Best of our wild blogs: 23 Sep 10


Interesting green ideas
from The Straits Times Blogs by Jessica Cheam

Kusu pilgrimage season: 8 Oct - 5 Nov 2010
from wild shores of singapore

Been to Cyrene: "Unlike any other reef I've seen in Singapore"
from Cyrene Reef Exposed!

There's always a catch...
from The annotated budak

Dragonfly (42) - Orchithemis Pruinans
from Nature Photography - Singapore Odonata

Common Myna altercation over nest ownership
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Dredging and massive reclamation next to Labrador until Apr 2011 from wild shores of singapore and Dredging off Kusu Island continues until Mar 2011.


Read more!

Keeping reservoirs litter-free and dealing wtih illegal fishing

Straits Times Forum 23 Sep 10;

PUB, the national water agency, thanks Mr Tan Poh Soon for his letter ('Pandan Reservoir under threat from dorm workers'; Sept 17).

Since 2006, PUB has been opening up reservoirs for more recreational activities such as boating and fishing. This is in line with our efforts to bring people closer to water as part of the Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters (ABC Waters) programme. By encouraging people to enjoy water, it is hoped that they will value water and play a part in protecting this precious resource and keeping it clean.

With the opening of the two new fishing jetties at Pandan Reservoir, it has attracted more people including foreign workers to fish at the reservoir. PUB is aware that there were instances when foreign workers fished outside the designated fishing zones using live baits which is prohibited. As such, PUB has stepped up its regular checks at Pandan Reservoir.

We have also liaised with the nearby foreign workers' dormitory operators to conduct regular talks to help educate the workers not to litter and to fish using only artificial baits at the two designated fishing jetties at Pandan Reservoir.

To further create public awareness and educate the public on keeping the waterways clean, PUB is engaging Sports Fishing Association (Singapore) and Gamefish & Aquatic Rehabilitation Society to hold workshops to share good fishing etiquette such as sports fishing with artificial baits, practising 'clean-up after fishing' and 'catch and release' habits.

PUB encourages members of the public who share the same vision of promoting recreational fishing to volunteer their services with the two organisations.

Tan Nguan Sen
Director, Catchment & Waterways
PUB, the national water agency

Pandan reservoir under threat from dorm workers
Straits Times Forum 23 Sep 10;

TWO fishing jetties have opened at the Pandan Reservoir, yet I have witnessed increased illegal fishing taking place outside the designated spots.

It disturbs me greatly that such activities are carried out by workers from the Penjuru dormitory.

PUB seems to be enforcing the 'No live bait' rule at the designated jetties while fishing continues to take place without restriction and out of control throughout the rest of the reservoir.

The use of live and organic bait by anglers can be seen along the stretch near Penjuru Road. I have seen fishing traps beneath floating platforms outside the Yacht Club.

The Malayan water monitor lizards are also under considerable threat as some anglers deliberately throw fishing lures targeting them. I have seen lizards with artificial lures hooked to their bodies.

Pandan Reservoir is essentially a small artificial water catchment area. Pollution and the ecological threat that results from undesirable activities is cumulative and not reversible. Hence, fishing activities and littering by workers from the nearby dormitory should not be taken lightly.

Despite PUB's repeated assurance of its commitment to tackle the problem of illegal fishing and littering at Pandan Reservoir, it seems that its efforts are neither persistent nor effective enough to bring about any improvement.

Tan Poh Soon


Read more!

Converted electric cars hit the road in Singapore

Idea gaining traction but it's a bumpy ride for pioneer firms
Grace Chua Straits Times 23 Sep 10;

FOR five years, a bright orange, single-seat car was the lone electric vehicle plying Singapore's roads.

But since last year, the Corbin Sparrow, registered in 2003 by an American teacher here, has had more company.

There are now at least eight electric vehicles here, going by Land Transport Authority (LTA) statistics: seven motorcycles and scooters and one electric car.

Electric car conversion start-up EV Hub has also obtained approval from LTA to convert a BMW and a goods vehicle.

Electric vehicle use and research seem to be moving ahead.

Japanese carmaker Mitsubishi is scheduled to bring in up to 50 of its i-MiEV cars for test programmes here by the end of the year, while the Energy Market Authority has been searching for a service provider to design, build and run a network of charging stations for such test cars.

Because they do not use fossil fuels, driving such vehicles does not produce the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, which contributes to climate change.

EV Hub unveiled a snazzy red Porsche and sleek grey BMW - both fully electric - at the launch of the Singapore G1 green vehicle race earlier this month, and also has an electric Renault van. Mr David Chou, 40, managing director of the one-year-old start-up, feels converting existing cars to electric ones would encourage people to adopt the technology.

'It's like doing a heart transplant for a car. You give it a new motor, components and wires, but keep the chassis you love, so it has the same sturdiness, safety features and so on,' he said. Making a new car from scratch, even if it was electric, also produces extra carbon emissions, he added.

It costs more than $50,000 for a basic conversion, which involves swopping the engine and innards with an electric motor system; and up to about $200,000 for a higher-end set-up with more cutting-edge batteries and technology.Those who own these cars have to charge them at home, so they are practical only for those living in landed property.

The firm is working with the National University of Singapore and Singapore Polytechnic to test different kinds of electric motor technology, and train students to test and maintain such vehicles.

Meanwhile, Greenlots, which distributes and installs charging points where people can pay to charge vehicles, has sold three of its E-Max electric scooters since they were launched in April last year.

Its customers are in their late 20s and early 30s, and commute short distances to work, said Greenlots vice-president Khoo Lin Zhuang, 28. But they live on landed property as there are few places to charge the vehicles here. Greenlots has, however, installed a handful of charging stations in places such as the 313@Somerset and Parkway Parade malls.

Such inconvenience, along with uncertainty about funding schemes, is part and parcel of being a pioneer on the electric vehicle scene here, Mr Khoo said.

But he added it was worthwhile: 'We're not one of the big boys, that's why we have to rush out of the gate first.'

But it has been a bumpy ride for other electric vehicle firms.

Mr Clarence Tan of the Green Car Company, with a fleet of five Corbin Sparrow three-wheelers, said no one wanted to buy the cars, which cost about $125,000 each. Reasons included the lack of charging points and limited range, as the car can travel only 30km to 50km on a single charge.

The firm's new plan: wait for certificates of entitlement prices to drop, then put the vehicles on the road and invite advertisers to place ads on the cars.


Read more!

Many Singaporeans not aware of World Car-Free Day initiative

Ng Lian Cheong Channel NewsAsia 22 Sep 10;

SINGAPORE : Wednesday marks World Car-Free Day - an initiative aimed at getting people to cycle, walk or take public transport instead of their car.

However, many Singaporeans were not aware of the initiative or its purpose. But Jennifer Oh, a 41-year-old financial consultant, was all for the initiative. She ditched her car and hopped onto her bicycle to get to work on Wednesday.

She may have taken an hour to reach her workplace instead of the usual 20 minutes, but she was glad to have done her part to save the earth.

She hopes more drivers will give way to cyclists.

Jennifer Oh said: "The main thing is that drivers are not very friendly with cyclists. They believe that cyclists are actually in their way. But I think the situation has improved a little bit and I would hope there would be more cycling lanes on the road."

She intends to keep up with the habit and cycle to work at least once a week.

- CNA/al

In Singapore: Hundreds leave cars at home
Goh Chin Lian Straits Times 23 Sep 10;

FINANCIAL adviser Jennifer Oh left her 1.3-litre Fiat Punto at home yesterday morning and cycled to work instead, to mark international Car-Free Day.

She left her four-room flat in Tampines at 6.15am, breezed along the streets of Bedok, Kaki Bukit, MacPherson, Little India and Bras Basah, and reached her office at Fuji Xerox Towers in Tanjong Pagar at about 7.30am.

'I've always thought of cycling at least once a week to work, but I haven't been able to make it,' said Miss Oh, 47, who has driven to work for at least 15 years.

She thinks cycling to work is possible on days when she has no appointments outside the city area. But on some days, she needs to drive to meet clients in places such as Jurong, Sembawang and Yishun.

Miss Oh was one of more than 200 people who signed up with the Automobile Association of Singapore (AAS) to leave their cars at home yesterday. Nine in 10 participants were AAS members.

Document equipment provider Fuji Xerox Singapore also adopted Car-Free Day in a separate campaign, which had more than 200 employees and customers signing up.

Car-Free Day, which began in the 1950s and was marked mainly in the United States, is now observed worldwide on Sept 22, including in China, Austria, Canada and New Zealand.

The campaign was introduced in Singapore by the Singapore Environment Council in 2001, but abandoned two years later when it found that, among other things, motorists did not want to give up their car after spending so much money on it.

The AAS told The Straits Times it revived the campaign this year to promote environmental consciousness.

Miss Oh said yesterday's ride was pleasant. She did not mind that her office does not have shower facilities, and simply brought along a towel to wipe herself.

'I don't really perspire that much,' she added.

She was due to cycle again later in the afternoon, this time to Kong Meng San Phor Kark See Monastery in Bishan for a Mid-Autumn Festival celebration.

'It's my little contribution to reducing my carbon footprint,' she said.


Read more!

UN puts the bat in the global spotlight

Yahoo News 22 Sep 10;

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – The United Nations Wednesday launched the "year of the bat," hoping a bit of positive publicity can foster better understanding of the role the mammals play in pollination and dispersal of seeds.

"From insect-eating bats in Europe that provide important pest control to seed-dispersing bats in the tropics that help sustain rainforests, bats deliver vital ecosystem services across a wide range of environments," the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said.

It voiced concern that bat populations have plunged in recent decades due to habitat loss, amid increasing urbanization and epidemics.

"Compared to animals like tigers and elephants, bats receive little positive attention," EUROBATS Executive Secretary Andreas Streit said of the only flying mammals.

"But they are fascinating mammals and play an indispensable role in maintaining our environment."

Of 1,100 bat species, half are endangered due to deforestation and other threats.

"Most people are unaware that bats provide invaluable services to the environment," the UNEP said.

"Fruit agriculture, central to tropical economies, depends to a large extent on the ecological contributions of fruit bats. An estimated 134 plants that yield products used by humans are partially or entirely reliant on bats for seed dispersal or pollination."

'Year of the Bat' gives wings to world's only flying mammals
UNEP 22 Sep 10;

Prague (Czech Republic), 22 September 2010 - They save the farming industry millions of dollars each year, help sustain the world's forests and, in some countries, are a major tourist attraction. Bats - described as 'one of the planet's most misunderstood and persecuted mammals' - are now flying out of the night and into the spotlight for a two-year-long celebration.

Launching today, the UNEP-backed 'Year of the Bat' will promote conservation, research and education on the world's only flying mammals. There will be a special focus on the ecological benefits that bats provide, such as pest control and seed dispersal.

The joint campaign, led by the UN's Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) and the Agreement on the Conservation of Populations of European Bats (EUROBATS), will draw attention to the world's 1100 bat species - around half of which are currently at risk.

"Compared to animals like tigers and elephants, bats receive little positive attention," says Andreas Streit, Executive Secretary of EUROBATS. "But they are fascinating mammals and play an indispensable role in maintaining our environment."

From insect-eating bats in Europe that provide important pest control to seed-dispersing bats in the tropics that help sustain rainforests, bats deliver vital ecosystem services across a wide range of environments.

Bat populations in large urban areas can consume up to 30,000 pounds of insects in a single night.

One of most spectacular and unusual tourist attractions in Austin, Texas is the Congress Bridge bat flight from mid-March until November, where over a million Mexican free-tailed bats stream into the sky at dusk on their nightly forage for food. A popular tourist attraction, the spectacular bat flight generates millions of dollars for the city each year.

"When migrating, bats can travel up to 4,000 kilometres in one year," said Elizabeth Mrema, Executive Secretary of CMS. "Africa's greatest mammal migration involves 8 million fruit bats that fly into Zambia from across the continent each year. This flight is an incredible spectacle that scientists are still unravelling."

Besides the Arctic, Antarctic and a few isolated oceanic regions, bats are found everywhere on Earth. Having inhabited the planet for the last 50 million years, bats today make up nearly a quarter of the global mammal population.

More than 1,100 bat species now documented but bat species are still being discovered in places as varied as Madagascar, the United Kingdom, the Philippines, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Comoros islands.

The Year of the Bat in 2011 will coincide with the United Nations' International Year of Forests. Bat species disperse seeds and aid pollination in temperate and tropical forests, helping to regenerate and sustain almost a third of the Earth's land area. Sustainable forestry management is essential for maintaining healthy bat populations as well as balanced ecosystems in forests and woodland areas.

Bat populations have declined alarmingly in recent decades. Despite intensified conservation efforts, over half of all bats species are now classified by the International Union for Conservation as threatened or near threatened. Habitat loss and destruction, human disturbance at hibernation sites, increasing urbanisation and epidemics such as White-nose Syndrome - which has killed more than half a million bats in the United States since 2006 - are putting bats increasingly in danger.

Bat species throughout the world need continued protection. Most people are unaware that bats provide invaluable services to the environment. Fruit agriculture, central to tropical economies, depends to a large extent on the ecological contributions of fruit bats. An estimated 134 plants that yield products used by humans are partially or entirely reliant on bats for seed dispersal or pollination.

The honorary ambassador for the Year of the Bat is Dr. Merlin Tuttle, a leading ecologist and wildlife photographer and founder of Bat Conservation International.

"Bats rank among our planet's most misunderstood and intensely persecuted mammals because they are active only at night and difficult to observe and understand", says Dr. Tuttle. "Many bats are the primary predators of insects that fly at night, for example, including those that cost farmers and foresters billions of dollars in losses annually. When these bat populations decline, demands for dangerous pesticides grow, as does the cost of growing essential crops like rice, corn and cotton."

As the Year of the Bat campaign brings these issues into focus in 2011, EUROBATS will celebrate the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Agreement on the Conservation of Populations of European Bats. A newly-adopted extension of the Agreement will expand EUROBATS' influence to 53 species and 62 countries in addition to the European Union. This will cover 14 new countries in Northern Africa and the Middle East.

New research announced at the EUROBATS conference held in Prague on 20 - 22 September has shown that bat species in Europe are the only species to have met the United Nations' 2010 targets for achieving a significant reduction in the rate of ecosystem and species loss. Yet this success does not eliminate the need for bat conservation and awareness-raising.

Many governments and organisations have already indicated their enthusiasm to participate in the Year of the Bat, including European countries ranging from Azerbaijan to the UK, as well as the United States and Cuba. The World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA) has also agreed to be a partner for the campaign.

Environmental experts increasingly regard bats as indicators of biodiversity and healthy ecosystems. With biodiversity as an integral part of the campaign, the Year of the Bat will encourage people across the world to get involved in bat conservation efforts, so that these fascinating "masters of the night sky" can continue to delight us and perform their invaluable services to the global environment.


Read more!

Elderly Malaysian rhino enlisted in breeding attempt

Yahoo News 23 Sep 10;

KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) – Malaysian wildlife officials on Borneo island said Thursday they will try to artificially inseminate an elderly female rhinoceros in a bid to revive one of the world's most endangered species.

Gelegub, a Sumatran rhino who at 28-years-old is equivalent to a 70-something grandmother in human terms, will be impregnated with sperm from a virile young male rhino.

"Gelegub is too old to mate normally and the mating ritual of rhinos is quite violent so this would be one of the best ways to try and get her pregnant and give birth to a rhino in captivity," said Sen Nathan, coordinator of the Borneo Rhino Sanctuary where the procedure will be carried out.

Nathan said the only breeding facility in the world that has had any success in producing Sumatran rhino calves in captivity is the Cincinnati Zoo in the United States, which has produced three calves over the last decade.

"Our priority of course is to have natural mating in the first place but at the moment we only have one male rhino in captivity and Gelegub is the only other viable female that we have," he told AFP.

"It is critical that we try and get the rhinos to reproduce as there are only 50 such rhinos in the region and without reproduction, they face imminent extinction."

Nathan said Gelegub will be injected with hormones in November to stimulate the production of eggs, which will be removed and fertilised, hopefully producing viable embryos for implantation.

Spare embryos will be frozen for implantation in surrogates at a later date.

Between 30 to 50 of the Borneo sub-species of the Sumatran rhinos are known to remain in the wild in Borneo -- a vast island shared by Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei.

It is distinguished from other Sumatran rhinos by its relatively small size, small teeth and distinctively shaped head.

Only 150 to 300 Sumatran rhino are known to exist in the wild, making it one of the world's most endangered species, with only small groups left on Indonesia's Sumatra island, the north of Borneo and peninsular Malaysia.

Rhino experts trying to impregnate old Gelegub
New Straits Times 23 Sep 10;

LAHAD DATU: Gelegub may be an "old girl" at 28 years but this is not stopping wildlife authorities from using the female Sumatran rhinoceros in a daring artificial insemination programme.

A team of scientists will be trying to impregnate her with semen from Kertam at the Borneo Rhino Sanctuary (BRS) here in November.

Gelegub, who cannot mate naturally due to her age, arrived at the sanctuary yesterday from the Lok Kawi Wildlife Park in Kota Kinabalu.


Sabah Wildlife director Dr Laurentius Ambu said the decision to move Gelegub was made after close consultation with local and foreign experts.

"She is too old for natural mating. Local and foreign experts here believe she would still be able to produce viable eggs which can then be fertilised with semen from Kertam."

He said Gelegub needed to be nearby for experts to carry out the artificial insemination properly.


Gelegub was translocated overland by the department's Wildlife Rescue Unit headed by Lok Kawi Wildlife Park veterinarian Dr Rosa Sipangkui.

BRS programme coordinator Dr Sen Nathan said veterinarians would use the electroejaculation, ovarian stimulation, oocyte recovery and invitro fertilisation methods in the effort.

"We will be working very closely with a team of rhino experts from Leibniz Institute of Zoo and Wildlife Research, Germany."


On risks, Nathan said: "As with any medical procedure there are always risks. We will take critical steps to manage these risks. Gelegub's age is our greatest concern. She is an old girl.

"But with experts here for the procedure, I am sure we will be able to give the rhino the best standard of care possible."

There are believed to be only 50 Sumatran rhinos left in the wild in Borneo.

The state Wildlife Department is also working with the Borneo Rhino Alliance (Bora)), World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Leipzig Zoo to increase the rhino population.

The BRS programme is jointly funded by the Sabah government and Yayasan Sime Darby.


Read more!

Brueni: Proboscis Monkey Killed In Traffic Accident Near Cleared Mangrove Site

BruDirect 22 Sep 10;

Bandar Seri Begawan - A Proboscis monkey, an endangered species endemic to Borneo island, was killed yesterday by afternoon traffic in Bunut, just kilometres away from a site where a known proboscis habitat was cleared earlier this year to make way fora flood prevention project.

An eyewitness who had been on his way to the capital told The Brunei Times that the long-nosed primate, which at the time was still alive but "seriously injured", was left in the middle of the road near the Bunut Shell filling station.

The eyewitness, who wanted to be known as Steve A, said that by around 2pm, the then limp animal had caused a traffic jam by motorists who were trying to avoid from running over it.

"At first, we thought it was a dog that had been hit because it was quite big and because of its colour," said Steve A, who stopped by the roadside to investigate.

Steve said that a teenager, who was also stuck in the jam with his family, had realised that it was a proboscis monkey and stepped out of the family four-wheel drive vehicle to help.

After signalling for traffic to stop, the young male adolescent lifted the nearly 20kg monkey and carried it to the side of the road.

However, the young Samaritan left the scene soon afterwards as his family had been waiting for him, Steve recalled.

Steve said that he tried to help out by contacting the Museums Department to come and try to save the monkey. He said that he had wanted to take the monkey to the veterinarian himself, but was afraid to do so because of the animal's endangered status.

However, when officials from the department arrived half an hour later from Kota Batu, it was too late.

"After being hit by the car, the monkey was still alive but was having difficulty breathing. Just when the officials were about to arrive, it was shaking and died," Steve said.

The museums officials collected data on the creature before bringing its body with them.

Steve estimated that the monkey was nearly 20kg, and considered a "young adult" of the species, based on his experiences from riverboat tours around Sg Damuan, where the proboscis monkeys, locally known as bengkatan, were often seen in the past.

"It was very big. In a group, that monkey would have been the leader," he remarked.

Normally timid creatures, the long-nosed, pot-bellied primates were known to keep away from human territories despite their habitats being just "15 minutes" away from the city. He recalled a similar incident in the past when another proboscis was killed while trying to cross a road in Lumapas.

"It is very rare to see proboscis monkeys go to busy areas. However there are some speculations that they are looking for food as most of the mangrove trees are being chopped down at around Damuan and Bunut rivers," Steve said.

The mangroves forests along Sg Damuan were cleared last May by the authorities, who saw it as a "necessary" initiative to combat habitual flooding in the nearby villages, which was home to some 30,000 residents.

However, the project caused dissent among the public, many of whom were initially left in the dark as to what was going on. People voiced out that the clearing of the mangroves would drive the endangered primates away, as well as affect the number of tourists who come to see these shy monkeys.

The Public Works Department (PWD) assured the public that the project's impact to the natural habitats were "minimal".

"Unfortunately, the clearance is essential to reduce flooding in the residential areas of Perpindahan Bunut, Bengkurong, Tasek Meradun, Bebatik, Mulaut and Kilanas," said the PWD public relations office in a statement released in May this year.

"The question of the best option incorporated short-term displacement for the proboscis and the tourism they generate, while minimising flooding for 30,000 people," said the department.

The department added that only about one per cent of the 9.5 square kilometres of mangroves would be cleared through the project.

It had also then emphasised that "no proboscis (had) been killed to date and care will be taken to ensure they move on to adjoining mangroves prior to river excavation". -- Courtesy of The Brunei Times

[by Ubaidillah Masli]


Read more!

Sustainable palm oil body censures Indonesia's PT SMART

Sunanda Creagh Reuters 23 Sep 10;

JAKARTA, Sept 23 (Reuters) - An industry body for sustainable palm oil has made its first public censure of a member, saying Indonesia's PT SMART Tbk breached its principles and may face sanctions, and also ticked off the firm's parent.

SMART last month released an independent audit after Greenpeace alleged SMART bulldozed high conservation value forests and damaged carbon-rich peatlands. The audit gave SMART a mixed score card, highlighting some instances in which Indonesia's environmental laws were breached.

The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) -- an industry body of planters, green groups and consumers -- said on its website its grievance panel had written to SMART and Golden Agri censuring the firms for the breaches uncovered by the audit.

SMART is a member of the RSPO but Golden Agri-Resources (GAR) is not.

"In its letter to SMART and GAR, the panel finds there has been serious non-compliance with the RSPO code of conduct, specifically a failure by SMART to work towards implementation and certification of the RSPO principles and criteria," it said.

In particular, RSPO principles on social and environmental impact assessments and peatland management have been infringed, it said.

"Members who have been found to not be in compliance and who continue to be in non-compliance with the RSPO regulations could ultimately face sanctions, including the suspension and, eventually, the termination, of their membership of the RSPO."

The comments may be a blow to SMART's aims to win back big palm oil buyers including Burger King Holdings, Nestle and Unilever, who have said they will stop buying from SMART because of environmental concerns.

The RSPO also urged GAR to stop publicly suggesting it was in the process of obtaining RSPO certification.

"GAR is not a member of the RSPO, nor has the RSPO yet received a membership application from the company. The Panel encourages GAR to submit a full and complete application for membership," the statement said.

SMART said in a statement it would work toward the requirements set by the RSPO, including environmental impact assessments and conservation of deep peatlands.

Enormous amounts of climate-warming gases are released when deep peatlands are disturbed, and the deforestation of Indonesia's extensive tropical forests led the World Bank to name it the world's number three emitter in a 2007 report.

"We take the feedback of our stakeholders very seriously and this applies to the concerns of the RSPO, whom we are in touch with," said Daud Dharsono, President Director of SMART. Golden Agri referred queries to the SMART statement. SMART and Singapore-listed Golden Agri are controlled by the Widjaja family that founded Sinar Mas, a group with interests from plantations to property and finance.

Greenpeace welcomed the RSPO's statement, saying RSPO should follow up on its reprimand by expelling SMART within four weeks if the company does not take action.

"Greenpeace is calling on other companies, like Cargill, to follow Unilever, Nestle and Kraft's lead and cancel its palm oil contracts with Sinar Mas until it stops destroying rainforest and carbon rich peatlands," said Greenpeace activist Bustar Maitar.

(Editing by Neil Chatterjee)

Indonesia's palm oil giant faces industry sanction
Yahoo News 23 Sep 10;

KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) – An industry body for sustainable palm oil on Thursday accused Indonesian agricultural giant Sinar Mas of breaching its principles, and warned that it could face expulsion.

Sinar Mas Agro Resources and Technology (SMART) has been struggling to repair its image after Greenpeace alleged the Indonesian firm was devastating rainforests and habitats for endangered species like orangutans.

The name-and-shame campaign by the environmental group has led several foreign buyers to cancel major contracts, but SMART said last month that an audit it had commissioned had cleared it of the charges.

In a rare public censure, the Roundtable of Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) -- an industry group of producers, environmental groups and food companies -- said it had found "serious non-compliance" on the firm's part.

"The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil takes all infringements of its Code of Conduct and Principles and Criteria very seriously," the Kuala Lumpur-based RSPO said in a statement on its website.

"Members who have been found to not be in compliance and who continue to be in non-compliance with the RSPO regulations could ultimately face sanctions, including the suspension and, eventually, the termination of their membership of the RSPO."

The industry group said SMART was found to have failed to "work towards implementation and certification of the RSPO Principles and Criteria".

The RSPO was formed in 2004 to establish stringent social and environmental criteria including a ban on clearing forests in order to plant the crop.

SMART, the Indonesian palm oil unit of its Singapore-listed parent company Golden Agri Resources (GAR) and part of the Sinar Mas agri-industry empire, commissioned the audit in February after Greenpeace made the claims.

The environmental watchdog accuses SMART of widespread forest destruction, including clearing primary forests and peatland.

SMART -- part of the Singapore-listed Sinar Mas agribusiness group -- has said it should not be blamed for the destruction of Borneo's forests and that the allegations are "largely unfounded".

GAR has lost major clients including Unilever, Kraft and Nestle in the resulting furore.

Indonesia is the biggest producer of palm oil, which is used in everything from biscuits to cosmetics, but environmentalists say plantations are driving deforestation blamed for habitat loss and producing greenhouse gases.


Read more!

Fears mount of massive Caribbean coral bleaching: study

(AFP)Google News 23 Sep 10;

MIAMI — Above-average temperatures this year could spark massive coral bleaching in the Caribbean basin region, experts with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warned Wednesday after a major study.

The review found that there is a high risk for bleaching damage to coral in the south and southeastern Caribbean. That could cause a repeat of damage done back in 2005 when 90 percent of coral in the area were damaged and 10 percent were destroyed.

"High temperatures cause corals to force out the symbiotic algae that provide them with food. This makes the corals appear white or 'bleached' and can increase outbreaks of infectious disease," said Mark Eakin, coordinator of NOAA's Coral Reef Watch.

"Temperatures are high in the Caribbean, and we expect this to continue," Eakin added, so "this season has the potential to be one of the worst bleaching seasons for some reefs."

Bleaching that goes on for even just a week can lead to the death of the coral, and to the loss of marine habitat, experts say.

Emma Hickerson, a sanctuary research coordinator, said that a NOAA survey cruise just returned from the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary off the coasts of Texas and Louisiana.

"We saw serious bleaching," she said of the sanctuary. "Several species were bleached and we are concerned we could lose much of the fire corals this year," she warned.

Scientists say corals are vital to marine life because they provide habitats for a vast variety of creatures and absorb large levels of poisonous carbon dioxide.

NOAA: Coral Bleaching Likely in Caribbean This Year
NOAA 22 Sep 10;

According to the NOAA Coral Reef Watch monitoring system, coral bleaching is likely in the Caribbean in 2010. With temperatures above-average all year, NOAA’s models show a strong potential for bleaching in the southern and southeastern Caribbean through October that could be as severe as in 2005 when over 80 percent of corals bleached and over 40 percent died at many sites across the Caribbean. Scientists are already reporting coral bleaching at several Caribbean sites and severe bleaching has been reported from other parts of the world.

The NOAA Coral Reef Watch (CRW) satellite coral bleaching monitoring shows sea surface temperatures continue to remain above-average throughout the wider Caribbean region. Large areas of the southeastern Caribbean Sea are experiencing thermal stress capable of causing coral bleaching. The western Gulf of Mexico and the southern portion of the Bahamas have also experienced significant bleaching thermal stress. The CRW Coral Bleaching Thermal Stress Outlook indicates that the high stress should continue to develop in the southern and southeast Caribbean until mid-October. Prolonged coral bleaching, can lead to coral death and the subsequent loss of coral reef habitats for a range of marine life.

“The early warning predictions of NOAA’s CRW program are vital to assist coral reef managers in making early preparations for coral bleaching events,” says Billy Causey, southeast regional director for NOAA’s Office of National Marine Sanctuaries. “While managers can’t do anything immediately to prevent coral bleaching, these early warnings give them time to monitor and track the stressful event, thus learning more about both direct and secondary impacts of bleaching on coral reefs around the world.”

The decline and loss of coral reefs has significant social, cultural, economic and ecological impacts on people and communities in the Caribbean, the United States, Australia and throughout the world. As the “rainforests of the sea,” coral reefs provide services estimated to be worth as much as $375 billion globally each year.

“High temperatures cause corals to force out the symbiotic algae that provide them with food. This makes the corals appear white or 'bleached' and can increase outbreaks of infectious disease,” said Mark Eakin, Ph.D., coordinator of NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch. “Temperatures are high in the Caribbean, and we expect this to continue. This season has the potential to be one of the worst bleaching seasons for some reefs.”

“A NOAA survey cruise just returned from the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary where we saw serious bleaching,” said Emma Hickerson, sanctuary research coordinator for the site, located off the coasts of Texas and Louisiana. “Several species were bleached and we are concerned we could lose much of the fire corals this year.”

Even though a variety of stresses — namely thermal stresses — continue to rise in the Caribbean basin, temperatures are expected to begin cooling in the Gulf of Mexico and Florida. In addition, recent hurricanes and tropical storms that passed near the U.S. Virgin Islands have cooled the waters there. NOAA researchers have shown that tropical weather systems can cool the high temperatures that cause bleaching, and NOAA forecasts that this Atlantic hurricane season will probably be more active than usual.

In 2005, the year of the worst bleaching on record in the Caribbean, no tropical storms passed close enough to cool the Virgin Islands, resulting in 90 percent of the area corals being bleached and 60 percent dying. Overall the 2005 bleaching event was the result of the largest, most intense thermal stress recorded in the Caribbean during the 25-year NOAA satellite record.

NOAA’s mission is to understand and predict changes in the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and to conserve and manage our coastal and marine resources. Visit us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/usnoaagov.


Read more!

China tops world in catch and consumption of fish

'SeafoodPrint' finds top 20 nations with most fishing impact on ocean ecosystems
Pew Environment Group EurekAlert 22 Sep 10;

WASHINGTON—China leads the world in tonnage of fish caught annually as well as the amount of fish consumed, according to new findings reported in National Geographic magazine.

The research, conducted by the University of British Columbia in collaboration with the National Geographic Society and The Pew Charitable Trusts, ranks the top 20 nations that have the greatest impact on ocean ecosystems through catching or consuming marine wildlife.

China's top ranking results from its enormous population, despite its very low per capita footprint of fish catch and consumption. Japan is high on the list too, a result of its rate of consumption (often by importation) of fish rather than its catch. The "top 20" lists of fish catch and consumption are unveiled in the October issue of National Geographic magazine.

The United States comes in third in both lists, due to its relatively large population and tendency to eat top predator fish such as Atlantic salmon. Peru ranks second in the world in catch though is not in the top 20 fish-consuming countries because Peruvians on the whole eat little seafood.

The data come from the SeafoodPrint study, led by Daniel Pauly of the University of British Columbia and National Geographic Ocean Fellow Enric Sala.

In assessing the true impact nations have on the seas, the team needed to look not just at what a given nation caught but also at what the citizens of that nation ate.
Standard methods of measuring nations' impact on the sea are misleading because, as Pauly says, "every fish is different. A pound of tuna represents roughly a hundred times the footprint of a pound of sardines."

That's because fish like tuna are apex predators — they feed at the very top of the food chain. The largest tuna eat enormous amounts of fish, including intermediate-level predators such as mackerel, which in turn feed on fish like anchovies, which prey on microscopic organisms. A large tuna must eat the equivalent of its body weight every 10 days to stay alive, so a single thousand-pound tuna might need to eat as many as 15,000 smaller fish in a year, the National Geographic article says.

Any large fish in the world — a Pacific swordfish, an Atlantic mako shark, an Alaska king salmon, a Chilean sea bass — is likely to depend on several levels of a food chain.

The SeafoodPrint method provides a way to compare all types of fish caught, by creating a unit of measurement based on "primary production" — the microscopic organisms at the bottom of the marine food web — required to make a pound of a given type of fish. The research found that a bluefin tuna, for example, may require a thousand pounds or more of primary production.

"The SeafoodPrint allows us to directly compare a sardine fishery with a tuna fishery, because each is measured according to the primary production it represents," Pauly says.

The new approach also allows the researchers to assess individual nations' impacts on the seas, based not only on what was caught but also on what their citizens ate through imports. "A country can acquire primary production by fishing, or it can acquire it by trade," says Pauly, whose research is part of the Sea Around Us project of The Pew Charitable Trusts and the University of British Columbia.

Much of the world's catch, especially from the high seas, is being purchased by wealthy nations for their people; poorer countries simply can't afford to bid for high-value species, the article says. Citizens in poor nations also lose out if their governments enter into fishing or trade agreements with wealthier nations. In these cases, local fish are sold abroad and denied to local citizens — those who arguably have the greatest need to eat them and the greatest right to claim them.

Humanity's demand for seafood has now driven fishing fleets into every virgin fishing ground in the world, the scientists say. A report by the World Bank and United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization suggests that even if the number of boats, hooks and nets now used were cut by half, the world would still end up catching too many fish to be sustainable for the future.

The scientists favor treaties among nations setting seafood-consumption targets as well as ocean havens to safeguard resources. "Barely one percent of the ocean is now protected, compared with 12 percent of the land," Sala says, "and only a fraction of that is fully protected."

###

The National Geographic Society, the Waitt Foundation and the SEAlliance, along with strategic government, private, academic and conservation partners including the TEDPrize, Google and IUCN, are beginning an action-oriented marine conservation initiative under the banner of "Mission Blue" that will increase global awareness of the urgent ocean crisis and help to reverse the decline in ocean health by inspiring people to care and act; reducing the impact of fishing; and promoting the creation of marine protected areas. For more information, go to www.iamtheocean.org.

China top in world seafood consumption: study
Yahoo News 23 Sep 10;

VANCOUVER, Canada (AFP) – A new model to measure fisheries shows China has overtaken Japan to lead the world in seafood consumption, researchers said.

American and Canadian marine scientists compared the resources needed by different kinds of fish to the total consumption of all seafoods worldwide, finding that China, Japan and the United States were the top three seafood-eating nations.

The report headed by Daniel Pauly, director of the Fisheries Centre at the University of British Columbia here, warned Wednesday however that global fisheries are increasingly unsustainable and their product is unequally consumed by wealthy countries.

Japan was previously considered the top seafood-consuming nation, mainly because China consumes less high-value fish like tuna or salmon, said the study.

But when total resources needed to produce seafood are tallied, the study showed the Asian giant at the top of the ocean food chain.

"Though the average Chinese consumer generally eats smaller fish than the average Japanese consumer does, China's massive population gives it the world's biggest seafood print, 694 million metric tons of primary production," said National Geographic, which co- funded the research.

Pauly's team developed a measuring tool called "SeafoodPrint" modeled on the "ecological footprint" concept that measures the area of land needed to sustain a person depending on their location and lifestyle.

The researchers' model compares fish by the amount of algae it takes to produce them, said study co-author and PhD economics student Wilf Swartz.

"By expressing everything in terms of kilograms of algae... we can measure how much of the ocean's production is being consumed by humans," Swartz told AFP. "A kilogram of herring would be the equivalent of 100 kilograms of algae, and one kilogram of tuna would be equivalent to 1,000 kilograms of algae."

The measurement gives regulators a means to measure the total human impact on the oceans, and the report hopes to encourage consumers to eat species with a less harmful impact.

"Hopefully we can change the demands on fish such as salmon, to less impactful species, like mackerel," said Swartz.


Read more!

Leave sharks in peace, nations plead

Yahoo News 22 Sep 10;

NEW YORK (AFP) – Tiny Palau and Honduras on Wednesday declared that their ocean waters are shark-infested -- and they want the rest of the world to jump right in.

The presidents of the two tiny countries met in New York to sign a declaration urging other coastal nations to join them in declaring their waters havens for the ocean's increasingly threatened predator.

"We cannot stand idly by while sharks are eradicated," Palau's President Johnson Toribiong and Honduran President Porfirio Lobo said in the declaration, coinciding with a UN summit on poverty and biodiversity.

"We believe it is in the long interest of our countries to have healthy ocean ecosystems, which is not possible without healthy shark populations."

Environmental activists say that 73 million sharks are killed annually just to feed Asia's appetite for shark fin soup. Massive over-exploitation has reduced the number of large predatory fish by 90 percent in the last 50 years.

Last year Palau created the world's first national shark sanctuary and Honduras followed this year.

"We feel very proud to be protecting our environment," Lobo said.

Toribiong said sharks needed to be seen as a precious part of the ocean, not a source of mass food -- and certainly not a threat.

"Sharks are beautiful beasts of the ocean of the ocean," he said. "Without sharks, the health of the ocean would deteriorate. I believe that in the chain of life, if one link is missing, human beings at the top of the chain would suffer."

In their joint declaration, the two presidents noted that a "live shark is worth far more than a dead shark" thanks to its potential in attracting divers to coral reefs.

The presidents cited a study that found a single reef shark had a renewable value of more than 33,000 dollars a year, but was worth only 32 dollars to a fisherman if caught and killed.


Read more!

Jakarta's Highway Collapse Just A Warning of What’s to Come, Scientist Warns

Fidelis E. Satriastanti Jakarta Globe 22 Sep 10;

Last week’s collapse of a section of road in North Jakarta foreshadows wider environmental damage along the north coast as a result of human activity and climate change, a scientist says.

A 103-meter, two-lane stretch of Jalan RE Martadinata fell into the Japat River last Thursday. While the cause of the collapse is still being determined, most experts have blamed it on subsidence or soil erosion around the base of the piles.

Alan Koropitan, a marine expert at the Bogor Institute of Agriculture (IPB), on Wednesday warned against ignoring the collapse’s wider implications.

“Whenever we get a disaster like the Martadinata collapse or the Situ Gintung levee breach, everyone starts talking about it,” he said. “But afterwards there’s nothing. We also end up neglecting other parts of the country that experience the same problems.”

Alan said the entire northern coast of Java was mostly sandy, thus an increase in property development would deplete groundwater and eventually lead to more subsidence.

“So we’ll have a lot more Martadinatas happening in the future along the northern part of Java,” he said.

“Meanwhile, Surabaya [in East Java] will face rising tides with waves up to 4 meters high, which will threaten the area with seawater. While waves that high are considered normal for Java, add in the effects of climate change, especially stronger winds, and greater frequency, and the waves will hit the northern Java coast much harder.”

The higher seas would also be felt in Sumatra which, while spared from high waves, would face seawater intrusion into its groundwater supplies.

“Meanwhile, the western coast of Sumatra and southern coasts of Java, Bali and West Nusa Tenggara will face higher rates of coastal erosion from the Indian Ocean,” Alan said.

“These are the things the government needs to plan for, especially when coastal effects are compounded by climate change and human activities, because each area has its own specific characteristics.”

Former environment minister Sonny Keraf said the government was not utilizing its strong legal powers to address environmental issues.

“The 2009 Environmental Management and Protection Law clearly calls for a strategic environmental assessment as the basis for environmental management,” he said.

“This means all kinds of development in a given area must be suspended and an assessment carried out to gauge the environment’s adaptation capacity. In the case of Jakarta, I believe everyone from NGOs to legislators agrees it has reached its limit in terms of environmental capacity.”

Sonny also said a stipulation that 30 percent of the city’s area be dedicated to green space was being flouted. The current figure is just 9.6 percent.

“From the policy point of view, it’s all there and it’s all clear, but these regulations are often overruled by lesser regulations that favor economic growth,” he said.

“Nowadays, development is based solely on economic benefits, so if someone is considering building a park or green space, the first question they’ll ask is: How much profit can I make from that? It’s no surprise then that a lot of green areas have been turned into malls and apartment blocks, because developers only think about their profit margin.”

Darrundo, an environmental and urban planning expert from Jakarta’s Tarumanegara University, said much of the environmental degradation in the capital was the result of “incorrect and irrational” public policies.

“I believe a lot of public policies aren’t rational,” he said.

“For instance, 25 percent of the land area of Jakarta was dedicated to green space, but now that proportion is less than 10 percent because those areas have been turned into malls and apartment blocks.

“For me, policies that encourage that kind of development are irrational.”

Negligent Indonesian Leaders Driving City Into Ground: Activists
Fidelis E. Satriastanti& Arientha Primanita Jakarta Globe 22 Sep 10;

Jakarta. The collapses of a road and an embankment last week are characteristic of the Jakarta administration’s failure to provide basic services for its residents and set a poor example for the rest of the country, an activist says.

A 103-meter, two-lane stretch of Jalan RE Martadinata fell into the Japat River last Thursday. While the cause of the collapse is still being determined, most experts have blamed it on subsidence or soil erosion around the base of the piles.

In the same week, a 115-meter stretch of new embankment along the West Flood Canal collapsed. That incident has been blamed on soil quality.

Slamet Daryoni, the head of urban environmental education at the Indonesian Green Institute, said on Wednesday that Jakarta was “destroying itself.”

“Despite that, it is still held up as a reference by other cities, but we know the city has failed to protect its citizens, mainly through misguided policies and messed-up spatial planning,” he said.

Such policies have led to severe environmental degradation that threatens to usher in a host of disasters, he said.

“If there’s a decline in the quality of the environment, then we’ll see more major disasters like Situ Gintung and Martadinata,” Slamet said, referring to the Situ Gintung levee breach that killed 100 people in 2009.

He said a study by his organization showed that only 33 of the 226 lakes and reservoirs in the Greater Jakarta area were still in good condition.

Darrundono, an environmental and spatial planning expert at Jakarta’s Tarumanegara University, said other threats came from climate change.

“Studies predict that because of global warming, the Jakarta coastline will have receded by 15 kilometers by 2020,” he said. “In other words, you better start trading in your cars for speedboats.”

Darrundono said the problems had never been so acute during the Dutch colonial era, during which time the administration dedicated 25 percent of the city’s total area to green space. That figure is now 9.6 percent.

The administration has vowed that it will to push it up to 13.9 percent, although by law it must be 30 percent.

The Indonesian Green Institute says green space in the city was at a high of 28.8 percent in 1984 under then Governor Ali Sadikin, before falling drastically to just 6.2 percent in 2007, the final year of Governor Sutiyoso’s 10-year term.

Darrundono said much of the lost green spaces were catchment areas for the city’s 13 rivers that had been developed into housing estates, which had led to more problems.

“The buildings extract the groundwater at high rates, resulting in land subsidence,” he said.

The city uses 532 million cubic meters of groundwater a year, or 46 percent of known supplies, according to the Indonesian Green Institute, and it is replenished at a much slower rate.

That exceeds the 40 percent limit recommended by experts and has been blamed for land subsidence of 17 to 26 centimeters a year.

“It’s important that we turn these developed areas back into the catchment areas that they used to be,” Darrundono said. “You can’t just build houses in such areas.”

Private households in Jakarta are prohibited from drawing groundwater, although many do so to avoid paying for piped water.

The administration is trying to get more people to connect to the mains supply, and has raised the rate for groundwater use by the 4,000 registered commercial and industrial users sixfold since last year in a bid to limit the amount extracted.

Jakarta needs to stop, look where it’s ‘growing’: Experts
Indah Setiawati, The Jakarta Post 23 Sep 10;

Jakarta should put development plans on hold pending a reassessment of the city’s capacity, in hope of coping better with deteriorating environmental conditions, experts say.

City planning should be based on an accurate calculation of the city’s population, its environmental conditions and its ability to provide quality living space for its residents, urban management expert Bianpoen said.

He said it was important to first assess the natural capacity of the capital city.

“Jakarta has reached its capacity, and now only the upper echelons of society enjoy quality living standards,” he said recently.

“I recommend a moratorium on the construction of housing and offices,” he said.

All urban cities in developing countries, including Indonesia, should be getting ready for overpopulation, Tarumanagara University civil planning postgraduate program director Jo Santoso said.

“How can we deal with residents who rely on private cars as their main means of transportation?” said Jo, the author of a book on spatial planning, Menyiasati Kota Tanpa Warga (Strategizing a City Without Involving Residents).

Jo also highlighted Jakarta’s dependence on the Citarum River in West Java for clean water, which is only available for 62 percent of the population, with the rest using groundwater, thus placing a massive burden on the environment.

Many buildings and skyscrapers in Jakarta also use excessive energy for air-conditioning, Jo said, adding that the problems in the capital had become so complex they could not be solved by political leaders alone.

“These problems need to be addressed based on scientific research focusing on housing.”

The Jakarta administration needs a grand plan to manage overpopulation, Jo said.

According to a report from the United Nations Population Fund, by 2030 almost 5 billion people will be living in urban areas, with urban populations accounting for more than half of the total populations of Africa and Asia.

Jo estimated that about 95 million people would live in Indonesian cities within the next 25 years. Jakarta is now home to 9.6 million people.

The development of commercial buildings in Jakarta would not be a problem if developers could be held accountable for their buildings’ environmental sustainability, Jo said.

“What we are seeing are irresponsible practices where building managements exploit groundwater supplies instead of using recycled water or collecting rainwater,” he said.

Meanwhile, Dodo Juliman, the head of the strategic unit at the Combined Resource Institution, a community-based network that develops planning and provides information to local administrations, said Jakarta should aim to develop in synchronization with its vision of becoming a service city.

“Telecommunication infrastructure, as one of the elements needed to serve this vision, should be developed without sacrificing the environment,” he said.

Experts have criticized the administration for failing to take environmental issues seriously in its management of development projects.

Recently, a section of Jl. RE Martadinata in North Jakarta, one of the main access roads to Tanjung Priok port, collapsed — allegedly because of erosion. Observers, however, said poor construction was to blame for the rapid deterioration of the road — immediately after urgent repairs.

Last week, thousands of dead fish have been washed ashore in Jakarta Bay, the mouth of 13 rivers that pass through Jakarta. The fish allegedly died from lack of oxygen as a result of heavily polluted rivers.

Dodo said the city often prioritized commercial developments and paid too little attention to provision of basic infrastructure including clean water, sanitation and drainage. He said the city should limit the development of commercial buildings that consumed excessive amounts of energy, such as malls.


Read more!

Nuclear plant in Malaysia: Public must approve nuclear power plant

The Star 23 Sep 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: It would be difficult for the Government to build a nuclear plant in Malaysia – unless there is public acceptance for such a project.

Tenaga Nasional Bhd (TNB) chief executive officer Datuk Seri Che Khalib Mohamad Noh said developed countries had started using nuclear energy and there was no reason why Malaysians could not be open about it.

He said the energy company has submitted a preliminary proposal, prepared together with the Malaysian Nuclear Agency and the Natural Resources and Energy Ministry, for the Government to consider.

“We are waiting for the Government to decide on the proposal,” he told reporters at a TNB Hari Raya open house here yesterday.

Che Khalib was asked to comment on plans to identify sites for the country’s first nuclear plant, as stated in the Economic Trans­formation Programme (ETP).

He said the Government hoped to build the first nuclear plant by 2021.

“That is an aggressive target or deadline and I hope Malaysians will support it because it takes a long time to realise the power plant,” he added.

Che Khalib said Malaysians should assess the building of nuclear power plant objectively in meeting the rising power needs of the country in future.

He said the demand for electricity had increased at a consistent rate of 6% to 8% each year and there was a demand for a new power plant.

“If we want to meet the demand by using current solutions such as gas and coal, I don’t think we can meet the demands by 2021,” he said.

Asked about the possibility of an increase in electricity tariffs in the coming months, Che Khalib said: “If there is no revision in gas prices, TNB will not revise the electricity price.”

He said Malaysians were fortunate that the US dollar had weakened and this had cushioned the impact of the rising price of coal. (Coal prices have been going up in the last two years.)

On whether the Government should reduce its stake in government-linked companies, such as TNB, as proposed in the ETP, he said it was in line with international practice and had also been carried out in Singapore previously.

“The Government has close to a 40% stake in TNB and TNB does not need to hold that many shares,” he said.


Read more!

U.S. seen losing renewable energy race to Asia

Reuters AlertNet 22 Sep 10;
* U.S. challenged by India, South Korea, Malaysia
* Industry urges govt on renewable electricity mandates

WASHINGTON, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Several Asian countries in addition to China could soon challenge the United States in the race to build a renewable energy industry if Washington doesn't provide more incentives for its domestic business, venture capitalists and others told a Congressional hearing on Wednesday.

The United States, once the world's leader in energy innovation, is now also "challenged and threatened" by India, South Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines, because it is not providing enough incentives to fund development of alternative energy and to increase demand, Ravi Viswanathan, a partner at New Enterprise Associates told a hearing chaired by U.S. Representative Ed Markey.

"These nations have outpaced the U.S. in recruiting, incenting and developing domestic manufacturing of solar, wind, and battery technology," he said.

China already has more than half of the world's market for solar panels and its companies are looking to export wind turbines.

The Senate failed to pass a climate bill this year that would put a price on carbon emissions, so it must pass laws that would create demand for alternative energy or fall further behind, experts told the panel.

Senator Jeff Bingaman introduced a bill this week that would require utilities to generate minimum amounts of alternative energy through a federal Renewable Electricity Standard, or RES, but the legislation faces an uncertain future.

Mark Fulton, Deutsche Bank's global head of climate change investment research, said that many states in America have developed their own renewable power mandates, but "in most cases these do not have enforcement measures nor penalties to ensure that they are financed."

Not everyone agrees that a federal RES is a good idea. James Sensenbrenner, the ranking Republican on the House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming, said mandates for alternative power could ultimately harm the industry by picking winners that might not ever become cheap, reliable sources of energy.

Fulton countered that the oil and gas industries receive far more subsidies than alternative energy and that alternative energies will fall in price as they develop.

Uncertainties in the United States, such as when it will pass a climate bill that would launch a carbon market and a political move in California to stop the state's ambitious program on emissions, discourage investors from deploying capital deployment into alternative energy on a long term basis, Fulton said. [ID:nN17133975]

The United States could make progress if it passed a national RES, extend recovery act grant programs that will expire at the end of the year, and streamline the Department of Energy's loan guarantee programs for small businesses, said Tom Carbone, the chief executive at Nordic Windpower.

Germany, Japan, and China have dedicated funds to develop domestic alternative energy technologies, but the United States has only just begun this effort, the experts said. (Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Marguerita Choy)


Read more!