Best of our wild blogs: 1 Jun 10


Singapore Oil Spill - Chek Jawa CleanUp - 29May2010
from sgbeachbum

Chek Jawa, 31 May 2010: Post Oil Spill Report
from Flying Fish Friends

Chek Jawa on 1st Jun 2010
from Manta Blog

Nature lovers band together amidst oil spill tragedy
from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Oill spill updates: Shore lovers checking up on our shores
from wild shores of singapore

Toddycats reports from Operation No Release 2010
from Toddycats!

Banded stomatopod at Changi
from Singapore Nature and Ant mimic mantis nymph and Upper Seletar

Web on wing
from The annotated budak

Raffles Museum Treasures: Lamp shell
from Lazy Lizard's Tales

Discovering the forgotten bears of Asia
Singapore volunteers blog from the Bornean Sun Bear Conservation Centre from Habitatnews

Asian Glossy Starling feasts on fruits of MacArthur palm
from Bird Ecology Study Group

International Year of Biodiversity - 2010
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Climate Witness: Pak Azhar, Indonesia
from WWF - Climate Witness stories


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Cambodia's trade with Singapore rose 84pc due to sand exports

May Kunmakara Phnom Penh Post 1 Jun 10;

Sand accounts for increase despite ban on exports from Kingdom, official says

BILATERAL trade between Cambodia and Singapore increased 84 percent in 2009, driven by sand exports from the Kingdom, a Ministry of Commerce official (MoC) said on Monday, despite a government ban on sand dredging for export since May last year.

MoC figures show Cambodia-Singapore bilateral trade hit US$1.18 billion in 2009, up from $640.4 million in 2008.

Singapore’s exports to Cambodia rose 41 percent to $740.9 million from $523.95 million, while Cambodia’s exports to Singapore shot up 275 percent to $438.2 million from $117 million.

MoC Secretary of State Chan Nora said sand was the likely source of the significant increase in Cambodia’s exports.

“I think the growth of our exports to Singapore last year was probably because of the export of sand,” he said.

He declined to comment, however, on the ban on sand exports issued by Prime Minister Hun Sen last year, saying it should be referred to the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy or the Ministry of Water Resource and Meteorology.

Hun Sen conditionally banned sand exports in May last year and reiterated the order in July, citing the “destructive impact” on the country’s river and coastal ecosystems.

Spokespeople from neither the Industry Ministry or the Ministry of Water Resources could be contacted for comment on Monday.

Chan Nora said another factor behind the growth was the city-state’s re-export practices – bringing raw materials to Cambodia from Singapore for refinement, and returning them to Singapore.

Cambodia Chamber of Commerce President Nguon Meng Tech agreed re-exporting was a key factor, saying Cambodia benefited from Singapore’s financial strength.

“Singapore is very strong in management and especially good at seeking out foreign markets,” he said.

“I did not see any Singaporean factories close during the crisis last year while others shut down – that’s why our trade rose.” He said most Singaporean investment in the country was through the garment industry, and that Cambodia can rely on the island state more to take its products to foreign markets.

Apart from Singapore, almost all bilateral trade between Cambodia and its Asian neighbours fell during 2009 compared to 2008. Hong Kong, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and South Korea all saw trade with the Kingdom decrease. Laos rose 4 percent.

The MoC said Singapore’s main exports to the Kingdom last year included unwrought gold, diesel, petrol, alcohol, non-industrial diamonds and electronic goods, while Cambodia’s main exports were natural sand, semi-manufactured and unwrought gold, cigarettes, silk, silica and quartz sand, and woven materials, including clothes.

Environmental watchdog Global Witness released a report on May 5 citing Singapore’s appetite for sand as fuelling a “corrupt and environmentally disastrous” industry that had damaged Cambodian fish stocks and threatened long-term damage to its riverine and marine ecosystems.

It estimated about 796,000 tonnes of sand was removed each month from Koh Kong province, the epicentre of a sand trade worth an estimated $248 million annually in Singapore.


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What if the oil spill here was really big?

Richard Hartung Today Online 1 Jun 10;

"There is no cause for alarm," the National Environment Agency (NEA) said right after the recent oil spill, and reassuring statements continued to flow in. The NEA said it didn't detect any toxic chemicals in the air, even as fumes wafted across the East Coast. PUB said the nation's water supply was safe, since "the outlet drains are all not linked to any reservoirs".

Right after the accident, the Maritime and Port Authority (MPA) deployed about 20 vessels to contain or break up the slick and set out over 1.5 kilometres of containment booms. NEA mobilised more than 200 workers to clean up the spill. Even though the collision occurred 13km off the Singapore coast, and despite all these activities, oil advanced steadily to the East Coast, to Chek Jawa and towards the Malaysian shoreline. Photos showed tiny booms trying to keep oil from hitting beaches or canals, people fishing between patches of oil and children playing amidst oil on the beach. Volunteers from the Animal Concerns Research and Education Society (Acres) battled to save animals covered in oil. The Star in Malaysia reported that more than 1,000 fishermen couldn't go out to sea.

Large as the oil spill may seem, it was actually a relatively small 2,500 tonnes. It is just a fraction of the more than 28,000 tonnes spilled when two tankers collided off southern Singapore in 1997. The ship that spilled the oil this time was reportedly carrying 62,000 tonnes, and the SPC refinery can handle ships up to 105,000 tonnes. A key concern is whether Singapore is sufficiently prepared to deal with a larger spill.

A natural tendency is to assume preparations are sufficient and, indeed, contingency plans are in place. There's a "Standard Operating Procedure for Joint Oil Spill Combat in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore," intended to coordinate actions to control spills. ChemSpill exercises, designed to test preparedness for dealing with oil spills, used a scenario in 2007 where "more than 100 tonnes of chemicals were spilled into the sea" and another scenario in a morning-long exercise in 2009 tested "a collision between an oil tanker and a chemical tanker".

While the preparations are good, there's little evidence of capabilities to deal with spills larger than 30,000 tonnes. The International Tanker Owners Pollution Federation, which has an MOU with MPA, noted in its report on preparedness that the largest spill in Singapore was 28,500 tonnes. Similarly, the 2009 Blue Plan presented to the Environment Minister also focused on the 1997 spill.

It's altogether too easy to assume the best. With the recent spill being just a tenth the size of the one in 1997, and double-hulled ships having stronger protection against collisions, the likelihood of a major catastrophe may seem low. Yet, just look at what happened in the Gulf of Mexico. BP believed it was "virtually impossible" for an accident to occur. The United States government took almost a week to call the problem a disaster, and there haven't been nearly enough trained ships or crew to contain the oil.

Cleaning up a large oil spill takes lots of preparation and fast work to contain and disperse or recover the oil. Containment means deploying barriers called booms to keep the oil within a limited area. Skimmer boats pick up the oil from the surface and sorbents soak it up for later recovery. Dispersants break down oil so it can be absorbed into the water system, though this broken-down oil can be hazardous to marine life.

Taking all these steps means it's necessary to have tens of kilometres of booms, plenty of sorbents and vessels ready to deploy them. Oil needs to be kept away from desalination plant intakes, too. On the softer side, it means having the resources ready to detect tiny particles in the air, keeping people from going into polluted water and cleaning up both the shoreline and animals. It's similar to having enough fire trucks ready and waiting. If the oil spill or fire doesn't occur, it's good news. If it does happen, you're prepared.

Oil refining remains a big business in Singapore, and accidents can happen. Despite the activities to contain the current spill, oil has continued to spread. That spread could make it seem like preparations to handle big spills are insufficient. If enough measures are in place, publicising them could provide better reassurance. If not, it's better to learn a lesson from the current spill and get better prepared just in case a bigger one actually does happen.

The writer is a consultant who has lived in Singapore since 1992.


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Johor Malaysian Nature Society: "Contingency plans to contain the oil spill have failed"

This is a test case for Malaysia, says society
The Star 1 Jun 10;

JOHOR BARU: Contingency plans to contain the oil spill caused by the collision between two vessels at the Singapore Strait recently have failed as the spillage has reached the country’s shores, said Malaysian Nature Society Johor chairman Assoc Prof Dr Maketab Mohamed.

“This is a test for us as it involves 2,000 tonnes of crude oil. The relevant authorities need to study their containment methods and improve on them before something more serious occurs,” he said.

While the impact of the oil spill has yet to be known, many fishermen are affected and their livelihoods are at stake, he said.

He added that the local authorities should protect the interest of the people living around the area.

Dr Maketab also said the Tanjung Pengerang area was notorious for illegal oil dumping activities.

If left unresolved, water pollution due to oil spills and illegal oil dumping would have an adverse effect on marine life and fishermen, he said.

Two ships held for illegal oil transfer
The Star 1 Jun 10;

KOTA TINGGI: The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency has detained two foreign vessels for illegally transferring 200,000 litres of oil off the coast of Pengerang here.

Its Tanjung Sedili enforcement chief Abdul Hadib Abd Wahab said the case proved that the area was still a hot spot for illegal oil transfer activities.

“Many agencies are working hard to try and clear up the oil spill following the collision of two vessels at the Singapore Strait here last Monday. Activities like this will only worsen the situation.”

He said the two vessels from Sierra Leone and Hong Kong were spotted at around 1.15pm about 2.1 nautical miles off Tanjung Ayam yesterday.

They were found transferring 200,000 litres of Marine Fuel Oil without proper permits.

“We have since confiscated the identification documents of the 33 crew members on board both the vessels,” he said, adding that the crewmen were between 22 and 64 years old.

Abdul Hadib added that 23 crewmen were from China while the other 10 were from Indonesia.

33 held over transfer of fuel
New Straits Times 31 May 10;

JOHOR BARU: Pengerang waters still remain a hot spot for illegal ship-to-ship activity even though security has been beefed up in the area.

Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) officers detained 33 crew members aged between 22 and 63, from two foreign-registered ships, after they were suspected to have transferred fuel from one ship to the other 2.1 nautical miles southwest off Tanjung Ayam yesterday.

During a routine patrol, KM Manjung, headed by Tanjung Sedili district commander Abdul Hadib Wahab, spotted MT Austin II and SC Dalian anchored close to one another about 1pm.


Investigations revealed that 200,000 litres of marine fuel was being transferred illegally from the Sierra Leone-registered vessel MT Austin II to SC Dalian which was registered in Hong Kong.

Both boat captains, however, were unable to provide valid documentation to conduct ship-to-ship fuel transfers.


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Oil spill off Changi East: Malaysian reports

Oil Spill In Pengerang Affects Tourist Resort
Bernama 1 Jun 10;

KOTA TINGGI, May 31 (Bernama) -- The oil spill in Pengerang waters and on its beaches as a result of a collision between two vessels last Tuesday, has not only affected the livelihood of fishermen but also business at a beach resort in the area.

Tanjung Kapal Beach Resort marketing manager, Nazaruddin Nasir, 30, said the oil spill had resulted in the cancellation of more than half of the bookings for rooms at the resort.

"We received a lot of bookings for a two-night stay beginning last Friday but most of the bookings were cancelled after news of the oil spill spread," he lamented when met at the resort, which opened for business in 2006 and has 19 guest rooms.

The resort is popular with locals and Singaporeans, as well as for school children's holiday camps.

Nazaruddin said the oil slick which reached the beach last Friday gave out a foul smell and caused throat irritation.

Meanwhile, cleaning work was seen being carried out in the Sungai Rengit area involving government agencies like the Southern Region Marine Department, and the private sector.

Its Operations Unit chief Zulkarnain Karim said 71 staff of the department were involved in the cleaning work from morning until 5pm, but this evening it stalled due to heavy rain and high tide.

The Department of Environment in a statement said to date, 2,680 bags of sand with oil slick and 18,911 litres of oil had been collected in the clean-up.

"The oil spill has polluted 16 kilometres of beach area, but 8.5 km have been cleaned up by 230 volunteers," it said.

The areas being cleaned up are Tanjung Pengelih-Tanjung Stapa, Tanjung Stapa-Tanjung Kapal, Tanjung Kapal-Tanjung Datuk, Tanjung Datuk-Tanjung Bulat and Teluk Ramunia-Tanjung Menyusup.

Last Tuesday, the MV Waily, registered in Kingstown, Saint Vincent and The Grenadines, was on its way to Hong Kong when it collided with MT Bunga Kelana 3, registered in Port Klang and carrying 61,858 tonnes of crude oil, causing 2,000 tonnes of the oil to spill.

The incident happened four nautical miles south-west of Tanjung Stapa, Pengerang and 3.7 nautical miles from Singapore waters.

-- BERNAMA

Oil Spill Causes Minimal Damage To Malaysian Shore
Bernama 1 Jun 10;

KUCHING, June 1 (Bernama) -- An oil spill in the waters off Pengerang, Johor from the collision between two vessels in the Singapore Strait last Tuesday caused only minimal damage to the Malaysian shore.

Natural Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Seri Douglas Uggah Embas said most of the spill was carried by waves to the Singaporean waters.

Malaysia and Singapore adopt a standard operating procedure in dealing with the oil spill crisis, he told reporters who visited him at his residence in conjunction with the Gawai Dayak celebration here Tuesday.

He said a clean-up operation was carried out at the affected areas by about 200 people, including those hired by the vessels' owners.

The collision between a Malaysian-registered tanker, MT Bunga Kelana 3, and a bulk carrier in the Singapore Strait, occurred four nautical miles southwest of Tanjung Stapa, Pengerang and 3.7 nautical miles from Singapore.

The master of the tanker estimated that 2,000 tonnes of crude oil could have spilled into the sea from the collision.

-- BERNAMA

16km of shoreline polluted
The Star 1 Jun 10;

PENGERANG: The Department of Environment estimates that 16km of shoreline have been polluted by the oil spill from the collision of two vessels in the Singapore Strait.

DOE director-general Datuk Ros-nani Ibarahim said clean-up efforts were in progress and over 18,911 litres of oil had been collected so far.

Clean-up activities were going on along the shoreline of Tg Pengelih, Tg Stapa, Tg Kapal, Tg Datuk, Tg Bulat, Teluk Ramunia and Tg Menyusup, she said in a statement yesterday.

“A total of 230 people are involved in these operations and we will be recruiting more people to help accelerate the work,” she said.

The owner of the Malaysian vessel involved in the collision too has hired fishermen to help in the clean-up.

Volunteers from the villages were also helping to clean up the shores and they have been advised to use proper safety gear.

Rosnani said that the Southern Region Marine Department was monitoring the movement of the oil slick.

Members of the public can contact the DOE hotline at 1800-88-2727 if they have any information on the oil slick.

Meanwhile, in Kota Tinggi, the owner of the Malaysian vessel has also agreed to compensate the fishermen who were forced to stop fishing activities.

Pengerang Fisherman Association chairman Abu Bakar Mohammad said a meeting with relevant authorities, including the vessel owner, was held yesterday to discuss the compensation.

“We do not know the exact amount that we will be paid,” he said. “We have been told that all the fishermen would be interviewed individually by the insurance company to determine the losses in-curred,” he added.

Abu Bakar said deep-sea fishermen in the area earned between RM500 and RM1,000 a day while fishermen who conducted activities closer to the shoreline earned bet-ween RM80 and RM500 a day.

He said the DOE had informed the fishermen that they would likely be allowed to begin fishing again within the next three days.

At least 1,400 fishermen have been affected by the spill.

Oil spill causes health worries
Austin Camoens, The Star 1 Jun 10;

KOTA TINGGI: Villagers here are worried about their health and have stopped their children from going to the beach following an oil spill which has polluted the coastline of Pengerang here.

Some villagers who live near the coast had experienced nausea and had to bear with the pungent odour of oil for the past six days.

Housewife Latipah Abdul Jalil, 49, said that the odour was overpowering but there was very little that could be done.

The mother of four said this was the first time she had experienced such an occurrence and was worried as the oil spill had affected most of the surrounding area.

“I have already told my two youngest children to stay away from the beach.

“I do not want them to fall ill from exposure to the oil spill,” she said at Tanjung Ayam yesterday.

Another housewife, Junaidah Pajar, 30, echoed Latipah’s sentiment, saying that she also told her two children not to go to the beach for at least two weeks.

“I don’t want them to play in the polluted area. Who knows what kind of infection or illness they might catch.”

Junaidah added that she came to Tanjung Ayam to assist in the clean-up of the beach so that life in the town would be restored to normal.

Meanwhile, Kampung Lepau village head Mat Tahir Hanati, 59, said that many villagers had come to him with concerns about the oil spill.

“We have more than 300 villagers here and many are fishermen,” he said, adding that most of them had not gone out to sea for a week.

He said many villagers complained about the bad odour while others, especially the fishermen, had express-ed concern about their livelihood.


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Oil spill off Changi East: Singapore reports

Some Singapore and Malaysian fisherman not going out to sea as they fear oil will ruin nets
Jessica Lim & Melissa Kok Straits Times 1 Jun 10;


Singapore fisherman Lim Chee Pew (above), 39, making a new net yesterday. He said the recent oil spill has not stopped him from going out to sea, although some fishermen have decided not to work rather than risk damaging their nets. -- ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM

THE worst may be over, but fishermen on both sides of the Causeway say they are not out of troubled waters just yet.

While much of last Tuesday's oil spill off Changi has been cleared, patches of the slick remain out at sea and could still be washed onto Singapore's eastern coast over the next few days.

Therefore, fishermen like Mr Ivan Foo, 57, will continue to wait it out, despite not going out to sea for the past five days.

The father of three estimates that the oil spill has cost him more than $600 in potential earnings. But despite the lack of income, he is not about to go back to work.

'The water in the Pulau Ubin area is still black and patchy. I dare not put the net down in the water, the oil will spoil it,' said Mr Foo, who added that the oil will harden and possibly damage his net, which cost him more than $1,000.

Fisherman Yeo Miang Joo, 50, is playing it safe too.

'The oil will make my net stick together,' he said, adding that he is keeping a lookout and hopes to start fishing in two days.

'It is better to be safe. If my net cannot be used anymore, who will compensate me?'

According to the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA), there are currently 38 licensed coastal fishermen in Singapore who contribute 10 per cent of locally produced fish.

The rest comes from fish farms - although locally produced fish make up only about 5 per cent of the total amount of fish consumed in Singapore.

But while fishermen remain cautious, the AVA said yesterday that it has not suspended the harvesting of fish from the sea.

'The oil patches that remain are small ones,' said its spokesman Goh Shih Yong. 'Fishermen are encouraged to continue fishing and avoid those oil patches.'

The AVA said checks show that both farmed and fresh fish in Singapore are safe for consumption, and it has intensified checks of the coastal waters and fish for food safety.

Malaysian fishermen are just as concerned as their Singapore counterparts.

Pengerang Fishermen's Association president Abu Bakar Mohammad said the oil spill, which hit the area stretching from Tanjung Pengelih in Johor to Desaru, has affected more than 1,200 fishermen. Tanjung Pengelih, located near Changi and Pulau Tekong, is close to the Singapore-Malaysia border.

Many fishermen have not been able to work since last Tuesday, with some reportedly losing as much as RM2,000 (S$850) in earnings per day.

However, a process has been put in place for fishermen seeking compensation for lost earnings.

'The fishermen can first make a police report, and the association will liaise with the fishery department involved to arrange meetings to discuss an agreement on compensation,' said Mr Abu Bakar in Malay.

Still, it may take about a month before they see any results, which is why Mr Abu Bakar is considering asking the Malaysian government to help the affected fishermen in the meantime. He added that the fishermen could soon go back to work as the oil slick should be cleaned up in two to three days.

But some fishermen have questioned whether their colleagues are overreacting.

Singapore fisherman Lim Chee Pew, 39, said the oil spill has yet to force him to stop fishing.

'If you see black stuff floating on the surface, just avoid it,' he said, scoffing at the possibility of a spoiled net. 'What is so difficult?'

The spill occurred after oil tanker MT Bunga Kelana 3, laden with 62,000 tonnes of crude oil, collided with bulk carrier MV Waily early on Tuesday morning, 13km off Changi East.

About 2,500 tonnes of oil leaked into the sea, causing a 4 sq km slick as the tanker moved to anchor in a safe place.

Containment and clean-up efforts continue to show positive results, said the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) in a statement issued yesterday. As of yesterday, waters from Changi Naval Base to East Coast Park were clear of any oil patches. The National Environment Agency also reported that East Coast Beach and Changi Beach have been cleared of oil stains.

'The possibility of small isolated patches of oil with debris surfacing remains,' said a spokesman, who added that the MPA will continue to monitor the waters closely and carry out the necessary clean-up efforts. 'The various craft involved in the containment and clean-up efforts remain deployed at sea round the clock to deal with any oil patches that may surface.

Fish farms prepared to run tests to ease oil contamination fears
Jessica Yeo & Ng Lian Cheong Channel NewsAsia 31 May 10;

SINGAPORE : Eight local fish farms said they are prepared to fork out their own money to conduct tests on their products to prove that their seafood is safe for consumption.

According to a researcher from the National University of Singapore, some locally-produced and locally-caught seafood may be affected due to the oil spill following the collision of two vessels last Tuesday.

Her advice is to eat less locally-produced seafood over the next two weeks.

"Within the two weeks of the spill, the contaminated seawater may still be pushed back to Singapore waters. Although they will be removed over time, there may still be residual oil. This may contaminate fishes from the kelongs or those caught by fishermen," said Dr Ng Ngan Kee, an instructor of Systematics & Ecology Laboratory at National University of Singapore.

Fish farmers disagree, and are willing to put their fish to the test.

"If there are such concerns, then we can send the fish for a third-party independent lab to do an autopsy and a full analysis to look for any chemical residue. For the consumers, they'll have a peace of mind when they eat the fish," said Lee Van Voon, chairman of the Singapore Marine Aquaculture Cooperative.

MediaCorp understands that fish farms have stopped feeding their fishes since the oil slick last Tuesday (25 May).

This prevents the fish from surfacing and consuming the oil stains.

Fish farmers said fishes can easily survive a week without food as they can survive on their own body fats. - CNA /ls '

No long weekend joy for East Coast businesses
Straits Times 1 Jun 10;

A LONG weekend is when shops usually rake in more money.

Yet for a number of businesses along East Coast Park, the three-day Vesak weekend was a quiet one as a result of last week's oil spill.

The Straits Times spoke to owners of shops, ranging from bicycle rental stores to small cafes, and they bemoaned the lack of crowds during the normally busy weekend, which left many with takings down by as much as half.

Mr William Ho, who for the last decade has run the Kit Runners bicycle rental store, one of seven along the beach, estimated he lost as much as $5,000 over the three days.

Mr Ho, who averages around 800 bike rentals a day on weekends, said this plummeted to just 200 last weekend. Takings shrunk from around $7,000 to $2,000.

He blames this on the beach closure, which the authorities took as a precaution after a 7.2km stretch was found to be polluted by the oil slick.

Mr Erhan Narin, 32, the manager of Turkish eatery Kebab Station, said the restaurant saw an average of 150 people a day over the three-day weekend, about half its normal crowd.

But others, such as Tung Lok Seafood restaurant, said business remained strong over the weekend. Its deputy manager, Ms Yuki Goh, said it managed to hit its daily takings target of $20,000 over the weekend.

She added that although many customers with pre-bookings had called in advance to ask whether the kerosene smell from the oil slick had wafted into the restaurant, there were few cancellations.

AMRESH GUNASINGHAM

Waters off Singapore's southeastern coastline clear of oil
Yahoo News 31 May 10;

SINGAPORE (AFP) – Waters off Singapore's southeastern coastline have been cleared of oil after seven days of containment and cleaning efforts, port authorities said Monday.

"As of 31 May 2010, waters from Changi Naval Base to East Coast Park were clear of any oil patches," said the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) in a press release issued Monday evening.

Oil patches which had drifted into Malaysian waters were also being cleaned up, said the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA).

"Clean-up efforts are under way and based on our assessments, it will be completed in three days," an MMEA spokesman told AFP.

No new oil patches had drifted into Malaysian waters since Sunday, Singapore's MPA added.

"We did not receive any further reports or sightings of oil patches in Malaysia waters off Tanjong Pengelih today," an MPA spokeswoman told AFP.

On Sunday, the MPA said patches of oil had been sighted off Tanjong Pengelih in southern Malaysia and waters off Singapore's eastern coast.

The spill came from the Malaysian-registered MT Bunga Kelana 3, a tanker carrying 62,000 tonnes of crude when it collided last Tuesday off Singapore with the MV Waily, a bulk carrier registered in St Vincent and the Grenadines.

About 2,500 tonnes of crude leaked from a gash in the double-hulled tanker but most of it was contained at sea, according to the MPA.

Singapore is a compact island republic known for its strict environmental standards, but the heavy maritime traffic off its coasts makes it vulnerable to the effects of shipping disasters.

Containment & clean-up of oil slick continue to show positive results
Mustafa Shafawi Channel NewsAsia 1 Jun 10;

SINGAPORE : Containment and clean-up efforts following the oil spill from the collision between MV Bunga Kelana 3 and MV Waily continue to show positive results on the eighth day.

The Maritime and Port Authority (MPA) said waters in Singapore's port, including the anchorages around Pulau Tekong and Pulau Ubin, were clear of any oil patches.

Waters from Changi Naval Base to East Coast Park and the Singapore Strait south of Changi remain clear of oil patches.

MPA said it will continue to monitor the waters closely and carry out necessary clean-up efforts. Various craft involved in the containment and clean-up efforts remain deployed at sea to deal with any oil patches that may surface.

MPA said it will also continue to work with the Indonesian and Malaysian authorities.

The public can contact MPA's 24-hour Marine Safety Control Centre at 6325-2489 to report any sighting of oil slick in Singapore's waters or coastlines.

- CNA/al


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Investing in energy efficiency pays

Stephan G�rner & Kaushik Das, For The Straits Times 1 Jun 10;

INCREASING productivity - creating more with less - is the only sure-fire way for businesses to gain a competitive edge. The same is true of countries, and Singapore's Budget 2010 and the recommendations of the Economic Strategies Committee have turned the spotlight back on the question of the country's national productivity. Rather than feeding the economy with more inputs of labour or capital, the Government is now seeking to renew the focus on productivity, and increase the quality and efficiency of Singapore's economic growth engine.

With global competition driving productivity increases for individual businesses, the productivity of labour inputs has increased some 250 per cent since the 1960s. New technology gets most of the credit, linked with better management and disciplines like lean manufacturing, which focus on improving processes and cutting waste. The productivity of material inputs has also doubled in the same period.

But new technology and better management have not helped improve the productivity of another essential economic input - energy. Energy productivity has improved by less than 50 per cent since the 1960s. From today's perspective, as we contemplate a future of higher energy prices and tighter resource constraints, this lack of focus on improving the productivity of our energy use seems short- sighted.

Now is the time to ensure that energy consumption forms part of our broader productivity agenda. Like labour or capital productivity, energy productivity measures the output and quality of goods and services generated with a given set of inputs. As demand for energy increases (as well as its price), companies that tackle this will have a bottom-line advantage. The size of the advantage will depend on overall reduction potential and the energy intensity of the business.

This is not to say gaining energy efficiency will be easy if we just put our minds to it. If it was easy, it would have been done already.

Companies, governments and consumer groups have sought for years to power more economic activity and residential consumption with less energy. There are innumerable barriers to these efforts, including relatively long periods required to earn back some energy efficiency investments. But there also have been some clear successes, such as the growing adoption of energy-saving appliances in many markets.

And as energy costs have risen, the return on efforts to optimise energy usage is now three times greater than in the 1990s, when oil traded for an average US$25 per barrel.

Companies with high energy productivity achieve gains by building on existing efficiency or waste reduction approaches. But we find that traditional lean programmes enable companies to realise only about one-sixth of their potential energy savings. To be successful, companies need an energy-first view of their processes. Then they can systematically identify energy waste and leakage, as they would in any other lean programme. Teams find that considerable energy savings can be achieved by simply changing the order of manufacturing steps, as you tap excess heat generated in one area to reheat elements at another point, or simply move the cooling processes away from the heat-generating ones.

We have found that most companies can reduce the overall energy efficiency of their operations by 10 per cent or more with relatively small investments and by up to 35 per cent when making substantially larger ones.

Savings vary by sector, of course. For example, integrated steel players in Europe or the United States can achieve 10 per cent to 15 per cent savings or more, and chemical companies 10 per cent to 20 per cent. What's more, all these savings can be achieved with limited investment and short payback periods of less than two years.

One European company, for example, estimates it can shave 6 per cent off its energy costs without any capital expenditure investments and an additional 5 per cent with capital expenditure expenses of less than US$20 million (S$28 million).

Few companies are making systematic efforts to holistically map out energy consumption at each step of their operating processes or to identify specific energy waste in their production systems and then to focus on opportunities to reduce it. They have not been setting concrete goals for improvement - the way they have in other areas where they have applied lean tools and thinking. As a result, few are realising anything near their energy-savings potential.

To some degree, you could argue that energy efficiency has been caught up in the wrong debate. It is often seen simply in the context of climate change, while it ought to be regarded as an essential part of broader productivity objectives. In many cases, it is an extremely attractive upfront investment that pays for itself over time, while providing the added benefits of reducing the cost of energy and increasing the productivity of the economy. Cutting carbon emissions is the added bonus.

The writers are partners with McKinsey & Company. Stephan G�rner is based in Sydney and Kaushik Das in Singapore.


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New book on Sungai Pulai and Birds of Malaysia and Singapore

The Star 1 Jun 10;

Save our seas

S.O.S. Files: A Journey To Sungai Pulai
Authors: Choo Chee Kuang, Serina Rahman and Khor Hui Min
Publisher: Self-published

MARINE scientist Choo Chee Kuang is among the many advocating for the protection of the Sungai Pulai estuary and the Pulau Merambong seagrass bed in south-western Johor, the habitat for seahorses which he has been studying.

The area is a mix of mangrove forests, seagrass beds, mudflats, rocky shores and coral reefs – and all are threatened by various development, including that of ports and power plants.

In 2004, Choo founded the non-profit Save Our Seahorses (SOS) and together with other supporters, have organised various programmes to protect the wild habitat there and raise public awareness.

This guidebook is useful should you be visiting Sungai Pulai, a gazetted Ramsar Site (which makes it a wetland of international importance), as it lists down the best time to go there and what you can see. When the tide recedes, all kinds of marine creatures lie exposed, waiting to be discovered by visitors.

The book describes the different species of sealife and plants, such as sea sponges, echinoderms (starfish and sea cucumbers), cnidarian (corals and anemone), ascidians (sea squirts), birds, worms, fish, seagrass, crustaceans, marine mammals, seaweed, molluscs, reptiles and mangrove plants.

To better appreciate the biodiversity of Sungai Pulai, it is best to join the SOS volunteer programme which includes monitoring the seagrass bed and surveying seahorses. Go to sosmalaysia.org for more details.

A Naturalist’s Guide To The Birds Of Malaysia And Singapore

Authors: G.W.H. Davison and Yeap Chin Aik
Publisher: John Beaufoy
Publishing, 176 pages

IF you’ve just taken up birdwatching, this is a handy book to have. It features 280 of the most commonly seen birds in Malaysia and Singapore – all presented in beautiful photographs.

The book is practical: compact and light enough for field use, with brief descriptions of the birds, their distribution as well as habits and habitats. The information is ample without being unbearingly detailed.

There is also an overview of the region’s climate, vegetation, biogeography, main birdwatching sites and a checklist of birds in both countries and their conservation status.

Though the species featured in the book are just a fraction of the 742 found here, they are the ones you’re likely to see on your birdwatching excursions.

Credit must be given to the photographers who contributed images for the book – David Bakewell, David Lai, Ooi Beng Yean, Cede Prudente and John Corder. The gorgeous photographs detail the birds’ plumage, making for easier identification of species.

The authors are experts in the field of ornithology.

Dr Geoffrey Davison was a university lecturer, a conservationist with World Wide Fund for Nature Malaysia, and is now with the National Parks Board in Singapore. Aside from numerous scientific papers, he is also author of Photoguide To The Birds Of Borneo and Photoguide To The Birds Of Peninsular Malaysia.

Yeap Chin Aik heads the conservation division at the Malaysian Nature Society and is one of the main compilers of Important Bird Areas In Malaysia: Key Sites For Conservation. – By Tan Cheng Li


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Animal testing in Malacca: Animal lovers can have a say

Allison Lai The Star 1 Jun 10;

MALACCA: The state welcomes dialogues with animal lovers and activists on the proposal to set up a cancer and diabetes laboratory that has caused a public uproar because it involves testing on animals.

Chief Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam made the invitation after his announcement in April on the laboratory in Rembia, Alor Gajah drew negative response from animal rights groups including over the social network website Facebook.

“We are willing to meet them to get their feedback and clarify the use of animals in the lab tests,” he said here.

Mohd Ali had on May 28, during a meeting with his Facebook friends at The Curve, Kuala Lumpur, said God created animals to be used by humans, including to be eaten and animals needed to be sacrificed in order to find vaccines and cure for diseases.

Yesterday, he reiterated his stand that animal testing with regards to disease research was acceptable if carried out according to proper guidelines set by the relevant authorities.

“I defend my previous statement. Why are people making it such an issue?” he said.

It is learnt that the laboratory would be set up by Vivo BioTech (M) Sdn Bhd, a joint venture between India-based Vivo BioTech Ltd and Vanguard Creative Technologies Sdn Bhd.

A canine from Holland, white mice, and local primates are said to be used for tests in this laboratory.

Among groups objecting to the laboratory are British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection, European Coalition to End Animal Expe­riments and Selangor Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.


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1.17 million ha of Indonesian forests gone each year

Antara 31 May 10;

Gorontalo, N Sulawesi (ANTARA News) - The association of Indonesian wild bird preservation, better known as "Burung Indonesia" (BI), claimed that 1.17 million hectares of forests in Indonesia were gone each year.

Managing Director of Burung Indonesia Agus Budi Utomo said that the natural forests are the last defense of the biodiversity in Indonesia, but ironically the forests had become smaller and smaller because of the illegal logging activities of irresponsible people as well as their conversion of forested land into open fields for other purposes.

He said Monday that the rate of disappearance of forested land in Indonesia had reached 1.17 hectares per year, while in Gorontalo province the rate had reached 1,689.2 ha per year.

He said to overcome this, he tried to offer a solution of restoring the ecosystem which would not only raise productivity of forests and preserve biodiversity, but would also increase the economic value of forest resources for the welfare of the people.

In the future, restoration of the ecosystem will have an economic significance by way of the utilization of non forest products, environmental services, and the utilization of regions, Agus said.


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Indonesia to scrap permits to save forests: official

Sunanda Creagh, Reuters 31 May 10;

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia will revoke existing forestry licenses held by palm oil and timber firms to save natural forests under a $1 billion climate change deal signed with Norway last week, a government official said on Monday.

Indonesia's president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who announced the deal last week in Oslo, said new concessions for the conversion of natural forest and peatlands would be suspended for two years. But he did not say at the time how existing concessions would be affected.

Preserving forests is seen as crucial to slowing climate change because trees absorb enormous amounts of greenhouse gases.

Indonesia has huge tracts of tropical forests but a rapid deforestation rate. It has pledged to cut emissions by 2020 to 26 percent lower than the level if no action were taken or 41 percent lower if it is able to secure foreign funding and other assistance, like technology.

Part of the $1 billion promised by Norway will be spent on compensating businesses that have existing concessions canceled in order to keep forests standing, said Agus Purnomo, head of the secretariat of Indonesia's National Climate Change Council.

"When you revoke licenses, when you cancel things, it involves money," Purnomo told Reuters by telephone.

"It's not that we will cancel all licenses but (only) if there is a need to do so" to keep primary forest intact, he said.

Compensation to permit holders could include cash, land swaps or other "amicable, workable and realistic solutions," he said.

Palm oil firms such as Wilmar and Indofood Agri Resources have ambitious expansion plans in Indonesia, already the largest producer of an oil used to make products ranging from chocolate to soap.

Palm oil and pulp and paper firms are most likely to be affected, said Purnomo.

"But I am not ruling out any possibility. The spirit of the agreement was to save the remaining natural forest and peatland and we will do whatever humanly possibly to make it happen, within the legal context of Indonesia," he said.

"If we have to go through cancellations in the court system, we will do it."

Permit holders will find out within six months if their concessions will be honored, he said.

"Some of them don't have a valid permit, they are just making a claim," said Purnomo. "If they don't have a valid permit, we are not going to compensate. If they are getting it through bribery, we are not going to give" compensation.

A text of the Oslo agreement, seen by Reuters, suggests that the moratorium on new concessions for conversion of peat and natural forests will not be implemented until 2011. The document said that the deal will be broken into two phases.

The first phase, which runs until the end of 2010, focuses mainly on preparing and implementing pilot projects under a U.N.-backed forest preservation scheme called reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD).

REDD allows developing nations to earn money by not chopping down their forests.

The second phase of the deal, running from 2011 to 2013, will focus on REDD, law enforcement and capacity building.

The commitment to a two-year suspension on all new concessions for conversion of peat and natural forests is listed in phase two, suggesting it does not come into effect until 2011.

(Editing by Sara Webb and Sugita Katyal)


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Australia bids to close Japan's whaling loophole

Amy Coopes Yahoo News 1 Jun 10;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Australia has launched international legal action to stop Japan killing hundreds of whales a year in the name of science, officials said Tuesday, as Tokyo condemned the move.

Australia's case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) seeks to stop Japan exploiting a loophole in a 1986 global moratorium which allows whaling for research purposes, according to documents seen by AFP.

Between the 1987/88 season and the 2004/2005 season Japan killed 6,800 minke whales for research in the Antarctic alone, compared with 840 worldwide in the 31 years before the moratorium, Australia's application said.

A further 2,595 minke whales were killed between 2005/06 and 2008/2009.

"The scale of killing, taking and treating carried out under this programme greatly outweighs any previous practice undertaken on the basis of scientific permits in the history of the IWC (International Whaling Commission)," it said.

"Whale-meat caught during JARPA I (a Japanese research whaling programme) was taken to Japan where it was placed on commercial sale," the application added.

Hirofumi Hirano, Japan's top government spokesman, said the move, which tests relations between the key trading partners, was "extremely regrettable," while foreign ministry officials said they were "studying our strategy regarding the lawsuit."

"Details are yet to be decided, but we won't disclose our strategy even after we make a decision," an official told AFP in Tokyo.

Australia's claim asks the ICJ to "adjudge and declare that Japan is in breach of its international obligations in implementing the (research whaling) programme in the Southern Ocean."

It urges the ICJ to order that Japan "cease implementation of (research whaling and) revoke any authorisations, permits or licences allowing the activities which are the subject of (this) application to be undertaken".

Foreign Minister Stephen Smith played down fears that the lawsuit could backfire if it fails by giving Japan's hunts a degree of legitimacy.

"Any legal action carries with it a chance or a prospect of success, equally there can be no guarantee of success, so we are confident that the action we have taken is the best action to advance our policy objective which is to see Japan cease whaling in the Southern Ocean," Smith said.

Canberra has long opposed Japan's annual whaling expeditions in Antarctic waters, and has in recent months hardened its stance, culminating in Friday's announcement of legal action.

Japanese whalers have clashed in recent years with militant activists from the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society who harass them on the high seas.

In their annual clashes, the adversaries regularly trade icy jets from water cannon, while the environmentalists hurl blood-red paint containers and rancid butter, or butyric acid, stink bombs at the whaling ships.

One environmentalist, Peter Bethune, is on trial in Japan after boarding a Japanese ship in February, and faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted.

The New Zealander last week pleaded guilty to all charges except one for assault, which relates to his firing a stink-bomb during a February 11 clash with the whalers.

Australia's legal action also comes before the June 21-25 annual meeting of the International Whaling Commission, which will discuss a compromise proposal to end years of divisions among its pro and anti-whaling members.

The plan would allow Japan -- as well as Iceland and Norway, which kill whales in defiance of the moratorium -- to hunt the mammals openly if they agree to reduce their catch "significantly" over 10 years.

Australia has attacked the compromise, under which Japan's Antarctic catch would go down to 410 whales next season -- from about 500 this year -- and then to 205 in the 2015-2016 season.

End of moratorium on whaling threatens more blood in the seas
Michael McCarthy, The Independent 1 Jun 10;

The moratorium on commercial whaling, one of the world's major environmental achievements, is in danger of being abandoned after 24 years at a meeting of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) which begins this week in Morocco.

A proposed new deal, which stands a realistic chance of being passed at the conference in Agadir, would allow the three countries which have continued killing the great whales in defiance of the ban – Japan, Norway and Iceland – to recommence whaling legally in return for bringing down their catches.

However, many conservationists do not believe that catches will actually fall under the proposed new agreement, and one of the world's leading whaling scientists recently described it in testimony to the US Congress as "a scam ... likely to fool many people".

Yet the chances of the deal going through are increased by a bizarre bureaucratic twist which may mean that European countries such as Britain, which are opposed, may not be able to vote against it in the final section of the meeting, which begins in three weeks' time.

"This is a great deal for the whaling countries," said Mark Simmonds, international head of science for the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society. "In Norway they're already celebrating. But it's potentially a tragedy for the whales."

Should the moratorium be dismantled, it would represent one of the most damaging setbacks ever for wildlife conservation. The ban, which was agreed in 1982 and became operational in 1986, was introduced after a long and intense campaign by environmental pressure groups such as Greenpeace.

They were protesting against the intense cruelty of whaling, where the killing is done by firing explosive harpoons into the large, intelligent animals, and also against the fact that many of the stocks of the great whales had been drastically reduced by over-hunting, with blue whales driven to the brink of extinction.

Although large-scale whaling came to an end with the ban, and populations began to recover, three countries carried on killing: Japan, by labelling its hunting "scientific research", and the Norwegians and Icelanders by lodging formal objections. Since 1986 the three nations have between them killed more than 30,000 whales, the Japanese leading with more than 1,000 whales a year – mainly minke whales, but also Bryde's, fin, sei and sperm whales.

But the global total of kills has nevertheless fallen to a tiny fraction of what it was, and the moratorium has been an unqualified success from a whale conservation point of view.

The deal which may do away with it, which has been on the table for three years, was first thought to be merely a diplomatic compromise to end the perpetual confrontation at IWC meetings between the whaling nations and the anti-whaling countries. But recently it has become clear that it had a different purpose, and was cooked up in the US – by leading figures in the Bush administration, among them being Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska, who, until his conviction for taking unreported gifts in 2008, was the longest-serving Republican senator in American history.

One of the most powerful figures in US politics, Senator Stevens sought a deal with Japan after the Japanese caused problems for the US by objecting (as a bargaining counter in IWC negotiations) to the whale-hunting quota for Alaskan Inuit peoples, who have a traditional hunt for about 50 bowhead whales.

Senator Stevens is believed to have put pressure on the then-US Whaling Commissioner and IWC chairman, William Hogarth – whose budget, in the US National Marine Fisheries Service, Mr Stevens controlled as a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee – to open talks with Japan, which Mr Hogarth duly did at the 2007 IWC meeting in Anchorage, Alaska.

Mr Hogarth's proposals, which would have allowed the Japanese and others to restart whaling commercially, were eventually thrown out by the IWC. Yet the deal now back on the table is essentially a modified version of his original plan, which is even more favourable to the whaling states.

It is notable that the US, which used to have to negotiate its Inuit bowhead quota every five years, will get a 10-year quota if the new deal goes ahead.

Not knowing the background, many environmental campaigners have been baffled by the fact that the US, which for decades had been one of whaling's staunchest opponents, seemed to be leading moves to end the moratorium. Now they understand why.

However, although Mr Hogarth's successor as US Whaling Commissioner, Monica Medina, has for months also been pushing the deal hard, President Obama has begun to take an interest in the issue and is understood to have expressed disquiet, and Ms Medina's attitude has shifted.

At a briefing late last week she said that the US could not accept the deal in its present form, but was interested in a new agreement. A close observer of the situation in Washington said: "The US position is now in flux."

Britain's position is clear: the UK is against the deal. "The UK opposes all forms of whaling other than limited whaling by indigenous people for clearly defined subsistence purposes," said the minister for the Marine Environment, Richard Benyon.

"We have a number of concerns with the IWC proposal, not least that this would effectively end the international moratorium on commercial whaling that the UK has fully supported. We will be encouraging our partners in Europe to vote against the proposal, and hope that the EU will show leadership in this important global conservation measure."

But therein lies a difficulty. European Commission lawyers have said that the EU must vote by consensus in the IWC, and if consensus cannot be achieved, the 25 EU member states – who form a substantial voting block in the 88-member IWC – must abstain.

Most EU nations will be against the deal, but it is possible that Denmark, with links to indigenous whaling communities in the Faroes and Greenland, might vote in favour, in which case Britain and other opponents would not be able to cast their votes against it, and the chances of the deal going through would soar.

The issue is still being negotiated between European Commission lawyers and member states, including Britain.

How the new hunting quotas will work

The idea of the new deal is to bring all whale killing back under the aegis of the IWC, so the Japanese would cease the fiction of "scientific whaling" and the Norwegians and the Icelanders would come back into the fold. But their hunting would have to be legitimised – they would be given official "quotas" to kill, for the first time in 24 years.

In return, say proponents, these quotas would be capped at a lower level than the killing currently going on, so, at the end of a 10-year period, fewer whales would have been killed. In addition, there would be other conservation measures, including observers on boats, a sanctuary in the South Atlantic, and a DNA database to trace the origin of whalemeat.

The opponents say that legitimising the commercial hunting of whales would open the way to a free-for-all. But, even more, there is no guarantee that the capped quotas would be safe, adequate, or even respected.

One of the world's leading experts on whaling, the British biologist Justin Cooke, who is the representative of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature on the IWC Scientific Committee, took the deal apart in the US Congress, in evidence to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. Dr Cooke said: "The proposal is disingenuous and I suspect that it will fool many people." It was a scam, he said, in which the calculation of how many whales could be killed was being left to politicians rather than scientists.

Dr Cooke's evidence can be read on: internationalrelations.house.gov/111/coo050610.pdf; the full IWC proposal can be read on: iwcoffice.org/_documents/ commission/IWC62docs/62-7rev.pdf

Australia takes legal action to stop Japan whaling
Kyoko Hasegawa Yahoo News 1 Jun 10;

TOKYO, Japan (AFP) – Australia has launched legal action at the International Court of Justice to stop Japan's hunting of whales, Japanese officials said Tuesday, calling the move "extremely regrettable".

Australia's action in The Hague follows months of tension between Canberra and Tokyo, which kills the ocean giants under a loophole in a 1986 international moratorium that allows lethal "scientific research".

"We were informed that Australia has filed a lawsuit with the International Court of Justice regarding research whaling," said a Japanese fisheries agency official. "We will discuss how to deal with it."

Hirofumi Hirano, Japan's top government spokesman, said: "I think it is extremely regrettable. The Japanese government will deal with it properly, based on our position."

Australia has long protested against Japan's annual whaling expeditions in Antarctic waters, and has in recent months hardened its stance, announcing Friday that it would launch legal action in The Hague this week.

"We want to see an end to whales being killed in the name of science in the Southern Ocean," said Environment Protection Minister Peter Garrett last week, vowing "to bring a permanent end to whaling in the Southern Ocean".

A Japanese foreign ministry official told AFP on Tuesday: "We are studying our strategy regarding the lawsuit. Details are yet to be decided, but we won't disclose our strategy even after we make a decision."

The legal action comes just ahead of the June 21-25 annual meeting of the International Whaling Commission in Morocco, which will discuss a compromise proposal to end years of divisions among its pro- and anti-whaling members.

The plan would allow Japan -- as well as Iceland and Norway, which kill whales in defiance of the moratorium -- to hunt the mammals openly if they agree to reduce their catch "significantly" over 10 years.

Australia has attacked the compromise, under which Japan's Antarctic catch would go down to 410 whales next season -- from about 500 this year -- and then 205 in the 2015-2016 season.

Japanese whalers have clashed in recent years with militant environmentalists who harass them on the high seas.

In their annual clashes, the adversaries regularly trade icy jets from water cannon, while the environmentalists hurl blood-red paint containers and rancid butter, or butyric acid, stink bombs at the whaling ships.

The US-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society harassed Japanese whalers in Antarctic waters for months in the 2009-2010 season, a campaign which both sides say reduced the Japanese cull by several hundred whales.

One of its members, Peter Bethune, is on trial in Japan on five charges after he boarded the security ship of the Japanese whaling fleet in February and was detained.

The New Zealander last week pleaded guilty to all but a charge of assault, which relates to his firing a rancid butter stink-bomb during a February 11 clash with the whalers.

Bethune faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted. His next hearing is set for June 10, when the court will announce the date of the verdict.

Japan, which says whaling has been part of its culture for centuries, is also seeking Interpol's help to arrest Sea Shepherd founder Paul Watson.


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Monsoon hits India's southern coast: weather office

Ratnajyoti Dutta, Reuters 31 May 10;

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Monsoon rains, vital for farm output in India's trillion-dollar economy, have hit the country's southern coast as scheduled, the chief of the weather office said on Monday.

Good rainfall after last year's drought would help boost the country's output of grain and oilseeds, help calm inflation that has triggered widespread protests and prompt the government to relax curbs on export of wheat and rice.

"The monsoon has hit the Kerala coast," Ajit Tyagi, director general of the India Meteorological Department, told Reuters.

The four-month monsoon season has begun sooner than the usual date of June 1, in line with the weather office's forecast that it would hit the mainland on May 30.

"It's raining here," D. Sivananda Pai, director of the weather office, said by phone from Cochin, now widely called Kochi.

Widespread rains/thundershowers would fall across Kerala, the weather office said in its outlook for this week.

The monsoon rains are vital for the soybean, cane and rice crops in India, the world's top buyer of edible oils and the biggest consumer of sugar.

The timely onset would help rein in double-digit food inflation by improving production prospects for summer-sown crops, said S. Raghuraman, a senior analyst with Delhi-based consulting firm Agriwatch.

"The start is good," he added.

After last year's driest season in nearly four decades, the June-September rains this year are expected to be 98 percent of the long-term average.

Last year, monsoon rains had hit the Kerala coast on May 23, a week ahead of the usual date, but actual rainfall was 23 percent below normal for the full season.

(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)


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Rich-poor rifts stall progress at U.N. climate talks

Gerard Wynn, Reuters 31 May 10;

BONN Germany (Reuters) - U.N. climate talks opened on Monday, exposing familiar rifts between rich and poor countries which delegates said were likely to delay a re-start of formal negotiations.

The 185-nation Bonn conference, which will run until June 11, is the biggest international meeting on climate change since a summit last December in Copenhagen failed to agree a new pact.

Several countries said they could not give a green light to formal negotiations on a new text published in mid-May and which outlines a huge range of options for fighting climate change.

The Copenhagen summit last year struggled to overcome suspicion on how to share global effort to curb greenhouse gases under a new deal to succeed the Kyoto Protocol after 2012.

On Monday differences re-emerged when a clutch of Latin American countries said they could not start negotiations on the new text.

The United States said it did not think the new text was intended as a basis for negotiations and South Africa said the document put too much burden on developing countries.

The Latin American group including Bolivia, Venezuela and Cuba said on Monday that the new text placed too much emphasis on the Copenhagen accord, which they opposed in December.

"The chair has prioritized the Copenhagen Accord," said Rene Gonzalo Orellana Halkyer, a member of the Bolivian delegation, speaking on the sidelines of the talks in Bonn.

Bolivia also wanted tougher targets, for example to return atmospheric greenhouse gases to a level far below where they are already, he added.

The Copenhagen Accord seeks to limit a rise in average world temperatures to below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 F) over pre-industrial times but does not spell out how.

Margaret Mukahanana-Sangarwe of Zimbabwe chairs the U.N. talks on forging agreement on global action and is expected to release a revised version next weekend, delegates said.

FIRST STEP

The United States said it believed Mukahanana-Sangarwe's text was not intended to be the basis of negotiations.

"Our view is that the text is Margaret's effort to elicit views so she can develop a formal negotiating text," said Jonathan Pershing, head of the U.S. delegation. "It's a constructive next step."

It remained to be seen whether countries can start negotiations on a revised text in the next two weeks, he told Reuters.

The head of the South African delegation, Alf Wills, said the new text focused too far on cuts in greenhouse gas emissions by developing countries.

"It's completely unbalanced in that respect," he said.

However Karsten Sach, head of Germany's delegation, said: "We think it is a basis for negotiation."

An additional, specific gap to be addressed at the Bonn talks was whether or not developed countries should be allowed to exclude from their national greenhouse gases carbon emissions from chopping trees to produce renewable energy.

That rule, allowed under the existing Kyoto Protocol, would represent "fraudulent accounting," said the head of Papua New Guinea's delegation, Kevin Conrad.

(Reporting by Gerard Wynn; editing by Peter Graff)

UN climate talks search for post-Copenhagen path
Yahoo News 31 May 10;

BONN (AFP) – The first full-bore UN climate talks since Copenhagen began Monday, with developing nations looking for bankable proof that promised aide is in the pipeline.

A 30-billion-dollar pledge for the period 2010-2012 to help poor countries green their economies and cope with climate change impacts was one of the few concrete measures to emerge from last year's nearly-failed summit.

But six months later there is little sign of the money.

"We need real implementation of the funding, real action on the ground," said Dessima Williams, chief negotiator of Grenada, representing the Association of Small Island States (AOSIS).

"There is absolute and continued urgency."

Nor are there any clues as to how financing will be ramped up to at least 100 billion dollars annually by 2020, another provision mandated by the Copenhagen Accord.

Ideas floated include a micro-tax on financial transactions, a carbon trading scheme for the aviation and shipping sectors, and "green bonds" issued against rich-country funds held by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

But so far none of these politically risky schemes have much traction.

"If the sense is that this is all a sham and countries are not following through on their commitments, it will really undermine the trust you need to get something done," said Alden Myer, a policy analyst at the Washington-based Union of Concerned Scientists.

Financing is only one of several thorny issues on the table as the 12-day talks under the 194-nation UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) get under way.

Negotiators must also work towards upholding the Accord's other core provision of preventing global temperatures from rising by more than 2.0 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

Voluntary pledges from industrialised nations and emerging giants such as China -- even if met -- would yield an increase of 3.0 C to 4.0 C, putting the planet on a trajectory for catastrophe, say scientists.

There are also complex wrangles over technology transfer, how to monitor and verify national plans to cut greenhouse gases, and the mechanisms for disbursing aide.

But the UN talks remain bogged down by procedure, unable even to decide on whether or how to incorporate the Copenhagen deal -- cobbled together by a handful of nations at the 11th-hour -- into the formal UN process.

At the same time, political ambition has been dampened by the fallout from crushed expectations in the Danish capital, and concerns about the fragile state of the world economy.

"The mood is one of realism and accepting incremental changes rather than one 'Big Bang' agreement," said Saleemul Huq, senior researcher at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) in London.

Outgoing UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer told journalists that the chances of forging a legally-binding climate treaty -- the avowed aim of all parties -- before year's end are now vanishingly small.

Since January, many nations have opted for a "building block" approach, laying the bricks of a future climate deal outside the UN framework in smaller, multilateral meetings focusing on a single region or sector.

An initiative, for example, spearheaded by France and Norway produced an agreement last week to boost funds to protect forests to four billion dollars up to 2012.

Deforestation accounts for about 17 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

"We want to demonstrate that it's possible to start coordinated action [on forests] while we have formal negotiations under way at the UNFCCC. The world needs to see this," Brazilian Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira told journalists days before the deal was sealed.

But some negotiators worry about losing sight of the big picture.

"We have to be very careful that the piecemeal approach does not mean that the large overarching framework is not achieved, so that we wind up with a gap," Williams said.

Over the next week, talks will focus on a 42-page text unveiled in the run up to Bonn and intended as a rough draft of a future agreement.

Informal comments from negotiators show how hard it is going to be to bridge the gap, said Meyer.

Bolivia and several other developing nations "say it reflects much too much of the Copenhagen Accord, while the United States is complaining that there is almost nothing in it from the Accord," he said.

Prudence now the watchword as UN climate talks resume
Richard Ingham Yahoo News 30 May 10;

PARIS (AFP) – UN climate talks resume in Bonn on Monday with negotiators branded by caution after the near-fiasco of the Copenhagen summit six months ago.

Excess ambition is being blamed for the failure of Copenhagen, where world leaders were to have blessed a post-2012 pact to tame global warming.

Instead, the big show became a stage for finger-pointing and last-night wrangling as the planet's major carbon polluters grappled over a document to save face.

Negotiations get back in gear on Monday for the 12-day mid-year meeting under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

But political impetus seems to have drained away and the atmosphere is chastened.

"The mood is one of realism and accepting incremental changes rather than one 'Big Bang' agreement, which was what was attempted in Copenhagen and just fell flat," said Saleemul Huq, senior researcher at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) in London.

Even the UNFCCC's chief, the perennially optimistic Yvo de Boer, who led the charge to Copenhagen and quit in the aftermath, is grim.

Any treaty is unlikely to be completed before the end of 2011, he told a press conference last week.

"It's extremely unlikely that we will see a legally-binding agreement in Cancun," de Boer admitted, referring to the end-of-year ministerial gathering in Mexico.

"I think that especially developing countries would want to see what an agreement would entail for them before they would be willing to turn it into a legally-binding treaty."

The Bonn talks have to start digging seriously through the morass of problems that bedevilled Copenhagen.

Who should make the deepest cuts in greenhouse gases? How can promises be policed? How should rich economies help poor countries -- the least to blame for climate change -- bolster defences against rising seas, drought and flood?

Adding a toxic ingredient to the mix is the fate of the so-called Copenhagen Accord.

The document sets a voluntary goal of limiting warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). It was brokered by a couple of dozen leaders in the summit's desperate final day but is viewed privately by many developing countries as worthless or a betrayal.

"The only country that thinks it (the Copenhagen Accord) has any life is the United States," said Huq. "Nobody else does. They are totally isolated on this."

To show that the accord has credibility -- and restore trust in the overall process -- developing countries are calling on the rich world to put its money where its mouth is.

In Copenhagen, the European Union (EU), the United States, Japan and other wealthy countries pledged 30 billion dollars in aid from 2010-2012, with a vaguer promise of mustering 100 billion dollars a year by the end of the decade.

"We need real implementation of the fundings, real action on the ground," said Dessima Williams, chief negotiator of Grenada, representing the Association of Small Island States (AOSIS).

"There is absolute and continued urgency."

Outside the UNFCCC arena, progress is being made in smaller, nimbler fora.

On Thursday, a Franco-Norwegian initiative on reducing carbon from deforestation rustled up four billion dollars for action up to 2012, as well as a promise by Indonesia to introduce a two-year freeze on forest clearance.

But progress within the UN temple, where consensus among 194 nations is required, is plodding.

The delay in fixing up a new climate treaty casts a pall over the Kyoto Protocol, the only international accord to impose legally binding limits on greenhouse gases.

Its current pledges expire at the end of 2012. Developed countries that ratified Kyoto -- everyone except the United States -- are hostile or lukewarm about renewing the deal so long as the successor treaty is not completed.


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