earth Day (22 April) and the Singing Forest[3] on 5 May 2010. 91 schools in Singapore also took part in simultaneous tree-planting yesterday and today as part of the global Green Wave movement.

Upcoming activities this year include:

* 'Community in Bloom' Arts Exhibition (24 May 2010) - It features paintings, sculptures and animation pieces submitted by students on gardening and nature appreciation.
* Biodiversity Race (29 May 2010) - Teams will have a hand at identifying birds, butterflies, dragonflies and plants along the Western Adventure Park Connector Network. The team with the most number of correct entries wins.
* Sungei Buloh Master Plan Public Exhibition - This exhibition outlines the future plans to transform the wetland reserve into a regional centre for wetland education and recreation, while strengthening the conservation of its biodiversity. It will launched in June.
* 'Plant-A-Tree' opportunities - More tree-planting opportunities will be provided on special dates and months such as 5 June (World Environment Day) for individuals and organisations to do their part for nature through planting of trees at designated parks and nature reserves.
* Monthly talks on interesting species of Singapore organised by the National Biodiversity Centre;
* Guided walks at various parks and nature reserves around Singapore.

[1] This photo exhibition was launched on 8 January 2010 in conjunction with the official launch of the start of the "International Year of Biodiversity 2010" in Curitiba, Brazil.

[2] The Sembcorp Forest of Giants comprises over 600 trees that originally dominated our regional landscape before the advent of urbanisation. Also known as emergents - large trees that grow above the forest canopy - some of the 55 species selected for the collection can attain heights of over 80m in the wild.

[3] The Singing Forest is a collection of regional native trees which aims to attract birds. When the forest is established, park visitors will be able to enjoy a chorus of birds singing at dawn.

Related links on the BiodiverCity exhibition


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Indonesian rangers catch notorious poacher who 'killed 100 tigers'

Major victory in battle to protect Sumatran tiger, of which there are just 500 left in wild
Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk 21 May 10;

Indonesia's forest rangers have notched up a major victory against tiger poachers with the arrest of a notorious figure who claims to have killed more than 100 of the endangered animals.

The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, and his son were caught in a sting operation with the pelt and skeleton of a Sumatran tiger at Kerinci Seblat national park.

There are believed to be about 500 of the animals left in the wild, down from 10s of thousands at the beginning of the 20th century.

The 57-year-old suspect reportedly told police he had killed more than 100 tigers over a 30 year period.

His family is feared and respected in their village – Tunggang in northern Bengkulu – which has long been a centre of poaching, according to conservationists.

"He is very well known in the underworld," said Debbie Martyr, field co-ordinator for Fauna & Flora International's Kerinci tiger protection programme.

"For someone like this to get caught will put a chill down the spine of opportunist poachers. If these two can get caught, anyone can."

The arrests follow a two month undercover investigation led by rangers from FFI's tiger protection and conservation unit with backup from Bengkulu city police.

It is the third success in six months for the unit, which was established in 1995. Last November a tiger dealer and poacher were nabbed and later jailed for 18 months. A month later, another dealer was detained after a year-long surveillance operation.

Villagers can earn the price of a new motorbike for a tiger. But the deterrent of anti-poaching operations is starting to take effect.

"After 10 hard years, I'm not saying we are winning the battle, but we are holding our own," said Martyr. "We now have about 140 tigers in this national park. That is more tigers than in Laos, Nepal, Cambodia or China."

But, on the eve of the eve of International Day for Biological Diversity, the threat to the tigers is far from over. Even as the rangers celebrated one success, they were called out to try to save a tiger that had been shot and badly wounded by poachers.


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Bali to host workshop on Orangutan conservation

Antara 22 May 10;

Denpasar, Bali (ANTARA News) - An international workshop on orangutan conservation will be conducted in the resort island of Bali from July 15-16, 2010.

The workshop will be organized by the Forestry Ministry`s directorate general of natural conservation and forest protection in cooperation with the Indonesian Orangutan Forum.

Spokesman of Trisakti University`s Orangutan Conservation Service Program, Jamartin Sihite said here on Saturday that the workshop would be conducted as part of similar activities in the past to save the orangutan from extinction.

"We are going to conduct the International Workshop on Orangutan Conservation in our bid to save the protected species from the danger of extinction," Jamartin said.

At the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Bali in 2007, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced a major initiative to save the nation`s orangutans.

A new study said orangutan numbers had declined sharply and were feared to become the first great ape species to go extinct if urgent action was not immediately taken.
Serge Wich, a scientist at the Great Ape Trust in Iowa, said

the declines in the orangutan populations in Indonesia and Malaysia since 2004 were mostly because of illegal logging and the expansion of palm oil plantations.

The survey found the orangutan population on Indonesia`s Sumatra island had dropped almost 14 percent since 2004, Wich said.

It also concluded that the orangutan population on Borneo island, which was shared by Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia, had fallen by 10 percent.

In their study, Wich and his 15 colleagues said the declines in Borneo were occurring at an "alarming rate" but that they were most concerned about Sumatra, where the numbers show the population was in "rapid decline."

"Unless extraordinary efforts are made soon, the orangutan could become the first great ape species to go extinct," researchers wrote.

Indonesia and Malaysia, the world`s top two palm oil producers, have aggressively pushed to expand plantations amid a rising demand for biofuels which are considered cleaner and cheaper than petrol.(*)


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Locals, NGOs rebuild Kampar Forest Protection camp in Riau, Indonesia

Antara 22 May 10;

Semenanjung Kampar, Riau (ANTARA News) - The people of Teluk Meranti together with Riau NGO Jikalahari, and Greenpeace, have begun rebuilding the torched Greenpeace forest protection camp on the Kampar Peninsula in Sumatra`s Riau Province.

The local community renamed the rebuilt camp "Community Camp for Kampar Protection" to symbolise the community`s spirit to protect the rich peat land forests of the Kampar Peninsula, according to a press statement of Greenpeace Southeast Asia on Thursday.

"We are rebuilding the camp to symbolize the struggle of the Teluk Meranti community to protect the Kampar Peninsula from new clearing by pulp and paper company RAPP. Our community depends on Kampar`s forests and rivers for fishing and farming as did our ancestors, and we will never surrender this forest to the company. We ask the government to revoke all permits for clearing. Before the company came, no one died from hunger." said Deli Saputra, Leader of Community Forum to Save the Kampar Peninsula.

The original camp, built in October last year by Greenpeace to highlight the role of deforestation in driving climate change, in the carbon-rich Kampar Peninsula, was burnt to the ground in March.

Last year Greenpeace activists from all over the world, working with the Teluk Meranti community and local NGOs, staged non-violent direct actions to stop RAPP`s illegal forest clearing operations which resulted in the Forestry Minister suspending the company`s deforestation permits.

However, the minister recently allowed RAPP to resume its operations in the Kampar Peninsula and the company is currently clearing peat forests in the south of the peninsula. As a result RAPP`s Smartwood FSC Certification has been suspended as they do not meet the required environmental and social standards.

Zulfahmi, a forest campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia said: "The people of Indonesia are calling for government action to save the Kampar forests and peatlands. The international community is also calling for action to back up President Yudhoyono`s 2009 commitment to reduce Indonesia?s greenhouse gas emissions by up to 41% by 2020. The government must save Kampar - the largest area of deep peat in Indonesia, as the first step in full peatland protection and must implement a moratorium on deforestation for the rest of the nation`s forests."

Susanto Kurniawan, Jikalahari Coordinator, said that peatland forests had to be fully protected to ensure the future of local communities and endangered species like the Sumatran tiger.

"The government must permanently revoke all the permits in the Kampar Peninsula to show they are serious about protecting this area. As we speak, RAPP is still excavating canals, and releasing carbon."

Recently, Greenpeace met with the ministers of forestry, environment and agriculture. They all publicly stated their commitment to protect peatlands. Yet, at the same time, companies like the Sinar Mas group and RAPP continue to destroy forests and peat lands, Greenpeace said.

"The Minister for the Environment needs to work with the Ministers of Agriculture and Forestry, to create a joint Ministerial Decree on peatland protection as an immediate step to stop ongoing peat land destruction before stronger legislation is issued.

Furthermore, the government must work together with local communities to develop sustainable alternatives for community livelihoods which don`t destroy forests and peat lands," Zulfahmi said. (*)


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Raja Ampat West Papua’s pristine water

J. Adiguna, The Jakarta Post 23 May 10;

The clear blue water seemed flawless as I sat on the deck of the ferry.

As we saw shadows of green hills amid the abundant fresh blue water covering the horizon, mama Albertina Thesia and her company of singers began to sing a traditional Papua song — a song of joy to see the big island, Waigeo.

“We are glad to be home”, she said, glowing sparks showed in her eyes. Stephen Hindom, her partner, tapped a tranquilizing rhythm of Tifa, a traditional Papuan percussion.

Together with a group of family and singers, they are about to join their relative in Wasai, the capital of Raja Ampat regency, celebrating the seventh anniversary of Raja Ampat as an autonomous regency. “We’ll be performing at the opening ceremony tomorrow,” she said proudly.

While the fascination remained, suddenly groups of small boats, decorated with palm leaves, popped out from a near cove, moving closer to our ferry. They were welcoming us.

Young brown-skinned and curly haired people with happy faces waved their hands cheerfully. They shouted the local greeting. Their eyes gazed at the ferry, looking for familiar faces.

Another cheerful rhythm of Tifa and Tambur, big traditional Papuan drums, echoed through the small islands in front of us. At the end of a wooden pier on the beach, stood a big brown bearded old man, wearing a traditional costume. He danced, stamped leaves in his hand while his legs moved to the the music. He was accompanied by groups of women young and old, wearing traditional cloth.
Welcome to Raja Ampat, heart of the Golden Triangle of the world!

Legend has it that the area was founded by four kings who were grown from eggs laid by a megapode bird. Later, the four kings settled in four large islands, which make up Raja Ampat regency: Waigeo, Salawati, Batanta and Misool.

Raja Ampat means four kings in Indonesian and its legend spreads beyond the indigenous people. The international community acknowledge Raja Ampat as the greatest repository of tropical marine life on earth. With its richness in marine life diversity, it’s known as the world’s “capital of coral and fish”.
More than 600 small islands with various shapes located in the north, west and south of Papua’s bird’s head peninsula gives Raja Ampat a geographical shelter from ocean waves.

Countless species of wildlife, including birds, fish and coral are found in this area which scientists are still studying its geographical advantage on nearby coral reefs including the Philippines, eastern Indonesia and the territory eastward to the Solomon Island.

In 1993, the Indonesian government declared Raja Ampat as a marine protected area (MPA) in the effort to protect this rich area that covers more than 60,000 square kilometers. A decade later, Raja Ampat became an autonomous regency under the province of West Papua. It makes it easier for the government and other organizations to implement the conservation and rehabilitation programs.

With more than 40,000 people living separately on 35 islands (mainly on the four big islands), reaching Raja Ampat is a challenge. A remote island surrounded by fresh blue water with a few harbors make a small boat and kayak ideal transportation for its people. Wasai, the capital of Raja Ampat, can be reached with a ferry from Sorong, the capital of West Papua province.

Entering Wasai from the harbor, you will find clear evidence of how the government has tried to improve and provide proper infrastructure in this remote place. There are small shacks and houses, but at least they have roads, a small health clinic, a government center, communication facilities and a market.

Cozy accommodation is easy to find as there are a few cottages which offer varied services from Rp 100,000 (US$10) to Rp 400.000 per night. Mostly, these are located near Wasai Beach. As an alternative, many houses are modified into homestays where you can experience the warmth and kindness of the people.

Local authorities have developed training for the people to prepare their home as homestays for. As long as you don’t mind bathing outside and sharing your private space with others, there is no problem. If anything, it provided more value and memories to our adventurous journey.

As for the food, you need not worry as long as you can eat seafood. The unique Papuan cooking style has an unforgettable delicious taste. If you have a chance, you should try “sagu bia”. It is made from sago cooked with a local clam called bia.

It is mixed with local herbs and salt and pepper, and is placed in a banana leaf and left roasted on hot stone. The spicy and gummy taste from the sago, mixed with the strong taste of the clam is worth a try. Locals say it can increase the libido.

For diving enthusiasts, there are some resorts to visit and dozens of cruises that offer services. The price varies between ¤5,000 (US$6,200) per person for a 10-day dive package to Rp 25,000,000 ($2,700) for five people for a three-day dive package.

You’ll be promised wonderful sights and marine life such as the spotted wobbegong, fimbriated moray, goliath grouper, manta ray and the sperm whale, reported to have been seen swimming around the water of Ayau Island, north of Waigeo.

Don’t miss the opportunity to visit small islands nearby with kayaks or small boats, especially in Kabui Bay or the small cove surrounding Gam area. You can learn moer about the legend of how King Waikew of Waigeo Island found seven eggs laid by a megapode bird. Four hatched and turned into four handsome princes who later ruled the four big islands. Another egg hatched and became a woman who was washed away and stranded in Biak, Papua. Another hatched and became a ghost that protected the sea and the last one didn’t hatch and turned into a big stone in Mayalibit bay.

As we float through the narrow strait between the mangrove jungle in a hidden bay, we feel the water become warmer. Sometimes we spot big brown-headed eagles fly above us.

We can also see red coral or big sea anemones, which grow only 2 meters below the clear water which is filled with orange ocellaris clownfish. Just beware of crocodiles when you do it. They are known to inhabit the mangroves.

Most people in Raja Ampat live as fishermen. They developed the tradition, which follows the harmony of nature. Indigenous people called themselves the Maya tribe. Years of influence from nearby islands mean the people of Raja Ampat have mixed ancestry with Maya and Biak as the majority.

There are many Melanisas as well as a few people life in southern Raja Ampat around Misool, descended from inter-island traders from Maluku and Sulawesi.

Uniquely they together adopt the same fishing technique called bacigi bwhich is fishing using string with no bait at the hook. Another technique ia called molo which is free diving, armed with a traditional spear gun called kalawai. The fishermen usually dive for 10-15 minutes in the water.

The declaration of Raja Ampat as a protected area recognizes the tradition of Raja Ampat people who had been preserving the marine biodiversity.

The help from natural conservation organizations such as Conservation International, The Natural Conservancy, World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and many others, together with the Indonesian and local government, are needed to preserve the environment.

There are many challenges to overcome. Great reserves of nickel and ore located in Waigeo, illegal fishing, the increasing po-pulation and the construction of modern infrastructure threaten the environment.


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Malaysian study finds Rafflesia can cause liver, spleen failure

The Star 23 May 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: Clinical tests on mice have shown that traditional medicine using the Rafflesia flower can have adverse effects on the liver and spleen, claims a Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) senior lecturer.

Dr Nazlina Ibrahim, of the university's School of Biosciences and Biotechnology, said Masters student Khairunnadwa Jemon's research found that the internal organs of white mice, which had delivered offspring and were given compounds of buds of the Rafflesia for 14 days, had become smaller.

She said traditional medicine using the flower were usually consumed by women who had just delivered to shrink their uterus and by men, supposedly for sexual strength.

Dr Nazlina said in an article in the university's news portal that the research by Khairunnadwa, under her supervision, found that the liver managed to detoxify ingredients from the buds of the Rafflesia azlanii.

“But this process also shrank the liver from its original size. The experiment thus confirmed that ability of the flower buds. But the risks to other vital organs being affected also exists, that is, the liver,” said Dr Nazlina in the article.

She said woman who have been drinking water boiled with the buds of the Rafflesia for after-birth treatment needed to seriously consider the adverse and dangerous effects.

Dr Nazlina said the level of toxicity seen in the study should be a warning to people taking jamu since the use of parts of the Rafflesia azlanii as a source of traditional medicine was not safe.

“If one wants to reduce weight, one should have a balanced diet and exercise. These are more effective and safe,” she said.

Dr Nazlina said the public should also avoid destroying the beautiful Rafflesia flower, which has become an icon in Malaysia's tourism industry, for slimming purposes and, in the process, endanger themselves.

The Rafflesia, famed as the biggest flower in the world, is a rare plant from the Rafflesiaceae family group but is seldom seen in tropical rain forests, she said, adding that it is actually an obligatory parasite and a creeper of the genus Tetrastigma (Vitaceae).

It lives for between two and three years but the flower blooms for a few days only before shrinking and decaying, and its uniqueness and beauty attracts many nature lovers, researchers and tourists from within the country and abroad.

She said research on the use of funds from the Rafflesia Rehabilitation Scheme in Taman Kinabalu found that the returns per year from the Rafflesia eco-tourism industry was much higher than if the same land area was used for agricultural purposes.

The Rafflesia has for generations been used as an ingredient of traditional medicine, and the buds of the flower can be bought for between RM9 and RM25, depending on the size. -- Bernama


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UN economic report into biodiversity crisis reveals price of consuming the planet

Species losses around the world could really cost us the Earth with food shortages, floods and expensive clean up costs
• UN biodiversity report calls for global action to prevent destruction of nature
Juliette Jowit, guardian.co.uk 21 May 10;

In every corner of the globe the evidence of the global biodiversity crisis is now impossible to ignore.

In the UK, a third of high priority species and two thirds of habitats are declining, according to government figures that emerged today on the UK's Biodiversity Action Plan. Since 1994 despite the extra attention provided by the plan, 5% of the species it covered are thought to have gone extinct.

Around the world the picture is as bad or worse: the International Union for the Conservation of Nature believes one in five mammals, one in three amphibians and one in seven birds are extinct or globally threatened, and other species groups still being assessed are showing similar patterns.

Simon Stuart, a senior IUCN scientist, has warned that for the first time since the dinosaurs humans are driving plants and animals to extinction faster than new species can evolve.

For decades, nature lovers have watched the fens being drained, or noticed the decline of cuckoos in spring and butterflies in summer. But until recently these changes have been overshadowed by growing fears about the impact of climate change.

However, as the impact of these species losses around the world have mounted – riots over food shortages, costly floods and landslides, expensive bills for cleaning polluted water, and many more disasters – attention has finally started to turn to the impact of human beings literally consuming the planet's natural resources.

So it was in 2007, just months after the British government made global waves with the biggest ever report on the economics of climate change by Lord Stern, that world governments met in Potsdam, in Germany, and asked the leading economist and senior banker Pavan Sukhdev to do the same for the natural world.

The study – called The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) shows that on average one-third of Earth's habitats have been damaged by humans – with, for example, 85% of seas and oceans and more than 70% of Mediterranean shrubland affected. It also warns that in spite of growing awareness of the danger of natural destruction it will "still continue on a large scale".

Following an interim report last year, the study group will publish its final findings this summer, in advance of the global Convention On Biological Diversity conference in Japan in October, marking 2010 as the International Year of Biodiversity.

Based on a host of academic and expert studies, the TEEB report is expected to say that the ratio of costs of conserving ecosystems or biodiversity to the benefits of doing so range from 10:1 to 100:1. "Our studies found ranges of 1:10, 1:25, 1:60 and 1 to almost 100 in the case of," said Sukhdev. "The point is they are all big ratios: I'd do business on those ratios...I'm fine with 1:10."

One report estimated the cost of building and maintaining a more comprehensive network of global protected areas – increasing it from the current 12.5%-14% to 15% of all land and from 1% to 30% of the seas – would be $45bn a year, while the benefits of preserving the species richness within these zones would be worth $4-5tn a year. Another unpublished report for the UN by UK-based consultants Trucost claimed the combined cost of damage to the environment by the world's 3,000 biggest companies was $2.2tn in 2008.

Echoing Lord Stern's famous description of climate change as "the greatest and widest-ranging market failure ever", Sukhdev – who supports action on climate change as well – said the destruction of the natural world was "a landscape of market failures", because the services of nature were nearly always provided for free, and so not valued until they were gone.

"The earth and its thin surface is our only home, and there's a lot that comes to us from biodiversity and ecosystems: we get food, fuel, fibre; we get the ability to have clean air and fresh water; we get a stable micro-climate where we live; if we wander into forests and wildernesses we get enjoyment, we get recreation, we get spiritual sustenance; all kinds of things – which in many cases are received free, and I think that's perhaps the nub of the problem," said Sukhdev who was visited the UK as a guest of science research and education charity, the Earthwatch Institute.

"We fail to recognise the extent to which we are dependent on natural ecosystems, and not just for goods and services, but also for the stability of the environment in which we survive - there's an element of resilience that's been built into our lives, the ability of our environment to withstand the shocks to which we expose it...the more we lose, the less resilience there is to these shocks, and therefore we increase the risk to society and risk to life and livelihoods and the economy," he added. Sukhdev is a senior banker at Deutsche Bank, adviser to the UN Environment Programme. He also owns a rainforest restoration and eco-tourism project in Australia and an organic farm in south India.

The final reports, in five sections covering the economic methods and advice to policy makers, administrators, businesses and citizens, will make a series of recommendations for how to use economic values for different parts of nature, such as particular forests, wetlands, ocean habitats like coral reefs or individual species (one example given is paying farmers to tolerate geese wintering in Scotland), into ways to protect them.

One of the most immediate changes could be reform of direct and indirect subsidies, such as tax exemptions, which encourage over-production even when there is clear destruction of the long-term ability of the environment to provide what is needed, and below-cost pricing which leads to wasteful use and poor understanding of the value of the products. "Particularly worrying" are about $300bn of subsidies to agriculture and fishing; subsidies of $500bn for energy, $238-$306bn for transport and $67bn for water companies are also singled out.

Although the report is likely to argue some subsidies should be reformed rather than axed, an example of the huge potential impact was given by Sukhdev told a meeting in New York this week that to stop the global collapse of fish stocks, more than 20 million people employed in the industry may need to be taken out of service and retrained over the next 40 years.

Other suggested reforms include stricter limits on extraction and pollution; other environmental regulations such as restrictions on fishing net sizes or more damaging agricultural practices; higher penalties for breaking the limits, reform of taxes to encourage better practices; better public procurement; public funds for restoring damaged ecosystems such as reedbeds or heathlands; forcing companies that want to develop an area of land to restore or conserve another piece of land to "offset" the damage; and paying communities for the use of goods and services from nature – such as the proposed Redd international forestry protection scheme. Money raised by some policies could pay for others, says the report.

Sukhdev's team also wants companies and countries to adopt new accounting systems so alongside their financial accounts of income, spending, profits and capital, they also publish figures showing their combined impact on environmental or natural capital, and also social capital, such improvements in workers' skills or national education levels.

"We're in a society where more is better, where we tend to reward more production and more consumption... GDP tends to get associated with progress, and that's not necessarily the case."

UN study backs economic changes to save natural world: report
Yahoo News 22 May 10;

LONDON (AFP) – A key UN report on biodiversity will recommend massive economic changes like company fines to help save species and protect the natural world, The Guardian reported here on Saturday.

The study, which is due for publication in the summer, will argue that global action on the topic is more powerful than the argument for tackling climate change, according to the newspaper.

The report, entitled 'The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity' (TEEB), was launched by Brussels in 2007 with the support of the UN Environment Programme, after G8 and major emerging economies called for a global study.

If nature is not factored into the global economic system then the environment will become more fragile and exposed to external shocks, placing human lives and the world economy in jeopardy, it will argue.

The TEEB report will also recommend that companies are fined and taxed for over-exploitation of the natural world, with strict limits imposed on what they can take from the environment, according to the paper.

Alongside financial results, businesses and governments should also be asked to provide accounts for their use of natural and human resources.

And communities should be paid to preserve natural environments rather than deplete them.

The Guardian's report, published on the UN's International Day for Biological Diversity, added that the UN will also recommend reforming state subsidies for certain industries, like energy, farming, fishing and transport.

The TEEB study will also warn that one-third of the world's natural habitats have been damaged by humans.

The total value of "natural goods and services" like pollination, medicines, fertile soil, clean air and water, will be around 10 and 100 times the cost of saving the species and natural habitats which provide them.

"We need a sea-change in human thinking and attitudes towards nature," said Indian economist and report author Pavan Sukhdev, cited by The Guardian.

Sukhdev, head of the UN Environment Program's green economy initiative, also appealed for nature to be regarded "not as something to be vanquished, conquered, but rather something to be cherished and lived within".


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Oil Spill to Wipe Out Gulf's Sperm Whales?

Just three dead whales could push the Gulf population over the edge, experts say.
Ker Than, National Geographic News 21 May 10;

If the Gulf of Mexico oil spill kills just three sperm whales, it could seriously endanger the long-term survival of the Gulf's native whale population, scientists say.

Right now between 1,400 and 1,660 sperm whales live year-round in the Gulf of Mexico, making up a distinct population from other Atlantic Ocean groups, in which males make yearly migrations.

All sperm whales are considered endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. But the Gulf of Mexico population is thought to be especially vulnerable due to its relatively small size.

The whales are now at risk from the ongoing Deepwater Horizon oil spill, because they are likely to ingest or inhale toxic crude and noxious oil fumes.

"We know there's going to be some [oil] exposure, and we know there's an endangered species. If you put those two thing together, there is reason for concern," said Celine Godard-Codding, an environmental toxicologist at Texas Tech University.

A 2009 stock assessment report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) estimated that the potential biological removal, or PBR, level for the Gulf of Mexico sperm whale population is three.

That means the whales' long-term survival is at risk if, in addition to natural deaths, three sperm whales a year are killed or removed by human causes.

The loss of a handful of whales each year can impact a population of hundreds, because sperm whales—especially females—require a very long time to reach sexual maturity. Females then give birth to just three or four calves during their entire lifetimes.

"They're like humans. Most of the human population is not going to have six kids at once and do that every year," Godard-Codding said.

"As soon as we get to the level of three deaths caused by human interaction—and this would include the oil spill—that would jeopardize that particular sperm whale population."

Whales May Be Choked, Drowned, and Poisoned

Oil spills can affect sperm whales and other cetaceans, including dolphins, in a number of ways.

For starters, the marine mammals have to surface to breathe, and if they come up through an oil slick, they can suck the toxic substance into their lungs.

Also, the fumes on the surface of the water after a recent spill can be powerful enough to knock out full-grown whales, causing them to drown.

Finally, the oil can taint the toothed whales' prey—fish and squid—affecting the whales' diets and hurting their chances of raising healthy calves.

"The chemicals in the oil product that move up through the food web are a great concern for us," said Teri Rowles, coordinator of NOAA's marine-mammal health and stranding response program.

Previous studies have shown that at least some of the Gulf of Mexico sperm whales are known to hang around where the Deepwater Horizon oil rig was located before it exploded on April 20, triggering the spill.

"Between 2000 and 2005, about 300 [sperm] whales were seen on a consistent basis right in that area," Texas Tech's Godard-Codding said.

Dead Gulf Sperm Whales Hard to Tally

Some experts worry that the Gulf oil spill could be as damaging to sperm whales as the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill was to killer whales in Alaska's Prince William Sound.

After the Exxon Valdez disaster, some populations of killer whales were reduced by as much as 40 percent, according to a 2008 study led by marine biologist Craig Matkin of the North Gulf Oceanic Society in Alaska.

Even now, that killer whale population has yet to recover and will likely go extinct in a few decades, Matkin said.

"We lost so many females out of that group that they couldn't catch up again. They still haven't caught up," he said.

If the current oil spill causes more than three Gulf sperm whale deaths this year, it could push that group into the "red zone," Matkin said.

Whether marine mammals are being affected by the Gulf oil spill is unclear. Oil is a suspected factor in the stranding of several coastal bottlenose dolphins (picture), but a firm link has yet to be established, NOAA's Rowles said.

"Deep-diving whales, like sperm whales living away from the shore"—and thus closer to the main body of the oil slick—"certainly have been exposed," she added.

Finding dead or affected whales will be difficult, however, because the animals spend most of their time underwater, and their bodies do not often wash ashore.

"In the aerial surveys that are being performed as part of the cleanup and marine-mammal observations, we are requesting that people report dead floating whales," Rowles said.

"That would be the most likely way we would detect dead sperm whales."


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Polluted by profit: Johann Hari on the real Climategate

The Independent 21 May 10;

Global warming - and the worst environmental disasters - will only be tackled when green lobbyists in the US stop taking cash from Big Oil and Big Coal

Why did America's leading environmental groups jet to Copenhagen to lobby for policies that will lead to the faster death of the rainforests – and runaway global warming? Why are their staff dismissing the only real solutions to climate change as "unworkable" and "unrealistic"? Why are they clambering into corporate "partnerships" with BP, which is responsible for the worst oil spill in living memory?

At first glance, these questions will seem bizarre. Groups such as Conservation International (CI) and the Nature Conservancy (TNC) are among the most trusted "brands" in the world, pledged to protect and defend nature. Yet as we confront the biggest ecological crisis in human history, many of the green organisations meant to be leading the fight are busy shovelling up hard cash from the world's worst polluters – and simultaneously burying science-based environmentalism. In the middle of a swirl of bogus climate scandals trumped up by deniers, here is the real Climategate, waiting to be exposed.

I have spent the past few years reporting on how global warming is remaking the map of the world. I have stood in half-dead villages on the coast of Bangladesh while families point to a distant place in the rising ocean and say, "Do you see that chimney sticking up? That's where my house was... I had to [abandon it] six months ago." I have stood on the edges of the Arctic and watched glaciers that have existed for millennia crash into the sea. I have stood on the borders of dried-out Darfur and heard refugees explain, "The water dried up, and so we started to kill each other for what was left." While I witnessed these early stages of ecocide, I imagined that American green groups were on these people's side in the corridors of Capitol Hill, trying to stop the Weather of Mass Destruction. But it is now clear that many were on a different path – one that began in the 1980s, with a financial donation.

US environmental groups used to be funded largely by their members and wealthy individual supporters. They had only one goal: to prevent environmental destruction. Their funds were small, but they played a crucial role in saving vast tracts of wilderness and in pushing into law strict rules forbidding air and water pollution. But Jay Hair – the president of the National Wildlife Federation from 1981 to 1995 – was dissatisfied. He identified a huge new source of revenue: the worst polluters.

Hair found that the big oil and gas companies were happy to give money to conservation groups. Yes, they were destroying many of the world's pristine places. Yes, by the late 1980s, it had become clear that they were dramatically destabilising the climate – the very basis of life itself. But for Hair, that didn't make them the enemy; he said they sincerely wanted to right their wrongs and pay to preserve the environment. He began to suck millions from them, and his organisation and others gave them awards for "environmental stewardship". Companies such as Shell and BP were delighted. They saw it as valuable "reputation insurance": every time they are criticised for their massive emissions of warming gases, or for events such as the massive oil spill that has just turned the Gulf of Mexico into the "Gulf of Texaco", they wheel out their shiny green awards to ward off the prospect of government regulation and to reassure the public that they Really Care.

At first, this behaviour scandalised the environmental community. Hair was vehemently condemned as a sell-out and a charlatan. But slowly, the other groups saw themselves shrink while the corporate-fattened groups swelled – so they, too, started to take the cheques. Christine MacDonald, an idealistic young environmentalist, discovered how deeply this cash had transformed these institutions when she started to work for CI in 2006. She told me: "About a week or two after I started, I went to the big planning meeting of all the organisation's media teams, and they started talking about this supposedly great new project they were running with BP. But I had read in the newspaper the day before that the EPA [Environmental Protection Agency] had condemned BP for running the most polluting plant in the whole country... But nobody in that meeting, or anywhere else in the organisation, wanted to talk about it. It was a taboo. You weren't supposed to ask if BP was really green. They were 'helping' us, and that was it."

She soon began to see how this behaviour had pervaded almost all of the mainstream green organisations. They take money, and they offer praise, even when the money comes from the companies causing environmental devastation. To take just one example, when it was revealed that many of Ikea's dining room sets were made from trees ripped from endangered forests, the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) leapt to the company's defence, saying that Ikea "can never guarantee" this won't happen; many environmental groups strongly disagree. Is it a coincidence that the WWF is a "marketing partner" with Ikea, and takes cash from the company?

Likewise, the Sierra Club – the biggest green group in the US – was approached in 2008 by the makers of Clorox bleach, who said that if the club endorsed their new range of "green" household cleaners, they would give it a percentage of the sales. The club's Corporate Accountability Committee said the deal created a blatant conflict of interest – but took it anyway. But Jessica Frohman, the club's Toxics Committee co-chair, said, "We clearly corrected the record. We never approved the product line." Beyond asking a few questions, she has said, the committee had done nothing to confirm that the product line was greener than its competitors', or good for the environment in any way. The club's chairman, Carl Pope, says he made sure the products met the EPA's most stringent standards and spent four months reviewing them.

The green groups defend their behaviour by saying they are improving the behaviour of the corporations. But as these stories show, the pressure flows the other way: the addiction to corporate cash has changed the green groups at their core. As MacDonald says, "Not only do the largest conservation groups take money from companies deeply implicated in environmental crimes, they have become something like satellite PR offices for the corporations that support them."

It has taken two decades for this relationship to become the norm among the big green organisations. Imagine this happening in any other sphere, and it becomes clear how surreal it is. It is as though Amnesty International's human rights reports came sponsored by a coalition of the Burmese junta, Dick Cheney and Robert Mugabe. For environmental groups to take funding from the very people who are destroying the environment is preposterous – yet in the US it is now taken for granted.

This pattern was bad enough when it affected only a lousy household cleaning spray, or a single rare forest. But today, the stakes are unimaginably higher. We are living in a brief window of time in which we can still prevent runaway global warming. So you would expect the American conservation organisations to be joining the great activist upsurge demanding we stick to a safe level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere: 350 parts per million (ppm). And – in public, to their members – they often are supportive. On its website, the Sierra Club says: "If the level stays higher than 350ppm for a prolonged period of time, it will spell disaster for humanity as we know it."

But behind closed doors, they tried to stop this becoming law. In 2009, the EPA moved to regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act, which requires the agency to ensure that the levels of pollutants in the air are "compatible with human safety" – a change the Sierra Club supported. But the Center for Biological Diversity – an independent group that doesn't take polluter cash – petitioned the EPA to take this commitment seriously and do what the climate science says really is "compatible with human safety": restore us to 350ppm. Kieran Suckling, the executive director of the centre, explains: "I was amazed to discover the Sierra Club opposed us bitterly. They said it should not be done. In fact, they said that if we filed a lawsuit to make EPA do it, they would probably intervene on EPA's side. They threw climate science out the window."

Why would the Sierra Club oppose a measure designed to prevent environmental collapse? Pope says that "while there are legitimate disagreements between lawyers about the best legal strategies to cut carbon emissions, we have always supported the deepest emission cuts and the need to convert to a new clean-energy economy." But climate scientists are bemused by this claim. Professor James Hansen – the world's most distinguished climate scientist – says: "I find the behaviour of most environmental NGOs to be shocking... I [do] not want to listen to their lame excuses for their abominable behaviour."

It seems the US "green" groups have come to see the world solely through the funnel of the US Senate and what legislation it can be immediately coaxed to pass. They say there is no point advocating a strategy that senators will reject flat out and urge environmentalists to be "politically realistic". This focus on inch-by-inch reform would normally be understandable: every movement for change needs a reformist wing.

But with global warming, this approach doesn't make sense, because of the existence of "tipping points" in the climate. If the artificial temperature rise is pushed beyond two degrees, the earth's natural stores of carbon will break down – and be released into the atmosphere. The huge amounts of methane stored in the Arctic permafrost are belched into the atmosphere, causing more warming. The moist rainforests begin to dry out and burn down, releasing all the carbon they store into the air, and causing more warming. They mark the Point of No Return. After that, any cuts we introduce will be useless. You can't compromise with the atmosphere.

By definition, if a bill can pass through today's corrupt Senate, then it will not be enough to prevent catastrophic global warming. Why? Because the bulk of the Senate – including many Democrats – is owned by Big Oil and Big Coal. They call the shots with their campaign donations. Senators will not defy their benefactors. So if the green groups call only for measures the Senate could pass tomorrow, you are in effect giving a veto over the position of environmentalists to the fossil fuel industry.

Yet the "conservation" groups in particular believe they are being hard-headed in adhering to the "political reality" that says only cuts far short of the climate science are possible. They don't seem to realise that in a conflict between political reality and physical reality, physical reality will prevail. The laws of physics are more real and permanent than any passing political system. You can't stand at the edge of a rising sea and say, "Sorry, the swing states don't want you to happen today. Come back in 50 years."

At Copenhagen, this process reached a startling climax. Some of the US conservation groups demanded a course of action that will lead to environmental disaster faster. It's a complex story, but the stakes are so high that it's worth smacking through the acronyms and loopholes.

It begins with one crucial loophole. When the presidents and prime ministers stand up and say they are going to cut their emissions, it sounds to anyone listening as if they are going to ensure that there are fewer coal stations and many more renewable energy stations at home. So when Barack Obama says there will be a 3 per cent cut by 2020 – a tenth of what the science requires – you assume the United States will emit 3 per cent less warming gases. But that's not how it works. Instead, they are saying they will trawl across the world to find the cheapest place to cut emissions, and pay for it to happen there. Today, the chopping-down of the world's forests is causing 12 per cent of all emissions of greenhouse gases, because trees store carbon dioxide. So the rich governments say that if they pay to stop some of that, they can claim it as part of their cuts. A programme called Redd – Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation – has been set up to do just that by the United Nations, and it is expected to be at the core of a global deal when – if – one ever arrives.

In theory, it sounds fine. The atmosphere doesn't care where the fall in emissions comes from, as long as it happens in time to stop runaway warming. A ton of carbon in Brazil enters the atmosphere just as surely as a ton in Texas. But if this argument sounds deceptively simple, that's because it is deceptive. In practice, the Redd programme is filled with holes large enough to toss a planet through.

To understand the trouble with Redd, you have to look at the place touted as a model of how the system is supposed to work. Fourteen years ago in Bolivia, a coalition of the Nature Conservancy and three big-time corporate polluters – BP, PacifiCorp and American Electric Power (AEP) – set up a protected forest in Bolivia called the Noel Kempff Climate Action Project. They took 3.9 million acres of tropical forest and said they would clear out the logging companies and ensure that the forest remained standing. They claimed this plan would keep 55 million tons of CO2 locked out of the air – which would, in time, justify their pumping an extra 55 million tons into the air from their coal and oil operations. AEP's internal documents boasted: "The Bolivian project... could save AEP billions of dollars in pollution controls."

Greenpeace sent an investigative team to see how it had turned out. They found that some of the logging companies had simply picked up their machinery and moved to the next rainforest over. An employee for one of the biggest logging companies in the area bragged to them that nobody had ever asked if they had stopped. This is known as "leakage": one area is protected from logging, but the logging leaks a few miles away and continues just the same. In fact, one major logging organisation took the money it was paid by the project to quit and used it to cut down another part of the forest. The project had to admit it had saved 5.8 million tons or less – a tenth of the amount it had originally claimed. Greenpeace says even this is a huge overestimate. It's a Potemkin forest for the polluters.

When you claim an offset and it doesn't work, the climate is screwed twice over – first because the same amount of forest has been cut down after all, and second because a huge amount of additional warming gases has been pumped into the atmosphere on the assumption that the gases will be locked away by the now-dead trees. So the offset hasn't prevented emissions – it's doubled them. And as global warming increases, even the small patches of rainforest that have technically been preserved are doomed. Why? Rainforests have a very delicate humid ecosystem, and their moisture smothers any fire that breaks out, but with two degrees of warming, they begin to dry out – and burn down. The climatologist Wolfgang Cramer says we "risk losing the entire Amazon" if global warming reaches four degrees.

And the news gets worse. Carbon dioxide pumped out of a coal power station stays in the atmosphere for millennia – so to "offset" it genuinely, you have to guarantee that a forest will stand for the same amount of time. This would be like Julius Caesar in 44BC making commitments about what Barack Obama will do today – and what some unimaginable world leader will do in 6010. In practice, we can't even guarantee that the forests will still be standing in 50 years, given the very serious risk of runaway warming.

If their primary concern was the environment, the major conservation groups would be railing against this absurd system and demanding a serious alternative. But on Capitol Hill and at Copenhagen, these groups have been some of the most passionate defenders of carbon offsetting. They say that, in "political reality", this is the only way to raise the cash for the rainforests, so we will have to work with it. But this is a strange kind of compromise – since it doesn't actually work.

In fact, some of the big groups lobbied to make the protections weaker, in a way that will cause the rainforests to die faster. To understand why, you have to grasp a distinction that may sound technical at first but is crucial. When you are paying to stop deforestation, there are different ways of measuring whether you are succeeding. You can take one small "subnational" area – such as the Noel Kempff Climate Action Project – and save that. Or you can look at an entire country, and try to save a reasonable proportion of its forests. National targets are much better, because the leakage is much lower. With national targets, it's much harder for a logging company simply to move a few miles up the road and carry on: the move from Brazil to Congo or Indonesia is much heftier, and fewer loggers will make it. Simon Lewis, a forestry expert at Leeds University, says: "There is no question that national targets are much more effective at preventing leakage and saving forest."

Yet several groups – such as TNC and CI – have lobbied for the weaker, lamer, worthless subnational targets to be at the core of Redd and the US climate bills. Thanks in part to their efforts, this has become official US government policy. The groups issued a joint statement with some of the worst polluters – AEP, Duke Energy, the El Paso Corporation – calling for them.

An insider who is employed by a leading green group and has seen firsthand how this works told me: "They will generate a lot of revenue this way. If there are national targets, the money runs through national governments. If there are subnational targets, the money runs through the people who control those forests – and that means TNC, Conservation International and the rest. Suddenly, these forests they run become assets, and they are worth billions in a carbon market as offsets. So they have a vested financial interest in offsetting and in subnational targets – even though they are much more environmentally damaging than the alternatives. It's shocking."

Becky Chacko, the director of climate policy at CI, tells me these subnational targets are only a first step, and they will support national targets in time. "Our only interest is to keep forests standing. We don't [take this position] because it generates revenue for us. We don't think it's an evil position to say money has to flow in order to keep forests standing, and these market mechanisms can contribute the money for that." Yet when I ask her to explain how Conservation International justifies the conceptual holes in the entire system of offsetting, her answers become halting. She says the "issues of leakage and permanence" have been "resolved". But she does not say how. How can you guarantee a forest will stand for millennia, to offset carbon emissions that warm the planet for millennia? "We factor that risk into our calculations," she says mysteriously. She will concede that national accounting is "more rigorous" and says Conservation International supports achieving it "eventually".

There is a broad rumble of anger across the grass-roots environmental movement at this position. "At Copenhagen, I couldn't believe what I was seeing," says Kevin Koenig of Amazon Watch, an organisation that sides with indigenous peoples in the Amazon basin to preserve their land. "These groups are positioning themselves to be the middlemen in a carbon market. They are helping to set up, in effect, a global system of carbon laundering... that will give the impression of action, but no substance. You have to ask – are these conservation groups at all? They look much more like industry front groups to me."

So it has come to this. After decades of slowly creeping corporate entanglement, some of the biggest environmental groups have remade themselves in the image of their corporate backers: they are putting profit before planet. They are supporting a system that will lead to ecocide, yet where more revenue will run through their accounts, for a while, as the collapse occurs. At Copenhagen, their behaviour was so shocking that Lumumba Di-Aping, the lead negotiator for the G77 bloc of the world's rainforest-rich but cash-poor countries, compared them to the CIA at the height of the Cold War, sabotaging whole nations.

How do we retrieve a real environmental movement, in the very short time we have left before the damage is irreparable? Charles Komanoff, who worked as a consultant for the Natural Resources Defense Council for 30 years, says: "We're close to a civil war in the environmental movement. For too long, all the oxygen in the room has been sucked out by this beast of these insider groups, who achieve almost nothing... We need to create new organisations that represent the fundamentals of environmentalism and have real goals."

Some of the failing green groups can be reformed from within. The Sierra Club is a democratic organisation, with the leadership appointed by its members: they can put it right. But other organisations – such as CI and TNC – seem incapable of internal reform and simply need to be shunned. They are not part of the environmental movement. They are polluter-funded leeches sucking on the flesh of environmentalism, leaving it weaker and depleted. Already, shining alternatives are starting to rise up across America. In just a year, the brilliant 350.org has formed a huge network of enthusiastic activists who are demanding our politicians heed the real scientific advice – not the parody of it offered by the corporate greens. They have to displace the contaminated conservationists as the voice of American environmentalism, fast.

This will be a difficult and ugly fight, when greens need all our energy to take on the forces of ecocide. But these conservation groups increasingly resemble the forces of ecocide draped in a green cloak. If they don't build a real, unwavering environmental movement soon, we had better get used to a new sound – of trees crashing down and an ocean rising, accompanied by the muffled ringing till of America's "conservationists".

A version of this article appeared originally in The Nation, America's best-selling political magazine. To read more of their articles, go to www.thenation.com


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