Best of our wild blogs: 9 Sep 10


7.5 million population: what it means for Chek Jawa and Ubin
from wild shores of singapore

Back to Changi's lively rocky shore
from wonderful creation and wild shores of singapore

Life's a beach
from The annotated budak

Metopo Metropolis at Changi
from wild shores of singapore

Dairy Farm Nature Park
from Garden Voices

Dragonfly (41) - Nesoxenia Lineata
from Nature Photography - Singapore Odonata

Chronicle of Mr & Mrs King
from Life's Indulgences

green hawk moth (Pergesa acteus)
from into the wild

A quick update for the past months
from Water Quality in Singapore

Cyrene on Google Earth's "Explore the Ocean"!
from Cyrene Reef Exposed!


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Room for 7.5 million people in Singapore: "there's still Pulau Ubin and Pulau Tekong" - Ex-HDB chief

Singapore has room for 7.5m people: Ex-HDB chief
Neo Chai Chin Today Online 9 Sep 10;

SINGAPORE - The quality of life in Singapore will not be heavily affected even if the population were to hit 7.5 million people, said Dr Liu Thai Ker, the former chief executive of the Housing and Development Board and the Urban Redevelopment Authority.

Asked what he thought was the "appropriate size" for Singapore's population after a Centre for Liveable Cities (CLC) lecture yesterday, Dr Liu said: "Since we have planned for 5.5 million people (in the Singapore Concept Plan 1991), if we increase ... to, say, 6, 6.2 million, I think that additional 10 to 12 per cent will not make a huge difference."

There are still the islands of Pulau Ubin and Pulau Tekong to fall back on, quipped Dr Liu, who was addressing the issue purely from a planner's perspective.

"If we have to grow to 7.5 million, personally I think it would not cause a deterioration of the environment.

"But beyond that, we need to do some re-thinking," he added.

Dr Liu, who chairs the CLC advisory board and is director of RSP Architects, spoke on the importance of urban planning in his lecture.

Singapore is the only success story of urbanisation in the 20th century in terms of dealing with high population density and high-rise living, he said.

Foreign visitors are always surprised when they learn the Republic is home to 30 golf courses and seven airstrips.

"Good planning can help you have your cake and eat it," said Dr Liu.

Export city planning skills: ex-URA chief
Singapore's experience can help Asian neighbours build up cities: Liu Thai Ker
Felda Chay Business Times 9 Sep 10;

SINGAPORE should actively export its city planning expertise to other Asian cities, said Liu Thai Ker, chairman of the Centre for Liveable Cities advisory board.

In a speech laced with anecdotes to about 250 policy-makers, industry practitioners and academics, the former chief executive of Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) and Housing and Development Board (HDB) said that Singapore should fly its brand name higher in the area of urbanisation given its sound city planning, which lives up to international standards.

'I firmly believe that we have an excellent team, a world-class team (of city planners).'

Singapore can take credit for what it has done, and help the countries around it, said Mr Liu.

Singapore stands out because it is developed 'by Asians in Asia within one generation', he said. This would be something that fast developing, rapidly urbanising countries like China and India hope to emulate.

The model of high density living that Singapore has adopted - one which countries like China, India and Indonesia are looking towards - is also what makes its city planning advice sought after, said Mr Liu.

While there are many liveable cities in Europe most, if not all, are not as densely populated as Singapore. This allows Singapore city planning experts to hold their own when it comes to offering advice and expertise on city development to Asian countries, he said.

Other marks of Singapore's urban development, such as having a clear objective and refusing to be a follower of trends, also put it in good stead to offer expertise to Asian nations - many of which are at the beginning stages of improving their city planning, Mr Liu said.

'We are very clear about what we are doing, what our objectives are, what we are looking for. We never chase popular trends. We always believed in and analysed what we needed to do and did it against the world trends. High-rise public housing, for one, was against the world trend in 1960 but Singapore went ahead with it anyway,' he said.

'Yes, we borrowed Western theories, but we did not just blindly use Western theories. We adapted them to Asian requirements,' said Mr Liu.

As such, 'we can share with the world general principles or even convert them into course materials because even that would be invaluable.'

This strong desire and belief that Singapore's city planning experience can help neighbouring nations build up their cities was what led the 72-year-old to put his feet back into the world of urban planning after leaving the URA in 1992.

'When I left URA, my intention was to say goodbye to planning totally and focus on architecture. But when I started going around to look at the horrible plans done by people from all over the world ... I just felt that it would be impossible for me to turn a blind eye to all those horrible plans. So I decided to carry on.'

The 'horrible' city planning the 72-year-old saw in cities worldwide stood in stark contrast to Singapore, whose planners have made her look 'amazing', said Mr Liu.

'So I think there is a great need for us to understand how it happened, document it and make use of the document for ourselves and the rest of the world, mainly Asia.'

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7.5 million population: what it means for Chek Jawa and Ubin from wild shores of singapore.



7.5m too many

City's 'elasticity' must surely have its limits
Letter from Narayana Narayana Today Online 15 Sep 10;

THE former chief executive of the Housing and Development Board and the Urban Redevelopment Authority, Dr Liu Thai Ker, confidently said that "the quality of life in Singapore will not be affected even if the population were to hit 7.5 million people" ("S'pore has room for 7.5m people: Ex-HDB chief", Sept 9).

His optimism appears to be underpinned mainly on the premise that "since we have planned for 5.5 million people (in the Singapore Concept Plan 1991), if we increase to, say, 6, 6.2 million, I think that additional 10 to 12 per cent will not make a huge difference".

However, 7.5 million people is a whopping 36 per cent increase and elasticity must surely have its limits, with an eventual snapping point, which could have disastrous repercussions and consequences.

Dr Liu's experience in the housing sector may have blinkered him into thinking only of providing accommodation for any increase in numbers.

A 50-storey block of flats would, of course, be able to house double the number of a 25-storey one but would it be possible to provide the necessary corresponding infrastructure and supporting facilities as well to ensure that "the quality of life in Singapore will not be affected"?

That is debatable, despite Dr Liu's lecture on "the importance of urban planning". As that well-known phrase goes: "The best-laid plans of mice and men oft go awry" and so too do theoretical calculations and projections.

For example, the less-than-3 million population in the early '90s has burgeoned to more than 5 million today but, despite the many improvements, public transport is not the projected breeze.

The MRT stations were designed so that a very definite six-coach train would fit into them with no possibility of adding more coaches to each train. Commuters now often wait for two or three to pass before they can get into one of them because of the overcrowding.


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Rice Prices ‘Worrisome’ as Global Supplies Tighten

Cecilia Yap and Luzi Ann Javier Bloomberg BusinessWeek 8 Sep 10;

Sept. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Rice prices are becoming “worrisome” as global supplies tighten because of crop losses in some of the largest exporters, according to an official in the Philippines, the world’s biggest buyer.

The global supply-and-demand balance is “not at the 2008 level yet, but it’s pretty worrisome because of the prices,” Lito Banayo, head of the National Food Authority, which handles state rice purchases in the Philippines, said in an interview in Manila yesterday.

The United Nations Food & Agriculture Organization’s global Food Price Index surged in August to the highest level since September 2008 as wheat and rice prices advanced after Russia, the world’s third-largest wheat grower last year, banned exports and flooding in Pakistan damaged rice crops, curbing supplies of Asia’s two main staple grains.

The FAO pared its estimate for global rice production on Sept. 1 for the second time since April as lower water levels in the Mekong River curbed yields in Thailand and Vietnam, the world’s two biggest exporters, and flooding slashed the harvest in Pakistan, the third-largest shipper.

The agency’s Rice Price Index, which tracks 16 export prices around the world, climbed to a five-month high of 215 points in August.

“We feel the market could be subject to a supply crunch,” Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services Pty. in Sydney, said in an e-mail to Bloomberg News today. “Already we have seen a strong movement in rough rice” prices, he said.

Thai Prices

Rice futures advanced to a record $25.07 per 100 pounds in Chicago in April 2008 as exporting countries including India and Vietnam restricted shipments, adding to concerns about a global food shortage that sparked riots from Haiti to Egypt. The Thai export price, the benchmark for Asia, surged to an all-time high of $1,038 a metric ton a month later.

Futures in Chicago have gained 23 percent since slumping to the lowest in almost four years in June. The December-delivery contract traded at $11.685 at 11:18 a.m. in Singapore.

The Thai export price may rise to $525 a ton in October, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 10 exporters and traders last month, as supply tightens ahead of the country’s harvest, which has been delayed because of drought. The price, updated weekly by the Thai Rice Exporters Association, climbed to a five-month high of $495 a ton yesterday.

The FAO cut its rice production forecast for this year to 467 million tons on Sept. 1, compared with 474 million tons in April, and 472 million tons in a June report.

Pakistan Losses

Crop losses in Pakistan “could negatively affect the rice trade,” the FAO said. The agency reduced its forecast for next year’s global exports to 29 million tons, from an estimated 30 million tons this year.

Exports from Pakistan may slump as much as 35 percent to 3 million tons in the year that began July 1, from 4.6 million tons a year earlier, after the deadliest flood in the nation’s history destroyed crops, Malik Jahangir, chairman of the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan, said Sept. 1.

Shipments from India of basmati rice, which is at least twice as expensive as the regular variety, may surge by about 22 percent after the floods in Pakistan, Anil Mittal, chairman of KRBL Ltd., the country’s biggest exporter, said yesterday.

“Timing of when to buy is important” for the Philippines, Banayo said. The country’s government is still “validating” production figures to gauge the volume of rice it needs to purchase for 2011, he said.

Supply in the Philippines may tighten after drought caused by El Nino delayed planting. The nation’s main harvest, which typically begins mid-September, may be delayed by at least a month, Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala said in July.

Drought may cut rough rice production in the Philippines by 15.2 percent to 9.24 million tons in the first nine months of the year, compared with the same period last year, according to a July report by the nation’s Bureau of Agricultural Statistics.

--Editors: Matthew Oakley, Jarrett Banks.


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Protect corals with reef networks, U.N. study says

Alister Doyle, Reuters 8 Sep 10;

(Reuters) - The world should safeguard coral reefs with networks of small no-fishing zones to confront threats such as climate change, and shift from favoring single, big protected areas, a U.N. study showed.

"People have been creating marine protected areas for decades. Most of them are totally ineffective," Peter Sale, a leader of the study at the U.N. University's Institute for Water, Environment and Health, told Reuters.

"You need a network of protected areas that functions well," he said. "It's important to get away from single protected areas which has been the common approach."

Fish and larvae of marine creatures can swim or be carried large distances, even from large protected areas.

That means it is often best to set up a network of small no-fishing zones covering the most vulnerable reefs, with catches allowed in between. Closing big zones can be excessive for conservation and alienate fishermen who then ignore bans.

Reefs from the Pacific Ocean to the Caribbean are nurseries for fish and vital for food supplies since about 40 percent of the world's population lives within 50 km (30 miles) of the coast.

Climate change, pollution and over-fishing are among threats to reefs. Warmer oceans can damage corals, sometimes irreversibly. The U.N. University study is in a new handbook to help planners cooperate with marine scientists.

On land, planners can usually be confident that plants and animals will stay in areas set aside as national parks, Sale said. At sea, park limits are far less relevant.

MANGROVES

In the past, he said, countries had sometimes set up large protected areas for reefs but then cleared mangroves along nearby coastlines to make way for hotels and beaches for scuba-diving tourists. That can damage some fish stocks.

"In the Caribbean, snappers and groupers spend their lives as juveniles in mangroves and sea grass beds," Sale said. As adults the fish go back to live on the reefs, creating a need for protected zones on both reefs and in mangroves.

Scientists recently discovered that the spiny lobster, the most valuable fishery in the Caribbean, has a larval stage lasting seven months, shorter than widely believed.

Understanding ocean currents can help to show how far they get dispersed within seven months before settling on the seabed. That can also help in deciding where to site protected zones.

Sale said Australia's Great Barrier Reef was a good example of management, with a network of no-fishing zones and others open to tourism or fishing. That system meant a balance between the needs of people and the reef.


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Native Toad Fights Back Against Yellow Crazy-Ant Invasion in Sulawesi

Susan Milius, Wired Science 8 Sep 10;

After so many sad tales of invasive species overwhelming hapless natives, scientists have found a native toad in Indonesia that’s fighting back.

The common Sulawesi toad turns out to be a prodigious eater of ants, even aggressive invading ones, says Thomas C. Wanger of the University of Göttingen in Germany and the University of Adelaide in Australia. On the island of Sulawesi, the Ingerophrynus celebensis toads readily feast on yellow crazy ants, which are colonizing the island as well as other tropical locations.

Yellow crazy ants get their name from their color and their zigzag scurrying, and they have crowded out native ants and disrupted ecosystems elsewhere. The invaders meet any foe aggressively, releasing noxious chemicals during battle. The Sulawesi toads eat them nonetheless, Wanger says.

During a week of toad abundance on Sulawesi farms, test plots hopping with toads had as little as one-third of the invasive-ant populations found on plots where fencing kept toads out, Wanger and his colleagues report in a paper released online the week of Sept. 6 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

The paper could be a first in suggesting that a native toad might control populations of invasive ants, says ecologist Stacy M. Philpott of the University of Toledo in Ohio. “It is a really neat finding,” she says.

Wanger and his colleagues established that the toads disproportionately prey on ants, based on the toads’ fecal samples. “You wouldn’t believe how smelly these things are,” he says. The samples revealed that some kind of ant accounted for three-quarters of the diet of the toads storming through the test region, even though ants didn’t represent a large proportion of the arthropods there. Native ants presumably have long coexisted on the island with the toads, but populations of invaders may be taking a hit, the researchers suggest.

The test plots lay in cacao plantations, and the researchers speculate that the toads’ taste for ants may turn out to be a boon for cacao pest control. About every three months, the toads leave their usual forest home and surge through the cacao plantations to breed in the water of neighboring rice fields.

Toads feasting on yellow crazy ants may help keep the invaders from crowding out the native ants in cacao plantations. Other researchers have shown that a rich diversity of native ants helps keep cacao pests and diseases in check.

The study’s suggestion that the Sulawesi toads ultimately help control pests in the cacao plantations is plausible, Philpott says. She and a colleague have surveyed the scientific literature on how the diversity of ants can affect diseases and pests in coffee and cacao plantations. One kind of native ant preys on insects that leave sticky lesions on cacao pods, for example, and fewer sticky spots means the pods attract fewer visits from flies tainted with a pathogen causing pod rot.

Making a case for toads as protectors of cacao might rouse new enthusiasm for protecting native amphibians, as Sulawesi residents have similar priorities to those in agricultural communities the world over. “They are not really interested in biodiversity conservation but in economic questions,” Wanger says.

A scientist who has studied the ecological damage from crazy ants, Dennis O’Dowd of Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, notes that the researchers now need to investigate the other links in their hypothesis, such as whether the toads’ periodic gorging on yellow crazy ants has a lasting effect on ant populations.

Nonetheless, he says, “I certainly like the sentiments in the paper, and I’m all for conservation of native amphibians.”


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$300,000 Needed to Help Save Last of Javan Rhinos

Fidelis E. Satriastanti Jakarta Globe 8 Sep 10;

Jakarta. An international partnership is seeking to raise $300,000 in a race against the clock to ensure the survival of the last estimated 48 Javan rhinoceroses in Indonesia — all found within Ujung Kulon National Park in Banten.

Operation Javan Rhino started on June 21 and is an initiative of the International Rhino Foundation and Indonesian Rhino Foundation (YABI).

Its goal is to create 4,000 hectares of expanded habitat to encourage population growth in the national park, a rare patch of wilderness on the western tip of one of the world’s most densely populated island.

“Having all the eggs in one basket isn’t a good thing for any species,” Susie Ellis, executive director of the International Rhino Foundation, told the Jakarta Globe.

“With the help of the Rhino Foundation of Indonesia, the Worldwide Fund for Nature, Save the Rhino and the Indonesian government, we have committed to improving the available habitat for Javan rhinos to increase and spread out the population.”

The project is supported by the Ministry of Forestry, which allocated land for it inside the national park.

However, all the improvements needed for the expanded habitat — specifically to help protect the species from the threat of extinction by a single natural disaster or introduced disease — will be shouldered by the nongovernmental organizations.

Widodo Ramono, executive director of YABI, told the Globe that $650,000 was needed for the two-year project, with $350,000 so far having been secured from the NGOs’ own resources.

“This funding is all purely coming from the NGOs; there is no special allocation from the government,” he said. “But they have already provided the land and the human resources, so everybody is doing their bit.”

Widodo said it would take two years to physically prepare the rhinos’ habitat near Mount Honje. The money for the project will be used to improve water and food sources, build guard posts and electric fencing, construct patrol routes and hire rangers to patrol the area.

Additionally, 60 camera traps donated by the Aspinall Foundation in January will be used to gather data about how many rhinos remain in Ujung Kulon.

Adhi Rachmat Hariyadi, site manager for WWF Indonesia’s project in the park, said the cameras were crucial to keeping track of the rhino population.

“So far, from the videos we have analyzed, we’ve identified 27 individual rhinos and extrapolated a maximum of 47 animals in the park, which still needs to be confirmed by surveys on the ground,” he said.


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No documents on the transfer of Anson Wong's Bengal tigers

The Star 9 Sep 10;

GEORGE TOWN: The Penang Government wants a probe on why convicted wildlife trafficker Anson Wong’s two Bengal tigers were transferred to another location without any proper documentation.

State Health, Welfare, Caring Society and Environment Committee chairman Phee Boon Poh said there were “no documents” on the transfer of the tigers to a private location near the Teluk Bahang Forest Reserve on July 29 last year.

“Last year, we asked the state Wildlife and National Park Department (Perhilitan) to reveal details of the special permit and licences it issued to Wong but so far we have not seen the official documents of transfer,’’ he said.

The endangered tigers, previously kept at the Bukit Jambul Hibiscus, Orchids and Reptile Farm in Bukit Jambul, will eventually be housed in a reptile garden at the forest reserve.

Current Perhilitan director Noor Alif Wira Osman, who has gone on leave, will be transferred to another state effective Oct 1.

Phee said the state would arrange for a meeting with the new director to get to the bottom of things and stressed that it had never dealt with Wong.

Ninety-five boa constrictors, two rhinoceros vipers and a matamata turtle were found by baggage handlers in Wong’s check-in suitcase during his transit through KLIA from Penang on a flight bound for Jakarta.

Chua criticises mild penalties for smuggler
The Star 9 Sep 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: MCA president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek has criticised the mild punishment given to “Lizard King” Anson Wong.

Through his Twitter account yesterday, Dr Chua said Wong should have been given a heftier fine and jail sentence, and that most Malay­sians were not sensitive enough about protecting the country’s flora and fauna.

In another update about 15 minutes later, he said: “Perhilitan Depart­ment is grossly understaffed, enforce­ment is weak.”

Perhilitan detained Wong for smuggling 95 endangered boa constrictors without a permit at KL Inter­national Airport on Aug 26.

Wong, who was on transit from Penang to Jakarta when he was caught, was sentenced to six months’ jail and fined RM190,000 by the Sepang Sessions Court on Monday.

The International Trade in En­­dangered Species Act 2008 carries a maximum fine of RM100,000 for each animal smuggled, and provides for a maximum sentence of seven years’ jail for illegal wildlife trafficking.

The Attorney-General’s Chambers has filed an appeal against the sentence.

Penang airport probes into inside job in snake fiasco
New Straits Times 9 Sep 10;

GEORGE TOWN: Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd (MAHB) yesterday defended its security at the airport here after a wildlife trafficker slipped nearly 100 boa constrictors into a plane.

Authorities at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport arrested Anson Wong Keng Liang on Aug 26 when they found 95 boa constrictors, together with other snakes and a turtle, in his bag.

The bag had broken open on a conveyer belt at the KLIA while on transit to Indonesia.


MAHB senior general manager of operations Datuk Azmi Murad said the airport's security was of international standards and comparable with that of all airports in the world.

He said it had launched an investigation into the incident, but had yet to lodge a police report.

It is understood that MAHB is looking into the possibility of an inside job as no security officer had detected the snakes despite them going through scanners at the airport.


"We fulfil all international requirements.

"We have never compromised the safety of our passengers and aircraft," Azmi said.

"We will investigate the matter and get to the bottom of things."


Wong, 52, had served time in the United States nine years ago for animal trafficking. He was on Monday fined RM190,000 and sentenced to six months in jail for trying to smuggle the endangered species without a permit.

However, some people said his sentence was too light.

State police chief Datuk Ayub Yaakob said police would not investigate the matter as no one had lodged a report.


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Rope in orang asli to curb poaching, says Malayan Nature Society

The Star 9 Sep 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: The orang asli in Malaysia are the “best eyes and ears” for enforcement officers of the Government to help reduce wildlife poaching, said academician Tan Sri Dr Ahmad Mustaffa Babjee.

The Malaysia Nature Society (MNS) member said proactive action should be taken to get Malaysia’s indigenous people to be part of the nation’s nature conservation efforts.

“They know the forests well enough compared to others and they are the best ‘enforcers’ in keeping wildlife safe,” he said at a press conference on Tuesday.

Due to encroachment by poachers, Dr Ahmad said the orang asli could be tempted easily when money was involved.

He also said the orang asli were animal lovers and were well-suited as eco-tourist guides.

“We should give them the needed training to take part in eco-tourism,” he added.

He said there was lack of public awareness on the impact and importance of biodiversity even though Malaysia was listed 12th in the world in terms of mega biodiversity.

Its rapid rate of depletion on flora had also caused concern.

Dr Ahmad said public should be educated on the importance of preserving nature.

Dr Ahmad added that MNS would host a two-day international conference themed “Challenges and Solutions for Tropical Biodiversity” from Oct 8 to discuss the current status and trends in Malaysia’s tropical biodiversity.

For more information, log on to www.mns.my.


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Great Apes Protected As EU Restricts Animal Testing

Pete Harrison PlanetArk 8 Sep 10;

Primates, including mankind's closest relatives -- chimpanzees, gorillas, bonobos and orangutans -- have gained new protection after the European Parliament backed a clampdown on animal testing.

"The use of non-human primates should be permitted only in those biomedical areas essential for the benefit of human beings, for which no other alternative replacement methods are yet available," a new EU law said.

The strongest protection was given to the "great apes," although sustained public pressure has already ensured none have been used in European Union research in eight years.

Less stringent measures were brought in to protect the 12,000 other smaller primates, such as macaques, used in EU labs each year.

The revision of the 25-year-old rules had originally envisaged a more complete ban on primate research, but were heavily contested and lobbied by industry.

Researchers argued primates were indispensable for work to find cures for diseases including HIV, Alzheimer's Disease, cancer, hepatitis, malaria, multiple sclerosis and tuberculosis.

In theory, great apes can be used in such research, but in practice license applications face rigorous EU scrutiny.

Researchers said a fair balance had been found.

"Today's agreement should bring direct and tangible animal welfare benefits and allow essential medical research to continue in Europe to deliver the new and innovative treatments," said drug industry group EFPIA.

Some 12 million vertebrate animals are used each year in experiments throughout the 27-nation EU -- half for drug development and testing, a third for biology studies and the rest for cosmetics tests, toxicology and disease diagnosis.

Around 80 percent are mice and rats and primates account for around a tenth of 1 percent or about 12,000 animals.

Researchers will have to keep files on the history of each individual primate, dog or cat to ensure their welfare needs are met. They will also be obliged to use alternatives to animal testing whenever they are available.

Government authorities will be required to perform inspections on laboratories, some of them snap checks.

Animal rights campaigners gave the rules a mixed welcome, saying they represented business as usual for laboratories in Germany and Britain, but might lead to improvements in eastern Europe.

"This directive also sends a challenge to other countries such as the United States where chimps are still used in significant numbers," said campaigner Wendy Higgins of the Humane Society International.

(Reporting by Pete Harrison)


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Kremlin eyes forest management reform after fires

Reuters AlertNet 8 Sep 10;

MOSCOW, Sept 8 (Reuters) - President Dmitry Medvedev said on Wednesday he would consider radically reforming Russia's forest management, currently under the control of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, after the worst forest fires in 30 years.

More than 50 people died and about 2,000 families were left homeless this summer after wildfires ravaged thousands of hectares in central Russia during the country's worst heat wave in decades.

Critics blame the new Forest Code that was passed by parliament in 2006 on the orders of then president Putin, Medvedev's mentor. The law disbanded a centralised system of forest protection, making a large part the country's forests a legal no man's land.

"I have made the decision to hand over the Federal Forestry Agency directly to the government," he told officials at a meeting. "But if this proves insufficient, I reserve the right to radically change the structure."

Medvedev criticised Putin's Forest Code by saying that around 13 percent of forests were left totally unprotected, and promised a new service to protect forests will be set up, which would reverse the most disputed part of the Forest Code.

"We need to analyse in the most careful manner the legislation and the structure -- or structures -- that will manage (the forests)," he said.

Medvedev also pledged to crack down on regional governors who prove unable to manage their forests. A mechanism will allow the Kremlin to deprive the regional officials of the powers to control forests and sack officials for their failings.

The Russian budget lost at least 12 billion roubles ($388.5 million) due to the wildfires, Emergencies Minister Sergei Shoigu said last month, though experts estimated the overall damage to the economy could top $14 billion.

Russia's forests cover 809 million hectares, 22 percent of global forest resources, or twice the size of the European Union landmass, and are vital for producing oxygen amid global climate change.

(Writing by Alexei Anishchuk; editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)


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Record Hong Kong air pollution sparks protest

Reuters 8 Sep 10;

(Reuters) - Roadside air pollution in Hong Kong hit record highs in the first six months of the year, hurting public health and economic competitiveness compared with Asian rivals, activists and lawmakers said Tuesday.

The city's air quality hit "unhealthy" levels about 10 percent of the time between January and June, the highest level in five years, said environmental group Friends of the Earth.

The government advises people with heart or respiratory problems to avoid lingering in traffic-heavy places when the air pollution index goes into "unhealthy" territory.

"Think of the health cost and also the disincentives to tourists and to people investing and setting up companies in Hong Kong," said legislator Audrey Eu who joined green activists in unfurling a big black banner over a roadside monitoring station at the heart of Hong Kong's Central financial district.

Health experts estimate poor air has cost the city HK$1.18 billion (US$151 million) in healthcare bills and lost productivity, along with 3.8 million visits to the doctor, this year.

"The bad air and pollution is actually giving Hong Kong a bad name and deterring people from coming," added Eu, who was among a coalition of lawmakers urging the government to do much more to resolve the problem including accelerating the phasing out of diesel buses and imposing stiffer fines.

Hong Kong's air pollution soared off the charts to unprecedented highs in March when sandstorms from northern China cloaked the city in dust.

A survey by Mercer Consulting ranking the quality of life of 221 cities, found air pollution weighed heavily on Hong Kong, a business gateway to China, knocking its ranking to 71, far below Singapore at 28.

"Hong Kong's always been rated lower than other neighboring cities ... it's due mainly to our air quality problems," said Edwin Lau, director of Friends of the Earth.

"The government seems to have done a lot of things, but I would say they've only been tinkering on the edges," said Lau, referring to a recent law to ban idling engines.

He noted, however, that imported pollution from China's vast industrial hinterland of the Pearl River Delta, across the border from Hong Kong, had shown mild improvement over the past year given a push to phase out older, more polluting industries there and other emission-reduction measures.

Hong Kong's Environmental Protection Department had no immediate response when contacted by Reuters, but earlier noted that while roadside pollution had peaked, overall atmospheric pollution levels actually fell in the first six months.

(Reporting by James Pomfret and Tan Ee Lyn in Hong Kong; editing by Chris Lewis)


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Mining the Truth on Coal Supplies

A view that the world’s leading electricity fuel—and major contributor to climate change—is running out
Mason Inman National Geographic News 8 Sep 10;

No matter how bad coal might be for the planet, the conventional wisdom is that there is so much of it underground that the world’s leading fuel for electricity will continue to dominate the energy scene unless global action is taken on climate change.

But what if conventional wisdom is wrong?

A new study seeks to shake up the assumption that use of coal, the most carbon-intensive fossil fuel, is bound to continue its inexorable rise. In fact, the authors predict that world coal production may reach its peak as early as next year, and then begin a permanent decline.

The study, led by Tad Patzek, chairman of the Department of Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin, and published in the August issue of Energy, predicts that by mid-century, the world's coal mining will supply only half as much energy as today.

The idea that the world will face "peak coal" as soon as 2011 flies in the face of most earlier estimates and analysis.

The London-based World Coal Institute, an industry group including the largest international coal producers, says "the use of coal will rise 60 percent over the next 20 years," and that "coal will last us for at least 119 years." And the U.S. Energy Information Administration, in its most recent international outlook, projects that coal consumption for electricity will grow more than 50 percent by 2035 unless policies are put in place to stop the growth of greenhouse gas emissions.

However, the Patzek study paints a far different picture—and not because people will use up the last of the coal in the ground. Rather, the world will finish off the coal that is easy to reach and high-quality—the coal that produces a large amount of energy per ton, the new study says. What remains will often be of lower quality, and progressively harder to dig up and bring to where it is used.

The study's prediction for the time of the peak—actually a peak in the energy produced by global coal production—may not turn out to be exactly right, Patzek said. “I’m not saying that on July 1, 2011, there will be a peak."

But the main thrust of the study is stark: “We are near or at the peak right now,” he said.

Economic Costs

If true, this could have a vast impact on the world economy.

Coal-fired power plants supply 40 percent of the world's electricity, and energy for two-thirds of the world's steel production.

"If we are right," Patzek's study said, "major restructuring and shrinking of the global economy will follow."

Many countries are counting on coal to continue powering their economies for decades to come.

“The United States is the Saudi Arabia of coal,” said President Barack Obama earlier this year, referring to estimates that the United States has the largest coal reserves of any country. Citing the huge stores and the need for clean energy, Obama made the remark at the launch of a task force to study how to deploy technology to “clean up” coal, through carbon capture and storage technology, in the next 10 years.

However, Patzek argues that the reserves estimates of the United States and other countries overstate how much coal is actually practical to mine and use.

"In my study, I disregard completely these [reserve] estimates," Patzek said. "They're not credible."

"The only estimate that's credible,” he argued, “is what actually comes out of the mines, and how you project that into the future."

For instance, the study notes that estimates of Illinois’ proven reserves are still high—second only to Montana in the United States—even though coal production has declined to a little more than half of what was produced there 20 years ago.

But there are numerous reasons for that drop, including the fact that Illinois coal is high in sulfur. Electric utilities have shifted to buying lower-sulfur coal from the Powder River Basin of Wyoming and Montana, despite its lower heat content, as a way to meet federal regulations for control of acid rain.

Other analyses that have taken the shift to lower-quality coal into account have concluded that reserves are robust, including a 2007 assessment of U.S. coal research and development needs, organized by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). Despite what the panel admitted were “significant” uncertainties in reserve estimates, the NAS concluded there was sufficient coal to meet the nation’s needs at current rates of consumption for more than 100 years. That study said the United States had about 270 billion tons of coal reserves, plus more than 1,500 billion tons of “resources”—known deposits that are not currently economical to produce, but that may be possible to develop later.

“It is safe to conclude that the U.S. is not running out of reserves,” said Raja Ramani, a mining engineer at the University of Pennsylvania and co-author of the NAS paper. “I do not see 2011 as the peak year of coal production.”

However, the NAS admitted that its 2007 estimates of coal reserves were based upon methods and data that had not been reviewed or revised since the early 1970s. The NAS called for a coordinated government and industry initiative to determine the magnitude and characteristics of the nation’s recoverable coal reserves.

Will Coal Follow Oil Curve?

Patzek's study uses a version of a method developed by the legendary father of “peak oil” theory, Marion King Hubbert, to analyze coal reserves. Hubbert, at the time a Shell Oil petroleum geologist, used prior production history to correctly predict 15 years in advance that U.S. oil production would peak in the early 1970s.

Hubbert's method, a controversial one, assumes that production follows a bell-shaped curve over time.

When there are many different oil wells or coal mines operating independently, the sum of all their production tends to follow such a bell curve over time—starting off small, rising to a peak, and then dropping again as the resources are depleted.

Oil in the United States has followed this pattern, as has coal in the United Kingdom.

Patzek's study, “A global coal production forecast with multi-Hubbert cycle analysis,” modifies Hubbert's method to allow for several bell curves, to reflect the development of coal mines in different parts of the world and the use of different technologies.

Patzek's study is not the only one to conclude that the reserve estimates are often too high. In recent years, chemical engineers at Newcastle University in Australia, the electrical engineer David Rutledge at the California Institute of Technology, and a German nonprofit called Energy Watch Group all have estimated that coal production would most likely peak in the next couple of decades.

One of the most important questions involving the peak coal studies is what they mean for climate change policy. Patzek’s study notes that its projections would mean that carbon emissions from global coal production would decline by 50 percent by 2050. That’s significantly below most of the carbon emissions scenarios produced by the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Patzek’s paper opens with a swipe at the IPCC scenarios, saying they are “based on economic and policy considerations that appear to be unconstrained by geophysics.”

But the paper concludes with an appeal that climate action advocates could only applaud—a plea for using less energy and more efficient electricity generation.

“The global community should be devoting its attention to conservation and increasing efficiency of electrical power generation from coal,” the paper said. “Immediate upgrades of the existing electrical coal-fired power stations to new, ultra supercritical steam turbines that deliver [greater efficiency than current power plants] are urgently needed.”

The paper underscores the different drivers behind the push for a new path forward on energy—the call is much the same, whether the worry is too much coal or too little.


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