Best of our wild blogs: 16 Jun 10


Checkup on Tanah Merah coral garden
from wonderful creation and singapore nature

Extensive coral bleaching at Tuas
from wild shores of singapore and colourful clouds

Tuas (15 Jun 10)
from teamseagrass

Now online: "A Preliminary Checklist of the Molluscs of Singapore"
from wild shores of singapore

Lesser Coucal sunning
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Green Volunteers update
from The Green Volunteers

Raffles Museum Treasures: Zebra coral
from Lazy Lizard's Tales

Wildlife-rich river threatened by sand-dredging in Borneo
from Mongabay.com news


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Oil spill? No more worries

The New Paper 16 Jun 10;

THERE might just be a new way of cleaning up oil spills in future - with the help of a substance called chitosan.

Chitosan comes from chitin, which is derived from the pulverised shells of crustaceans. It is used in the food processing, health-care and pharmaceutical industries.

A group of students and their lecturer from Temasek Polytechnic's School of Applied Science have come up with a project exploring the use of chitosan and styrofoam to deal with oil spills.

The project won third prize in the recently concluded Singapore Junior Water Prize competition. The finals were held last month.

The annual competition aims to encourage students to take an interest in water research. Organised since 2008 by Ngee Ann Polytechnic, it is supported by the Lien Foundation and PUB, the national water agency .

The project members- final-year chemical engineering students Johnson Seow, 20, Lim Shao Xuan, 19, Ng Bokai, 19, and their lecturer,Mr Dion Khoo, 38 - say the method is effective, though local companies do not use it at present.

The team took two years to complete their project.

The idea came after the students and Mr Khoo read a journal article on the positive aspects of using chitosan.

Johnson said: "The article said chitosan could absorb fat well. So we thought, why not see if it works well with oil?"

The team spent six months researching and finding materials.

Chitosan-coated balls

The next year was spent coating pinky nail-size styrofoam balls with chitosan and ensuring that they could soak up oil while staying afloat.

The team said each ball could soak up the oil completely in fewer than three seconds in still water conditions. The last six months saw the team building a two-tiered prototype for submission.

The prototype shows oil-soaked, chitosan-coated styrofoam balls are placed in the first tier, a desorption unit with turbulent water.

Within 24 hours, the oil separates from the balls and can be drained into the second-tier recovery unit, which has a spray to flush down the oil.

The no longer oil-soaked balls are left in the desorption unit and can be re-used as they are still coated with chitosan.

From the recovery unit, the oil and water are drained out via separate valves.

Shao Xuan explained: "The oil can now be re-used, and will not go to waste."

One current oil spill clean-up method sees oil being burned off the water's surface, which is harmful to the environment.The oil also cannot be used again. The project cost the team less than $700 - about $500 for the prototype with tubing and fittings, and about $160 for 80g of chitosan. The oil and the styrofoam balls were from the polytechnic laboratory.

Mrs Grace Quah,who chairs the competition organising committee, said the team was awarded third prize as they ventured into a relatively new area of research and made good use of materials available to them in their laboratories.

"The judges felt that the project was creative, and the students were very passionate about their work," she added.

Mrs Quah was not aware if chitosan was currently used by local companies to clean upoil spills.

Operations manager Ho Yew Weng from Oil Spill Response said his company has "no experience (using) chitosan".

Oil Spill Response was employed by the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) during the recent oil spill off the Singapore coast and it had used dispersants.

Associate Professor Zhang Yong from the National University of Singapore's Division of Bioengineering said the use of chitosan in cleaning up oil spills has been "well-researched". He considers it a feasible option when dealing with oil spills here in the future.

In response to The New Paper's queries, a PUB spokesman said that the organisation will meet with MPA to explore the option "should the use of chitosan be found effective in cleaning up oil spills".

The team is keen to develop their project further. "We believe in our work and would like to further refine it," said Johnson.

Teams from NUS High School and Dunman High School were tied for the top prize. They will form a joint team to represent Singapore at the Stockholm Junior Water Prize competition in Swedenin September.


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Heavy downpour causes flash floods around Singapore

Mustafa Shafawi/ Joanne Chan Channel NewsAsia 16 Jun 10;

SINGAPORE: The heavy downpour Wednesday morning caused flash floods in several areas.

Among the areas affected were Bukit Timah, Newton Circus and Scotts Road.

Several vehicles including buses were stuck in the flood in front of Ion Orchard.

Ms Devika Misra, who was stuck at Liat Towers because of the heavy rain, said the water was knee-high.

"Orchard Road, opposite Lido, is flooded. And there are about half a dozen cars marooned, they can't go forward. And there is a person whom I think is from the Civil Defence Service who is wading into the water to rescue the people, to get them out of the car."

According to an advisory issued by the Land Transport Authority, a fallen tree has caused the closure of the CTE in the direction of AYE, before the Orchard Road exit.

The American Chamber of Commerce, whose offices are across from ION Orchard, has an event planned at noon.

It's getting in touch with the speakers and attendees to warn them about the situation.

One lane along a stretch of Dunearn Road is not passable to traffic.

Another caller to the MediaCorp hotline described the situation from his office at Goldbell Towers, which faces the Newton MRT station, saying that at least five cars broke down, and other motorists had to find alternative routes.

"The water is too deep. Everyone is stopping and reversing along Bukit Timah Road."

MediaCorp's news hotline received at least 10 calls about floods on the roads.

Many office workers were late for work as traffic crawled.

The Meteorological Services Division had issued an advisory earlier to expect heavy showers with thunder and gusty winds over many areas of Singapore in the morning. - CNA/jy


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Guidebook, certification for builders to go green

Grace Chua Straits Times 16 Jun 10;

CONSTRUCTING a building requires a lot of raw materials, water and energy - producing up to 10 per cent of the building's total carbon emissions over its lifetime.

To get the multibillion-dollar construction industry in Singapore to cut back on energy, recycle more and be more environmentally friendly, the authorities and trade groups have put together new incentives.

Yesterday, the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) launched its Green And Gracious Builder Guide, which lists ways to recycle materials, save energy and keep the peace with residents and communities near construction sites.

Joining the push is the Singapore Contractors Association Limited (Scal) and Singapore Environment Council, which have put together a certification scheme for contractors employing eco-friendly practices - a kind of green label for the construction industry.

The scheme aims to give Singapore's 3,000 to 4,000 small and medium-sized contractors the resources and know-how to cut waste, noise, energy use and pollution, said Scal president Andrew Khng.

This differs from existing green building programmes such as the Green Mark certification, which looks at a building's environmental impact over time but may not account for the impact of its construction.

Both the guide and the scheme were launched at a conference on sustainable green practices for Asean contractors yesterday. Ms Grace Fu, Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education, who was the guest of honour, said: 'As buildings worldwide consume about 40 per cent of all raw materials, the building sector has an important role in ensuring that our future developments are not only economically, but also environmentally sustainable.'

At least 21 companies here, winners of the BCA's Green and Gracious Builder Award last year and this year, are putting sustainable practices in place.

For example, no bar of steel or plank of timber goes to waste at Gammon Construction's worksites. Its sites even have small, medium and large generators to match the demand for power. In the day, when power demand is high, the largest generator kicks in, but at night, when power demand is lower, the smallest generator is used.

While the measures might push a project's upfront costs up by 15 per cent, these costs are easily recouped from energy savings and other savings over the project's two- or three-year lifetime, said Gammon executive director Jon Button.

Local construction trade urged to go green
Business Times 16 Jun 10;

THE Singapore construction industry was rallied to partner the government in promoting environmentally sustainable industry practices during a conference yesterday.

Themed 'Sustainable Green Practices for ASEAN Contractors', the ASEAN Contractors Conference was held yesterday in conjunction with the ASEAN Constructors Federation meeting.

At the official opening ceremony, the Singapore Environment Council (SEC) and Singapore Contractors Association Limited (SCAL) jointly launched the SEC-SCAL Eco Certification Scheme for Contractors.

The scheme aims to guide contractors to adopt green and sustainable practices. It will provide recognition for contractors that contribute to the protection and sustainability of the environment and provide a framework for contractors to maintain their green practices.

The 'Green and Gracious Builder Guide' produced by the Building Construction Authority (BCA) and SCAL was also launched at the event.

The guide provides information on the best practices of builders in addressing environmental concerns and mitigating possible inconveniences to the public caused by environmental works. These best practices were compiled from on-site observations of various builders under the Green and Gracious Builders Scheme.

At the conference, contractors from around ASEAN also shared their experiences and best practices relating to green construction practices.

Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education Grace Fu was the guest of honour for the opening event.

'Leading firms and institutions in ASEAN can play an active role, by working closely with one another, and devising new and creative solutions for the construction industry,' said Ms Fu.


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New institute to take Singapore to global clean energy stage

Lester Kok Straits Times 16 Jun 10;

SINGAPORE has a new institute that will focus on research into fast-growing and increasingly important areas such as solar power, electric vehicles and smart power grids.

Dubbed ERI@N, short for the Energy Research Institute @ Nanyang Technological University (NTU), it will be powered by $200 million in funds from several agencies, including the Economic Development Board (EDB), the National Research Foundation (NRF) and the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*Star).

Other areas it will conduct research into include energy materials, wind energy and sustainable buildings.

ERI@N will not go it alone. It will partner six renowned universities - the Austrian Institute of Technology, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland, Imperial College London, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, University of Cambridge, and the Technical University of Munich.

It will also have a seven-member international advisory board comprising top academics in various fields. The board will be headed by a Swiss scientist, Professor Michael Gratzel, who won this year's Millennium Technology Prize in Finland for his invention and development of dye-sensitised solar cells, a cheap and good alternative to silicon solar cells.

At the launch of the institute yesterday, Mr S. Iswaran, the Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry and Education, said the research and development (R&D) work done by ERI@N will yield insights and ideas which would affect energy policy in Singapore for the next two to three decades.

Singapore's significant investment in energy R&D demonstrates a long-term commitment towards overcoming future energy challenges, he said. It will also transform Singapore into a smart energy economy - one that is resilient, sustainable and innovative in the use of energy.

'Apart from creating higher value activities and quality jobs, such research helps enhance our energy security and strengthen our environmental sustainability,' Mr Iswaran, who was guest of honour at the event at NTU's Nanyang Executive Centre auditorium, said.

He added that in a compact, densely-populated city like Singapore, 'these are essential public policy priorities'.

ERI@N's research will help Singapore achieve global leadership in the area of clean energy, said the EDB yesterday.

NTU Provost Professor Bertil Andersson said that the institute's key focus will be on alternative sources of energy, its usage and applications, and improving efficiency of current energy systems.

'Resources, especially energy, are being consumed at unsustainable rates and the impact that this creates on environmental degradation threatens our very existence,' he said.

Energy research was a key pillar in the landmark report of the Economic Strategies Committee earlier this year.

The panel recommended that research and development into the field be made a national priority, and this was accepted by the Government, which announced in April last year that it would commit $680 million over five years to build a clean technology ecosystem as part of its plan to turn Singapore into a global R&D hub.

The cleantech cluster was also identified as one of the key growth areas by the EDB for Singapore's economy. It is expected to contribute $3.4 billion to Singapore's gross domestic product and create up to 18,000 jobs by 2015.

Prof Gratzel, an expert in solar technology, said ERI@N is not just about academic research, but will develop practical applications to solve energy problems for both Singapore and the world.

One area it could look at is closing the growing energy gap. Having an energy gap means the supply of fossil and renewable energy will not be able to match the world's demands for more electric power.

'It's time to tackle it on a major scale ...I'm very excited about it,' he said.

Energy research body signs six pacts at opening
Business Times 16 Jun 10;

THE Energy Research Institute @ NTU ERI@N signed six memoranda of understanding (MOUs) yesterday at its official opening by S Iswaran, Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry and Education.

NTU signed the MOUs with University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, Technical University Munich, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Austrian Institute of Technology and Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne Switzerland.

Mr Iswaran said that Singapore's significant investments in energy research 'summarised one of the most fundamental challenges of this city state for the next 20-30 years, balancing the trilemma between energy resilience, environment sustainability and economic competitiveness'.

ERI@N has already secured funding of $200 million from entities such as the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB).

The institute will advance research aimed at improving efficiency of current energy systems and maximising synergistic effects of alternative energy sources. ERI@N plans to grow to about 250 scientists in three years.

Beh Swan Gin, EDB's managing director, said: 'Through partnerships with companies and academic institutions, ERI@N will serve as an important multiplier for clean energy research, innovation and commercialisation in Singapore.'

A strategic growth area, the cleantech industry has government funding of nearly $700 million over five years. It is expected to contribute $3.4 billion to Singapore's gross domestic product with up to 18,000 jobs.


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The road to a cycling city

Government should take a firm stand as pedestrians and motorists alike do not welcome cyclists
Cassandra Chew The Straits Times 16 Jun 10;

I WAS in a bicycle store one weekend when I noticed a bumper sticker by the cashier counter.

Watch For Cyclists, the striped black-and-yellow sign read.

As I picked it up, the shopkeeper urged me to take one. Her eyes were heavy.

It was the weekend when news of the death of experienced cyclist Evelyn Toh, 39, broke. She had been hit by a van.

'At least the newspapers reported the accident,' the shopkeeper sighed. 'They didn't use to.'

It was a brief conversation, but she said plenty with just those few words.

To her, society has little regard for cyclists. And it is easy to see why.

Cyclists here are almost like the red-headed stepchildren of the road, without a place to call their own.

By law, cyclists are to ride on the road - except in Tampines, where cycling on pavements is allowed.

Yet, many motorists are unwilling to share the roads with them.

Ask any cyclist and he will readily share an incident or two, or three, when he had a near brush with death, no thanks to a motorist who drove with a bad attitude.

Naturally, some cyclists opt for the relative safety of the pavement.

But as it turns out, pedestrians are equally, if not more, territorial than motorists. I would be hard-pressed to find a pedestrian who does not find cyclists a menace on the walkways.

So where do cyclists belong?

It's a question that needs to be answered quickly as this island copes with a burgeoning two-wheeler population.

The longer it is sidestepped, the longer the vulnerable cyclist on the roads will have to ride on, exposed to hazards from careless motorists, deprived of the rights of safety they are entitled to.

If the answer is that cyclists are 'legitimate road users (who) deserve to be able to ride safely', as Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports, said recently, then the status quo is not going to cut it.

Like cycling advocate Irene Ng, a Tampines GRC MP, I feel the Government plays a key role in establishing cyclists' right to be on the roads.

Although millions are being invested in infrastructure for leisure cycling and short commutes, more can be done to integrate cycling as a mode of transport here, she argues.

And there are good reasons to do so.

Cycling is a good form of exercise. It is cheaper than travelling by car. It is also a faster means of travel than being stuck in a car if there is a traffic jam.

Cycling produces less pollution than cars. Cycling infrastructure costs less to build than that for other vehicles.

But here is a reason that will interest every road user, not just than the health- and environmentally-conscious.

Cycling as an additional form of transport can help ease traffic congestion, a problem that can cost businesses billions of dollars.

That was the projection by the business community in Melbourne, Australia, in the early part of this decade, which led their mayor at the time, Dr John So, to be serious about encouraging cycling.

Like many cycling cities in the world, Melbourne used bicycle lanes. Then, Dr So added bike rental stations and parking facilities equipped with showers and cafes.

Over in the Swedish city of Malmo, Mr Ilmar Reepalu, the mayor, says the idea is to make cycling attractive.

So besides offering useful maps, the city wooed commuters by getting local celebrities on board.

Mr Reepalu put them on bicycles, sent them round the city and published their favourite experiences in a book.

In Melbourne, Dr So also rounded up people in the community to get everyone on the same page.

'Companies can organise cycle-to- work days and cycling carnivals on weekends to get motorists to become recreational cyclists,' he suggests.

From his experience, motorists will be more open to sharing the roads if they knew what it was like out there for cyclists.

Both city planners, who will be in Singapore in two weeks' time for the World Cities Summit, displayed strong political will to make cycling safe.

And soon, the community came alongside to partner them in their efforts.

Today, bicycles make up 40 per cent of all journeys to and from work in Malmo, and 9 per cent of peak hour commuter traffic in Melbourne.

The Government here can spark a similar transformation if it establishes the legitimacy of cyclists here and promotes the humble bicycle as a means of transport.

If there is not enough room on existing roads for bicycle lanes, then how about shared lanes where cyclists have priority?

Motorists can be re-educated on the hows and whys of giving way to cyclists. Driving instructors, on their part, can help teach learner drivers the appropriate way of co-existing with cyclists on the roads.

More bicycle parking spaces can be erected near MRT stations and town malls. If outdoor bicycle parking facilities are unsafe, what about mandating, as New York City has, that new buildings have secure indoor parking for bicycles?

On the other hand, it will also be necessary to look into the list of bugbears that motorists have about cyclists.

After all, we can't expect motorists to share the roads if cyclists continue to flout traffic rules and get away with it.

If we have moved away from the practice of licensing bicycles, then what about a compulsory road safety test before cyclists are allowed on the roads?

And to help alter motorists' view of cyclists as parasitical road users who don't contribute to the upkeep of roads, perhaps we can consider charging cyclists a nominal fee if their bikes are above a certain size. Call it a bike tax.

There are solutions if we are willing to find them. The question is: Are we committed to doing so? Cyclists, for their part, can abide by the rules.

But until the Government takes a firm stand on where they belong, motorists will have an excuse to see cyclists as road hazards who don't pay road tax, and not as living, breathing people who matter too.


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New frog species discovered in Australia

ABC Net 15 Jun 10;

A new frog species has been found in South Australia's Flinders Ranges - the first in the state in 45 years.

Frog expert Mike Tyler says as soon as he was shown four specimens last week, he knew it was special.

Professor Tyler says the frog's markings distinguishes it from other species living in waterholes in South Australia's north-east.

"Perhaps an inch on the old scale. It is pale brown in colour, it has little discs on its fingers so that it can climb," he said.

"Its back is freckled, it has these little little markings on it which is a feature which is unique to it and something that tells me that this is quite distinct from anything else."

Mining worries as frog species found
ABC Net 16 Jun 10;

The owner of Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary says discovery of a new frog species is yet another reason to be wary of mining in the Flinders Ranges region of outback South Australia.

Scientists say it is the first new species to be identified in SA in 45 years.

The species was found this month at Arkaroola, where Marathon Resources is involved in a uranium exploration project at Mount Gee.

Sanctuary owner Marg Sprigg says she is worried Marathon's initial drilling program could lead to it getting a full drilling licence later in the year.

"I'm a geologist, I'm not against mining but I don't think you have to mine everywhere and there were a lot of geologists who put in submissions saying 'leave Arkaroola alone, it is too special, it's a brilliant geological teaching laboratory'."

Ms Sprigg says mining could prevent more unique species being found in the Flinders Ranges.


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Indonesian Government to keep 72 million hectares of forest, peat “untouched”

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 15 Jun 10;

Indonesia has pledged to stop converting more than a half of its forest area as a result of a new moratorium agreement signed with Norway government and domestic regulations linked to spatial planning issues.

The latest Environment Ministry’s analysis recommended that the country protect some 72.5 million hectares of forest and peat land from any conversions for business purposes.

“In accordance with the regulations, Indonesia must protect some 72.5 million hectares of forest and peat land,” Masnellyarti Hilman, deputy minister for environmental damage supervision at the Environment Ministry, told reporters on Tuesday.

She said that the proposal had been submitted to the cabinet meeting.

The analysis was made based on the two-year moratorium policy on the natural forest and peat which followed a forest protection agreement signed by Indonesia and Norway in Oslo earlier this month and the spatial planning policy which requires the government to protect forest area located in mountain’s slopes.

Indonesia is the world’s third largest forest nation with 120 million hectares of natural forest. The country is home to some 20 million hectares of peat.


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Second rare Javan rhino found dead in Indonesia

Yahoo News 15 Jun 10;

JAKARTA (AFP) – A second Javan rhino has died in Indonesia, conservationists said Tuesday, underscoring the need to expand the critically endangered mammals' last refuge in Ujung Kulon National Park.

With fewer than 50 Javan rhinos remaining, the deaths of two males in recent months has brought the world's scarcest mammal closer than ever to extinction, experts said.

"We have 40 to 50 rhinos here now. If two die, that's four percent of the population," Indonesian Rhino Foundation head Widodo Ramono said.

A carcass was found Monday in a river in Ujung Kulon, West Java province. Like another male that was found dead earlier in May, Ramono said the animal could have drowned in a wallow during heavy rain.

"There were no signs it had been killed by poachers as its horn was intact. It might have died of old age or illness," he said.

"We're still investigating the cause of death and checking if there are other carcasses in the area."

The Javan rhino is distinguished from African rhinos by its small size, single horn and loose skin folds.

Around 44 Javan rhinos are believed to live in Ujung Kulon, a rare patch of wilderness on one of the world's most densely populated islands.

Another four or so are found in Vietnam's Cat Loc reserve, where poachers killed a rhino last month.

Ramono said the latest death highlighted the need to expand and improve the rhino sanctuary at Ujung Kulon, which is constantly encroached upon by human activity.

There are plans to expand the habitat with the addition of another 4,000 hectares (990 acres) of jungle.

"We hope it will be ready next year," he said.

Asian rhinos have been driven to the brink of extinction because their horns are highly valued in traditional Chinese and Korean medicine, although most countries in the region have banned the trade.


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Australia's native ducks soon to be extinct

Victoria University Science Alert 15 Jun 10;

Research Fellows Dr Patrick-Jean Guay and Dr Randall Robinson of VU’s Institute of Sustainability and Innovation found native Pacific Black Ducks appear destined to follow a similar fate in Australia as they have in New Zealand, where they are now likely extinct in their pure form.

Their nemesis is the domestic duck, or Mallard, which mates with wild ducks and creates cross-bred populations.

Dr Guay said hybridisation not only represents a threat to biodiversity – the life-sustaining dispersal of species across the planet – but Mallards and their hybrid offspring can become a nuisance since they are more aggressive, more tolerant of humans, and can invade urban habitat.

On Lord Howe Island, for example, an increasing number of Mallards and their hybrids have caused extensive beach fouling, and tourists now tend to avoid those areas.

During a three-year study, the researchers aim to determine the genetic integrity of Australia’s native duck populations by collecting DNA samples of ducks from hunters.

Once the extent of the problem is exposed, recommendations to manage Mallards will be submitted to the nation’s wildlife agencies. The sampling has already started in Tasmania and parts of Victoria.

“In New Zealand, it took less than 100 years from when the first Mallards were introduced from Europe and North America for wild Pacific Black Ducks to reach the brink of extinction,” he said.

“Most ducks in New Zealand now are hybrids between Mallards and Black Ducks,” he said.

Dr Guay said it was important for people not to release domestic ducks into the wild, nor to feed those in urban settings. Domestic ducks can be distinguished from wild ducks by their larger size, their orange legs and their yellow (males) or orange (females) bills. Their plumage ranges from white to black and all shades in between. The native Pacific Black Duck is smaller and has olive legs and a dark grey bill. It is mostly brown and has a black stripe through its eye.


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"The Cove" Activist Lambasts Japan Film Cancellations

PlanetArk 16 Jun 10;

Dolphin activist Ric O'Barry urged Japanese theatres on Tuesday to screen Oscar-winning documentary "The Cove," despite threats from groups who see its footage of dolphins being slaughtered as an affront to traditional culture.

O'Barry, a former dolphin trainer who is in Japan to promote the film, told Reuters Television that the cancellations were an "assault on democracy."

"This is not North Korea. It's not China and it's not Cuba. It's a democratic society. There's a very small minority of radicals who are going to theater owners and threatening them. They don't want people to see this film," O'Barry said.

The documentary, which shows dolphins being herded into a cove and slaughtered, has met with fierce resistance from some groups in Japan. Fears that protests might inconvenience movie-goers have prompted cancellations at two cinemas in Tokyo and one in Osaka, according to Unplugged, the Japan distributor.

Unplugged is still in negotiations to show the movie at several venues around the country when it is released on June 26, said a spokeswoman for the company, who asked not to be named.

Earlier this month, a group of about 60 Japanese journalists and film makers released a statement urging "open discussion" of the film.

Directed by former National Geographic photographer Louie Psihoyos, the documentary follows a group of eco-activists who struggle with Japanese police and fishermen to gain access to a secluded cove in Taiji, southern Japan, where dolphins are hunted.

While the documentary depicts some confrontation between locals and activists, O'Barry tried to distance himself from environmental groups that are viewed as using extreme methods.

"I haven't really given it any thought. I'm focused on trying to stop the sale of tainted dolphin meat," he said, referring to concerns the meat has excessively high mercury content.

"The media tends to try to put everybody who likes dolphins and whales in the same bag. If you like dolphins and whales, you must be Sea Shepherd or you must be Greenpeace and it's something that actually I'm not," O'Barry explained.

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society attracted attention in March when anti-whaling activist Pete Bethune, a member of the hardline group, was arrested in Japan after boarding a whaling vessel in the Antarctic. He is currently on trial.

O'Barry, a former dolphin trainer from the 1960s television series "Flipper" has appeared on various talk shows urging an end to commercial displays and hunting of dolphins.

(Editing by Linda Sieg)


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Scores of whale products in the pipeline

Marlowe Hood Yahoo News 15 Jun 10;

PARIS (AFP) – Companies in Japan, Iceland and Norway are developing whale-based products ranging from drugs to cosmetics to animal feed, banking on the resumption of global trade, according to a report.

Ahead of a key meeting of the 88-nation International Whaling Commission (IWC) in Agadir, Morocco next week, debate on the use of hunted whales has centered on the consumption of meat, especially in Japan.

But the three countries harvesting the marine mammals despite a 1982 global moratorium also exploit whales in other ways and are laying a foundation for future commercial applications, said the report prepared by the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS) and released late Tuesday.

Thousands of approved patents list whale oil, cartilage, and spermaceti -- a wax-like liquid found in the head cavities of sperm whales -- as ingredients in goods as diverse as golf balls, hair dye, "eco-friendly" detergent, candy, health drinks and bio-diesel, investigators found.

"It is clear that whalers are planning to use whale oil and other whale derivatives to restore their hunts to long-term profitability," said Sue Fisher, who heads the WDCS's whale campaign.

"Iceland, Japan and Norway are betting heavily that the commercial whaling moratorium will be lifted."

These new applications could ultimately dwarf the value of whale meat, whether sold domestically or exported, she said.

Profit-driven whale hunting has been banned for 25 years, and international trade in whales or whale parts is forbidden under CITES, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

All three nations however have used loopholes in the moratorium -- which went into effect in 1986 -- to continue tracking and killing the animals.

During that time the IWC has been paralysed, split between pro-conservation and pro-whaling interests.

But a proposal on the table in Agadir could break the stalemate, leading to a compromise deal that all parties can live with, if only barely.

The whaling states would each be granted annual kill quotas through 2020, totalling nearly 12,000 specimens, in return giving up the right to invoke unilateral exemptions, as do Norway and Iceland, or to hunt for "scientific" purposes, as does Japan.

Conservationists would finally see what they regard as rogue nations brought into the IWC fold and the creation of a DNA-based monitoring system, but at the cost of thousands of whale lives.

The 10-year deal is designed to create a pressure-free zone for hammering out a durable agreement.

But anti-whaling groups fear it will legitimate commercial hunting and provide an incentive to push for an overturn of the ban once the decade-long deal expires.

"We anticipate they will use these new pharmaceuticals, animal feed and personal care products to soften global opposition to whaling and challenge the ban on international trade," said Kate O'Connell, a WDCS trade analyst.

Already today, the report shows, Japan uses whale cartilage to manufacture chondroitin to treat osteoarthritis, collagen for anti-inflammatory treatments and beauty products, and as a common food additive called oligosaccarides.

Norway, the world's top exporter of fishmeal and oil for livestock and aquatic farming, has conducted research on how to integrate whale products in to the manufacturing process.

Norwegian scientists have also researched the use of whale oil for pharmaceutical and health supplements such as omega-3. And at least one clinical trial is testing its efficacy for treating rheumatoid arthritis.

In Iceland, the government recently recommended the creation of an industrial park in Hvalfiroi where fin whales could be transformed into meat, meal and oil.


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Japan may quit whaling commission if ban stays put

Jay Alabaster, Associated Press Yahoo News 15 Jun 10;

TOKYO – Japan is considering withdrawing from the International Whaling Commission if no progress is made toward easing an international ban on commercial whaling, its fisheries minister said Tuesday.

The IWC — the international body that regulates whaling — will gather for its annual meeting next week in Agadir, Morocco. The meeting is expected to seek a compromise between pro- and anti-whaling countries, which may include allowing commercial whaling on a limited scale.

A moratorium has been in place for 25 years, but countries such as Japan, Norway and Iceland hunt whales under a variety of exceptions to the ban. An IWC proposal was circulated in April to allow limited commercial hunts for 10 years.

Japan has frequently threatened to pull out of the IWC in the past. Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Masahiko Yamada was asked Tuesday if Tokyo would quit the IWC if progress was not made toward easing the ban on commercial whaling.

"I am considering various options," Yamada said. "This is really the final stage, and we're not sure how things are going to turn out."

The proposal to allow commercial whaling has drawn criticism from all sides and drawn fresh attention to the whaling issue. The foreign minister of New Zealand and Australia's environment minister are due to attend next week's meeting.

Yamada said he would not attend, citing budget concerns. An official from Japan's foreign ministry said its representatives to the meeting had not yet been decided.

"This is one of the most important meetings of the IWC in the last 30 years. It is my sincere hope that all member nations come to this meeting determined to break the gridlock that has been a hallmark of the Commission for so long," Australian Environment Minister Peter Garrett said in a statement.

Anti-whaling states, including Australia and New Zealand, have called a proposed whaling quota system unacceptable and demanded an end to Japan's hunt in Antarctic waters.

Japan's whaling program includes large-scale scientific expeditions to the Antarctic, while other whaling countries mostly stay along their coasts. Opponents call Japan's scientific research hunts a cover for commercial whaling.

Australia is taking Japan to the International Court of Justice in a bid to stop Japanese whaling for scientific research purposes.

Yamada's comments were the first he made to reporters since assuming his post a week ago. He was one of several Cabinet ministers appointed by new Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan.

___

Associated Press writer Rod McGuirk contributed to this report from Canberra, Australia.


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Malaysia and global warming

When Global Warming Comes Calling
Melati Mohd Ariff Bernama 16 Jun 10;

This six-part articles dwells on several environmental issues namely global warming, water vitality, ecosystems, biodiversity and Green Economy. This is the first of the six-part series.

KUALA LUMPUR, June 16 (BERNAMA) -- The global warming is one of the most critical environmental threats of the 21st century.

However, climate change is here to stay and the earth will naturally adapt to the change.

S. Piarapakaran, a vocal environmental activist explained, the Earth in fact has been exposed to climate change all this while but it was in a slow pace that allowed the earth's inhabitants to adapt to the changes.

The current fast rate of change however does not give ample time to both humans and other beings to adapt to the new climatic pattern.

The current problem was somewhat hastened when the Industrial Revolution that took the world by storm in the early 19th century with major transformations in agriculture, manufacturing, mining and transport.

The accelerated growth of human activities ever since has significantly contributed to the greenhouse gases that trapped heat within the atmosphere.

MALAYSIA AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Climate change in Malaysia reportedly would manifest in several ways, namely extreme drought, extreme flooding, rise in sea level and erosion in coastal areas.

Already in terms of temperature increase, the analysis made on Malaysia's temperature has been consistent with the global warming trend.

On average, the country's temperature has increased by 1.1 degrees Celsius over the last 50 years.

Piarapakaran, who is also the Senior Manager of Environment, Energy & Water of the Federation of Malaysian Consumers Associations (Fomca), added that the country's climate change would contribute to freak weather conditions like typhoon and high-speed wind.

This is already being observed here in small scale or as isolated incidents.

MORE FLOODS

Meanwhile, Anthony Tan, the Executive Director of Centre for Environment, Technology and Development (Cetdem) recalled the 2007 massive floods that hit Johor, Penang and Melaka.

"The last major flood in Melaka was in 1971, I was in standard one then. In the 2007 flood, one of the inundated areas was Melaka Sentral, which used to be a paddy field.

"Was the flood due to global warming or one of those freak events? Some blame it on the changing of the monsoons or inter-monsoon period," he said.

Tan also pointed out that there is no clear-cut rain and dry period in Malaysia these days.

As far as he is concerned, all these are an indication of climate change.

POLICIES TO NEGATE CLIMATE CHANGE

Tan who regards himself as a practical environmentalist took note of the Malaysian government's concern over the climate change issues.

"The prime minister has made a pledge at the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen last year to reduce our carbon emission by 40 per cent.

"Now how do we translate this into a government policy, how the industry and business are going to react and how a person on the street will also want to participate in that?" he asked.

What is deemed important now is for the government to work hand in hand with non-governmental organisations such as Cetdem in establishing more concrete programmes.

"It is not just about bringing awareness but also showing people what are the practical actions they can take to stop climate change," he said.

Tan said he learnt that the Government is coming up with a policy on climate change.

"This policy is a good start. It should be comprehensive. It should not be one ministry taking the lead but should be across all ministries," said Tan.

CHANGING VIEWS

Even the Malaysian public's perception on climate change has improved compared with the early part of the millennium.

Tan said in those days it was quite difficult to get even 50 people to attend talks on climate change but the general public are now starting to appreciate this whole issue of climate change.

"Each time I give a public talk I can see the surprise in the faces of the participants. Only then they realise that what they have been doing actually contributed to climate change.

"One of the things that I pointed out to them is that for every one kilowatt hour of electricity that they use, the power station has released carbon dioxide that is equivalent to one kilogram.

"Every one liter of diesel or fuel that you use, you release two and a half kilogram of carbon dioxide. So lets say you pump in 200 liters per month, you are actually contributing to 500 kilograms of carbon dioxide," said Tan.

"If fuel is the highest contributor of green house gas, then shouldn't we be looking at reducing our private car use and switch to public transport?" asked Tan.

SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION

As for Piarapakaran, who is also the Secretary General of the Water and Energy Consumer Association of Malaysia (WECAM), sustainable consumption and production (SCP) should be considered as part of the solution to adapt to the climate change.

According to him, most of the manufacturing processes in Malaysia involved the linear process - extract, process, manufacture, consume and dispose.

"This is not a sustainable way of utilising any resources. It also means we will consume and finish all resources without preserving it or even replenishing it.

"A sustainable process involves a cycle and it involves material reduction, optimisation, reusing and recycling and finally recovery of waste.

"These simple initiatives can help reduce dependency on raw material straight from the environment," he stressed.

As global warming descends upon the earth, Malaysians indeed have to learn to be climate friendly.

We need not go far, we just have to learn from our ancestors. They have lived their life in moderation and in sustainable manner. They have also learnt to live with the nature.

"We are not asking Malaysians to opt for tree houses or even live in caves. We are talking about simple change in behaviour. We are talking about caring more for the environment we live in by doing simple things like reducing energy usage by being energy efficient as one of them.

"Practicing the 3R (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle) principles in waste management, buying only what we need, using more public transport or car pooling, rainwater harvesting and many more simple things.

"By doing simple things, 28 million Malaysians definitely can make a difference. I believe in them. I believe Malaysia Boleh!" said Piarapakaran.

-- BERNAMA


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UN development chief: Myanmar, Thailand challenges

Ian Timberlake (AFP) Google News 16 Jun 10;

HANOI — Myanmar faces a tough task to eradicate extreme poverty and meet other global development goals, while political instability is holding back Thailand's progress, the UN development chief says.

In an interview with AFP, Helen Clark also said Vietnam had "a pretty good story to tell" about its efforts to achieve the so-called Millennium Development Goals, but faces a major challenge from climate change and rising sea levels.

Clark said military-ruled Myanmar, with "huge poverty", will find it difficult to meet any of the eight development goals by the 2015 global target.

"It would be tough," Clark, administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), said Tuesday on the sidelines of a conference.

The former New Zealand prime minister said Myanmar has the lowest foreign aid per capita of any developing country, and "political factors" restrict what the UNDP can do in Myanmar, "so it's not so easy to make progress there at this time."

Myanmar, which has detained democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi for most of the past two decades, is under European Union and United States sanctions.

Neighbouring Thailand has made reasonable progress in tackling poverty, Clark said, but further development is being hindered by political tensions.

Outbreaks of violence in Bangkok during two months of anti-government protests from March until May killed 90 people, wounded nearly 1,900, and left the country deeply divided.

"Clearly, instability holds back a country's development progress, and you end up punching below your weight when you could be punching to, or above, your weight," she said.

The unrest followed more than three years of political instability after the army seized power from then-prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra in a 2006 bloodless coup.

"Things haven't been stable since and I think what's really needed is a national dialogue on how to move to elections which are seen as free and fair and people will accept the result," said Clark, who assumed her post in April last year.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has called a September summit in New York to accelerate efforts toward reaching the 2015 development goals deadline.

Clark said Vietnam will be able to report good progress towards the goals of eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, and reducing child and maternal mortality.

The country has work to do to combat HIV/AIDS and add to the existing progress on access to water and basic sanitation, she said, while the environmental cost of old-style industrialisation also needs to be addressed.

But fast-growing Vietnam, which this year is set to attain "middle-income" status, faces a "huge challenge" from climate change, Clark said.

"And I believe that the government is acutely aware of this, aware now that Vietnam is one of the most exposed countries in the world to rising sea levels, intensity and frequency... of adverse weather events like typhoons," she said.

Vietnam is planning for a one-metre (3.3 feet) rise in sea levels by 2100, which would inundate about 31,000 square kilometres (12,400 square miles) of land -- an area about the size of Belgium -- unless dykes and drainage systems are strengthened, a UN discussion paper said in December.

It said the inundation threat is greatest in the Mekong Delta, the country's main rice production area. Vietnam is the world's second-biggest rice exporter.

If that land becomes unusable there are "serious implications" for the region, Clark said.

She spoke on the sidelines of a conference to review a pilot programme that aims to improve the coherence and effectiveness of UN assistance. Vietnam and Pakistan are among eight countries worldwide participating in the pilot which, the UN says, has hastened achievement of the Millennium Development Goals.


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May 2010 Was Warmest On Record: U.S. Government Data

Deborah Zabarenko PlanetArk 16 Jun 10;

Last month was the warmest May on record, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said on Tuesday.

It was also the 303rd consecutive month that was hotter than the 20th century global average for that month, according to Deke Arndt, chief of the climate monitoring at NOAA's National Climatic Data Center.

"Since February 1985, every single month has been warmer than its 20th century average," Arndt said by telephone from Asheville, North Carolina.

The long-term warming trend, along with reports that Arctic sea ice covered less of the ocean and snow covered less ground around the world in May, is consistent with the science of climate change, Arndt said.

Many climate scientists believe that Earth's surface is warming, due in part to the emission of heat-trapping greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide.

In addition to a record-hot May, high temperature surface records -- for warmth on the planet's land and oceans -- were set for the period of March through May and for January through May, the data center said in a statement.

Looking only at global average land surface temperatures, May and the March-to-May period were also the warmest on record.

Global ocean surface temperatures for both May and March-to-May were the second-hottest on record, behind 1998, according to the data center.

The combined global land and ocean surface temperature for May was 59.84 degrees F (33.25 C), which was 1.24 degrees F (0.69 degrees C) above the 20th century average of 58.6 degrees F (14.8 degrees C).

The global land surface temperature for May was 53.87 degrees F (12.15 degrees C), which is 1.87 degrees F (1.04 degrees C) above the 20th century average of 52 degrees F (11.1 degrees C) -- the warmest on record.

The May worldwide ocean temperature, the second warmest ever recorded after 1998, was 62.29 degrees F (34.61 C), compared to the 20th century average of 61.3 degrees F (16.3 degrees C).

Most of Earth's land areas saw extraordinary warm temperatures, with the hottest showing up in eastern North America, eastern Brazil, eastern Europe, southern Asia, eastern Russia, and equatorial Africa. China's Yunnan province had its warmest May since 1951 while many locations in Ontario, Canada had their warmest May on record.

It was unusually cool across western North America, northern Argentina, interior Asia and Western Europe. Germany had its coolest May since 1991, its 12th coolest May on record.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)


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Restating the IPCC's reason for being

Dr R K Pachauri BBC Green Room 15 Jun 10;

As the latest meeting of the InterAcademy Council's review into the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change convenes in Montreal, IPCC chairman R K Pachauri says the past year has been "momentous" for the organisation, and not always for the right reasons. In this week's Green Room, he sets out how and why the panel was established, and argues that it plays a vital role in the global climate policy debate.

I would like to start by saying that I am not deaf to those who do not agree with the scientific consensus on man-made climate change.

Nor, indeed, to those who do not agree with the findings - or, in some cases, the existence - of the IPCC.

Such scepticism is inevitable, and has been the case with every area of new knowledge that has burst into human consciousness.

We who are on the side of the consensus must remind ourselves that the evolution of knowledge thrives on debate.

The last year has been a momentous one indeed for the IPCC and climate science, and not always for the most welcome of reasons. The discovery of a mistake in our AR4 report - even as we prepared to start work on AR5 - led to considerable controversy.

It was, and is, inevitable that such an incident would lead to criticism and - quite rightly - to both internal and external examination.

However, at times in the last six months it has become apparent that many people either do not know, or have forgotten, what the IPCC actually is: what it was formed to do, who it reports to, and what its current mandate is.

Without that starting point - of understanding based in current and historical knowledge - there is a danger that the wrong conclusions can be drawn about the organisation's future.

Shared responsibility

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was established in 1988 through the mandate of the UN General Assembly.

It is not - and it is important to remember this - a UN body but, as its title suggests, an intergovernmental organisation, which means that ultimately its decisions have to be taken by the panel as a whole (ie all the governments of the world).

Contrary to allegations made by some of our wilder critics, there is no role - and no desire - for an executive function making decisions of its own.

It is also worth noting that most of the IPCC's more public figures - myself included - are not paid for our work.

Only our small secretariat in Geneva is paid - and the total budget for our organisation, which is responsible for co-ordinating the work of several thousand scientists around the world, is just £6m a year: hardly the giant, monolithic bureaucracy that some of our critics claim.

Another myth is that the IPCC was founded as a climates science organisation alone, publishing up-to-date science on the subject and nothing more.

Quite the contrary: going back to the IPCC's foundation, it is pertinent to observe that resolution A/RES/43/53 of the UN General Assembly, which was adopted on December 6, 1988, charged the IPCC to: "provide internationally co-ordinated scientific assessments of the magnitude, timing and potential environmental and socio-economic impact of climate change and realistic response strategies".



The wording of this resolution is important.

It clearly requires the IPCC to go beyond merely assessing various aspects of climate change and mandates it to provide an assessment of "realistic response strategies", as well as addressing socio-economic concerns.

The same resolution also defines by implication the audience that should be addressed by the IPCC by calling upon "non-governmental organisations, industry and other productive sectors to play their due role".

So, right from its foundation the strength of the IPCC lay in the fact that it is not only able to mobilise the best available expertise from across the globe - in climate science, yes, but also in economics, business, engineering and so on - but, through its voting structure, it also ensures that all the assessment reports are "owned" by the 194 sponsoring governments around the world.

Under the microscope

Notwithstanding my observation that the IPCC has always been charged with delivering more than climate science expertise alone, it is true to say its role in informing decision-makers across the globe has evolved rapidly over the past two decades.

As someone who has long been involved in the IPCC - first as a lead author in the Second Assessment Report and then as vice chairman during the Third Assessment Report and finally as chairman since 2002 - I have seen the rapid spread of its findings.

As the scope of those findings has increased - to address its broader mandate outlined above - it is inevitable that everything that the IPCC does is now under the lens of public scrutiny and criticism.

This requires the Panel to ensure a high level of transparency and objectivity in all that it does.

All the IPCC's reports are subject to open, extensive and transparent review at every stage of drafting.

What do I mean by that?

Well, the IPCC bases its work on the most recent relevant sources of literature available worldwide and undertakes a two-stage review process - first by external experts, and then by governments and experts simultaneously. The results of these processes are then made available to anyone who wants to see them.

Most of the literature we assess is peer-reviewed. However, there are areas such as the ones related to response measures where lots of important and relevant information is not in scientific peer-reviewed literature, but published by very respected institutions, for example from the International Energy Agency or the OECD.

'Wonderful organisation'

The IPCC is now working on the preparation of the Fifth Assessment Report (AR5).

This has begun on a positive and heartening note: in spite of all the attacks on climate scientists over the last year, around 3,000 outstanding scientists from all over the world have been nominated, more than ever before.

From these, around 600 are under selection to become the actual authors of the AR5, and several more as contributing authors and expert reviewers.

Meanwhile, as the process of author selection continues, we continue to look at improving our work in any way we can.

Earlier this year, we at the IPCC, together with the secretary-general of the United Nations, requested the InterAcademy Council to review the processes and procedures followed by the IPCC.

This review is currently in hand, and its outputs will be considered seriously at our plenary session in October.

The AR5 will, therefore, not only build on the remarkable record of the IPCC in the 22 years of its existence but also benefit from the views of the most dominant scientific body in the world, the InterAcademy Council, which can only add further authority to the output of the Panel.

The IPCC and the scientific community at large should welcome the development of a vigorous debate on the science of climate change (so long as the level of that debate does not descend to personal abuse, as it has done at times).

But welcoming a debate should never equate to losing our focus and our passion for fulfilling our purpose.

For that purpose is more relevant now than it ever has been: given the extent and global nature of the challenge, if the IPCC did not already exist, someone would need to invent it urgently.

It is that sense of urgency and necessity that drives the volunteer spirit of this wonderful organisation I have the honour to chair - a spirit that we can all be proud of.

Dr R K Pachauri is chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

The Green Room is a series of opinion articles on environmental topics running weekly on the BBC News website

Climate panel chief welcomes climate debate
Richard Black BBC News 15 Jun 10;

The head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Rajendra Pachauri, says he welcomes "the development of a vigorous debate" on climate science.

In an article for the BBC's Green Room series, he says those on the side of "consensus" must remember that debate drives the evolution of knowledge.

The panel and its chairman have been much criticised in recent months over errors in its landmark 2007 report.

Tuesday sees the second public session of a review into its operations.

An expert review panel convened by the InterAcademy Council (IAC) - a network of science academies across the world, such as the UK's Royal Society - will hear testimony from four expert witnesses at the session in Montreal.

The panel is chaired by US economist Harold Shapiro, a former adviser to Presidents George Bush and Bill Clinton.

Dr Pachauri says the IPCC welcomes the review - indeed, it requested such a process, realising that as a 20-year-old institution, many of its practices might benefit from an update.

"As the scope of (its) findings has increased... it is inevitable that everything that the IPCC does is now under the lens of public scrutiny and criticism," he writes.

"This requires the panel to ensure a high level of transparency and objectivity in all that it does."
Broader view

Critics have accused the IPCC of making multiple errors in its 2007 Fourth Assessment Report (AR4), but Dr Pachauri admits to just one - citing 2035 as the date by which Himalayan glaciers may have melted away.

"It was, and is, inevitable that such an incident would lead to criticism and - quite rightly - to both internal and external examination," he writes.

"However, at times in the last six months it has become apparent that many people either do not know, or have forgotten, what the IPCC actually is: what it was formed to do, who it reports to, and what its current mandate is."

The remit goes much further than climate science, he points out, with the UN resolution that established the body in 1988 calling on it to "provide internationally co-ordinated scientific assessments of the magnitude, timing and potential environmental and socio-economic impact of climate change and realistic response strategies."

Giving testimony

Tuesday's session of the InterAcademy Council review will hear testimony from four people who have all worked closely with the IPCC down the years.

Robert Watson, now a senior UK government adviser, chaired the organisation between 1997 and 2002.

Christopher Field, an ecologist based at Stanford University in California, now leads the working group on impacts, adaptation and vulnerability.

The other two speakers are Hans von Storch, director of the Institute of Coastal Research in Geesthacht, Germany, and John Christy, director of the Earth System Science Center at the University of Alabama, US.

Dr Christy, in particular, has criticised the IPCC's "politicisation" in the past.

Dr Pachauri presented his views at the opening session, held in Amsterdam last month.

The IAC panel will conclude its deliberations by the end of August. Its report will then go out for peer review before being formally presented at an IPCC meeting in South Korea in October - a meeting that will set parameters for the Fifth Assessment Report (AR5).

Dr Pachauri notes in his Green Room article that despite the intense, sometimes highly personal criticism aimed at climate scientists in recent months, about 3,000 have been nominated to take part in AR5 - more than ever before.


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